Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

Welcome into this sacred rhythm of daily devotions, where the Lord meets us in every moment and continues the good work He has begun in us. No matter where you are in your faith journey, you are invited into His presence today. God’s commitment to you is steady and unwavering, and as you engage these Scripture reflections, you will discover that your Christian walk is being shaped not by chance, but by His intentional hand.

Today begins with The Measure of a Wise Life – As the Day Begins, where we are invited to consider how wisdom is not merely knowledge, but the faithful stewardship of our time, words, and resources. This morning meditation calls us to live with purpose, recognizing that each moment is entrusted to us by God to reflect His love and truth.

In When Dying Becomes Living – A Day in the Life, we walk closely with Jesus as He reveals that true fruitfulness comes through surrender. This devotional challenges us to examine what must be laid down in our lives so that the fruit of the Spirit, especially love, may grow freely and transform those around us.

Then, When Confession Isn’t Enough – The Bible in a Year brings us into the sobering account of Saul’s confession. We are reminded that acknowledging sin is only the beginning; true transformation requires a heart that fully yields to God rather than seeking the approval of others.

Later, Called by Name, Sent with Purpose – On Second Thought helps us reflect on the personal nature of God’s favor. We are reminded that being known by God is not an invitation to remain still, but a calling to step forward into the good works He has prepared for us.

In When Being Right Isn’t the Goal – DID YOU KNOW, we are gently challenged to reconsider our motives in conversation and conflict. This reflection reveals that humility and love, not the desire to win, are the clearest expressions of a life shaped by Christ.

As the day draws to a close, When Failure Doesn’t Have the Final Word – As the Day Ends offers peace and reassurance. Even when we fall short, God’s faithfulness remains, and we are invited to rest in His grace and begin again.

May these spiritual disciplines guide your heart, steady your mind, and deepen your walk with Christ today.

Pastor Hogg

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Held in a Love That Does Not Let Go

As the Day Ends

As the day settles into quiet, we often become more aware of what we lack than what we have. There are moments we replay—words we wish we had said differently, decisions we question, and lingering doubts about whether we are truly walking in faith. It is here, in the stillness of evening, that this truth meets us with gentle clarity: Christ is not waiting for perfect confidence before He loves us—He meets us in our unbelief. The father in Mark 9:24 cried out, “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!” and Jesus did not turn him away. Instead, He responded with compassion. That same invitation rests before us tonight.

Jesus reminds us in John 16:27, “For the Father himself loves you, because you have loved me and have believed that I came from God.” This is not a distant, abstract love. The Greek word philei used here conveys affection—a personal, relational love that moves toward us. Even more striking are the words of Jesus in John 15:9–11: “As the Father has loved me, so have I loved you. Abide in my love.” To “abide” comes from the Greek menō, meaning to remain, to dwell, to stay connected. It is not a command to strive harder, but an invitation to stay close. The same love that flows between the Father and the Son is extended toward you. That is not something we achieve; it is something we receive.

As we wind down, this truth begins to reshape how we understand obedience. Jesus says that remaining in His love is connected to keeping His commands—not as a burden, but as a pathway to joy. “That my joy may be in you, and that your joy may be full.” This is where our weekly focus comes into view. The fruit of the Spirit, especially love (agapē), is not formed through pressure but through presence. The more we remain in Christ, the more His love becomes evident in us. Easter assures us that this love is not fragile. It has already overcome sin, death, and every barrier that stood between us and God. That means even our struggles with belief do not disqualify us—they become the very place where His grace meets us.

Charles Spurgeon once wrote, “Faith is the foot of the soul by which it can march along the road of the commandments.” That image is helpful as we end the day. Faith is not about having everything figured out; it is about continuing to walk, even when the path is dimly lit. Tonight, you do not need to resolve every doubt. You simply need to rest in the love that has already secured you. Let that love quiet your thoughts, steady your heart, and prepare you for rest.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, as this day comes to a close, I come before You aware of both my faith and my doubts. Thank You for loving me not because my belief is perfect, but because Your love is steadfast. You have seen every moment of this day—my strengths, my weaknesses, my uncertainties—and still You draw near to me. Help me to rest tonight in the assurance that I am known and loved by You. Teach me to trust You more deeply, not by striving harder, but by surrendering more fully. Let Your peace settle over my heart and quiet every anxious thought.

Jesus, the Son, I thank You that You have loved me as the Father has loved You. That truth stretches beyond what I can fully understand, yet it anchors me in a love that cannot be shaken. You invite me to remain in You, to abide in Your presence, and to walk in obedience as an expression of that relationship. Forgive me for the times I have tried to earn what You have already given. Draw me closer tonight, and let Your joy begin to fill the places where doubt once lingered. Help me to rest in You, knowing that You are holding me even as I sleep.

