Welcome to The Light, where we pause and consider what the day is asking of us.
There is something quietly profound in the story of the taxi driver, a figure whose lineage stretches back to ancient Rome, to the cobblestones of Paris, to the fog of London. These are people who have carried strangers through cities for centuries, and now find themselves navigating something far more uncertain than traffic.
From questions of livelihood, we turn to questions of reverence. A golden statue of President Trump has been unveiled, and a televangelist ally insists it is an act of honor, not worship. And yet the distinction between honoring a man and elevating him to something beyond human is a line worth sitting with, quietly, and with care.
And in Tennessee, a debate over whether women who receive abortions should face prosecution for murder was defeated in committee, though the conversation it reopened runs much deeper than any single bill. How a society chooses to hold moral conviction alongside legal consequence tells us something essential about who we believe people to be.
Three stories, each asking us to consider where we draw the lines between service and dignity, honor and idolatry, justice and compassion. That is this hour's reflection. Carry the light gently.["https://www.theatlantic.com/ideas/2026/05/waymo-self-driving-cars/687119/?utm_source=feed","https://www.christianpost.com/news/trumps-statue-isnt-golden-calf-worship-pastor-mark-burns.html","https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/equal-protection-harms-pro-life/"]πΊ The Light Β· 1 PM Update Β· player loadingβ¦