World War Will is not a book about war as history records it. It is a book about the war beneath history—the conflict that determines why nations rise, systems harden, morals bend, and individuals fracture or endure. At its core, this book argues that every conflict, personal or global, is first a conflict of will. Not merely between people or powers, but between submission and self-sovereignty, alignment and autonomy, truth and necessity. Drawing from Scripture, philosophy, psychology, and lived experience, World War Will traces how the human will is shaped, trained, manipulated, and ultimately tested under pressure. Rather than offering abstract theology, the book examines real patterns: how systems justify cruelty in the name of survival, how moral language shifts when stability is threatened, how power disguises itself as necessity, and how individuals are slowly conditioned to surrender conscience for coherence. It exposes why sincerity is not enough, why good intentions collapse under strain, and why untrained wills are quietly absorbed by stronger ones. At the same time, World War Will makes a difficult but hopeful claim: that alignment with God does not remove struggle, but it does remove chaos. Through biblical case studies, historical parallels, and psychological insight, the book reveals how a will anchored beyond circumstance can remain intact even when everything else gives way. This is not a call to retreat from the world, nor a promise of safety. It is a sober examination of what it costs to remain aligned—and what it costs when alignment is lost. It asks the reader to confront an unsettling question: not who is right , but who or what is shaping your will . Written for readers willing to think deeply and honestly, World War Will challenges assumptions, dismantles false neutralities, and invites a reckoning with the unseen forces that quietly decide the outcome of lives, cultures, and history itself.