Holy Spirit, I ask that You would continue Your work within me as I rest. Where there is uncertainty, bring clarity. Where there is fear, bring comfort. Where there is unbelief, gently lead me into truth. Form in me the fruit of love, not as something I must produce on my own, but as the natural result of Your presence within me. Guide my thoughts, renew my mind, and prepare my heart for the day to come. Let me wake with a deeper awareness of Your nearness and a stronger confidence in Your leading.

Thought for the Evening
Do not measure your faith by the absence of doubt, but by your willingness to remain in Christ’s love despite it. Rest tonight knowing that His love is holding you steady.

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When God Says Move

Leaving What’s Familiar for What’s Faithful
DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that staying where you are can become disobedience when God has already called you forward?

There is a moment in Deuteronomy 1:6–7 where God speaks directly to His people: “You have stayed long enough at this mountain. Turn now and move on.” This was not a suggestion—it was a divine command. The Hebrew verb pānâ (“turn”) carries the sense of reorientation, a decisive shift in direction. Israel had grown comfortable at Horeb, the very place where they encountered God. Yet even sacred places can become obstacles when we cling to them beyond their purpose. What once was a place of revelation can become a place of resistance if we refuse to move when God speaks.

This truth presses into our lives in subtle ways. We often equate comfort with blessing, assuming that if something feels stable, it must be God’s will. But Scripture reveals that God’s will often requires movement, not maintenance. Growth demands transition. Just as a seed cannot remain in the soil and also become a tree, so we cannot remain in old patterns and step into new purpose. The danger is not in being at the mountain—it is in staying there too long. God’s voice calls us forward, not because He is dissatisfied with where we’ve been, but because He has prepared something beyond it.

Did you know that fear of the unknown often keeps us from experiencing the promises of God?

When God called Israel to move, He was leading them toward the land promised to Abraham. Yet that land was occupied by formidable nations—the Amorites and Canaanites. From a human perspective, the command seemed unreasonable, even dangerous. Fear naturally rose in the hearts of the people. This is the tension we all face: the pull between what is familiar and what is faithful. The Greek word thlipsis in 2 Corinthians 1:8 describes the kind of pressure that overwhelms human strength. Paul admitted, “We were under great pressure, far beyond our ability to endure, so that we despaired of life itself.” Yet even in that place, God was teaching reliance not on self, but on Him.

Fear, then, is not merely an emotion—it is a decision point. Will I trust what I see, or will I trust what God has said? Moses chose to anchor his confidence not in circumstances but in God’s promise. That is the shift we must make as well. The unknown is only threatening when we forget who is leading us. When God calls us forward, He does not send us alone. He goes before us, preparing the way. The resurrection of Jesus reminds us that even death—the greatest unknown—has been conquered. If God has already overcome the ultimate barrier, what remains that we cannot entrust to Him?

Did you know that your confidence in moving forward is not based on your ability, but on God’s Word?

Moses did not lead Israel forward because he felt capable; he moved because God had spoken. “Then we turned and set out… as Yahweh told me” (Deuteronomy 2:1). That phrase reveals the foundation of true confidence—obedience to God’s voice. The Hebrew concept of dābār (word) is not merely information; it is active, effective, and reliable. When God speaks, His word carries the power to accomplish what it commands. This is why faith is not blind—it is anchored in the character of God.

The psalmist echoes this trust in Psalm 31:3: “For You are my rock and my fortress; therefore, for Your name’s sake, lead me and guide me.” Notice the progression—God is first recognized as secure, and then trusted as a guide. We often reverse that order, wanting guidance before we surrender trust. But God calls us to anchor ourselves in who He is before we understand where He is leading. This is where the fruit of the Spirit begins to take shape in us. Love (agapē) grows when we trust God’s intentions, even when His path feels uncertain. It is in these moments of movement that our faith becomes visible.

Did you know that remaining in comfort can quietly diminish the work God desires to do through you?

There is a sobering reality in our modern lives. Many believers spend more time preserving comfort than pursuing calling. We fill our days with what is easy, predictable, and safe, often neglecting the deeper work of prayer, Scripture, and service. Yet over time, this pattern can lead to a quiet dissatisfaction—a sense that something is missing. The elderly often reflect with regret, not over what they attempted, but over what they avoided. “If only I had trusted more, risked more, followed more closely.” These reflections are not rooted in ambition, but in missed obedience.

