Before You Scroll: 3 Things to Know About Breaking News This Morning
- Dr. Layne McDonald
- Feb 18
- 5 min read
Before your phone fills with headlines, here's what you need to know this Wednesday morning. Three stories are unfolding right now: one involves a rescue operation in the Sierra Nevada, another affects millions of New York households, and the third signals ongoing tension in the Middle East. Here's the truth, the context, and how we can respond with both clarity and grace.
1. Avalanche Near Lake Tahoe Leaves 10 Missing
The Facts:
An avalanche struck the Castle Peak area near Truckee, California, around 11:30 a.m. Tuesday. The slide affected a group that included mountain guides and skiers in the backcountry terrain. At least six people survived the initial event, but ten individuals remain unaccounted for as search and rescue teams continue operations. Castle Peak sits in the Tahoe National Forest, a popular area for experienced backcountry skiers, and avalanche risk had been elevated in recent days due to heavy snowfall and warming temperatures.
Search teams are working against time and weather conditions. The area is remote, and crews are navigating unstable snowpack while trying to locate those still missing.

A Biblical Lens:
When tragedy strikes without warning, we're reminded that life is fragile and time is not guaranteed. James 4:14 says, "What is your life? You are a mist that appears for a little while and then vanishes." That's not meant to discourage us: it's meant to wake us up to what matters most. Every moment is a gift. Every person is irreplaceable.
For those waiting for news about loved ones, the wait is excruciating. For the rescuers working in dangerous conditions, their courage reflects the call to lay down our lives for others. Jesus said, "Greater love has no one than this: to lay down one's life for one's friends" (John 15:13). In moments like these, we see that principle lived out in real time.
What We Can Do:
Pray for the missing and their families. Pray for the rescuers working in hazardous conditions. If you're in the outdoor community, use this as a moment to review avalanche safety protocols and respect nature's power. And if you're far from the mountains, let this remind you to check in with the people you love: today, not tomorrow.
2. NYC Mayor Proposes Nearly 10% Property Tax Hike
The Facts:
New York City Mayor Zohran Mamdani announced a 9.5% property tax increase proposal Tuesday. The mayor framed it as a backup plan if the state legislature does not agree to raise income taxes on the state's wealthiest residents. The proposed tax increase would affect more than 3 million homes and over 100,000 commercial buildings across the five boroughs.
While the measure is designed to generate revenue for city services and programs, it would impact working- and middle-class homeowners and renters (through increased costs passed down by landlords) alongside wealthier property owners. Critics argue the plan disproportionately burdens everyday New Yorkers already struggling with high living costs. Supporters say it's necessary to fund essential services without deep cuts to education, public safety, and infrastructure.

A Biblical Lens:
Taxation and stewardship are ancient tensions. Jesus addressed this directly when asked about paying taxes to Caesar. His response? "Give back to Caesar what is Caesar's, and to God what is God's" (Mark 12:17). He acknowledged the reality of earthly governments while reminding us that ultimate allegiance belongs to God.
Scripture also speaks clearly about justice in the distribution of resources. Proverbs 29:7 says, "The righteous care about justice for the poor, but the wicked have no such concern." When policies are debated, Christians should ask: Who bears the burden? Who benefits? Are the vulnerable protected or overlooked?
This isn't about left or right politics: it's about wisdom and compassion. Governments need revenue to function. Citizens need fairness in how that revenue is collected. The question isn't whether taxes should exist, but whether they're just and whether they serve the common good without crushing those already struggling.
What We Can Do:
If you're in New York, engage. Understand the proposal, contact your city council representatives, and advocate for policies that reflect both fiscal responsibility and care for the vulnerable. If you're outside New York, watch how your own city or state approaches budget challenges. And wherever you are, ask yourself: How am I stewarding what I have? Am I generous with my resources, even when times are tight?
Pray for wisdom for leaders making these decisions. Pray for families trying to make ends meet. And if you have margin, ask God how you might help someone carrying a heavy financial burden right now.
3. Iran Nuclear Talks Show Minimal Progress
The Facts:
The second round of nuclear negotiations between the United States and Iran concluded in Geneva this week. U.S. Vice President JD Vance acknowledged that some progress was made during the discussions, but noted that Iran has not acknowledged key American red lines. Chief among those red lines: Iran must not obtain nuclear weapons.
The talks are part of ongoing efforts to address Iran's nuclear program, which has been a flashpoint in Middle Eastern geopolitics for years. The negotiations involve complex issues including uranium enrichment levels, international inspections, economic sanctions, and regional security concerns. Both sides have made statements signaling cautious optimism, but significant gaps remain.

A Biblical Lens:
Peace is hard work. It requires patience, humility, and a willingness to keep talking even when progress is slow. Romans 12:18 instructs, "If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone." That doesn't mean naivety or ignoring real threats: it means pursuing peace wherever possible while remaining wise and discerning.
The pursuit of nuclear weapons represents the opposite of peace. These are tools designed for mass destruction, and their very existence reflects humanity's brokenness. Yet the call of the gospel is to be peacemakers (Matthew 5:9), which sometimes means the slow, frustrating work of diplomacy and negotiation rather than the quicker path of conflict.
Christians should pray for leaders on all sides to choose wisdom over pride, dialogue over escalation. We should also remember that lasting peace doesn't come from treaties alone: it comes from transformed hearts. "There is no peace," says the LORD, "for the wicked" (Isaiah 48:22). Until human hearts turn toward God, we'll keep building weapons we hope we never use.
What We Can Do:
Pray for negotiators on both sides. Pray for the people of Iran, many of whom simply want to live in peace and provide for their families. Pray for regional stability in the Middle East. And pray for wisdom in your own life: that you'd be someone who pursues peace in your relationships, your community, and your corner of the world.
The Bigger Picture
Three stories. Three very different contexts. But all three remind us of the same truth: we live in a world that desperately needs hope, wisdom, and people willing to stand in the gap.
The avalanche reminds us life is fragile. The tax debate reminds us that fairness and justice matter. The nuclear talks remind us that peace is worth fighting for, even when progress is slow.
As followers of Jesus, we're called to bring light into dark places, truth into confusion, and hope into despair. That doesn't mean we have all the answers. It means we know the One who does. And it means we're committed to showing up: in prayer, in action, in conversation: with both conviction and compassion.
Your Next Step
Stay informed, but don't let the news steal your peace. Follow at LayneMcDonald.com for calm updates as these stories develop. And if the weight of the news feels heavy today, you're not alone.
Need prayers? Text us day or night at 1-901-213-7341.
God sees every missing person on that mountain. He sees every struggling family in New York. He sees every leader in Geneva trying to navigate impossible tensions. And He sees you, wherever you are this morning.
Walk into today with hope. Not because everything is okay, but because God is still on the throne.
Source: Reuters, AP, NBC News

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