To him that is afflicted pity should be shewed from his friend; but he forsaketh the fear of the Almighty. is afflicted: Heb. melteth
Job 6:14 (KJV)
When calamity strikes suddenly and indiscriminately—when buildings collapse and the earth itself becomes unreliable—we are reminded of our radical dependence on mercy, both human and divine. The news today speaks of rescue workers racing against time, of communities mobilizing aid across borders, of the fragile thread that connects us to those in deepest need. Job’s words cut deeper still: in moments when the afflicted cry out, the measure of our faith is not what we believe in theory, but whether we show pity—whether we abandon the comfort of distance and stand beside those who suffer. The question before us is whether we will be the friend who turns away, or the one who bends toward the wound.
What prompted this
The day is dominated by natural disaster and human suffering: devastating earthquakes have struck, leaving thousands missing and entire communities in ruins, while concurrent crises—disease outbreaks, displacement, political instability—compound the vulnerability of those already fragile.
- Earthquake is devastating blow to Venezuela at time of uncertainty BBC World
- Aerial footage reveals destruction in coastal Venezuela BBC World
- UN pauses Strait of Hormuz evacuation plan after cargo ship attacked BBC World
- Christmas market attacker jailed for life for murdering six in Germany BBC World
- Rescuers scramble to find Venezuela earthquake survivors. And, SCOTUS rules on asylum NPR News
- 'We are with you, Venezuela': Houston community rallies after deadly earthquakes NPR News
- How well do you know your Reflecting Pool news? Because the quiz will test you NPR News
- Trump axed a Black history exhibit. Former park rangers are teaching it anyway. NPR News
- Whereabouts of nearly 300 people with Ebola unknown in DRC The Guardian
- Outrage as woman jailed for three years after criticising Somali government online The Guardian