Learn to do well; seek judgment, relieve the oppressed, judge the fatherless, plead for the widow. relieve: or, righten
Isaiah 1:17 (KJV)
There is a kind of cruelty in broken promises, and today’s news carries the weight of that rupture. A program that worked—that gave malnourished children a second chance through accessible nutrition—has faltered because the resources sustaining it have withdrawn. Elsewhere, those fleeing environmental devastation find doors closing rather than opening. The prophet’s call to “relieve the oppressed” assumes a kind of persistent attentiveness, a refusal to look away once need is known. What does it mean to “learn to do well” when the machinery of care, once working, grinds to a halt? Perhaps it means sitting with the dissonance between what we know works and what we allow to fail—and letting that tension move us toward restoration rather than away from it.
What prompted this
Today's headlines reflect a fractured world: while conflict persists and wealth concentrates dramatically, vulnerable populations face the sudden collapse of lifesaving aid, and the displaced find new barriers to safety.
- Israel carries out air strikes on Lebanon, state media says, as Iran claims deal with US near BBC World
- Switzerland to vote on plan to cap population at 10 million BBC World
- Married at First Sight Australia stars not told partners had drug and violence convictions BBC World
- Elon Musk becomes world's first trillionaire as SpaceX soars in stock market debut BBC World
- A plan to get lifesaving food to malnourished kids was working -- until it wasn't NPR News
- 'Cool Ladies Club' is directed by 10 working-class women. They live up to the title NPR News
- COMIC: How excessive heat kills and how to stay safe NPR News
- Pope Leo XIV's flight home from Spain was grounded so the king came to his aid NPR News
- London council seizes social housing flat rented by Sierra Leone first lady The Guardian
- Trump targeting immigrants from countries hit most by climate shocks The Guardian