“The heavens will be dissolved in flames and the elements melted by fire” (2 Peter 3:12). Yikes! That was a hard start to our first reading. To modern ears, the language sounds catastrophic, end of the world kind of stuff. “Frightening” would be a bit of an understatement. If we had not told you it was from 2 Peter you would have probably thought it was from Revelation.
Yet for Peter’s original audience, the passage was intended less as a threat than as a call to perseverance and hope. The letter is addressed to Christians who were growing weary because Christ had not returned as soon as they expected. Earlier in the chapter, Peter mentions scoffers who ask, “Where is the promise of his coming?” (3:4). Some were beginning to doubt whether God’s promises would ever be fulfilled. Peter responds in three ways:
First, God’s timetable is not ours. “The Lord does not delay his promise” (3:9). What seems like delay is actually divine patience. God is giving humanity time to repent. Just before our reading, Peter instructed the people that “With the Lord one day is like a thousand years and a thousand years like one day. The Lord does not delay his promise, as some regard delay, but he is patient with you, not wishing that any should perish but that all should come to repentance.” (2 Peter 3:8-9) Peter is likely echoing the psalmist: “A thousand years in your sight are as yesterday, now that it is past, or as a watch of the night.” (Ps 90:4)
Second, the present world is not ultimate. The imagery of fire is drawn from the Jewish prophetic tradition. Fire often symbolizes God’s judgment, purification, and renewal. Peter’s point is not to provide a scientific description of cosmic destruction but to proclaim that evil, injustice, and sin will not have the last word. The prophet Malachi writes: “He is like a refiner’s fire… He will sit refining and purifying silver.” (Malachi 3:2-3). A refiner does not throw silver into the furnace to destroy it. The fire burns away impurities so that the silver becomes what it was meant to be.
Third, Christians should live now according to the future God is preparing. Because believers await “new heavens and a new earth in which righteousness dwell” (3:13), they are called to holiness, peace, and steadfastness. The emphasis falls not on fear of destruction but on hope for renewal.
In our times we face a different challenge but a similar temptation. We often become discouraged when God’s kingdom seems slow to appear. Wars continue, injustice persists, and the Church itself experiences weakness and scandal. Like Peter’s audience, we can wonder whether God’s promises are really unfolding. Peter’s answer remains relevant:
God’s patience should not be mistaken for absence.
History is moving toward God’s purposes, even when we cannot see it.
Christians are called to live as citizens of the coming kingdom now.
The “new heavens and new earth” remind us that Christianity is not merely about escaping the world but about God’s intention to transform and renew creation.
There is an interesting contrast in the passage. Everything that appears permanent—the heavens, the earth, the structures of this world—will pass away. Yet the one thing that endures is what is rooted in God: faith, holiness, righteousness, and grace. Peter is essentially asking: If everything else is temporary, what kind of life is worth building? His answer comes at the end of the reading: “Grow in grace and in the knowledge of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ” (3:18).
The Christian response to an uncertain future is neither fear nor speculation about the end times. It is growth in holiness, confidence in God’s promises, and faithful discipleship today. Things come and go, but we are called to keep our eyes fixed on the world God is bringing to birth.
Image credit: Created by ChapGPT, May 31 2026 | “The heavens will be dissolved in flames and the elements melted by fire” (2 Peter 3:12)
In the year 2024 China built more ships in their own yards – in one year – than the United States built, in total, since the end of World War II. At the end of that war the U.S. had approximately 11,000 logistic and auxiliary vessels – far, far more than we needed for peacetime. Post-war the surplus was sold or given to European allies to “jump start” their economies and shipyards. The same was done for Asian nations – including Japan. Today, China’s shipbuilding capacity is approximately 200 times that of the United States. That reflects the massive expansion of Chinese capacity and near extinction of a once great U.S. capacity. It wasn’t always that way.
This post walks the reader through the history of U.S. shipbuilding from the 1920s up until today. It describes the output as well as the supporting political action needed to build the needed war-time capacity for a two-ocean Navy. It does not take much to imagine the needed capital and political commitment to begin to restore U.S. shipbuilding.
U.S. Shipbuilding – a history
Following World War I and the Great Depression, America’s shipbuilding industry had severely atrophied. Between 1922 and 1937, U.S. shipyards produced almost no oceangoing dry cargo freighters. The few yards that did remain operational were mostly focused on occasional naval cruisers or tankers. In 1937, the United States possessed a mere 10 shipyards with the capacity to construct oceangoing vessels. However, by the conclusion of World War II in 1945, this industrial base had undergone a dramatic expansion, resulting in more than 80 major public and private shipyards operating nationwide to sustain the wartime fleet.