The call of God disrupts this pattern. It invites us into a life that is not defined by ease, but by purpose. Jesus embodied this fully. He did not remain where He was welcomed; He moved where He was needed. He did not avoid hardship; He embraced the path that led to the cross. And through that obedience, He revealed the fullness of God’s love. Easter stands as the ultimate testimony that obedience, even when costly, leads to life. When we refuse to move, we limit what God can do through us. But when we step forward in faith, we open ourselves to His transforming work.

As you reflect on these truths today, consider where you may have lingered longer than God intended. Is there a step you have delayed, a calling you have resisted, a change you have avoided? God’s invitation is not meant to overwhelm you, but to awaken you. He calls you forward not to harm you, but to fulfill His purpose in you. Trust His voice. Anchor yourself in His Word. And take the next step, even if it feels uncertain.

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Seen by God in a World That Overlooks You

On Second Thought

There is something quietly unsettling about beginning the day in a world that measures importance by visibility. The headlines shout of global summits, influential leaders, and historic decisions, while most of us rise to routines that seem, by comparison, ordinary and unnoticed. You balance a checkbook instead of negotiating economies. You seek peace in your home rather than between nations. You gather with family instead of dignitaries. And if you are not careful, a subtle conclusion begins to form: “My life must not matter very much.” That quiet erosion of identity is one of the enemy’s most effective tools, not because it is loud, but because it is believable.

Yet Scripture interrupts that narrative with remarkable clarity. “For by grace you have been saved through faith… For we are His workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:8–10). The word “workmanship” is the Greek poiēma, from which we derive our word “poem.” It suggests that your life is not an accident or an afterthought but a carefully composed expression of God’s intentional design. You are not mass-produced; you are handcrafted. And the psalmist reinforces this truth with deeply personal language: “I will praise You, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; marvelous are Your works, and that my soul knows very well” (Psalm 139:14). The Hebrew phrase yārēʾ (fearfully) here conveys awe and reverence—God did not create you casually but with careful attention and purpose.

What becomes clear is that God’s view of your life is not shaped by scale but by relationship. He does not measure significance the way the world does. While we are drawn to what is visible and impressive, God is attentive to what is faithful and formed in love. Jesus demonstrated this repeatedly. He paused for individuals when crowds pressed in. He noticed the one overlooked woman, the one blind beggar, the one grieving sister. In the economy of God, the individual is never lost in the multitude. This is where our understanding must shift. Your life is not insignificant because it is unseen by the world; it is deeply significant because it is fully seen by God.

This truth connects directly to the transformation we are exploring this week—becoming who God wants us to be through the fruit of the Spirit. Love, as described in 1 Corinthians 13:4–7, is not cultivated on a stage but in the quiet, consistent moments of life. It is formed in how you speak to your spouse when no one else is listening, how you respond to your children when patience is thin, how you carry burdens that others never notice. The Greek word agapē describes a love that gives without seeking recognition. It is not driven by applause but by alignment with God’s nature. Easter stands as the ultimate declaration of this kind of love. The resurrection tells us that God’s greatest work did not occur in the spotlight of human approval but through the sacrifice of His Son, often misunderstood and rejected.

Dallas Willard once wrote, “The greatest issue facing the world today… is whether those who are identified as ‘Christians’ will become disciples—students, apprentices, practitioners—of Jesus Christ.” That insight reframes our identity. We are not defined by what we achieve in the eyes of the world, but by how we are formed in the likeness of Christ. Your daily life, with all its ordinary rhythms, is the very place where this formation occurs. It is where love takes root, where patience is tested, where kindness is practiced, and where faithfulness is proven.

It is worth noting that God’s attentiveness to your life is not abstract. Scripture reminds us that He knows even the smallest details—“the very hairs of your head are all numbered” (Matthew 10:30). That is not poetic exaggeration; it is a statement of intimate awareness. Your concerns, whether they seem large or small, matter to Him. Your checkbook, your conversations, your quiet struggles—none of these are beneath His notice. In fact, they are the very context in which He is shaping you into His masterpiece.

If you would like to explore more about your identity in Christ and how God sees your life, this article provides helpful biblical perspective:

What begins to emerge is a new way of seeing yourself—not through comparison, but through calling. You are not here to compete for significance but to live out the purpose God has already assigned to you. And that purpose is not measured in headlines but in faithfulness.

