Finding Stability When Life Refuses to Stand Still

DID YOU KNOW

Did You Know? God often grows your faith through the very conflicts you would rather avoid.

When we read the opening chapter of James, we immediately encounter one of the most challenging commands in the New Testament: “My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations [trials]; knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience” (James 1:2–3). At first glance, James seems almost disconnected from reality. Joy and trials rarely appear together in our thinking. Yet James is not asking believers to enjoy pain or pretend suffering is pleasant. Instead, he invites us to see conflict from God’s perspective rather than our own. Every difficulty that enters the life of a believer becomes an opportunity for God to develop steadfastness. The Greek word hypomonē (ὑπομονή), translated “patience” or “steadfastness,” carries the idea of remaining under pressure without abandoning faith. It describes endurance that is produced, not inherited.

This truth is illustrated in Israel’s history. First Samuel records the tragic spiritual decline during the days of Eli. Corruption filled the priesthood, the ark was eventually captured, and the nation experienced heartbreaking loss. Yet even in those dark chapters, God was preparing Samuel to become His faithful prophet. What looked like chaos to Israel was actually the stage upon which God would demonstrate His faithfulness. We often assume conflict signals God’s absence, but Scripture repeatedly shows that conflict frequently becomes the setting where God’s purposes become most visible. Our trials rarely rewrite God’s plans; they often reveal them.

Did You Know? Doubt creates storms within us that are often more destructive than the storms around us.

James continues by describing two very different responses to adversity. He encourages believers to ask God for wisdom, “that giveth to all men liberally, and upbraideth not” (James 1:5). What an encouraging promise. God never grows impatient when His children sincerely seek His direction. He does not shame us for needing His help. Instead, He delights in supplying wisdom to those who ask in faith. The Greek word sophia (σοφία) refers not merely to intelligence but to the God-given ability to apply truth skillfully in life’s complicated situations.

The opposite response is equally instructive. James compares the doubting person to “a wave of the sea driven with the wind and tossed” (James 1:6). The problem is not asking difficult questions. Scripture is filled with faithful people who asked honest questions. The danger lies in refusing to trust God’s character while demanding His guidance. Doubt turns every circumstance into another source of instability because it shifts our confidence from God’s unchanging nature to our ever-changing emotions. Psalm 119 provides the antidote. The psalmist repeatedly anchors himself in God’s Word, praying, “Deal bountifully with thy servant, that I may live, and keep thy word” (Psalm 119:17). The Word becomes the fixed point when everything else seems uncertain.

Did You Know? Real stability is not found in self-confidence but in confidence that God will provide what you need.

Modern culture celebrates self-sufficiency. We admire people who appear completely independent, capable of solving every problem through determination and discipline. Yet the Bible consistently teaches another lesson. God never intended His children to become spiritually self-contained. Instead, He calls us into continual dependence upon Him. The strongest believer is not the one who trusts himself the most but the one who trusts God the deepest.

This explains why James immediately connects wisdom with prayer. God knows that conflict exposes the illusion of self-reliance. Difficult seasons force us to recognize that our own understanding has limits. Proverbs echoes the same truth: “Trust in the Lord with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding” (Proverbs 3:5). Charles Spurgeon once observed, “Faith is reason at rest in God.” That statement captures James’ message beautifully. Faith is not the absence of thinking; it is the decision to rest our thinking upon the reliability of God’s promises rather than the instability of our circumstances. The believer who continually seeks God’s wisdom develops an inner steadiness that circumstances cannot easily shake.

Did You Know? Every conflict has an ending, but the character God builds through it will remain forever.

One reason conflict feels overwhelming is that it often appears endless while we are living through it. Yet James continually points our attention beyond the present struggle. “Blessed is the man that endureth temptation: for when he is tried, he shall receive the crown of life” (James 1:12). The Christian life always lives with eternity in view. Today’s hardship is preparing tomorrow’s reward. The “crown of life” is not earned by human effort but graciously promised to those whose faith perseveres because their hope rests in Christ.