Between 1937 and 1945, U.S. shipyards produced a staggering total of over 14,000 major vessels, including approximately 5,200 large ocean-going merchant ships and nearly 9,000 naval combatants and major auxiliaries (excluding over 50,000 small landing craft).
Merchant and Cargo Fleet Production. Under the strategic direction of the U.S. Maritime Commission, the industry prioritized the production of commercial hulls essential to maintaining the global allied supply chain. This immense industrial effort yielded a total of 5,171 ocean-going merchant vessels, including:
Liberty Ships: A total of 2,710 built. These standard, mass-produced cargo vessels served as the indispensable backbone of allied wartime logistics.
Victory Ships: A total of 534 built. As faster and larger successors to the Liberty ship, these were designed to remain competitive in post-war merchant trade.
Standard Cargo Ships: approximately 700 built. These high-quality, turbine-driven vessels (comprising C1, C2, C3, and C4 designs) were utilized for both cargo transport and various military conversions.
Tankers: A total of 705 built. This figure includes 525 of the iconic T2 turbo-electric tankers, which were vital for the transport of fuel, oil, and aviation gasoline.
Minor/Specialized Merchant Hull Types: Approximately 522 built. This diverse category included refrigerated “Reefer” ships, Lakers, barges, and ocean-going tugboats.
Naval Combatant Production. The U.S. Navy underwent a historic expansion to become the most powerful fleet in human history, incorporating thousands of warships into its ranks. Major combat vessels constructed during this period included:
Aircraft Carriers (All Types): A total of 128 built. This included 22 fleet carriers (CVs), Light Carriers (CVLs) built on smaller hulls often converted from cruiser designs to rapidly put more flight decks into service and smaller escort carriers (CVEs or “jeep carriers”) converted from merchant hulls and primary used to transport aircraft from the U.S. to operating carriers or bases.
Battleships: A total of 8 built, representing the North Carolina, South Dakota, and Iowa classes. These served as fleet anti-craft platforms as well as shore bombardment ships.
Cruisers: A total of 48 built, including heavy (CA) and light cruisers (CL/CLAA). As the war in the Pacific progressed cruisers were part of the defence-in-depth screen for the aircraft carriers with enhanced anti-aircraft defense while still retaining surface combat capability.
Destroyers: A total of 352 built of which 175 were Fletcher class DDs that were the workhorse of fleet picket and anti-aircraft defence.
Destroyer Escorts: A total of 563 built. These were specialized anti-submarine warships tasked with convoy protection.
Submarines: A total of 203 built, primarily consisting of Gato, Balao, and Tench-class fleet submarines.
Auxiliary and Small Naval Craft. In addition to frontline combatants, American shipyards produced thousands of secondary and logistical naval hulls to support the fleet:
Frigates and Corvettes: Approximately 160 built, largely consisting of Tacoma-class patrol frigates.
Mine Warfare and Patrol Vessels: Over 2,500 built, including minesweepers, sub-chasers, and PT boats.
Amphibious Warfare Ships: Over 2,500 built, including large ocean-going amphibious vessels such as LSTs (Landing Ship, Tanks) and LSMs.
U.S. Shipbuilding Acts and Programs
The Roosevelt Administration was active as much as 8 years before the war. Early acts served dual purposes of economic stimulation during the Great Depression but also to keep the shipyards open and the skilled labor engaged.
Program / Act
Year
Core Objective
Key Combatant Impact
NIRA Executive Order
1933
Depression relief; initial modernization.
Funded USS Enterprise & Yorktown.
Vinson-Trammell Act
1934
Build up to maximum international treaty ceilings.
102 replacement warships (Cruisers/DDs/Subs).
Second Vinson Act
1938
20% expansion post-treaty collapse.
Shifted focus to Essex-class carriers & fast battleships.
11% Naval Expansion Act
1940
Emergency tonnage boost following the fall of France.
Accelerated fast carrier task force components.
Two-Ocean Navy Act
1940
70% fleet expansion; global naval dominance.
Laid down the massive fleet that fought from 1942–1945.
The point of this historical review is to show what was necessary in terms of supporting military operations at distances far from home ports – the dynamic that the U.S. faces in the Indo-China Region – an area that ranges from the Straits of Hormuz to the South China Sea.
U.S. Shipbuilding – 2026
At present, the United States maintains four public naval shipyards alongside approximately eight to nine active private facilities possessing the industrial capacity to construct large, deep-draft ocean-going merchant vessels or major naval combatants.