On Second Thought, there is a paradox that quietly reshapes everything: the more you seek to be significant in the eyes of the world, the less secure your identity becomes. But the more you rest in being known by God, the less you need to be seen by others. That runs against every instinct we have. We are conditioned to believe that visibility equals value, that recognition validates existence. Yet Scripture gently reverses that logic. Your worth was settled long before anyone noticed you. In fact, some of the most meaningful transformations in your life will occur in places no one applauds. The irony is that the life most hidden in God often becomes the most impactful in others.

This means your daily life is not a distraction from God’s purpose—it is the very arena where it unfolds. The conversation you have at the kitchen table, the patience you extend in a moment of tension, the quiet obedience no one else sees—these are not small things. They are the threads of a life God is weaving into something eternal. When you begin to see yourself this way, comparison loses its power, and calling takes its place. You no longer ask, “Do I matter?” but rather, “Am I faithful with what God has entrusted to me?”

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When Wisdom Walked Among Us

Learning to See as Jesus Sees
A Day in the Life

There is a subtle but defining difference between intelligence and wisdom, and I am learning that difference more clearly as I walk through the life of Jesus. Moses wrote, “Therefore be careful to observe them; for this is your wisdom and your understanding” (Deuteronomy 4:6a), and he was not pointing to knowledge as accumulation, but to obedience as revelation. The Hebrew word for wisdom here is ḥokmāh, which carries the sense of skill in living—an applied understanding shaped by relationship with God. As I reflect on Jesus, I do not see a man merely informed about God; I see One who lived in perfect alignment with Him. His wisdom was not theoretical; it was embodied.

When I consider how Jesus moved through each day, I notice that He did not rely on human reasoning to guide His steps. In fact, the Apostle Paul reminds us, “For the message of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God” (1 Corinthians 1:18). That word “foolishness” translates the Greek mōria, meaning something that appears absurd by human standards. And yet, what seems irrational to the world is often the clearest expression of divine wisdom. Jesus choosing the cross is the ultimate example—an act that defied human logic but fulfilled God’s eternal purpose. Easter stands as the vindication of that wisdom. What looked like defeat became the greatest demonstration of love the world has ever known.

I find myself asking, “Where do I look for wisdom when decisions press in?” If I am honest, there are moments when I lean too heavily on my own understanding. Yet Jesus consistently modeled dependence on the Father. He would withdraw to pray, align His will, and then act with clarity. This is precisely what Jesus promised us through the Spirit. “When He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth” (John 16:13). The Greek word for guide, hodēgēsei, suggests leading along a path—not merely informing but directing step by step. That means wisdom is not something I possess independently; it is something I follow as I remain attentive to the Spirit’s voice.

A.W. Tozer once wrote, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” That statement challenges me because it reveals that wisdom begins not with circumstance, but with perception. If I see God as distant, I will trust myself more than Him. If I see Him as present and faithful, I will lean into His direction even when it contradicts my instincts. Likewise, Charles Spurgeon observed, “Wisdom is the right use of knowledge.” Jesus exemplified this perfectly. He did not simply know the Scriptures; He lived them out in real time, applying truth with compassion, timing, and authority.

What becomes clear is that God’s design has always been for His people to display His wisdom through their lives. Zechariah foresaw a day when others would say, “We will go with you, for we have heard that God is with you” (Zechariah 8:23). That is the kind of life I want—a life that quietly testifies to God’s presence through wise decisions, steady peace, and sacrificial love. This connects directly to the fruit of the Spirit, particularly love (agapē), which is not driven by emotion but by divine character. As 1 Corinthians 13:4–7 describes, love is patient, kind, and enduring. That kind of love requires wisdom to know when to speak, when to wait, and when to act.

As I walk through this day, I am reminded that wisdom is not proven in isolation but in relationship. My family experiences it in how I respond under pressure. My friends see it in the counsel I give. Even those who do not share my faith observe it in the steadiness of my choices. The Holy Spirit is not simply present to comfort me but to guide me into decisions that reflect God’s heart. That means every moment carries an opportunity to demonstrate a wisdom that is not my own.

So I begin this day with a simple posture: listening before acting, trusting before striving, and loving before judging. Because in the life of Jesus, I see that wisdom is not something I achieve—it is Someone I follow.

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A Life Ordered by Reverence, Service, and Gratitude

The Bible in a Year

As we continue our journey through Scripture, we arrive at a moment of transition in 1 Samuel 12:24: “Only fear the Lord, and serve him in truth with all your heart; for consider how great things he hath done for you.” Samuel stands before Israel at a critical point—the establishment of Saul as king—and offers what could be called a final pastoral charge. He does not overwhelm them with complexity. Instead, he distills their national and spiritual duty into three foundational movements: fear God, serve God, and thank God. These are not merely ancient instructions for a nation; they are enduring principles for every believer seeking to walk faithfully with the Lord.

