[To the chief Musician for the sons of Korah, A Song upon Alamoth.] God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble. for: or, of
Psalms 46:1 (KJV)
When the earth shakes and the air burns, when the vulnerable find themselves hunted, when the powerful negotiate over the fate of regions and people feel fear rising through the rubble, the psalmist offers not an explanation but a presence. The word translated “very present” carries the sense of being immediately, actively there—not distant, not delayed. In moments when disaster strikes suddenly and human systems prove fragile, we are invited to notice what remains constant: a refuge that does not depend on our competence or our plans, available in the very midst of trouble, not after it ends. This is not a promise that calamity will be averted, but that in calamity, one need not face it alone.
What prompted this
The day's news carries the weight of sudden catastrophe and mounting human vulnerability—earthquakes claiming lives, extreme heat endangering millions, violence targeting the displaced and marginalized, and geopolitical tensions threatening stability.
- 'I thought I was going to die' - Venezuelans describe earthquake panic BBC World
- France, UK and Spain see record temperatures as heatwave grips western Europe BBC World
- Trump asks Congress for billions for Iran war, after tension with Republicans BBC World
- Oil price falls back to pre-Iran war levels BBC World
- 2 earthquakes in Venezuela kill at least 164. And, Trump cancels housing bill signing NPR News
- 4 surprising things to know about abortion in America since Dobbs NPR News
- 'They can kill you': Immigrants fear a surge in xenophobic violence in South Africa NPR News
- How to find middle ground when your partner wants kids — and you don't NPR News
- France confirms first Ebola case in doctor who had worked in DRC The Guardian
- Play puts spotlight on Kenya’s crisis of gender-based violence The Guardian