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Good Friday 2026

  Good Friday draws us into a quiet, solemn space where the weight of the day settles over the heart. It is the day when Jesus endured betrayal, injustice, suffering, and death, and yet Christians have long called it “good.” In the deep shadows of this day, the love of God is revealed with a clarity that is both humbling and overwhelming. To enter Good Friday is to slow down, to breathe, and to allow the mystery of the cross to speak. The Gospel tells us that as Jesus hung upon the cross, he declared, “It is finished.” These words are not the sigh of a defeated man but the proclamation of a mission completed. The work of redemption, the bearing of human brokenness, the offering of divine love—Jesus brought all of it to its fulfillment. In that moment, the cross became more than an instrument of execution. It became a window into the heart of God. Good Friday confronts us with the cost of love. Not a sentimental or easy love, but a love that steps willingly into suffering. Jes...

The Lord Is My Strength

  Scripture: Habakkuk 3:19 (ESV) God, the Lord, is my strength; he makes my feet like the deer’s; he makes me tread on my high places. Devotion: Here, Habakkuk declares his confidence, spoken at the end of a book filled with questions, fear, and honest wrestling. These words do not come from a man whose circumstances have improved. They come from a prophet who has just been told that hardship, loss, and national upheaval are on the horizon. Yet Habakkuk ends not in despair but in praise. Like us, the prophet lives in turbulent times, and yet he has peace that, through God, all things will end well. The image of God giving “the feet of a deer” is rich with meaning. In the rocky hills of the ancient Near East, deer and mountain goats were known for their ability to move with grace and stability across dangerous terrain. They could climb steep cliffs, leap across gaps, and stand firm where others would slip. Habakkuk uses this image to describe what God does for His people. ...

Teach Us

Scripture: Psalm 34:11-14 (NIV) Come, my children, listen to me; I will teach you the fear of the Lord. Whoever of you loves life and desires to see many good days, keep your tongue from evil and your lips from telling lies. Turn from evil and do good; seek peace and pursue it. Devotion: This Psalm is a gentle but urgent invitation from a father to his children, calling them to learn the way of life that flows from fearing the Lord. David speaks not as a distant teacher but as someone who has walked through danger, fear, deliverance, and restoration. He knows what it means to cry out to God and be heard, and he knows the kind of life that grows from trusting the Lord. These verses form a small doorway into a larger truth: those who belong to God are called to live differently, not out of fear of punishment but out of reverence, gratitude, and love. David begins by inviting his listeners to “come” and “listen,” gathering them close. He wants them to learn “the fear of the Lord...

He Saved Us

  Scripture: Titus 3:5-7 (NIV) He saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of his mercy. He saved us through the washing of rebirth and renewal by the Holy Spirit , whom he poured out on us generously through Jesus Christ our Savior, so that, having been justified by his grace , we might become heirs having the hope of eternal life. Devotion: This scripture passage presents a picture of Christian character shaped not by cultural pressure but by God's transforming grace . Paul writes to a young pastor on the island of Crete , a place known for moral confusion and social instability. In that setting, he speaks of a life that reflects the beauty of the gospel —lives marked by integrity , self-control , and faithfulness . These verses remind us that Christian witness is not only spoken with words but demonstrated through the quiet, steady patterns of daily life. Paul’s instruction is based on the belief that the gospel transforms people from the...

Created For Good Works

  Created For Good Works Scripture: Ephesians 2:10 (NIV) For we are God’s handiwork , created in Christ Jesus to do good works , which God prepared in advance for us to do. Devotion: The words of Ephesians 2:10 offer one of the most beautiful truths in all of Scripture: This single verse gathers together identity, purpose, grace , and calling into a single, all-encompassing promise. It reminds us that the Christian life is not an accident, not a self‑improvement project, and not a desperate attempt to earn God’s approval. It is the unfolding of God’s creative, redemptive work in us—work He began long before we ever knew Him. The word Paul uses carries the sense of a carefully crafted work, something shaped with intention and care. We are not mass‑produced or casually assembled. We are formed by the hands of a God who knows exactly what He is doing. This is especially powerful when read in the context of the preceding verses, where Paul reminds us that salvation is ent...

Summary of 1 Thessalonians

  Paul writes this letter to the church at Thessalonica, the capital and principal city of the Roman province of Macedonia, making it one of the earliest of his surviving epistles — composed around A.D. 49–51, likely from Corinth during his second missionary journey. The letter carries a warmth and pastoral tenderness that set it apart, reading almost like a father writing to beloved children whom he has been too long separated from. It is not primarily a letter of correction, as some of Paul's other letters are, but a letter of encouragement, thanksgiving, and instruction — written to a young congregation that had received the gospel with joy under intense pressure and had already become, in Paul's words, a model to believers throughout Macedonia and Achaia. The background is important. Paul and his companions, Silas and Timothy, had come to Thessalonica on the second missionary journey after their imprisonment and mistreatment at Philippi. They preached in the synagogue f...

Hold Fast to God

Scripture : Deuteronomy 10:20-21 (NIV) Fear the Lord your God and serve him. Hold fast to him and take your oaths in his name. He is the one you praise; he is your God, who performed for you those great and awesome wonders you saw with your own eyes. Devotion:             In these verses, Moses calls Israel to wholehearted loyalty rooted in memory. These words come as Israel is about to enter the promised land , reminding them of who and whose they are. These people had rebelled, had wandered, but had also been forgiven. They have both God’s judgment and His mercy. Moses here calls them with a simple command: cling to the Lord.             Fearing the Lord is not about cowering in dread, but rather about standing in awe of God's holiness and recognizing His power and steadfast love. It is in knowing that this God is not to be taken lightly but respected. Israel had se...