Welcome to The Light, where we pause and let the day breathe.
Elie Wiesel emerged from Auschwitz with a faith shattered and, he thought, lost. Yet he came to understand that his anger at God was itself a form of prayer. To demand an answer is still to believe someone is listening. Grief and devotion, it turns out, can be the same gesture.
That tension between doubt and longing finds a strange companion in the voyage of the Kon-Tiki, which set sail seventy-nine years ago today. Thor Heyerdahl crossed the Pacific on a balsa raft to prove what science had not yet blessed with certainty. The journey was improbable, perhaps irrational, and yet the raft held. Sometimes the most human thing we do is sail anyway.
And in Washington this week, King Charles addressed a joint session of Congress, describing Christianity as an anchor during his first state visit to the United States as monarch. He spoke of shared roots between nations, of values that outlast politics. An anchor, of course, does not stop the current. It simply keeps you from drifting past what matters.
That is this hour's reflection. Carry the light gently.["https://odb.org/2026/04/29/","https://nautil.us/kon-tiki-set-sail-79-years-ago-today-1280285/","https://www.christianpost.com/news/king-charles-speech-to-congress-christianity-is-an-anchor.html"]
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