To “fear the Lord” carries a depth that is often misunderstood. The Hebrew word yārēʾ does not suggest terror but reverence, awe, and submission. It is the posture of a heart that recognizes God’s holiness and responds accordingly. This reverence shapes how we think, speak, and act. When Samuel calls Israel to fear God, he is calling them to honor Him above all else, to believe His Word without reservation, and to obey Him without hesitation. This aligns closely with the New Testament vision of transformation. As we seek to become who God wants us to be—especially in cultivating the fruit of the Spirit—this reverence becomes the soil from which love grows. Without a proper view of God, love becomes sentiment. With it, love becomes a reflection of His character.

Samuel then moves naturally from reverence to service: “serve him in truth with all your heart.” The order is important. We cannot serve what we do not first revere. The word for “truth” here is rooted in the Hebrew concept of ʾĕmet, meaning faithfulness, reliability, and integrity. This is not service for appearance or recognition; it is service that is authentic and God-centered. I am reminded of how easily service can become performance. We can do the right things for the wrong reasons—seeking approval, recognition, or influence. Yet Samuel calls us back to something deeper: honest service that flows from a sincere heart. Heart service is both fervent and faithful. It is consistent when no one is watching and joyful even when unnoticed. As Charles Spurgeon once said, “It is not how much we do, but how much love we put into the doing.” That statement bridges beautifully into our weekly focus—love as the defining mark of transformation.

This brings us to the final instruction: gratitude. “Consider how great things he hath done for you.” The word “consider” invites intentional reflection. It is easy to move through life unaware of the blessings that surround us, but gratitude requires attention. The greatness of God’s works is seen both in their abundance and their significance. Salvation stands at the center of these blessings, especially as we reflect on Easter. The resurrection is the ultimate “great thing” God has done—a demonstration of His love that reshapes everything. The Greek term charis (grace) captures this reality: unearned favor freely given. When we truly consider what God has done, gratitude becomes the natural response, and that gratitude fuels both our reverence and our service.

A.W. Tozer once observed, “The thankful heart will always find something to be thankful for.” That insight reminds us that gratitude is not dependent on circumstance but on perspective. When we see our lives through the lens of God’s faithfulness, even ordinary moments become expressions of His grace. This perspective transforms how we live. We begin to serve not out of obligation but out of appreciation. We obey not out of fear of punishment but out of love for the One who has already given us everything.

As we walk through today, these three movements—fear, serve, and thank—offer a simple yet comprehensive framework for faithful living. They guide our decisions, shape our relationships, and anchor our hearts in God’s truth. In a world filled with uncertainty and competing voices, this clarity is a gift. The Holy Spirit takes these ancient words and makes them alive within us, guiding us into wisdom and helping us reflect the love of Christ in tangible ways.

As we continue this year-long journey through the Bible, let us not rush past these foundational truths. Instead, let us carry them with us—allowing reverence to shape our worship, service to define our actions, and gratitude to fill our hearts. In doing so, we begin to reflect the very love that Easter proclaims.

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A Worthy Goal

Walking in the Will That Forms Love
As the Day Begins

“Commit your way to the Lord, trust also in Him, and He shall bring it to pass.” — Psalm 37:5

There is a quiet tension that many of us carry into the morning hours—the desire to become something meaningful, to accomplish something lasting, to shape a life that matters. Yet the psalmist invites us into a different posture, one not rooted in striving alone but in surrender. The Hebrew word for “commit” in Psalm 37:5 is galal, which literally means “to roll.” It paints the picture of rolling the full weight of your life—your plans, ambitions, fears—onto the Lord. This is not passive resignation, but an intentional trust that God is both architect and finisher. When we pursue goals outside of His design, we often feel the friction of frustration and the exhaustion of self-dependence. But when our goals are aligned with His purpose, there is a different kind of effort—one marked by growth rather than strain, formation rather than manipulation.

This speaks directly into the heart of what it means to become who God wants us to be, especially as we reflect on the fruit of the Spirit. Love, as described in 1 Corinthians 13:4–7, is not achieved through force of will but cultivated through transformation. Easter stands as the ultimate evidence of this truth. The resurrection is not merely an event to celebrate but a declaration that God’s love accomplishes what human striving cannot. When Jesus rose, He did not validate human effort; He fulfilled divine intention. The Greek word for love in Galatians 5:22 is agapē, a love that is self-giving, sacrificial, and rooted in God’s nature. That kind of love cannot be manufactured by ambition; it must be formed through surrender.

