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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. Delta suspends special services for lawmakers amid government shutdown (CBS News)

“Delta Air Lines is suspending special services it usually offers to members of Congress as passengers at some airports wait for hours in security screening lines during the partial U.S. government shutdown. Absences have soared among TSA officers working without pay amid the funding impasse, leading to staffing shortages and chaos at U.S. airports. Delta said Tuesday that it will temporarily halt "specialty services" for lawmakers, citing the strain on its own resources. 

“Ordinarily, such services can include airport escorts for government personnel and so-called Red Coat assistance. With such services suspended, lawmakers traveling on Delta will face the same inconveniences as other passengers. Nearly 11% of Transportation Security Administration officers called out of work yesterday, according to Lauren Bis, the acting assistant secretary for public affairs at the Department of Homeland Security. TSA officers have been working without pay, and more than 450 of them have quit since the lapse in DHS funding began more than a month ago, Bis said.”

 

  • Is Congress about to experience a misogi? In his book The Comfort Crisis, Michael Easter argues that we have been lulled into a way of living and being that is less than ideal. Discomfort begets creativity and urgency, hence the misogi. This refers to a challenge that tests the body and mind. "New situations kill the mental clutter. In newness we're forced into presence and focus." 
     

  • Easter argues for introducing problems to raise the threshold for what we consider a problem. "When a new comfort is introduced, we adapt to it and our old comforts become unacceptable. Today's comfort is tomorrow's discomfort. This leads to a new level of what's considered comfortable.” He goes on: “As we experience fewer problems, we don’t become more satisfied. We just lower our threshold for what we consider a problem.”
     

  • Discomfort has been known to refine thinking… From Jonah in the belly of the fish to Elijah in the darkness of a cave, the biblical narrative is replete with examples of individuals who haven’t been immune to challenges but have traversed them. The lack of comfort spurred a sense of urgency, driving progress. Or as Adam Grant put it: "Progress is not only reflected in the peaks you reach—it's also visible in the valleys you cross." (Jonah 1, 1 Kings 19)
     

5. Fire truck in LaGuardia runway collision had no transponder, limiting tower’s ability to track it, NTSB says (CNN)

“A fire truck involved in Sunday’s deadly collision with an Air Canada plane at New York’s LaGuardia Airport was not equipped with a transponder — technology that helps air traffic controllers identify and track vehicles on the airfield — the National Transportation Safety Board said Tuesday. The crash marks the first deaths at LaGuardia, the New York area’s third-busiest airport, in 34 years.

“Also, the airport’s surface detection equipment – ASDE-X – didn’t generate an alert ahead of the collision “due to the close proximity of vehicles merging and unmerging near the runway,” which resulted “in the inability to create a track of high confidence,” NTSB chairwoman Jennifer Homendy said.

”Those were among the latest details announced Tuesday in the investigation into Sunday night’s collision, in which officials said the plane, which was landing and had just touched down, struck the truck on a runway that the truck was crossing. The collision killed the plane’s pilot and copilot and injured dozens of people, including a flight attendant who was thrown from the plane while still strapped to her seat.”

 

  • In his book Black Box Thinking, Matthew Syed compares how the medical industry investigates their failures with the airline industry, suggesting that a detailed analysis of our mistakes can prevent recurrences just as black box flight data examinations have dramatically reduced the number of airplane crashes.
     

  • First, there is medical thinking. Syed highlights how in 2013 there were more than 400,000 premature deaths associated with preventable harm. This ranks preventable medical error as the third biggest killer in the US, behind heart disease and cancer. A variety of factors, such as the precipitous drop in the number of autopsies, causes Syed to assert that the problem “isn’t that patients aren’t finding out about mistakes; it’s that doctors aren’t finding out about them either, and are therefore unable to learn from them.”
     

  • Then there is pilot thinking. Syed observes that learning from failure is hardwired into the system. “Every aircraft is equipped with two almost-indestructible black boxes, one of which records instructions sent to the onboard electronic systems, and another that records the conversations and sounds in the cockpit. If there is an accident, the boxes are opened, the data is analyzed, and the reason for the accident is investigated. This ensures that procedures can be changed so that the same error never happens again.”
     

