Nowadays, there seems to be a vaccine in development for nearly every ailment known to mankind. Some are aimed at deadly diseases, some at seasonal illnesses, and some at threats that may or may not become widespread.
Breitbart reported that an international disease-response group says an Ebola vaccine for the current outbreak could be developed within 100 days. The current concern is Bundibugyo Ebola, a strain for which there is no approved vaccine. Ebola is deadly, terrifying, and real. That makes it a serious health concern. It also makes it a powerful tool for fear-driven policy when governments, global health agencies, media, and pharmaceutical interests all begin moving in the same direction.
The question is whether Ebola’s fear factor could produce another COVID-style panic, where emergency becomes permission, and permission becomes coercion. COVID taught the world how fast “recommended” can become “required,” how quickly dissent can be branded dangerous, and how easily conscience, employment, travel, worship, education, and medical choice can be pressured by decree.
AP reported that the Congo has already restricted gatherings because of the outbreak, while WHO officials warn of spread and limited containment capacity.
Public health officials have a duty to respond to deadly disease. Citizens also have a duty to remember that emergencies have been used to expand authority, silence questions, and pressure people into medical decisions they would have otherwise refused.
We are also learning that vaccines, like all medical products, come with risks.
The CDC lists serious vaccine-related fever and non-fatal anaphylaxis among reports from Ebola vaccine clinical development. FDA materials for Ervebo warn that its effectiveness may be diminished in immunocompromised people and that risks must be weighed carefully. Merck states Ervebo protects against Zaire ebolavirus, not other Ebola species, and says the duration of protection is unknown.
That matters. Side effects can be immediate, delayed, minor, or serious. Some may be rare, but rare does happen to real people. No honest person should dismiss listed side effects with slogans like “That could never happen to me” or “They just have to list that.”
The wise path is neither panic nor blind trust. It is sober judgment, research, prayer, and body autonomy. Read both sides. Study official warnings. Ask who benefits. Ask whether the vaccine matches the actual strain. Ask whether the risk of disease outweighs the risk of the shot for your age, health, location, and exposure.
Government-sponsored health campaigns deserve scrutiny, especially when fear is used to produce compliance. Each person should make an informed decision without coercion, threats, or manipulation.
Ephesians 5:6 says, “Let no one deceive you with empty words, for because of these things comes the wrath of God upon the children of disobedience.”
That is sound counsel for the soul, and for the body. Compassion requires care for the sick. Wisdom requires guarding the free.
Sources
- Breitbart:
https://www.breitbart.com/europe/2026/05/22/ready-for-the-jab-response-group-says-race-for-ebola-vaccine-is-on/ - Reuters:
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/bundibugyo-ebola-vaccines-treatments-development-2026-05-21/ - Reuters:
https://www.reuters.com/business/healthcare-pharmaceuticals/who-africa-head-warns-against-underestimating-risk-ebola-spread-2026-05-22/ - AP:
https://apnews.com/article/4e08d8df6d9c34039a9e0b8bad7a8954 - WHO:
https://www.who.int/news-room/questions-and-answers/item/ebola-vaccines - CDC:
https://www.cdc.gov/ebola/hcp/vaccines/index.html - FDA:
https://www.fda.gov/vaccines-blood-biologics/ervebo - National Academies:
https://www.nationalacademies.org/news/does-the-current-ebola-vaccine-protect-against-every-type-of-ebola-virus
The post Ebola, Fear, and the Next Vaccine Push :: By Bill Wilson appeared first on Rapture Ready.
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