Consider how often we set goals that sound admirable but are disconnected from how God has shaped us. There is a difference between developing your gifts and attempting to become someone you were never created to be. God calls us to stewardship, not imitation. Just as a farmer cultivates what is planted rather than forcing a different crop to grow, so we are called to nurture the gifts God has placed within us. This requires discipline, yes, but also discernment. As theologian Dallas Willard once noted, “Grace is not opposed to effort, it is opposed to earning.” The effort we give is not to prove ourselves but to cooperate with what God is already doing in us.

When we begin the day with this understanding, our perspective shifts. We are no longer chasing validation through achievement, but seeking alignment through obedience. The worthy goal is not success as the world defines it, but faithfulness to the path God has entrusted to us. This is where peace replaces pressure, and purpose replaces performance. If you find yourself striving today, pause and ask: “Is this something God has called me to become, or something I have imposed upon myself?” The answer will often reveal whether your effort is producing fruit or simply fatigue.

For a deeper exploration of how God shapes our desires and directs our paths, consider reading this helpful resource:

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I come before You this morning with a heart that longs for direction and clarity. I confess that I have often set my own course without fully seeking Your will, striving toward goals that have left me weary and unfulfilled. Teach me to roll my way upon You, to entrust not only my plans but my identity into Your hands. Shape my desires so they reflect Your purpose, and give me the humility to accept the gifts You have given me without comparison or complaint. Let my life be aligned with Your design, and may I walk today in quiet confidence that You are working all things according to Your will.

Jesus, the Son, thank You for the example You have given me—a life fully surrendered to the Father’s will. You did not strive for recognition, yet You accomplished the greatest work of love the world has ever known. Help me to follow Your path of obedience, even when it leads through difficulty or misunderstanding. Form in me the kind of love that reflects Your heart, a love that is patient, kind, and enduring. Let Your resurrection remind me that true success is found not in what I achieve, but in what You accomplish through me. Speak my name today, as You did to Mary, and draw me into the joy of knowing You.

Holy Spirit, dwell within me and guide my steps throughout this day. Illuminate the areas of my life where I am striving in my own strength, and gently lead me back to dependence upon You. Cultivate in me the fruit of love, not as an external performance but as an inward transformation. Give me discernment to recognize the difference between godly ambition and self-driven desire. Empower me to live in step with You, responding to Your promptings with obedience and trust. Let my life bear witness to the quiet, steady work of Your presence.

Thought for the Day
Choose alignment over ambition. Commit your way to the Lord, and allow Him to shape your goals so that your life produces the fruit of love rather than the fatigue of striving.

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

As we step into this day together, I invite you to slow your pace just enough to recognize that God is already present, already at work, and already committed to completing what He has begun in you. No matter where you are in your faith journey—whether steady or struggling—you are not overlooked. The rhythm of spiritual disciplines is not about perfection but about presence, learning to walk with God in both clarity and uncertainty. Today offers another opportunity to align your heart with His, to listen more closely, and to live more faithfully.

In As the Day Begins: A Worthy Goal, we are invited to reconsider what it means to pursue a life that honors God. The focus is not on striving toward self-defined success, but on committing our way to the Lord and allowing Him to shape our goals. This devotional helps us begin the day grounded in trust, reminding us that true transformation—especially in love—comes from alignment with God’s purpose rather than personal ambition.

In A Day in the Life: When Wisdom Walked Among Us, we walk alongside Jesus and discover that wisdom is not rooted in knowledge alone, but in obedience and relationship with the Father. This reflection encourages us to rely on the Holy Spirit’s guidance, trusting that God’s wisdom will lead us through the complexities of life with clarity and love.

In The Bible in a Year: A Life Ordered by Reverence, Service, and Gratitude, we are drawn into Samuel’s final charge to Israel. The call to fear God, serve Him sincerely, and remember His goodness becomes a framework for faithful living. This devotional helps us see how gratitude and reverence shape a life that reflects God’s love in everyday actions.

In On Second Thought: Seen by God in a World That Overlooks You, we are reminded that our identity is not determined by visibility or recognition, but by God’s intentional design. This article speaks into the quiet struggle of feeling insignificant, offering the reassurance that we are God’s workmanship, created with purpose and sustained by His love.

In Did You Know: When God Says Move, we are challenged to examine where we may have grown too comfortable. This reflection encourages us to trust God’s voice when He calls us forward, reminding us that fear often keeps us from stepping into His promises. It is a call to movement, grounded in faith rather than familiarity.

