Welcome to The Light, your quiet-hour reflection.
A question as old as faith itself is finding fresh voice in theological circles: did the cross have to happen the way it did? Some thinkers are asking whether God, in infinite freedom, might have chosen another path to redemption, or whether the suffering of the cross was, in some deeper sense, the only way love could fully speak.
That question of how generations speak to one another carries into a different conversation this week, where a New York Times piece framing older Americans as a governing class hoarding power has drawn sharp response. Critics argue the piece doesn't offer remedy so much as resentment, stoking a divide between young and old that serves no one seeking genuine understanding.
And in quieter, more personal territory, many who pray through anxiety are finding that relief does not always arrive on schedule. Writers and pastors alike are gently naming what so many already know in their bones: that faith and fear can coexist, and that the persistence of worry is not evidence of a failing spirit, but perhaps of a very human one.
That's this hour's reflection. Carry the light gently.["https://www.christianpost.com/voices/did-god-need-to-kill-his-own-son.html","https://www.christianpost.com/voices/nyt-gerontocracy-attack-why-they-want-your-kids-to-hate-you.html","https://www.christianpost.com/voices/why-anxiety-doesnt-always-go-away-when-you-pray.html"]
πΊ The Light Β· 6 AM Update Β· player loadingβ¦