Even Psalm 119 reflects this long view of faith. The psalmist does not ask for an easy road nearly as often as he asks for an obedient heart. God’s greatest work is not always changing our circumstances but changing us within them. Conflict becomes the workshop where faith is refined, pride is exposed, wisdom is gained, and dependence upon God becomes more natural than dependence upon ourselves. One day every unanswered prayer, every difficult season, every confusing delay, and every painful trial will make sense in the presence of Christ. Until then, the certainty we seek is not found in knowing what tomorrow holds but in knowing the One who already stands there.

The invitation today is simple but life-changing. Rather than asking God to remove every conflict immediately, ask Him to reveal what He desires to produce within you through it. Read James 1 slowly. Pray through Psalm 119. Remember Samuel’s faithfulness amid Israel’s turmoil. Above all, keep your eyes on Jesus Christ, who endured the greatest conflict of all—the cross—so that we might receive the greatest certainty of all: eternal life through His grace. The Lord is not wasting your struggles. He is weaving them into a testimony that will strengthen both your faith and the faith of those who watch you trust Him.

For readers exploring James 1, Psalm 119, or the relationship between Christian suffering and spiritual growth, Scripture consistently teaches that trials are not interruptions to God’s plan but instruments He uses to mature His people. God’s wisdom, faithfully sought through prayer and His Word, provides lasting stability in uncertain times and prepares believers for eternal hope.

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When Strong Becomes Small

On Second Thought

One of the most repeated sayings in popular culture is, “God helps those who help themselves.” It sounds practical, responsible, and even biblical. Yet those words never appear in Scripture. In fact, the gospel teaches almost the opposite. God delights in helping those who realize they cannot save themselves. The doorway into God’s kingdom is not self-confidence but surrender. Jesus consistently drew near to people who recognized their need, while those who trusted in their own righteousness often walked away unchanged.

This truth comes into sharp focus during the nighttime conversation between Jesus and Nicodemus in John 3:1–17. Nicodemus was not an irreligious man. He was a Pharisee, a respected teacher in Israel, and a member of the Sanhedrin. If anyone could have claimed religious credentials, it was Nicodemus. Yet Jesus immediately moved beyond his accomplishments and declared, “Except a man be born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). The Greek expression gennēthē anōthen (γεννηθῇ ἄνωθεν) means “born from above” or “born again.” Jesus was describing a work of God, not an achievement of man. Eternal life begins not with improved behavior but with divine transformation.

Nicodemus struggled because he approached salvation through the lens of human effort. Like many sincere people today, he assumed that enough knowledge, enough morality, or enough religious activity would eventually earn God’s approval. Jesus dismantled that assumption in a single conversation. The kingdom of God is entered through faith, not performance. Paul later summarized this same truth with remarkable clarity: “For by grace are ye saved through faith; and that not of yourselves: it is the gift of God: not of works, lest any man should boast” (Ephesians 2:8–9). The Greek word charis (χάρις), translated “grace,” speaks of God’s unearned favor. It is a gift freely given, never wages earned.

Jesus frequently used children as living illustrations of authentic faith. In Matthew 18:3 He said, “Except ye be converted, and become as little children, ye shall not enter into the kingdom of heaven.” Children possess a remarkable quality that adults often lose. They instinctively recognize their dependence. They ask for help without embarrassment because they understand they cannot do everything alone. The story of the little girl struggling to tie her shoes captures that spirit beautifully. After exhausting every effort, she simply cried, “Help me, God. I just can’t do it.” That simple prayer contains more theology than many lengthy debates. It is the language of humble dependence.

Throughout Scripture, God consistently responds to that kind of heart. David confessed, “The sacrifices of God are a broken spirit: a broken and a contrite heart, O God, thou wilt not despise” (Psalm 51:17). Isaiah declared, “To this man will I look, even to him that is poor and of a contrite spirit, and trembleth at my word” (Isaiah 66:2). God’s attention is drawn not to impressive résumés but to humble hearts. As Charles Spurgeon observed, “Faith is the empty hand that receives Christ.” Likewise, Matthew Henry wrote that faith “renounces all confidence in ourselves that we may rely wholly upon God’s mercy.” Their words echo the testimony of Scripture from Genesis to Revelation.

