For the oppression of the poor, for the sighing of the needy, now will I arise, saith the LORD; I will set him in safety from him that puffeth at him. puffeth...: or, would ensnare him
Psalms 12:5 (KJV)
The promise in this verse is not that suffering ends quickly or that systems correct themselves, but that God hears the cry of those without recourse. Today’s headlines catalog the ways institutions—military, political, adoptive, athletic, diplomatic—fail the people they ought to protect: the child caught between adoptive parents and trafficking investigations, the young athlete whose vulnerability to heat exhaustion was not heeded, the refugee families turned away at port, the sick and dying when aid programs shrink. There is no comfort in the sight of such failures. But the verse does not ask us to look away or accept them as inevitable; it invites us to recognize in the sighing of the needy the sound that moves the heart of God, and to consider what it means to set safety in place where it is absent.
What prompted this
Today's news reveals cascading failures in the systems meant to protect the vulnerable—from military strikes and civilian casualties, to children in the adoption system, to athletes under supervision, to marginalized communities denied refuge. Across headlines runs a thread of people harmed by institutions they depended on.
- Iran launches more strikes after accusing US of striking near nuclear plant BBC World
- Democrat Graham Platner suspends campaign for key US Senate race after assault allegation BBC World
- Platner's disastrous candidacy exposes rifts that could dampen Democrats' Senate hopes BBC World
- It was 'love at first sight' with their adopted baby. Then they were told he may have been trafficked BBC World
- Former coach at Bucknell University charged in death of freshman football player NPR News
- Graham Platner ends Senate bid. And, why Nolan Wells' death captured national attention NPR News
- Bonnie Tyler, singer of ballad 'Total Eclipse of the Heart,' has died at 75 NPR News
- A Florida airport is officially renamed for Trump. What does he stand to gain? NPR News
- LGBTQ+ cruise ship refused entry to Egypt days after Turkey turned it away The Guardian
- Species’ ingenious survival strategies no match for human destruction, red list reveals The Guardian