Kin
Cultura, identidade, relacionamentos, pertencimento. A Bíblia é uma história de família antes de qualquer outra coisa. Estas reflexões acompanham as notícias sobre como as pessoas permanecem unidas ou se separam, e o que as Escrituras dizem sobre as duas coisas.

Meninos praticam amor com algo que não sabe dizer não
Oitenta e cinco por cento dos meninos britânicos entre doze e dezesseis anos já conversaram com um chatbot. Mais da metade prefere por poder controlar a conversa.

O cérebro de um pai se reorganiza em torno do recém-nascido em nove semanas
Exames de ressonância magnética em pais de primeira viagem mostram uma reconfiguração acelerada em torno do bebê. Moisés notou o mesmo fenômeno numa marcha pelo deserto, há 2.500 anos.

Os Estados Unidos votaram para manter Mr. Rogers em sua correspondência
Um concurso postal, um cardigã, um fantoche. Vinte e três anos após sua morte, o país escolheu o homem mais gentil que já apareceu em sua televisão.

Fifteen Hundred Strangers Came So He Wouldn't Be Buried Alone
A Navy veteran with no family left was buried by people who had never met him. They came anyway.

The Cold Night No One Lifts
Teen drinking is collapsing. So is the room where the drinking used to happen. Sobriety and solitude are not the same finding.

The Cistern That Was Always Going to Leak
A 24-year-old writer is naming what an industry built on the language of liberation has delivered to the girls inside it.

Names Set Into the Pavement
The numbers climb while the stones stay small. Both refuse the abstraction we offer them.
The Marriage Gap Read Honestly
The data is real. Both tribes are misreading it. What does it cost when a culture talks itself out of one of its oldest practices?
The Shrinking of the Neighbor
Seventy percent of the world will not trust someone whose values, facts, or culture differ from their own. The circle is closing.
Forgiven Much, Tipped More
An Idaho pizza driver bought a stranger's Diet Cokes and ended up retired. The economy underneath the GoFundMe is older than the camera that caught it.
The Teens Who Rewrote Family
D.C. foster youth wrote a bill letting older teens curate their own legally binding kin. Scripture has been operating in this category since Ruth.
The App That Asked "Are You Dead?"
An app that pings urban Chinese professionals every 48 hours to confirm they are still alive briefly topped the iPhone charts. Genesis saw this coming before sin did.
Switzerland Asks Who Belongs
A referendum to cap Switzerland's population at 10 million forces a question older than any border: who counts as one of us?
The Decade the Movie Erased
The Michael Jackson biopic earned $217 million and ends in 1988. The abuse allegations begin in 1993. Twenty-two days of reshoots made sure you never saw them.

The Epidemic No Vaccine Can Reach
One in six people worldwide is persistently lonely. Gen Z is the loneliest generation ever measured. The first thing God called not good was a person alone.
The Children No One Is Having
The US fertility rate hit another record low. Most young Americans say they want children. The distance between wanting and having keeps growing.
The Carousel Remembers What We Forget
The Smithsonian's restored carousel reopened on the National Mall. The first riders were the Black children who desegregated it sixty years ago.
The Girlfriend Who Never Says No
One in five teenage boys knows someone dating an AI chatbot. Over a quarter prefer the bot's attention to a human's. The cost is still being counted.

When Families Go Silent
Nearly four in ten Americans have cut off a relative. An ancient letter to a fractured church suggests the work reconciliation actually requires.

The Hands That Carry You
A dying woman asked her friends to weave her casket. They came anyway. Scripture remembers who shows up when the body needs carrying.
Cambodia Built a Monument for a Rat
A three-pound rat cleared more landmines than most military units. Cambodia carved him a seven-foot statue. Scripture saw this pattern first.

When Men Stopped Singing at Work
Historians are trying to pinpoint when work songs disappeared from roofs, docks, and fields. The answer says something uncomfortable about how we live together now.

Children Give Before They Are Taught To
A new study finds toddlers are happier sharing treats than receiving them. The science is new. The observation is ancient.

Gen Z Chooses Inconvenience to Feel Alive
Young Americans are buying dumb phones, joining reading circles, and seeking friction as an antidote to digital isolation.

Courts Block Virginia's Youth Screen Time Cap
Virginia became the first state to cap minors' daily social media use. A federal court struck it down on free speech grounds.
Forgiveness at Full Ticket Price
A music festival invokes forgiveness to defend booking Kanye West. Scripture has conditions for what that word actually costs.

A Child Between Two Broken Halves
Japan was the last G7 nation to deny divorced parents shared custody. The law changed on April 1.

Persecuted Abroad, Suspected at Home
American politicians champion Coptic Christians overseas. When those Christians arrive at the border, the welcome disappears.

They Exalt the Role and Despise the Woman
A study of 595 young men found that hostile sexism, not protection, drives admiration for the tradwife movement.

They All Want Marriage. Almost Nobody Dates.
86% of unmarried young adults expect to marry. Only 30% are dating. The marital horizon stays five years away no matter how old you get.