Daily Verse
lamentmercycare for the vulnerablethe cost of conflict

Is it nothing to you, all ye that pass by? behold, and see if there be any sorrow like unto my sorrow, which is done unto me, wherewith the LORD hath afflicted me in the day of his fierce anger. Is it...: or, It is nothing pass by: Heb. pass by the way?

Lamentations 1:12 (KJV)

On days when the news carries stories of those killed for staying at their posts, villages destroyed, the displaced made doubly vulnerable, and institutions that should protect the weak instead threatening harm, the ancient voice of lament speaks with particular force. The writer of Lamentations does not rush to explanation or comfort but calls out to those passing by—asking them truly to see the suffering before them, to let it pierce the ordinary busyness of life. Today’s headlines ask something similar: whether we are willing to look at the cost borne by the vulnerable, the conservationist who would not flee, the trafficking victim cast back onto the streets, the disabled person watching protections erode. Lament is not despair; it is the refusal to let suffering be invisible or footnoted.

What prompted this

Today's news carries the weight of multiple overlapping crises: active conflicts displacing and killing civilians, including those devoted to protection and peace; vulnerable populations—trafficking victims, disabled persons, those caught in violence—facing compounded suffering; and slower-moving injustices (historical trauma, institutional harm) demanding reckoning and repair.