Public Naval Shipyards (4)
Operating under the direct supervision of the U.S. Navy via NAVSEA, these four public facilities are no longer utilized for new construction. Instead, their operations are dedicated exclusively to the intricate depot-level maintenance, refueling, and modernization of the fleet’s nuclear-powered aircraft carriers and submarines.
Norfolk Naval Shipyard (NNSY): Located in Portsmouth, VA, this yard manages the maintenance requirements for nuclear carriers and submarines.
Puget Sound Naval Shipyard & IMF (PSNS): Situated in Bremerton, WA, its primary focus remains nuclear vessel support and carrier maintenance.
Pearl Harbor Naval Shipyard & IMF (PHNSY): Positioned in Oahu, HI, this facility is strategically vital for Pacific Fleet submarine overhauls.
Portsmouth Naval Shipyard (PNSY): Located in Kittery, ME, this yard is specialized specifically in submarine modernization and overhaul.
Private Shipyards Capable of Large-Scale New Construction (8–9)
The defense industrial base relies on a highly consolidated group of private defense contractors—primarily dominated by General Dynamics and Huntington Ingalls Industries (HII)—alongside a limited number of commercial shipbuilders.
Naval Combatant Specialists. The following major yards are responsible for the construction of frontline combatants for the U.S. Navy and Coast Guard:
Newport News Shipbuilding: Located in Newport News, VA, this is the nation’s sole facility capable of constructing nuclear-powered aircraft carriers (the Gerald R. Ford class) and one of only two yards building nuclear-powered submarines.
General Dynamics Electric Boat: Situated in Groton, CT, this facility is dedicated exclusively to the design and construction of nuclear submarines, including the Virginia and Columbia classes.
General Dynamics Bath Iron Works: Located in Bath, ME, this yard primarily constructs surface combatants, with a focus on Arleigh Burke-class guided-missile destroyers.
Ingalls Shipbuilding: Positioned in Pascagoula, MS, this yard builds amphibious assault ships, Arleigh Burke destroyers, and national security cutters for the U.S. Coast Guard.
Austal USA: Located in Mobile, AL, this facility specializes in aluminum and steel vessels, such as Littoral Combat Ships (LCS), expeditionary fast transports, and Coast Guard cutters.
Fincantieri Marinette Marine: Situated in Marinette, WI, this yard constructed the Freedom-class LCS and is currently tasked with the production of the Navy’s new Constellation-class guided-missile frigates.
Currently, the United States accounts for less than 1% of the world’s large commercial shipbuilding, producing only 3 to 5 deep-draft merchant vessels annually. As private builders are heavily optimized for the specific requirements of rigid naval contracts, the industry lacks the requisite “surge” capacity or infrastructure to absorb substantial merchant or naval losses during a prolonged geopolitical crisis.
Commercial Cargo & Dual-Use Yards
A select group of only two to three shipyards maintains the industrial infrastructure necessary for the construction of large, ocean-going commercial hulls. These facilities persist largely through the fulfillment of U.S. government auxiliary contracts, bridging the gap between civilian and military requirements.
General Dynamics NASSCO: San Diego, CA, this yard constructs large commercial product tankers and container ships while simultaneously producing Navy auxiliary supply ships, such as the T-AO fleet oilers.
Philly Shipyard: Philadelphia, PA, this facility has a historic record of building large commercial container ships and tankers; it was recently acquired by Hanwha Ocean of South Korea to support the production of national-security multi-mission vessels.
Keppel AmFELS: Brownsville, TX, this yard retains significant large-scale construction capability and occasionally delivers Jones Act-compliant commercial transport vessels to the domestic market.
The Hanwha Group and U.S. Shipbuilding
Hanwha Group has formally concluded its $100 million acquisition of Philly Shipyard, a transaction that signals a fundamental paradigm shift in the revitalization of the nation’s atrophied maritime industrial base through allied foreign investment. Prior to this landmark deal, the Philadelphia facility struggled with inconsistent order books, often delivering fewer than two vessels per year.
In a massive commitment to industrial modernization, Hanwha announced a $5 billion infrastructure plan dedicated to the comprehensive upgrade of the Philadelphia yard. This strategic capital injection will fund the construction of two additional dry docks, three quays, and a state-of-the-art block assembly facility. Through these enhancements, Hanwha aims to scale the yard’s industrial output from 1.5 ships annually to an unprecedented capacity of 10 to 20 vessels per year by 2035.
Central to this revitalization is the implementation of the “Smart Yard” concept, which integrates highly automated South Korean shipbuilding technologies—including robotic welding, automated inspections, and digital twin modeling—to address decades of stagnant productivity in American shipyards. Furthermore, the investment establishes a 36-month apprenticeship program designed to train over 1,000 new shipbuilders, ultimately supporting a workforce of up to 5,000 personnel in Pennsylvania.