Childlike faith does not mean childish thinking. Jesus never praised ignorance or immaturity. Rather, He commended trust. A mature believer may possess decades of biblical knowledge, yet still approach the Father with the dependence of a child. In fact, the deeper our understanding of God’s holiness becomes, the more aware we become of our continual need for His grace. Spiritual maturity does not reduce dependence upon God; it increases it.

On Second Thought

Here is the paradox that often escapes us. As children, we spend much of life trying to become independent. We celebrate learning to walk without assistance, solve our own problems, earn our own income, and build our own futures. Independence is often viewed as one of adulthood’s greatest achievements. Yet the Christian life quietly reverses that pattern. The longer I walk with Christ, the more I discover that spiritual maturity is not measured by increasing independence from God but by increasing dependence upon Him. What appears to be weakness before the world becomes strength before the Lord.

Perhaps that explains why Jesus chose a child to illustrate saving faith instead of a scholar, a king, or a religious leader. Children are comfortable admitting what adults often hide: “I need help.” Pride persuades us that dependence is failure, while grace reveals that dependence is freedom. Nicodemus entered his conversation with Jesus carrying decades of education, influence, and religious accomplishment, yet he left realizing he still needed to begin again. His greatest qualification became his willingness to admit that he did not fully understand. That same invitation stands before each of us today. The Father is not waiting for polished performances or flawless spirituality. He is waiting for surrendered hearts willing to say, “Lord, I cannot do this without You.” Ironically, the strongest Christians are not those who appear the most self-sufficient. They are those who have learned that every breath, every victory, every act of obedience, and every hope for eternity rests entirely upon the grace of God revealed in Jesus Christ. That is not the faith we eventually outgrow. It is the faith into which we continually grow.

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Forgiven Yet Still Formed

The Bible in a Year

One of the greatest misunderstandings in the Christian life is the belief that forgiveness automatically removes every consequence of our choices. Psalm 99:8 presents a balanced picture of God’s character that is both comforting and sobering: “Thou answered them, O Lord our God; thou wast a God that forgave them, though thou took vengeance on their inventions.” The psalmist reminds us that God is perfectly holy, perfectly just, and wonderfully merciful. His forgiveness is real, complete, and freely offered to the repentant, yet His fatherly discipline continues to shape His children into people who reflect His holiness.

As I read this verse, I am reminded that forgiveness begins with God’s compassion. The Hebrew word sālaḥ (סָלַח), translated “forgive,” is used almost exclusively of God’s gracious pardon. Human beings may overlook offenses, but only God can remove the guilt of sin. This truth reaches its fullest expression in Jesus Christ, whose sacrifice on the cross satisfied God’s justice while displaying His immeasurable mercy. As “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just to forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness” (1 John 1:9). Matthew Henry observed that “God’s pardoning mercy does not weaken His government but magnifies His grace.” Every believer lives because God delights to forgive those who come to Him through faith in Christ.

Yet the second half of the verse reminds me that grace should never be mistaken for permission. God’s forgiveness restores fellowship, but it does not erase every earthly consequence of sin. Moses was forgiven after striking the rock in anger, yet he was not allowed to enter the Promised Land (Numbers 20:12). David found forgiveness after his repentance, but the painful consequences within his household remained (2 Samuel 12). These accounts are not evidence of an unforgiving God but of a loving Father whose discipline teaches His children that sin always carries destructive effects. The writer of Hebrews explains, “For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth” (Hebrews 12:6). Divine discipline is never revenge; it is loving correction designed to produce righteousness.

This principle continues to speak into everyday life. A broken relationship may be reconciled, yet rebuilding trust often requires patience. Harm done to the body through sinful habits may leave lasting scars even after spiritual restoration. Financial dishonesty may be forgiven, but debts still need to be repaid. God’s mercy does not suspend the moral order He established; instead, His grace enables us to walk through the consequences with hope rather than despair. Warren Wiersbe wisely wrote, “God in His grace forgives our sins, but in His government He allows us to reap what we have sown.” That truth humbles me while encouraging me to pursue holiness before temptation bears bitter fruit.

