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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...

Light Your World

Scripture: Matthew 5:14:16 (NIV) “You are the light of the world. A town built on a hill cannot be hidden. Neither do people light a lamp and put it under a bowl. Instead, they put it on its stand, and it gives light to everyone in the house. In the same way, let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven. Devotion:   This passage presents one of the most vivid and compelling images Jesus gives His disciples. He tells them, “You are the light of the world.” This is not merely a description; it is a calling. Light is meant to be seen. It reveals what is hidden, guides those who are lost, and brings comfort to those who sit in darkness. When Jesus speaks these words, He is not offering a suggestion about what believers might become someday. He is declaring what they already are because they belong to Him. The One who is the Light of the world shares His light with His people so they may shine in a world desperate for ...

Be Wise

Psalm 111:10 (NIV) The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom; All who follow his precepts have a good understanding. To him belongs eternal praise. Devotion: With these words, the psalmist reminds us that true wisdom does not begin with human insight, intellectual achievement, or life experience. It begins with God Himself. Wisdom is not something we discover apart from Him; rather, it is something we receive as we learn to revere, trust, and submit to Him. In Scripture, the fear of the Lord is not terror or dread but a posture of awe-filled reverence. It means recognizing God as holy, sovereign, and infinitely worthy. It means acknowledging that He is God and we are not. This reverence shapes how we think, choose, and live. When the psalmist says that the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom, he is telling us that every wise decision, every righteous path, and every understanding of truth flows from a heart rightly oriented toward God. Without this foundation, e...

More Than Eating and Drinking

  Scripture: Romans 14:17-18 (NIV) For the kingdom of God is not a matter of eating and drinking, but of righteousness, peace, and joy in the Holy Spirit, because anyone who serves Christ in this way is pleasing to God and receives human approval. Devotion: Romans 14:17–18 offers a profound reorientation of what life in God’s kingdom truly looks like. Amid a chapter in which believers wrestled with disagreements over food, customs, and personal convictions, Paul lifts their eyes to a far greater reality. The kingdom is not defined by external practices but by the inward work of the Spirit, which shapes the heart and transforms the community of faith. Paul begins by reminding believers that the kingdom is not about eating and drinking. This does not mean such matters are unimportant, but they are not ultimate. The early church struggled with disputes over dietary laws, holy days, and personal freedoms. These issues threatened unity and tempted believers to judge one anothe...

My Soul Praise Him

  Scripture: Psalm 103:1-5 (NIV) Praise the Lord, my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the Lord, my soul, and forget not all his benefits— who forgives all your sins and heals all your diseases, who redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion, who satisfies your desires with good things so that your youth is renewed like the eagle’s. Devotion: This psalm opens with a stirring call from David’s soul. This is not casual praise or half-hearted worship. David summons every part of himself—mind, heart, strength, memory, and affection—to rise in gratitude before the Lord. He knows how easily the human heart drifts into forgetfulness, how quickly blessings can be taken for granted, and how subtly anxieties and burdens can overshadow God’s goodness. So he speaks to his soul, urging it to remember, rejoice, and bless the Lord with fullness and sincerity. As the passage unfolds, David grounds his praise in God's character and actions...

A Summary of 2 John

  Second John is the shortest book in the New Testament, a mere thirteen verses, yet it carries the full theological weight of the Apostle John's mature pastoral concern. It is addressed by "the elder" — John's self-designation that speaks not merely of office but of earned authority, the gravitas of a man who has walked with Christ and shepherded his people through decades of struggle — to "the elect lady and her children." Whether this refers to a specific woman and her household or, as most Reformed interpreters have understood it, to a local congregation and its members, the pastoral situation is the same. A community John loves is in danger, and he writes to warn and to strengthen them. The letter opens, as John's writings characteristically do, with truth and love bound tightly together. John loves this community in truth, and so does everyone who has come to know the truth, because the truth abides in believers and will be with them forever. T...

Thought for today

 From AW Tozer's book God's Attributes "Did you ever stop to think that God is going to be as pleased to have you with Him in heaven as you are to be there?"