Dispatch № 001 · May 9, 2026
Dispatches From The Divide — 5.9.26
We're living in a wild time where speed gets rewarded and real reflection feels almost old-fashioned. Maybe the quiet rebellion we need is refusing to be rushed into outrage.
We're living in this wild time where everything moves so fast—speed gets rewarded, but real reflection? It feels almost old-fashioned. Something happens, and boom—everyone's expected to have an instant opinion, pick a side, and dig in. But I've been thinking… that knee-jerk habit is quietly changing us. It's making us more reactive than thoughtful, more tribal than truthful.
The real problem goes deeper than just politics being broken. It's about who we're becoming. We're being shaped—discipled, really—by algorithms, hot takes, and that constant nudge to say what "our people" want to hear. Little by little, there's less space left for humility, patience, or actually trying to understand someone else.
Scripture keeps pointing us the other way. It says be slow to speak, careful with judgment, and more interested in wisdom than winning the argument. That kind of life doesn't get likes or go viral. But it does something that matters way more: it builds people who are steady when everything else is spinning.
So maybe the quiet rebellion we need right now is pretty simple: refusing to be rushed into outrage. Choosing to listen a little longer. Asking better questions. Becoming the kind of person who doesn't get swept up in the moment. It's not weakness. It's true strength.
"Everyone should be quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry, because human anger does not produce the righteousness that God desires."
— James 1:19-20
Around The Web
The Gospel Coalition AU
Trusting God in the Wilderness: Living in Light of the Book of Numbers
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With All Wisdom
Slow to Anger in a Culture of Quick Outrage
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Crossway
Introducing the Reactivity Podcast with Paul Tripp
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A Note on Shared Links. The articles and resources we share each week are chosen to spark thought, reflection, and conversation. At times, they may highlight viewpoints that are controversial or even in conflict with one another. That's intentional—our goal is to help readers step outside their ideological and political bubbles and consider perspectives they may not normally encounter. Please note that the writers and editors of the Good Faith Dispatch do not necessarily endorse every idea or opinion expressed in these links.