The beauty of Psalm 99:8 is that it keeps mercy and justice together. The cross of Christ is where both meet perfectly. Jesus bore the eternal judgment that belonged to us so that we could receive complete forgiveness and everlasting life. At the same time, our heavenly Father continues His sanctifying work through discipline, teaching us wisdom, humility, and obedience. Rather than questioning God’s love when correction comes, I can recognize it as evidence that I belong to Him. Forgiveness opens heaven’s door, while loving discipline prepares me to live faithfully until I arrive there.

For readers studying Psalm 99:8, this passage offers an important biblical framework for understanding forgiveness, consequences, repentance, and God’s fatherly discipline. Scripture consistently teaches that salvation through Christ completely removes the believer’s guilt before God, while His loving discipline continues to shape character and encourage spiritual maturity. Holding these truths together guards us from both presumption and despair, leading us into a deeper appreciation of God’s holy love.

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The Guest List That Changed the World

In the Life of Christ

There is something unforgettable about walking into Levi’s house with Jesus. I can almost hear the conversations, the laughter, and the curiosity filling the room. Tax collectors sat beside tradesmen, neighbors mingled with those society preferred to avoid, and at the center of it all sat Jesus. To the religious leaders, the guest list was offensive. To Jesus, it was exactly where the kingdom of God was breaking into the world. Mark tells us, “And it came to pass, that, as Jesus sat at meat in his house, many publicans and sinners sat also together with Jesus and his disciples: for there were many, and they followed him” (Mark 2:15). What others saw as contamination, Christ saw as opportunity for redemption.

Levi’s banquet was far more than a dinner party. It marked the beginning of a transformed life. Having left his tax booth to follow Christ, Levi wanted those he knew best to meet the One who had changed everything. Like Andrew bringing Peter to Jesus (John 1:40–42) or the Samaritan woman inviting her village to meet the Messiah (John 4:28–30), Levi understood that genuine faith naturally introduces others to Christ. Salvation is never intended to remain private. Joy longs to be shared. The celebration in Levi’s home reminds me that heaven rejoices whenever one sinner repents (Luke 15:7), making every conversion a reason for worship rather than suspicion.

The guests gathered around Jesus were identified simply as “tax collectors and sinners.” Many scholars note that “sinners” often referred to those considered ceremonially unclean or those who failed to observe the extensive traditions of the Pharisees. They lived outside respectable religious circles and carried the weight of public rejection. Yet these were precisely the people who recognized their need. Jesus later declared, “They that are whole have no need of the physician, but they that are sick” (Mark 2:17). The Greek word hamartōlos (ἁμαρτωλός), translated “sinner,” describes one who has missed God’s standard. Christ did not deny their condition; He came because of it. Grace never ignores sin, but neither does it allow sin to become the final word.

The Pharisees, however, could not celebrate what heaven celebrated. They viewed table fellowship as endorsement, believing holiness required separation from people they considered spiritually inferior. Their criticism exposed more than theological disagreement; it revealed hearts imprisoned by pride. As commentator William Lane observed, “Jesus’ fellowship with sinners is itself a proclamation of the arrival of the kingdom of God.” Likewise, the NIV Application Commentary notes that Jesus “crossed social and religious barriers because His mission was to restore people to God rather than reinforce human divisions.” Their observations capture the heart of this passage. Holiness in Christ was never threatened by mercy; instead, His holiness transformed those who came near Him in faith.

As I reflect on this scene, I realize how easily I can become selective with grace. It is comfortable to welcome those who resemble me, agree with me, or fit within my expectations. Jesus consistently challenged that instinct throughout His ministry. He touched lepers, spoke with Samaritans, forgave adulterers, healed Gentiles, and called fishermen alongside tax collectors. Every encounter pointed toward the same truth: the kingdom of God is built not upon human worthiness but upon divine mercy. The cross itself became the ultimate expression of that mercy, where Christ bore the penalty of sinners so that sinners could become sons and daughters of God.

