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Daily briefing

Today’s News With biblical perspective

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The Daily Briefing highlights the news of the day and research that reveals the spirit of the day.

 

The Daily Briefing is a newsletter sent straight to your inbox every morning that provides biblical insight on today's news.

Top News

6. Trump rejects latest Iran offer for talks, extending limbo in Mideast War (NY Times)

“President Trump on Sunday rejected the latest offer from Iran to end the war with the United States, declaring that it was “TOTALLY UNACCEPTABLE.” Mr. Trump commented hours after the Iranian government said it had sent a counterproposal to end the conflict following a tense week of attacks and responses in the Persian Gulf that rattled a fragile cease-fire between the countries. The details of Iran’s proposal were not made public, and Mr. Trump did not say what was objectionable. “I have just read the response from Iran’s so-called ‘Representatives,’” he wrote in a post on his social media platform. “I don’t like it.” 

“In the interview, released by the syndicated news show “Full Measure,” he repeated a claim that the United States was monitoring sites that contained the uranium. He warned that “if anybody got near the place, we will know about it, and we’ll blow them up.” The president’s messaging on the importance of the existing uranium stockpiles has been inconsistent: Last month, Mr. Trump said he didn’t care about the uranium because it was buried “so far underground.”

 

  • They aren’t playing for time—the time is the play. Morton Klein writes: “Iran does not delay negotiations in order to improve its bargaining position. Delay is its bargaining position. Each extension, each procedural dispute, each open-ended ceasefire is designed to produce a singular outcome: the preservation and advancement of its strategic capabilities while external pressure dissipates… At the negotiating table, Iran’s objective is not agreement but time. In conventional diplomacy, delay precedes a proposal. In Iran’s system, delay is the proposal.”
     

  • But can they endure – especially with how painful it is? Iran scholar Suzanne Maloney noted recently: “A regime that slaughtered its own citizens to silence protests in January is fully prepared to impose economic hardships on them now.”
     

  • Iran may play the long game, but this isn’t a new game. Sanballat and Geshem sent messages asking Nehemiah to meet them in one of the villages on the plain of Ono. They wanted to pull him away from the wall to "negotiate," which was actually a stall tactic to halt construction and potentially harm him. In response, Nehemiah said: "I am carrying on a great project and cannot go down. Why should the work stop while I leave it and go down to you?" In this instance, the Iranian regime like Sanballat, is playing for time, yet they forget that the One who holds time in His hands does not delay His justice. (Neh. 2)
     

5. American passengers exposed to Hantavirus land in the U.S. (NY Times)

“Seventeen American passengers who were aboard the cruise ship in the Atlantic Ocean that faced a hantavirus outbreak returned to the United States early Monday morning, a health official said. An official from the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, speaking on the condition of anonymity, confirmed that the Americans were aboard a flight from Tenerife, Spain, that landed in Nebraska. Associated Press footage showed a Kalitta Air plane landing in Omaha early Monday.

“The passengers will be transported to the National Quarantine Unit at the University of Nebraska Medical Center/Nebraska Medicine in that city, the country’s only federally funded quarantine center, health officials previously said. At the center, the passengers will be observed around the clock by a volunteer team of doctors and nurses, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention said. “At this time, the risk to the American public remains extremely low,” the C.D.C. said in a statement.”

 

  • The pandemic changed us, including what captures our attention in the news. At least 2 concepts help explain this: anchored-to-your-own-history bias and the availability heuristic. Regarding the anchoring bias, Morgan Housel noted: “Your personal experiences make up maybe 0.00000001% of what’s happened in the world but maybe 80% of how you think the world works.”
     

  • Then there is the availability heuristic. This is a mental shortcut where people judge the probability of an event based on how easily examples come to mind. Because the pandemic was the most significant global health event in recent history, any news of a "shipborne outbreak" or "quarantine" immediately triggers those vivid memories, leading us to overestimate the likelihood of a similar global catastrophe occurring now.
     

