I asked the question with a mixture of admiration and unease.
“How did they do it?” I said. “What China has achieved in the past fifty years—lifting hundreds of millions out of poverty, building massive infrastructure, emerging as a global economic force—feels almost unreal. No divine claim. No special spiritual narrative. No emotional slogans. And yet, staggering progress. How?”
He didn’t hesitate.
“They worked with a vision,” he replied. “And more importantly, they decided what they would admire.”
The answer felt too simple at first—almost unsatisfying. I had expected geopolitics, conspiracies, hidden advantages. He shook his head gently, as if reading my resistance.
“Progress rarely comes from mystery,” he said. “It comes from clarity.”
China didn’t rise because of some sacred origin or exceptional destiny. It rose because it made a collective decision: *We will build.* It changed what it praised. It changed what it expected from its people. Hard work stopped being optional and became a shared ethic. National development stopped being a slogan and became a lived priority.
“And that,” he said, “changes everything.”
I thought about how often we search for shortcuts—special blessings, external saviors, miraculous turns—while ignoring the slow, demanding work of building capacity.
His tone softened then, not out of politeness but out of something closer to concern.
“We are an emotional people,” he said. “And emotion, when not guided by reflection, becomes a substitute for responsibility.”
He reminded me how easily we cling to statements from the past, recycling powerful words as if they were guarantees of the future. We take comfort in what was once said, even when reality has already moved on.
“Just imagine,” he said quietly, “still feeling reassured by a declaration that no power can undo a nation—after history has already shown otherwise.”
That line hurt because it was true.
We want reassurance more than we want reform. We pray for outcomes without preparing the means. And when things don’t improve, we look outward—toward fate, enemies, conspiracies—anywhere but within.
He leaned back and said something that reframed everything.
“God’s system in the world is not emotional. It is causal.”
Divine help, he explained, does not bypass effort. It works through it. Cause and effect are not opposed to faith; they are part of it. If a society produces discipline, planning, competence, and perseverance, outcomes shift. If it does not, no amount of rhetoric can compensate.
“Prayer does not replace preparation,” he said. “It dignifies it.”
I remembered two students I once knew. One constantly spoke about success, destiny, and potential. The other quietly studied every day—improving bit by bit, failing, adjusting. Years later, the difference between them was not talent or intelligence. It was posture. One hoped. The other worked.
“Nations behave the same way,” he said.
“When ideals change, behavior follows. When behavior changes, results follow. But if ideals remain emotional and unexamined, nothing durable emerges.”
What struck me most was his insistence on reflection—not pessimism, not cynicism. Reflection.
“Ask uncomfortable questions,” he said. “What do we reward? What do we excuse? What do we celebrate? What do we tolerate?” The answers, he believed, reveal far more about a nation’s future than its speeches or its prayers.
He ended with a warning that stayed with me:
“A hopeful nation that refuses to work will eventually lose even its hope. A working nation, even without slogans, will build its future.”
As I sat with his words, I realized how often we mistake emotional reassurance for faith, and nostalgia for vision. We want progress without discomfort, dignity without discipline, outcomes without causes.
But the world does not work that way.
Some nations keep hoping. Others quietly build.
History is indifferent to our feelings. It answers only to what we build


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