In As the Day Ends: Held in a Love That Does Not Let Go, we are invited to rest in the assurance of Christ’s love. Even in moments of doubt, we are reminded that abiding in Him is not about perfection but about remaining. This closing devotional helps us release the burdens of the day and find peace in the love that holds us steady.

May these daily devotions guide your Scripture reflections, strengthen your Christian walk, and deepen your awareness of God’s presence in every moment.

Pastor Hogg

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You Are Not Finished Yet

As the Day Ends

“Whoever invokes a blessing in the land will do so by the God of truth… For the past troubles will be forgotten and hidden from my eyes.” — Isaiah 65:16

There is a quiet question that often surfaces as the day comes to an end: Is this all there is? Have I already lived my best days? Have my failures quietly written the final chapter of my story? The prophet speaks into that weary place in Isaiah 65:16 with a striking declaration—God is not only aware of your past troubles, He is willing to hide them from His sight. The Hebrew word for truth here, ’emet (אֱמֶת), carries the sense of firmness, reliability, and faithfulness. God is not shifting or uncertain; He is steady in His promise to redeem what has been broken. What you see as a permanent record, God sees as something He can cover, transform, and move beyond.

As I reflect on this, I realize how easily I define myself by what has already happened. Regret becomes a lens, and disappointment becomes a ceiling. Yet Scripture gently dismantles that mindset. In Ephesians 5:8–10, we are reminded, “For you were once darkness, but now you are light in the Lord. Walk as children of light.” The Greek word for light, phōs (φῶς), suggests illumination, clarity, and revelation. It is not something I produce; it is something I receive. My identity is no longer anchored in what I was but in who I am becoming. And that becoming is ongoing. God is not finished with me simply because I feel finished.

There is also a quiet assurance here that aligns with the love we are exploring this week. Love, as described in 1 Corinthians 13:4–7, “keeps no record of wrongs.” If God, in His perfect love, chooses not to hold my past against me, why do I continue to rehearse it? Why do I let it define the boundaries of what I believe He can still do? Easter reminds me that resurrection is not just about Jesus rising from the grave—it is about the ongoing reality that God brings life out of what appears finished. The cross looked like the end, yet it became the beginning. The same God who raised Christ is still at work, shaping, restoring, and calling me forward.

As the day closes, I am invited to release what I cannot change and trust the One who can redeem it. My past may still feel close, but it does not have the final word. God’s truth does. And His truth says there is more ahead than behind.

Triune Prayer

Father, I come before You at the close of this day with a heart that is both grateful and honest. You know the weight I carry, the memories I revisit, and the doubts that sometimes whisper that my best days are behind me. Yet You are the God of truth, steady and faithful, and You have promised that past troubles can be hidden from Your sight. Help me to trust that promise. Teach me to release what I cannot change and to rest in Your ability to redeem what feels broken. Thank You for not defining me by my failures but by Your love. Give me the courage to believe that You are still writing my story.

Son, You walked through suffering, rejection, and death, and yet You rose in victory. Thank You for showing me that what looks like an ending can become a beginning in Your hands. When I am tempted to measure my life by past mistakes or missed opportunities, remind me of Your resurrection power. You are not finished with me, and Your love continues to shape me. Help me to walk as a child of light, reflecting Your goodness, righteousness, and truth. Let my life tonight rest in the assurance that You have already secured what I could never achieve on my own.

Holy Spirit, dwell within me and bring clarity where there is confusion and peace where there is unrest. Shine Your light into the places where I still hold onto regret or fear. Guide me gently into truth, reminding me that I am not who I once was but who God is forming me to be. Strengthen my heart to trust in God’s ongoing work, even when I cannot see it. As I rest tonight, renew my mind and prepare me for tomorrow. Let Your presence quiet my soul and anchor me in hope.

Thought for the Evening:
Release your past into God’s hands tonight, and rest in the truth that He is still working—your story is not finished.

For further reflection, consider this article on leaving the past behind in Christ:
https://www.gotquestions.org/forgetting-the-past.html

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Grace That Gives and Shelters

DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that giving to God’s work was established before God’s people ever received the fullness of their blessing?

When I read through Numbers 35:1–2, I am struck by the timing of God’s command. Before Israel fully settled into the Promised Land, God instructed them to give cities and land to the Levites. These Levites would not receive a traditional inheritance because their role was spiritual—to guide, teach, and intercede for the people. The Hebrew idea here reflects natan (נָתַן), meaning “to give, entrust, or bestow.” God had already given generously, and now He invited His people into a cycle of giving that would sustain spiritual life within the community. This was not about obligation; it was about alignment with God’s nature.

