Dogen developed the Tendai and Lotus Sutra view of the "Dharma Moment" ("dharma" here meaning something like "event" or "happening" or "phenomenon"), each "fully exerting" as itself. The things and events of this world and our life, from the stars to smallest blade of grass or atom, all the changes and happenings of our life, are each a "Dharma Moment" in its own "Dharma Position" into which all space and time and Buddha pours and "comes to life" as that thing or moment. The result is that (together with the usual Mahayana Buddhist teaching that all the separate "selves" and things and happenings of this world are like dreams that are swept away in a vision of their "emptiness" of separate selfness), the whole of reality is reaffirmed and blossoming as each self and thing and moment ... which is thus each and all made sacred, each thing or moment now known as boundless and complete, as real as real can be, encountered as just the whole of this life and world happening, each timeless yet just this moment of its happening, each Buddha and each a shining jewel in its way that fully contains the "Whole Thing," the "Whole Catastrophe" that is our world.
In other words, you have had some happenings in this world (now, as in Buddha's time or Dogen's time), some ups and downs, welcome or unwelcome, happy or so sad this week ... each Buddha, each Sacred, each Whole.
...
But ... although each problem in this world can be honored and bowed to as a sacred jewel, whole and complete, just as it is ...
... that does not stop us in any way from getting busy to fix the problems that we can, stopping the wars, fighting the diseases, ending poverty, etc. etc. etc.
We bow to each, honor each, see each as the whole world happening ... then get busy to fix what we can.