This acquisition serves as the cornerstone of a broader $150 billion commitment by South Korea. Acknowledging that the United States lacks the organic capacity to match the industrial shipbuilding scale of China, Washington is increasingly viewing South Korea and Japan as vital industrial lifelines rather than mere trading partners.
While U.S. statutes historically prohibited the foreign construction of naval combatants, Hanwha’s strategy of acquiring and modernizing facilities on American soil effectively circumvents these restrictions while ensuring compliance with “Made in America” mandates. Consequently, the current administration has signaled that Hanwha will play an integral role in the future construction of Navy frigates and nuclear-powered submarines.
Current Initiatives
The administration has announced several major initiatives intended to rebuild and expand U.S. commercial and military shipbuilding capacity, largely in response to concerns about China’s dominance in maritime industry and naval production. The centerpiece is President Donald Trump’s April 2025 executive order, “Restoring America’s Maritime Dominance.” The administration directed multiple federal departments (Defense, Transportation, Commerce, Homeland Security, and Labor) to create a comprehensive strategy for rebuilding U.S. shipbuilding and merchant marine capability – a Maritime Action Plan (MAP). The February 2026-issued MAP focuses on expanding U.S. shipyard capacity, increasing the number of U.S.-built commercial ships, strengthening the maritime workforce, improving Navy and Coast Guard procurement efficiency, revitalizing the U.S.-flag merchant marine and rebuilding maritime supply chains.
Despite the ambitious rhetoric, significant obstacles remain.
U.S. shipyards lack large-scale commercial production capacity
Workforce shortages are severe
Shipbuilding costs in the U.S. remain far higher than in Asia
Many proposals require congressional appropriations
Rebuilding industrial supply chains may take a decade or longer
Some analysts have also questioned whether executive actions alone can reverse decades of industrial decline without sustained bipartisan funding and long-term policy continuity.
The Jones Act
The “Jones Act” is the common name for Section 27 of the Merchant Marine Act of 1920, a U.S. federal law governing domestic maritime commerce. The law requires that cargo transported between two U.S. ports must be carried on ships that are built in the U.S., owned by U.S. citizens or U.S. companies, registered (flagged) in the U.S. and crewed primarily by U.S. citizens or permanent residents. The law applies to “cabotage,” meaning domestic shipping between American ports, e.g.: Houston to New York, Los Angeles to Hawaii, Jacksonville to Puerto Rico, Seattle to Alaska, Long Beach to Guam.
The Jones Act was enacted after the First World War because the United States recognized that it lacked a sufficiently strong merchant marine and shipbuilding base to support wartime logistics. Congress concluded that the nation needed a domestic shipbuilding industry, a trained pool of mariners, and a reserve fleet that could support military mobilization – all national security issues. Many defense analysts, shipbuilders, labor unions, and maritime organizations argue that the Jones Act is essential for national security and industrial resilience. Critics argue that the Jones Act substantially increases shipping costs and contributes to inefficiency.
Military Sealift Command
The Military Sealift Command (MSC) is the primary organization responsible for strategic sealift, naval logistics, and ocean transportation for the United States military. It operates one of the world’s largest government-owned auxiliary fleets and is essential to sustaining U.S. global military operations.
MSC operates approximately 130 ships supported by roughly 5,000–5,500 civilian mariners supplemented by additional contract mariners and military personnel. MSC’s fleet is absolutely critical because it carries fuel, ammunition, vehicles, aircraft equipment, supplies, troops and general cargo. Without MSC, the U.S. military could not sustain large overseas operations.
MSC faces several serious challenges today. Many sealift ships are old, some average over 40 years in age which carries increasing maintenance costs as well as needed upgrades in navigation, communications, and security measures. Because of the diminished shipbuilding capability and budgetary constraints, the U.S. has struggled to replace ships quickly or at all.
The U.S. also faces shortages of qualified civilian mariners. Current assessments indicate that sustained wartime activation could exceed available crews. This issue is increasingly viewed as a national-security concern.
Potential conflict scenarios involving Taiwan or the western Pacific create enormous logistics challenges because of vast distances, missile threats, port vulnerability and limited sealift capacity.
