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One Thing Only

Scripture: Psalm 27:4 (NIV) One thing I ask from the Lord, this only do I seek: that I may dwell in the house of the Lord all the days of my life, to gaze on the beauty of the Lord and to seek him in his temple. Devotion : David was not a man who lacked options. He was a warrior, a king, a poet. He had power, wealth, and influence. But when he sat down to name the deepest desire of his heart, all of that fell away. One thing. That was it. Not victory. Not security. Not legacy. God Himself. That ought to stop us cold. We live in a world that trains us to want a hundred things at once. Security. Affirmation. Comfort. Success. And if we are honest, we have to admit that the noise gets inside us. Our hearts become divided before we even notice it happening. We drift. We chase. We settle. David had lived through real danger — betrayal, wilderness hiding, enemies on every side. He had also tasted real triumph. And his conclusion, forged in all of that, was this: none of it comp...

Remember

Scripture: Deuteronomy 6:10-12 (NIV ) When the Lord your God brings you into the land he swore to your fathers, to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, to give you—a land with large, flourishing cities you did not build, houses filled with all kinds of good things you did not provide, wells you did not dig, and vineyards and olive groves you did not plant—then when you eat and are satisfied, be careful that you do not forget the Lord, who brought you out of Egypt, out of the land of slavery. Devotion: These verses capture a moment of anticipation for Israel. They were on the edge of a land filled with abundance—cities they did not build, wells they did not dig, vineyards and olive trees they did not plant. Everything ahead of them was a gift, a fulfillment of promises made long before they were born. Yet God knew the human heart well enough to warn them: prosperity can make people forget the One who provided it. The danger God names is subtle. Forgetting the Lord does not usually happen...

Perfect Peace

  Scripture: Isaiah 26:3 (NIV) You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in you. Devotion: Do not miss the context of this verse. Isaiah is not writing from a comfortable chair on a quiet afternoon. He is writing in the middle of a chapter that talks about judgment, turmoil, and the fragility of human strength. The world he is describing is not peaceful. And yet right in the middle of all of that, he delivers one of the most remarkable promises in all of Scripture. God will keep you in perfect peace. Now here is something worth stopping over. In Hebrew, the word for peace is shalom . But Isaiah does not just write shalom once. He writes it twice — shalom shalom . That doubling is not an accident. It is emphasized. It is Isaiah's way of saying this is not ordinary peace, not the kind of peace you feel on a good day when everything is going your way. This is peace layered upon peace. Wholeness upon wholeness. A deep, settled rest t...

The Spirit of Truth

  Scripture: John 14:17 (NIV) The Spirit of truth. The world cannot accept him, because it neither sees him nor knows him. But you know him, for he lives with you and will be in you. Devotion: These words come from Jesus’ farewell discourse, spoken on the night before His crucifixion. The disciples were troubled, confused, and anxious about His departure. They had walked with Him for years, relying on His presence, His voice, and His guidance. The thought of losing Him felt unbearable. In the face of that fear, Jesus offered a promise that would forever reshape their understanding of God’s nearness. Jesus speaks of the Holy Spirit as the Spirit of truth—the One who reveals, guides, and anchors the hearts of believers in what is real and eternal. The world, Jesus says, cannot receive Him because it does not recognize Him. The world measures truth by sight, by logic, by what can be controlled or proven. But the Spirit is known through relationship, not observation. He is no...

1st Timothy: A Summary

Paul's first letter to Timothy stands as one of the three Pastoral Epistles, written to a young pastor whom Paul had left in Ephesus to oversee the congregation there. The letter is intensely practical, addressing the ordering of church life, the silencing of false teachers, and the personal formation of a minister of the gospel. Throughout, Paul writes with apostolic authority and fatherly affection, shaping both Timothy's character and his understanding of the church as "the household of God, the church of the living God, a pillar and buttress of the truth" (3:15). The Problem of False Teaching (1:1–20) Paul opens by charging Timothy to remain in Ephesus specifically to confront those who "teach a different doctrine" (1:3). These teachers were entangled in speculative mythology, endless genealogies, and a misuse of the Mosaic law — generating controversy rather than the "stewardship from God that is by faith" (1:4). Paul insists that the la...

No Shame in Hope

Scripture: Romans 5:5 (NIV) And hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured out into our hearts through the Holy Spirit, who has been given to us. Devotion: With this single sentence, Paul lifts our eyes from the fragility of human hope to the unshakable certainty of divine hope. Human hope often disappoints because it rests on circumstances, outcomes, or our own strength. But the hope Paul describes is rooted in God Himself, and therefore it cannot collapse under the weight of life’s trials. These words come in the middle of a passage that acknowledges suffering, endurance, and character. Paul does not pretend that the Christian life is free from hardship. Instead, he shows that God works through hardship to produce a hope that is not naïve or fragile, but tested and proven. This hope is not wishful thinking. It is the confident expectation that God will be faithful to His promises. And the reason this hope will never put us to shame is because it is an...

Too Hard For The Lord?

Scripture: Jeremiah (32:26-27 (NIV)  Then the word of the Lord came to Jeremiah: “I am the Lord, the God of all mankind. Is anything too hard for me? Devotion: With this single question, God confronts both Israel’s despair and our own. Jeremiah heard these words while imprisoned, while Jerusalem was under siege, and while the future looked impossibly bleak. The Babylonian army surrounded the city. The people’s hearts were hardened. Judgment was unfolding. Nothing about the moment suggested hope. Yet it is precisely into that kind of moment that God speaks His most sweeping declarations of sovereignty. Jeremiah had just obeyed God’s strange command to buy a field—a symbolic act of future restoration at a time when land ownership seemed meaningless. The city was about to fall. Exile was imminent. Buying property under those conditions looked foolish. But God was teaching His prophet, and through him His people, that human circumstances do not limit divine promises. When God...