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)
On days when the headlines pile witness upon witness—conflict expanding, the displaced growing more desperate, aid withdrawing, waters rising—the instinct is to despair. Yet the prophet in Lamentations speaks not from a place of false comfort but from the depths of ruin itself, where he discovers that mercies are not earned by the world’s righteousness but given fresh each dawn. This is not a promise that suffering will end today, or that the powerful will suddenly choose restraint, or that the sea will give back what it has taken. It is something quieter and harder: an invitation to notice, in the wreckage, that we are still here, still capable of witnessing, still called to mercy. Faithfulness, the text suggests, is not the world’s but God’s—and it returns not when we deserve it, but when we most need it.
What prompted this
Today's headlines reveal a world fractured by escalating conflict, displacement, environmental crisis, and the erosion of international support for the vulnerable. Amid military strikes, vanishing refugees, flooding, and aid cuts, the news carries the weight of suffering that exceeds any single narrative.
- Iran accuses US of hitting civilian infrastructure BBC World
- Trump alleges China meddled in 2020 election and questions voting security ahead of midterms BBC World
- More than 500 Rohingya vanished at sea - what happened? BBC World
- Japan relaxes royal succession rules - but ban on female emperors remains BBC World
- Takeaways from Trump's primetime speech. And, at least 2 dead in major Texas flooding NPR News
- Photos: When the World Cup came to town NPR News
- U.S. strikes bridges in Iran, Tehran targets U.S. bases in the Gulf NPR News
- 'Superworms' help scientists with a vexing task: Cleaning animal specimens NPR News
- UK aid cuts ‘reduce bilateral support to some African countries by 90%’ The Guardian
- Uganda calls for travel restrictions to be lifted after last Ebola patient discharged The Guardian