There is something deeply revealing about this. Giving is not something we do after we feel secure—it is something we do as an act of trust in God’s provision. In our walk with Christ, especially as we explore love as the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians 5:22–23, we begin to understand that generosity is one of love’s most visible expressions. Love gives. Love invests. Love supports what God is doing in the lives of others. When I withhold, I operate from fear; when I give, I participate in grace. The Levites represented God’s ongoing presence among His people, and supporting them ensured that spiritual truth would remain central. In the same way, our giving today sustains the work of ministry and keeps the message of Christ alive in our communities.

Did you know that God built grace into His justice system through the cities of refuge?

Just a few verses later in Numbers 35:6–8, God establishes cities of refuge—places where someone who had accidentally taken a life could flee and find protection. This is one of the earliest institutional expressions of grace in Scripture. The Hebrew term for refuge, miqlat (מִקְלָט), means a place of escape or shelter. It acknowledges that while justice is necessary, mercy must also have a place. God did not ignore wrongdoing, but He created space for protection, evaluation, and restoration. This is a remarkable balance between righteousness and compassion.

When I reflect on this, I see a clear foreshadowing of Christ. Jesus becomes our ultimate refuge—the place where we run when guilt, failure, or fear threaten to overwhelm us. In Him, justice and grace meet. This is why the church has historically been seen as a sanctuary, a place where broken people can come without fear of condemnation. As we move toward Easter, this truth becomes even more powerful. The cross is not merely a symbol of sacrifice; it is the ultimate city of refuge where sinners find mercy. And if we are becoming who God wants us to be—people marked by love—then we must also become places of refuge for others. That means extending grace even when our instincts demand judgment.

Did you know that hospitality is one of the clearest signs of grace at work in a believer’s life?

In 1 Corinthians 16:10–11, Paul urges the Corinthian church to receive Timothy without fear and to send him on his way in peace. What makes this especially meaningful is the context—Paul’s relationship with the Corinthians had been strained. There had been misunderstanding, correction, and tension. Yet Paul still calls them to extend hospitality. The Greek word often associated with hospitality, philoxenia (φιλοξενία), literally means “love of strangers.” It is not limited to friends or those with whom we are comfortable; it extends to those who may even cause discomfort.

This challenges me in a practical way. It is easy to be kind when relationships are smooth, but grace becomes visible when we choose kindness in strained situations. Hospitality is not just about opening our homes; it is about opening our hearts. It is about creating space for others to feel safe, valued, and respected—even when there is history that might suggest otherwise. This aligns directly with the description of love in 1 Corinthians 13:4–7, where love is patient, kind, and not easily angered. When I extend hospitality, I am embodying the grace I have received from Christ. I am saying, “You are welcome here,” just as God has welcomed me.

Did you know that gratitude transforms how we experience God’s grace in everyday life?

Psalm 30 provides a beautiful expression of this truth. In Psalm 30 30:5, we read, “Weeping may endure for a night, but joy comes in the morning.” The psalmist moves from distress to praise, recognizing that God’s grace is not absent in hardship but active within it. The Hebrew word for joy, rinah (רִנָּה), conveys a ringing cry of celebration. It is not a quiet acknowledgment but an overflowing response to God’s faithfulness. Gratitude becomes the lens through which we interpret our experiences.

When I cultivate gratitude, I begin to see God’s hand in places I might have overlooked. I recognize that even in difficulty, He is present, working, and sustaining me. This perspective fuels generosity, grace, and hospitality. It reminds me that everything I have is ultimately a gift from God. As Easter approaches, gratitude becomes even more central. The resurrection is the ultimate declaration that God’s grace triumphs over sin and death. It invites me to live with a heart that is not only aware of God’s goodness but actively responding to it. Gratitude is not passive; it is transformative. It shapes how I give, how I forgive, and how I love.

As I step back and reflect on these truths, I see a pattern emerging. God gives, and He calls me to give. God shows grace, and He calls me to extend grace. God provides refuge, and He calls me to become a place of refuge for others. This is the pathway of love—the very transformation we are exploring this week. It is not always easy, and it often runs counter to our natural instincts. But it is the life Christ modeled and the life the Spirit empowers us to live.

So today, I invite you to consider one simple question: Where is God calling you to reflect His grace? Perhaps it is in your giving, your hospitality, or your willingness to forgive. Whatever it may be, take a step toward it. In doing so, you will not only bless others—you will discover a deeper experience of God’s love in your own life.

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