To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:
Ecclesiastes 3:1 (KJV)
The news today speaks in different registers—some stories announce new beginnings, others revisit old wounds that demand acknowledgment, still others document the ordinary persistence of human life amid threat. There is a temptation to read each headline as urgent, final, conclusive. But the dominant shape of today’s reporting suggests something else: that meaningful change—whether negotiated peace, historical justice, or simple endurance—unfolds according to its own rhythm, not ours. The talks that began last week will take months. The reckoning with historical harm spans centuries and generations. Even crisis responds to seasons we do not control. To attend to these stories without despair or false confidence is to recognize that our task is not to force resolution but to show up faithfully to the work of each season as it comes.
What prompted this
Today's news carries a current of tentative progress amid deep uncertainty—from diplomatic negotiations beginning their slow work to calls for historical reckoning that span generations, suggesting that healing and accord require time and sustained commitment.
- First round of US-Iran talks ends with encouraging progress, mediators say BBC World
- Trump-backed political outsider wins Colombia election, initial count shows BBC World
- Largest ever cocaine bust in Australia after police raid underground bunker BBC World
- Russian troop build-up threatens city seen as key to seizing Ukraine's Donbas BBC World
- 8 things to know about the gut microbiome and keeping yours healthy NPR News
- Alan Greenspan, the legendary former Federal Reserve chair, dies NPR News
- UK PM Keir Starmer resigns. And, US and Iran agree to roadmap for final deal NPR News
- Keir Starmer announces resignation as UK prime minister NPR News
- Sweat, tears and camaraderie as 20,000 runners take on world’s largest ultramarathon The Guardian
- Ghana conference calls for formal apology for transatlantic slave trade The Guardian