For I was an hungred, and ye gave me meat: I was thirsty, and ye gave me drink: I was a stranger, and ye took me in:
Matthew 25:35 (KJV)
The texture of today’s world is one of enforced migration: families evacuated from hostile shores, communities displaced by gang violence and conflict, young people locked out of housing markets, aid workers exhausted from tending wounds that keep multiplying. Even infrastructure—from robotaxis to snack packaging—reveals how fragile our systems are when disruption spreads. The verse from Matthew’s judgment scene offers not condemnation but a mirror: it asks what it means to see the stranger, the thirsty, the displaced, not as abstractions but as the face of Christ himself. In a time when so many are moving against their will, when donors grow weary and supplies dwindle, the question becomes not whether we can solve all suffering, but whether we can bear witness to it with open eyes and respond with what little we have.
What prompted this
Today's headlines are haunted by movement and dislocation—people fleeing violence, floods, persecution, and economic precarity; goods and resources disrupted by distant conflicts; aid networks straining under the weight of need.
- Thousands of Waymo robotaxis recalled over risk of entering flooded roads BBC World
- Nigerian film star Alexx Ekubo dies aged 40 BBC World
- Australia has some of the world's costliest homes. Will scrapping tax breaks help? BBC World
- Ghana to evacuate 300 from South Africa over anti-immigrant protests BBC World
- War in Iran costs $29 billion so far. And, students are finally improving in math NPR News
- Putin hails Russia's test launch of a new ballistic missile NPR News
- Japanese snack packages turning black-and-white as Iran war depletes ink supply NPR News
- Some Minneapolis donors have moved on. The immigrants waiting for help haven't NPR News
- ‘Blatant disregard for rights’: concern grows over Gabon’s social media clampdown The Guardian
- Internal displacements caused by violence or conflict at record high in 2025 The Guardian