Greater love hath no man than this, that a man lay down his life for his friends.
John 15:13 (KJV)
When catastrophe strikes without warning, what we remember are the moments of love made visible—a mother running toward her child instead of away from danger, a choice made in seconds that echoes beyond a lifetime. Today’s news holds much that troubles: the machinery of conflict, the creep of authoritarian power, disease spreading where oversight fails. But woven through it is also the stubborn persistence of human love, the kind that asks nothing and gives everything. In times when so much feels beyond our control, we might ask what it means to live by the logic of that love—not as sentiment, but as a way of seeing where our own small sacrifices might matter, where care for those near us becomes its own kind of resistance against a world grown hard.
What prompted this
Today's news carries the weight of sudden loss and ongoing suffering—earthquakes claiming hundreds, families searching for the missing, and across the world, violence and instability threatening the most vulnerable. Amid it all, one story stands out: a mother's sacrifice for her child.
- US strikes Iran after attack on cargo ship BBC World
- Venezuela earthquakes kill 920 people as international rescue teams arrive BBC World
- Mother dies saving daughter in Venezuela earthquakes BBC World
- Meloni and Trump: A very public fall-out that is proving very hard to fix BBC World
- If a Lyme disease vaccine gets approved, how would it go over? We asked hunters NPR News
- As Supreme Court expands Trump's immigration power, experts warn of steeper U.S. population decline NPR News
- How coach Mauricio Pochettino made believers out of the U.S. World Cup team NPR News
- Inside a secretive Ukrainian team launching deep drone strikes at Russia NPR News
- ‘Everyone is talking about Cape Verde’: World Cup run delights diaspora community in UK The Guardian
- Whereabouts of nearly 300 people with Ebola unknown in DR Congo The Guardian