He wrote what others missed—the Gospel that listened, through the eyes of a doctor who turned stories into healing.
Some stories live only in Luke’s Gospel—the angel’s visit to Mary, the shepherds hearing heaven’s message in the dark, the Prodigal Son running home, the Good Thief whispering hope before death.
Why him? Why only Luke?
Because Luke didn’t just witness—he listened. He wasn’t there on the boat when the storm stopped. He wasn’t there at the mountain when Jesus shone like light. But he searched. He asked. He wrote what hearts remembered.
Luke was a doctor—used to studying pain, not avoiding it. He saw that healing isn’t only about curing the body, but understanding its cry. That’s why his Gospel feels warmer, more human—he showed Jesus not as a distant Savior, but as a Friend who sits beside you when everyone else leaves.
Maybe that’s why his pages hold Mary’s song, the Samaritan’s kindness, the prodigal’s return, and the thief’s last prayer—because Luke stayed quiet long enough to hear what others didn’t.
And maybe that’s what holiness really is—not the loud miracles, but the quiet listening that brings them to life.
2100 sounds far, but the planet’s already heating fast—each decade is a chance to cool it down before it’s too late.
The world’s getting hotter—literally. A new study says we’re heading for around 57 more “superhot” days every year by the end of this century. A “superhot” day means one that’s hotter than 90% of what used to be normal for that place—whether that’s 38°C in Manila or 30°C in London.
That’s year 2100. Sounds far, right? But it’s not some sci-fi future—it’s the direction we’re already walking into today.
Every decade we ignore adds heat our kids will live through. It’s not “too far.” It’s too close if wekeep pretending it’s not our problem.
🌍 The unfair heat
Big countries create most of the pollution, but small countries pay the bigger price. Small island nations like Samoa, Panama, and the Solomon Islands don’t have huge factories or millions of cars, yet they’re surrounded by oceans that trap more heat and make their air more humid. That means their temperatures rise faster, their crops dry quicker, and their people suffer longer.
Meanwhile, richer nations that caused most of the carbon buildup can afford cooling systems and better healthcare—so they feel the heat less, even when it’s the same sun. It’s not just science. It’s injustice in slow motion.
🌡 Heat with no mercy
Scientists now warn that heatwaves are changing—longer, harsher, deadlier. Europe already feels it tenfold. India’s heat now mixes with humidity, turning ordinary afternoons into survival tests.
Every “superhot” day means higher electricity use, more crops failing, and people—especially the poor—fainting, falling, and dying. This isn’t “climate drama.” It’s real life, heating up faster than our response.
⚖ Between hope and heat
Back in 2015, when countries agreed under the Paris Agreement, they helped slow down the planet’s heating. Without that agreement, the world could’ve faced around 114 extra superhot days every year instead of57. So yes—we can still change the story.
The year 2100 isn’t a faraway doom date—it’s a signpost, warning us early enough to act. We can still cool the earth if we move together—less greed, more care, more action. The clock isn’t just ticking—it’s burning. But that means there’s still time to turn off the fire.