  • The leeks of Egypt... Despite the miraculous deliverance from slavery and the daily provision of manna, the Israelites began to grumble on their journey out of Egypt. The "availability" of the vivid, sensory memories of food in Egypt, like fish and leeks, outweighed the more nebulous reality of their new freedom. Because those flavorful memories were so easy to call to mind, they concluded that their current situation was a death sentence, ignoring the promises of God. In this instance, we’re living in a world where a rare virus meets a hyper-available memory, and though our memory usually wins the argument, the sweetness of God’s grace triumphs over the leeks from Egypt’s fields. (Numbers 11)

 

4. Trump releases UFO files, says public can judge for themselves (WaPo)

“Trump officials on Friday released their first batch of declassified files related to unidentified flying objects, following President Donald Trump’s directive to make long-secret documents broadly available. The Defense Department, the FBI, NASA and other agencies provided photos, videos and other documents, ranging from grainy videos that show objects that federal agencies say remain unexplained to redacted interviews with eyewitnesses. The files were posted at war.gov/ufo, with federal officials pledging to add more files on a rolling basis as they are declassified.

“The President is focused on providing maximum disclosure to the public, who can ultimately make up their own minds about the information contained in these files,” White House spokeswoman Anna Kelly said in a statement. “The American people asked, and President Trump delivered — enjoy!”

 

  • Contrary to Tiffany, I Don’t Think We’re Alone NowIn 1990, there were 346 UFO sightings. In 2022, there were 5,035. Sightings peaked in 2014, with 8,779 encounters. 
     

  • Did Ezekiel see a UFO? In his inaugural vision, some have argued, like NASA engineer Josef F. Blumrich, that the prophet’s view of wheels within wheels was not an encounter with God but rather with ancient astronauts from another planet. (Ez. 1)
     

  • I don’t think Blumrich is right, but I don’t think we’re alone. Angels are supernatural beings created by God who move between heaven and earth. While they are usually invisible to us, they can make themselves known – as we may soon find out. God made the sun stand still, parted the waters, flooded the earth, made the mountains quake, and caused donkeys to talk (Josh. 10, Ex. 14, Gen. 6, Nahum 1:5, Num. 22). I’m not sure what I believe about UFOs, but I do know my God is big enough to work outside of my normative conception of reality (Eph. 3:20-21). 

Cultural News

3. Is the ‘dead internet’ theory coming true? New Stanford research calculates exactly how far we are—and it’s alarming (Fast Company)

“Conspiracy theorists have long discussed the “dead internet” theory, which reasons that online spaces, once entirely populated by and filled with content created by humans, have slowly become dominated by bots posing as people. The more extreme conspiracists allege that this transformation is deliberate, with governments and corporations using the bots to manipulate public perception. Their results show that as of May 2025, more than a third (35.3%) of all new websites were AI-generated or AI-assisted. That includes 17.6% of all newly published websites being entirely generated by AI.

“The study’s findings corroborate other data, including Cloudflare’s report that nearly a third of all internet traffic over the past year comes came from bots, and Imperva’s claim that 2024 saw automated traffic surpass human traffic for the first time.”

 

  • We now live in the slopoverse, according to Ian Bogost. Inundated with AI material that is less than trustworthy, we navigate in this world driven by curiosity and tempered by skepticism. Experts estimate that AI-generated content could account for as much as 90 percent of information on the internet in the coming years.
     

  • Enter the Promethean Gap, which refers to how technology is outpacing wisdom; we're changing the world faster than we can adapt to it. As we continue to build the ethical framework around the technology before us, we're increasingly unable to foresee the effects of what we create. 
     

  • I’m convinced AI isn’t going to replace but divide: those who are used by it (Demas posture) and those who use it (Berea gesture). Those who assume a Demas posture will personally benefit from the conveniences created by the technology, continually feeding it more information and echoing the material it provides. Then there are those, like the people at Berea, who use it with consideration. Like Demas, they will benefit from the conveniences but with limitations: just because something can be shared doesn’t mean it needs to be shared, just because you read it doesn’t mean you have to believe it. In this sloppy universe, there will continue to be a need to renew your mind to approve what is good and right. (Rom. 12)

News You Can Use

2. Students go nuts after donor announces during his commencement speech that he is paying off their debts.

 

  • Watch it here. “If you then, though you are evil, know how to give good gifts to your children, how much more will your Father in heaven give the Holy Spirit to those who ask him! (Lk. 11:13)

 

1. Arnold Schwarzenegger is every sitcom character. 
 

  • Watch it here. "See, I am doing a new thing! Now it springs up; do you not perceive it? I am making a way in the wilderness and streams in the wasteland." (Is. 43:19)

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