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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...

Commit To The Lord

  Scripture: Psalm 37:5=6 (NIV) Commit your way to the Lord; trust in him and he will do this: He will make your righteous reward shine like the dawn, your vindication like the noonday sun. Devotion: These verses sit within a psalm that speaks to the tension between what we see and what we believe. David wrote to people troubled by the apparent success of the wicked and by the slow, quiet work of God, which often seems futile. Into that tension, he offers a simple but demanding invitation: place your whole path—your decisions, your desires, your future—into God’s hands, and trust that He will move in ways you cannot yet see. To commit your way to the Lord is more than offering Him your plans. It is the act of rolling the weight of your life onto Him, acknowledging that He is wiser, steadier, and more faithful than your own understanding. It is a surrender that does not weaken you but frees you. When you commit your way to God, you are no longer carrying the burden of outc...

Do Not Be Afraid

  Scripture: Deuteronomy 31:6 (NIV) The Lord will deliver them to you, and you must do to them all that I have commanded you. Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid or terrified because of them, for the Lord your God goes with you; he will never leave you nor forsake you.” Devotion: “Be strong and courageous. Do not fear or be in dread of them, for it is the Lord your God who goes with you. He will not leave you or forsake you.” These words were spoken to Israel at a moment of profound transition. Moses, the only leader they had ever known, was preparing to step aside. The wilderness years were ending, and the land of promise lay before them, but so did battles, unknown enemies, and the weight of a future they could not yet see. Into that uncertainty, God spoke a command and a promise woven together: strength rooted not in themselves, but in His unfailing presence. Courage in Scripture is never presented as a personality trait or a natural boldness. It is the settled ...

2 Thessalonians A Summary

  Paul writes this second letter to the Thessalonian church shortly after the first, almost certainly still from Corinth, around A.D. 51. The occasion is both urgent and specific. It appears that the congregation had been shaken — perhaps severely — by the claim, circulating among them in some form, that the day of the Lord had already come. Whether this idea arrived through a prophetic utterance, a teaching, or even a letter falsely attributed to Paul, the effect was real and damaging: some members of the congregation had become unsettled in mind and alarmed, and others had apparently drawn the practical conclusion that since the end had arrived, ordinary life — including honest labor — no longer mattered. Paul writes to correct the eschatological confusion, to steady the congregation's nerves, and to insist firmly that Christian hope, rightly understood, produces not passivity but faithful, grounded, daily obedience. The letter opens, as 1 Thessalonians did, with thanksgiving...

Easter Sunday: The Dawn That Changes Everything

  Before the sun rose on that first Easter morning, the world still felt like Saturday. The air was heavy with grief, the disciples were scattered and afraid, and the tomb stood sealed in the quiet darkness. Nothing suggested that history was about to turn. Nothing hinted that death itself was about to lose its grip. Yet in the stillness before dawn, God was already moving. The stone that seemed immovable was already weakening. The victory that looked impossible was already unfolding. Easter begins in the dark. It begins with women walking to a tomb carrying spices for a body they believed would still be there. They were faithful, but they were not expecting resurrection. They were simply doing the next right thing in a world that had broken their hearts. And it was in that ordinary obedience, in that quiet grief, that they became the first witnesses to the greatest miracle the world has ever known. When they arrived, the stone was rolled away. The grave was empty. And the me...

Silent Saturday: Waiting in the Shadows

Today is the day between. The day after the cross, before the dawn. Scripture gives us almost nothing about this Saturday, and perhaps that silence is the point. The world had gone quiet. The crowds had dispersed. The disciples had locked themselves behind doors. And the body of Jesus lay still in the tomb. Silent Saturday is the space where grief has spoken its last word, but hope has not yet found its voice. It is the day when promises seem distant, and prayers feel unanswered. It is the day when nothing appears to be happening, yet everything is being prepared. We often rush from Good Friday to Easter morning, eager to move from sorrow to celebration. But the Christian life is lived mostly in the Saturdays—those long stretches where we wait, wonder, and wrestle with what God is doing. The disciples had heard Jesus speak of rising again, but on this day, all they could see was loss. Their Teacher was gone. Their expectations lay shattered. Their future felt uncertain. And still...