5 Things Happening Today (Filtered Through Jesus) – Your 8 AM Breakfast Brief
- Dr. Layne McDonald
- Feb 18
- 5 min read
Good morning. It's Wednesday, February 18, 2026, and if you're reaching for your coffee and wondering what happened overnight, you're in the right place. Here are five stories landing in today's news cycle: filtered through the lens of Jesus and what it means to follow him in real time.

1. Ash Wednesday: A Season of Hope Begins
The Facts: Lent begins today, marking a forty-day spiritual journey leading to Easter. Ash Wednesday services will be held in churches worldwide, with ashes applied to foreheads as a reminder of mortality and repentance.
The Lens: While Ash Wednesday reminds us that "we are dust and to dust we shall return," the deeper message is that Jesus came close to us in our dust. He carried our sin, walked through death, and defeated it. This season isn't about proving yourself worthy to God: it's about understanding why Jesus suffered, died, and rose again. The ashes mark humility, but they also point forward to resurrection.
The Response: If you're starting this season, remember: Lent is less about what you give up and more about making room for Jesus. The forty days mirror Christ's time in the wilderness: a period of testing, hunger, and ultimately, victory over temptation. Use this time to fast from distraction, feast on Scripture, and let God reveal areas where pride or self-reliance have crept in.
"Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me." (Psalm 51:10)

2. A Civil Rights Legend's Legacy
The Facts: Rev. Jesse Jackson, the prominent civil rights leader and Baptist minister, has passed away at age 84. Former President Barack Obama released a statement honoring Jackson's decades of advocacy for racial justice, voting rights, and economic equality.
The Lens: Obama reflected that Jackson "was relentless in his belief that we are all children of God, deserving of dignity and respect." That belief didn't come from political strategy: it came from the gospel. Jackson's life bore witness to Jesus' command to love your neighbor, confront injustice, and never stop believing that people can change.
The Response: Whether you agreed with every policy position or not, Jackson's core conviction was biblical: every human being is made in the image of God. That truth calls us to speak up when anyone is dehumanized, devalued, or discarded. Today's a good day to ask: Am I living like I believe every person I meet bears God's image?
"So God created mankind in his own image, in the image of God he created them; male and female he created them." (Genesis 1:27)
3. Religious Leaders Stand for the Vulnerable
The Facts: More than 30 faith leaders are taking legal action against the Trump administration's recent asylum policy changes, arguing that offering refuge to asylum-seekers is "a core religious and moral tenet." The coalition includes Christian, Jewish, and Muslim leaders.
The Lens: This isn't about left or right: it's about what Scripture says. Jesus was a refugee. His family fled to Egypt to escape violence. The Bible commands God's people over and over to "welcome the stranger" and care for those in need. Leviticus 19:34 says, "The foreigner residing among you must be treated as your native-born. Love them as yourself, for you were foreigners in Egypt."
The Response: You don't have to agree on every immigration policy to agree on this: followers of Jesus are called to compassion for the vulnerable. You can hold strong opinions about border security and still treat asylum-seekers with dignity. The question isn't whether people should follow legal processes: it's whether we'll reflect Christ's heart toward those who are fleeing danger.
"I was a stranger and you invited me in." (Matthew 25:35)

4. A Call to Intentional Fasting and Reflection
The Facts: Pope Leo has urged Catholics globally to abstain during Lent: not just from food, but from harsh words, slander, and judgment. He called for a period of deep listening and fasting from divisive speech.
The Lens: Jesus consistently used fasting to deepen spiritual hunger and sharpen focus on the Father. But he also modeled something else: restraint in speech. James 1:19 says, "Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry." Fasting from harsh words might be more challenging: and more transformative: than giving up dessert.
The Response: What if this Lenten season, you fasted from the comment section? From the sharp comeback? From the text you were about to send in anger? Pope Leo's invitation is wise: in a world drowning in noise, maybe the most countercultural thing we can do is listen more and judge less.
"Set a guard over my mouth, Lord; keep watch over the door of my lips." (Psalm 141:3)
5. Unexpected Interruptions as Divine Invitations
The Facts: Today's devotional themes from multiple Christian publishers focus on how Jesus treated interruptions: stopping mid-journey to heal the paralyzed man lowered through a roof, pausing to restore the woman with the issue of blood who touched his cloak.
The Lens: Jesus never saw interruptions as obstacles. He saw them as divine appointments. When the crowds pressed in, when someone called his name, when a parent brought a sick child: Jesus stopped. He made eye contact. He spoke peace. He healed.
The Response: Most of us treat interruptions like inconveniences. The coworker who needs five minutes. The child who asks another question. The friend who texts when we're busy. But what if those moments aren't distractions from your calling: they are your calling? What if showing up with patience and presence in the unplanned moment is exactly how Jesus wants you to reflect him today?
"And let us not grow weary of doing good, for in due season we will reap, if we do not give up." (Galatians 6:9)

What This Means for You
Today's news reminds us of three anchors:
1. We are dust, but we are loved. Ash Wednesday tells the truth about our mortality: and about the God who entered that mortality to save us.
2. Every person matters. From civil rights leaders to asylum-seekers, the gospel insists every human being is sacred.
3. Interruptions are invitations. Jesus didn't have a five-year plan. He had a Father and a willingness to stop for whoever was in front of him.
If you're starting Lent, let it be a season of less noise and more Jesus. If you're grieving a loss like Rev. Jackson's passing, let it remind you that a life spent loving people well is never wasted. And if today feels chaotic and full of interruptions: welcome them. You might be standing at the edge of a divine appointment.
Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.
Follow at LayneMcDonald.com for calm, Christ-centered updates as the day unfolds.
Sources: Reuters, Associated Press, Catholic News Agency, devotional content from multiple Christian publishers.

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