For the Lord will not cast off for ever: But though he cause grief, yet will he have compassion according to the multitude of his mercies. For he doth not afflict willingly nor grieve the children of men.
Lamentations 3:31-33 (KJV)
Today’s news carries the weight of systems failing those who depend on them most—healthcare collapsing under economic strain, funding for disease prevention cut without warning, military postures hardening across regions where ordinary people will bear the cost. The prophet’s words offer not easy comfort but honest acknowledgment: grief is real, suffering is not always deserved, and yet there exists a mercy larger than human policy. To sit with this tension—to grieve what is broken without surrendering to despair—may be the work of faith in such a day. The question is not whether compassion can fix what we have broken, but whether we will turn toward it anyway, as those who know ourselves to be held by something deeper than the news cycle.
What prompted this
A day marked by escalating military tensions, sudden policy reversals affecting vulnerable populations, and humanitarian strain—moments when the world's fragility becomes visible and the question of how we respond to suffering grows urgent.
- Trump says ceasefire is 'over' after US and Iran trade strikes BBC World
- US strikes target Iranian military boats BBC World
- Will Le Pen rise again? French nationalist leader defiant after court's ruling BBC World
- Nato allies announce £37bn for new missile project BBC World
- Trump says he believes the Iran ceasefire is 'over.' And, IOC lifts Russia's suspension NPR News
- A spirit of resilience helps Venezuelans face healthcare challenges after the quakes NPR News
- Trump administration abruptly cancels grants for teen pregnancy prevention NPR News
- What's behind the push to make peptide therapies more readily available NPR News
- Catnip lotion as effective as Deet at repelling mosquitoes, study finds The Guardian
- What will define Elon Musk’s legacy? Doge cuts to USAID Ebola programs The Guardian