I called upon thy name, O Lord, out of the low dungeon. Thou hast heard my voice: hide not thine ear at my breathing, at my cry.
Lamentations 3:55-56 (KJV)
When systems of power collide—whether through arms or policy or economic pressure—those without voice or agency bear the weight. The book of Lamentations speaks from the wreckage of a fallen city, where the writer cries out not with confidence but with raw need: Lord, hear me from the pit. Today’s news offers many such pits: the child killed at sea, the villagers deceived by false peace, the families displaced by climate and conflict, the protester shot during dissent. Lamentations does not promise swift rescue or justice rendered; it simply records the cry itself as an act of witness. Perhaps our calling today is to listen—to acknowledge that the cry has been made, that it echoes, and that God’s silence is not indifference but an invitation to us to become the hearing that the vulnerable desperately need.
What prompted this
Today's news cycles between escalating military conflict and strikes across regions, the suffering of civilians caught in violence and displacement, and the erosion of protections for the vulnerable—from climate refugees to detained minors to those seeking asylum.
- US and Iran exchange strikes across Middle East for second day in a row BBC World
- Trump says 'I love the inflation' as US prices rise at fastest rate in three years BBC World
- The furious dispute over what caused Air India flight 171 to crash BBC World
- Thai court sentences two men to death over Bangkok shrine bombing BBC World
- Greetings from a Seoul museum, where Buddhist masterpieces offer calm away from city bustle NPR News
- U.S. launches second day of Iran strikes. And, World Cup facts to know before kickoff NPR News
- Along the 7 train in Queens, World Cup fans welcome the 'beautiful game' NPR News
- How 'algorithm' got its name from a 9th-century Persian mathematician NPR News
- Trump targeting immigrants from countries hit most by climate shocks The Guardian
- Global brands ‘likely’ using mineral that funds rebels accused of atrocities in DRC, investigation finds The Guardian