It is of the Lord's mercies that we are not consumed, because his compassions fail not. They are new every morning: great is thy faithfulness.
Lamentations 3:22-23 (KJV)
In times of tremor and rupture—when families call into ruins, when disease moves faster than rescue, when power silences dissent and nations trade strikes—the impulse is to ask where mercy has gone. Yet the prophet’s word speaks not of mercy as reward for the righteous, but as the ground we stand on each morning, whether we deserve it or not. Even in a day scarred by catastrophe and injustice, there are congregations crossing political lines to forgive debt, and diaspora communities finding pride in persistence. These small acts do not erase the suffering, but they testify to something the morning insists on: that compassion is not earned back into existence each dawn—it is already there, waiting to be recognized and received.
What prompted this
Today's headlines reflect a world fractured by crisis—natural disaster trapping families, disease spreading beyond reach, armed tensions escalating, and vulnerable voices silenced. Yet alongside the devastation, ordinary people are quietly choosing solidarity and mercy.
- Families calling out to loved ones trapped in rubble by Venezuela quakes BBC World
- In Caracas, this feels like the hardest moment in Venezuela's modern history BBC World
- US and Iran exchange strikes and accuse each other of violating ceasefire BBC World
- Why Kim Jong Un never talks about his mother - or her controversial bloodline BBC World
- These church members disagree on politics. Together they're wiping out medical debt NPR News
- July 4th fireworks in Washington: What's different for America's 250th? NPR News
- Food defined social hierarchy in 1776. Here's what was on the table NPR News
- Will the new student loan limits actually drive down tuition? Economists weigh in 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