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God’s Ways

  Scripture: Isaiah 55:8-9 (NIV) “For my thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways my ways,” declares the Lord. “As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are my ways higher than your ways and my thoughts than your thoughts. Devotion: This verse should humble us. When we think we understand what God is doing, we often miss the mark. God’s plans for our lives and indeed the course of the world’s events are completely beyond us. We need to be open to God doing new things, things we never imagined He would do. The cross and resurrection prove that not even the devil knows all things. If he did, he would never have inspired men to kill Jesus. These verses press this truth into our hearts with a force that is both unsettling and deeply comforting. God declares that His thoughts are not our thoughts and His ways are not our ways. We hear those words often, but rarely do we let them sink in. They are not a poetic flourish or a gentle reminder that God is a little ...

A Summary of Jude

  Jude is a letter written under pressure. Its author, who identifies himself as a servant of Jesus Christ and as the brother of James, had intended to write a calm and constructive letter about the salvation that believers share. Instead, the urgency of the moment compelled him to take up a different pen entirely — a letter of alarm, calling his readers to contend earnestly for the faith once for all delivered to the saints. That phrase alone is worth pausing over. The faith is not a developing conversation or an evolving consensus. It is a fixed deposit, delivered once, held in trust by the church, and worth fighting for. The occasion is the infiltration of the congregation by ungodly persons who have turned the grace of God into sensuality and denied the only Master and Lord, Jesus Christ. Jude does not speculate about these men or treat their presence as a minor concern. He reaches deep into the Old Testament and into Jewish tradition to demonstrate that God has always deal...

Impossible Without Faith

  Scripture: Hebrews 11:6 (NIV) And without faith it is impossible to please God, because anyone who comes to him must believe that he exists and that he rewards those who earnestly seek him. Devotion: This verse declares that faith is essential to the Christian’s life. Faith is essential because it is the means by which we lay hold of Christ Himself. The Christian life is not built on self‑effort, moral achievement, or religious performance. It is built on trusting the One who has already accomplished everything necessary for our salvation. Faith looks away from self and toward Christ. It acknowledges weakness and embraces His strength. It confesses sin and clings to His righteousness. It admits need and receives His sufficiency. In this way, faith becomes the lifeline that connects the believer to the living Christ, drawing from Him the grace, wisdom, and power needed for every step of the journey. Faith is also essential because it shapes how we see the world. It tea...

A Lamp for Us to See

Scripture: Psalm 119:105 (NIV) Your word is a lamp for my feet, a light on my path. Devotion: The word of God is essential for us to see where God wants us to go and what to do. Jesus teaches us that we are to be the light of the world in the Sermon on the Mount. We cannot be that light if we do not receive that light from study and application of the word found in the scriptures. This brief verse from the longest psalm and indeed the longest chapter in all the Bible shows us the truth of that statement in one brief sentence. Psalm 119:105 tells us, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” It is as though the psalmist is reminding us that God’s people have always been a pilgrim people, walking forward into a future they cannot fully see, yet guided by a God who sees all things clearly. The lamp does not flood the landscape with brilliance. It does not reveal the entire journey in one sweeping vision. Instead, it casts just enough light for the next faithful st...

The Bread of Life

  Scripture: John 6:35 (NIV) Then Jesus declared, “I am the bread of life. Whoever comes to me will never go hungry, and whoever believes in me will never be thirsty. Devotion: This passage stands as one of the most gracious and sweeping invitations Jesus ever spoke. He is speaking directly to the deepest longings of the human heart. Bread in the ancient world was not a luxury but a necessity. It was the daily sustenance that kept life going. By calling Himself the bread of life, Jesus is saying that He alone is essential for the soul. He is not an optional addition or a spiritual supplement. He is the One without whom true life cannot be found. When Jesus invites us to come to Him, He is inviting us into a relationship of trust and dependence. Coming to Him is not a single moment but a continual turning of the heart toward Him. It is the daily recognition that our strength, identity, hope, and purpose are found in Him alone. Many people come to Jesus for what He can give...

Our Atonement

  Scripture: 1 John 2:1-2 (NIV) My dear children, I write this to you so that you will not sin. But if anybody does sin, we have an advocate with the Father—Jesus Christ, the Righteous One. He is the atoning sacrifice for our sins, and not only for ours but also for the sins of the whole world. Devotion: John’s words in 1 John 2:1–2 carry a tenderness that reveals the heart of a shepherd who knows both the frailty of believers and the faithfulness of Christ. He begins with the gentle address, “My little children,” a phrase that conveys affection, care, and deep pastoral concern. John is not writing as a distant theologian but as a spiritual father who longs for the people of God to walk in holiness. He tells them plainly that his purpose in writing is that they may not sin. The Christian life is not indifferent to sin, nor does grace make sin trivial. John calls believers to pursue purity, obedience, and a life shaped by the character of Christ. Yet he also knows the realit...

A Summary of 3 John*

  Third John is the most personal and situationally specific of John's three letters, a brief pastoral note addressed not to a congregation but to an individual — a man named Gaius, whom John calls his beloved four times in the span of these fourteen verses. The letter addresses a concrete crisis of church leadership and hospitality. Yet, in doing so, John lays down principles of enduring importance for the life and governance of the local church. It is a window into the practical struggles of the early Christian community, and what it reveals is both encouraging and sobering. John opens with a prayer for Gaius that is as theologically rich as it is personally warm. He prays that Gaius would prosper in all things and be in good health, even as his soul prospers. The connection John draws between the flourishing of the soul and the flourishing of the whole person is characteristic of a biblical anthropology that refuses to divide the spiritual from the physical. John does not pr...