  • Success isn’t the absence of failure but rather how we react to past failures, according to Syed. “Progress in most human activities depends, in large part, on our willingness to learn from failure. If we edit out failure, if we reframe our mistakes, we are effectively destroying one of the most precious learning opportunities that exists.” From denying Jesus to forsaking Paul, Peter made a few mistakes in his life. We all make mistakes, but a key component is learning from them and humbly dealing with the consequences as a result of them. (Luke 22, Gal. 2, 1 Jn. 1:9)

 

4. Taliban releases U.S. citizen Dennis Coyle over a year after he was detained (CBS News)

“Afghanistan's Taliban government on Tuesday announced that it released a U.S. national who had been detained in the country for more than a year. The foreign ministry said in a statement it agreed to the release after a letter from his family, and that Dennis Coyle "would be pardoned and released" for Eid, the holiday marking the end of Ramadan. The U.S. State Department later confirmed Coyle's release.

“Coyle, a 64-year-old academic from Colorado, was taken by force from his Kabul apartment by the Taliban. His abduction came just six days after another American, Ryan Corbett, was released at the start of President Trump's second term. Coyle's family said they were "profoundly grateful" to Mr. Trump, Secretary of State and national security adviser Marco Rubio and others in the administration, leaders in the United Arab Emirates and Qatar, and all those who assisted and advocated on his behalf. "Your efforts as mediators, your compassion, and your commitment to diplomacy have given our family the most precious gift imaginable: Dennis' freedom," the family wrote.”

 

  • Breaking records and chains… As of late 2025, it is estimated that at least 40 Americans remain wrongfully detained or held hostage by foreign governments and non-state actors in 14 different countries. There has been a significant decrease in the number of Americans held unjustly abroad over the last 2 years, including a record-breaking 101 releases secured within a single year by the US government.
     

  • The vast majority of arrests and detainments of Americans abroad are for legal and legitimate reasons (98 percent), but there are 4 categories of illegitimate reasons: hostage taking (unlawful abduction to compel action as a condition for release), possible wrongful detention (unclear circumstances and limited information), probable wrongful detention (account for 0.7 percent of American detained), and wrongful detention (designated so by the secretary of state). 
     

  • Like Joseph in an Egyptian prison, Mr. Coyle was being unjustly held. But consider how Genesis 39:21 describes Joseph’s situation: “But the Lord was with Joseph and showed him steadfast love and gave him favor in the sight of the keeper of the prison.” Dennis Coyle lacked so much during this season of detainment, but he did not lack the presence of God.

3. Congress launches investigation into California hospice fraud, citing millions in taxpayer losses (CBS News)

“House Republicans announced that Congress will mount an investigation into "rampant hospice fraud," alleging that potentially tens of millions in taxpayer funds may have been lost in improper payments to Southern California companies. 

"Recent reporting has revealed alarming evidence of fraudulent activity in California's hospice programs, including agencies overbilling Medicare and fraudulently enrolling beneficiaries without their knowledge," committee members wrote, citing a recent CBS News investigation.  The CBS News report examined business and financial records of every hospice currently operating in Los Angeles County, looking for the warning signs that a 2022 state audit identified as potential indicators of fraud.  The CBS News analysis revealed that over 700 of the roughly 1,800 hospices in LA County triggered multiple red flags for fraud as defined by the state.”

 

  • Before He Cheats? Too late, Carrie Underwood. The US federal government loses an estimated $233 billion to $521 billion annually to fraud, according to GAO estimates. These losses, representing roughly 7 percent of federal spending, are distinct from "improper payments," which totaled over $2.7 trillion in errors since 2003, with significant fraud occurring in pandemic-relief programs.
     

  • But is no fraud ideal? Megan McArdle makes an insightful yet simple point: the optimal amount of fraud isn’t zero. Attempting to stamp out every single abuse costs more than the fraud you are trying to prevent. “The more important speed is, the more risk of fraud you have to tolerate.” For example, in financial institutions, for every $1 lost to fraud, $4 are spent on establishing systems and controls to prevent it. 
     

  • Dishonest scales… No, I’m not referring to my ongoing denial of weight gain due to parenthood, but rather God’s repeated condemnation throughout the Old Testament of commercial fraud. In the Scriptures, we read that the root of all kinds of evil is the love of money. From Pro. 11 to Lev. 19, we learn about God’s distaste for dishonest scales, rigging weights to cheat customers in trade. When you commit fraud, you may gain in the moment, but it's at the expense of your neighbors near and far.

News You Can Use

2. This is such a cool video of Solomon's Temple being built.

 

  • Watch it here. “In the eleventh year in the month of Bul, the eighth month, the temple was finished in all its details according to its specifications. He had spent seven years building it.” (1 Kings 6:38)

 

1. California restaurant staff jump in to restrain dancing robot after it goes rogue

 

  • Watch it here. “You have turned for me my mourning into dancing; you have loosed my sackcloth and clothed me with gladness…” (Ps. 30:11)

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