In Afghanistan, an official ban on girls going to school has sparked defiance: Clandestine classes in private homes are keeping their learning, and their dreams, alive.
During Matt Williams鈥 career in television, he often heeded 鈥渁 divine nudge.鈥 The writer, who got his start at 鈥淭he Cosby Show鈥 and later co-created 鈥淩oseanne,鈥 recalls lunching with a Canadian comedian. An inner voice told him, 鈥淒o this show with this man ... it will be a top 10 show.鈥 The comic was Tim Allen. The ensuing sitcom was 鈥淗ome Improvement.鈥
More recently, Mr. Williams felt a divine nudge to quit Hollywood. He鈥檚 launched a multimedia project titled a counterpoint to the darkness in the news. His and a forthcoming book focus on glimpses of God in everyday life.
鈥淚鈥檓 talking about moments of grace, tenderness, unexpected compassion,鈥 Mr. Williams explains during a Zoom call. 鈥淎nd yes, there鈥檚 horrible things happening, but in the midst of this darkness, there鈥檚 always a little flicker of light.鈥
He cites how the husband of an editor of his book flew with ex-servicemen to Poland, loaded a truck with medical equipment, and drove into Ukraine to teach civilians battlefield triage. Another example is Thomas Keown鈥檚 charity , which helps free children in Africa from injustices such as modern-day slavery.聽
Mr. Williams equates the process of creation to prayer. During a podcast interview with playwright Father Edward Beck, they discuss how stories can 鈥渋nspire and heal because they connect us with the loving vitality of soul in each of us, and make it conscious to us.鈥澛
Mr. Williams says that the term 鈥淕od鈥 makes some fear that he鈥檚 going to start proselytizing. But his goal is to encourage his audience to tune out the algorithms of fear that fill our phones with gloomy headlines. One antidote is becoming attuned to the divine nudges to express kindness.聽聽
鈥淚t鈥檚 the human BitTorrent,鈥 says Mr. Williams. 鈥淚t鈥檚 passed from one person to another to another.鈥