This coming Sunday is the Solemnity of the Body and Blood of Christ. All the gospel writers describe the miracle of the fishes and loaves (Mk 6:33-46, Mt 14:13-23, Lk 9:10-17, and Jn 6:1-15). Through the dialogue that precedes and follows the miracle, Jesus teaches the disciples to trust in him whenever they meet with difficulties in their future apostolic endeavors. He teaches them that they should engage in using whatever resources they have even if they are clearly inadequate. He will supply what is lacking and underscores the meaning of the their continuing mission:
they are to nourish the people,
they will need God’s help in nourishing the people, and
their job is to distribute that which Christ provides.
In the account of the miracles, although Jesus orders the Apostles to feed the people, the main act is performed by Jesus alone. In a solemn, liturgical style, St John describes the scene as “Jesus then took the loaves, and when he had given thanks, he distributed them to those who were seated…” (Jn 6:11). Where the other gospels go on to describe more events, the fourth gospel pauses to theological reflect on the meaning of the miracle whose inner meaning is spelled out at length in Jn 6:25-59. These verses are known as the Bread of Life Discourse.
The best way to understand this discourse is to recognize that it centers on one biblical text, “He gave them bread from heaven to eat” (v. 31), and is therefore a conscious demonstration of the truth of 5:39, 46–47 that the Scriptures illuminate the person of Jesus. The pivotal text is an echo of many Old Testament verses:
Exod 16:4: “I will now rain down bread from heaven for you”;
Neh 9:15: “Food from heaven you gave them in their hunger”;
Ps 78:24: “He rained manna upon them for food and gave them heavenly bread”;
Ps 105:40: “ … and with bread from heaven he satisfied them.”
All of these verses are referring to the miracle of manna in the desert during the Exodus from Egypt. The first reading on Corpus Christi Sunday is taken from Dt 8 in which Moses reminds the people of what God had done for them: “…fed you with manna, a food unknown to you and your fathers, in order to show you that not by bread alone does one live, but by every word that comes forth from the mouth of the LORD.” (Dt 8:3)
This is a sign/miracle which discloses Jesus as the one who sustains us with his living word and with the gift of his own life in the Eucharistic bread. Not only the sign of the bread but also the reassuring words to the disciples, ‘It is I’ (John 6:20), along with the Christological ‘I am’ statements (vv. 25, 35, 41, 48-51), all draw our attention beyond the words of Jesus and beyond the Eucharist itself to the person of Jesus who communicated his life-giving power through them. For St. John, the point of this scene is that Jesus is the Moses-like prophet who feeds his people with a new bread. This new bread is Jesus’ word of revelation received in faith as well as his Eucharistic bread. But the crowd’s understanding is clouded by their messianic expectations because their hopes are tainted with politics and power. They do not see the spiritual nature of the messianic kingdom; only the outward signs.
The discourse is interrupted four times by dialogue from/within the audience. Lifted from the text and placed in order of occurrence it is easy to see the shifting reaction of the audience as their messianic expectations are not being met.
So they said to him, “What sign can you do, that we may see and believe in you? What can you do? Our ancestors ate manna in the desert, as it is written ‘He gave them bread from heaven to eat.’” (John 6:30-31)
So they said to him, “Sir, give us this bread always.” (John 6:34)
The Jews murmured about him because he said, “I am the bread that came down from heaven,” and they said, “Is this not Jesus, the son of Joseph? Do we not know his father and mother? Then how can he say, ‘I have come down from heaven’?” (John 6:41-42)
The Jews quarreled among themselves, saying, “How can this man give us [his] flesh to eat?” (John 6:52)
In Jn 6:4 we are told that the Passover was at hand. After that St John has little to directly say about the Passover and its relation to the Bread of Life Discourse. Many Catholic scholars believe that St John’s writing assumes that the reader is familiar with the synoptic Gospels. Consequently, St John does not recount the story of Jesus, rather, St John gives the theological perspective. Whereas the synoptic writers recount the Eucharistic institution in their Gospels, St John provides the theological basis for the event. Where the synoptic writers place their accounts in the proper historical setting, the Passover feast; St John provides the explanations in a different setting, following the miracle of the feeding of the 5,000. In this way he shows the prefiguring of Holy Eucharist in the OT via the Exodus account, as well as an immediate prefiguring here at another Passover.
But St John did not simply use the Passover setting as a backdrop. There is some evidence that in St John’s telling of the story he has captured very strong parallels to the Passover feast, just as in the Last Supper. In the Passover liturgy four children ask questions about what is enacted by the celebration. These questions have parallels in questions that the crowd asks of Jesus. The first question of the meal is about the works of God. The second question regards passages in Scripture. The mocking question in vv.41-42 is equated with the third question posed at the meal by the ‘wicked child’. The ‘sincere child’ asks the fourth question supposed to be a practical question paralleled in v.52.