Levi’s banquet also points beyond itself. Every shared meal with Jesus anticipates another table yet to come. The celebration foreshadows the marriage supper of the Lamb described in Revelation 19:9, where redeemed people from every nation, tribe, people, and language will gather around the victorious King. No seat at that banquet will be earned by social standing, religious achievement, or personal merit. Every place will be occupied because of grace received through faith in Jesus Christ. The invitation remains open today. The same Savior who entered Levi’s house still calls unlikely people to follow Him, still welcomes the socially undesirable, and still transforms ordinary lives into testimonies of extraordinary mercy. When I remember that I, too, was welcomed solely by grace, it becomes much easier to leave an empty chair at my table for someone else who needs to meet the Savior.

One final observation deserves careful attention. Mark 2:15–17 remains one of Scripture’s clearest portraits of the inclusive invitation of the gospel without compromising its call to repentance. Readers seeking to understand why Jesus associated with tax collectors and sinners consistently find that His purpose was redemptive rather than permissive. Christ’s ministry demonstrates that biblical holiness moves toward broken people with truth, compassion, and the offer of new life. The Church continues that mission best when it reflects both His unwavering righteousness and His astonishing welcome.

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Deciding Before You Understand

As the Day Begins

“Now the Lord had said unto Abram, ‘Get thee out of thy country, and from thy kindred, and from thy father’s house, unto a land that I will shew thee.’… So Abram departed, as the Lord had spoken unto him.”Genesis 12:1, 4 (KJV)

Every day places before us decisions that shape far more than the next few hours. Most seem ordinary, yet some become defining moments that redirect an entire life. Abraham’s greatest decision was not made after receiving all the answers. It was made when he trusted the God who called him before he knew the destination. Faith always begins with God’s initiative. Before Abraham ever sought the Lord, the Lord sought Abraham. That is the beauty of God’s prevenient grace. His loving call reaches us long before we fully understand Him or His plans.

The same pattern continues today. God often asks us to obey before He explains everything. We naturally want certainty before commitment, but Scripture repeatedly shows that God usually provides clarity after obedience begins. Abraham’s willingness to leave the familiar opened the door for God’s covenant promises that ultimately blessed the entire world through Jesus Christ. Every believer encounters similar moments when comfort competes with calling. Today’s invitation is not merely to admire Abraham’s faith but to respond to God’s quiet prompting with the same confidence that His wisdom always exceeds our understanding.

Prayer to the Father

Father, thank You for seeking me before I ever thought to seek You. Your grace has always been at work ahead of my steps, preparing the path that I cannot yet see. Help me trust Your character when I cannot fully understand Your direction. Give me courage to obey Your voice today, even when the future remains hidden from my sight.

Prayer to the Son

Lord Jesus, You perfectly demonstrated obedience to the Father’s will. Teach me to follow You with the same willingness to surrender my plans and embrace Yours. Keep my eyes fixed upon You so that fear will never become louder than faith, and let my decisions reflect confidence in Your faithful leadership.

Prayer to the Holy Spirit

Holy Spirit, quiet the competing voices around me and sharpen my heart to recognize Your gentle prompting. Fill me with wisdom, discernment, and peace as I make today’s decisions. Produce within me a faith that responds quickly, trusts deeply, and walks faithfully wherever You lead.

Thought for the Day

The most important decision you make today may simply be saying “yes” to the first thing God asks of you. Obedience often reveals tomorrow only after faith has taken today’s first step.

One final reflection deserves our attention. Genesis 12 stands as one of Scripture’s defining examples of divine calling, faithful obedience, and covenant promise. Readers exploring Abraham’s journey, biblical faith, prevenient grace, or Christian decision-making will repeatedly discover the same enduring truth: God initiates His relationship with people before they fully comprehend His purposes, and lasting spiritual growth often begins with trusting His character more than our circumstances. Abraham’s response continues to serve as a timeless model for anyone seeking to discern God’s will in seasons of uncertainty.

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

Welcome to another day of walking with the Lord. Wherever you are in the world and whatever season of life you are experiencing, may God’s presence meet you with fresh mercy and steady hope. Spiritual disciplines are not merely routines to complete but invitations to know Christ more deeply. As we open His Word together, may your Christian walk be strengthened, your faith journey encouraged, and your heart become increasingly attentive to the voice of the Good Shepherd. God is faithful to complete the work He has begun in each of us, and today’s Scripture reflections are designed to help us take another faithful step toward Him.

Our journey begins with “Deciding Before You Understand” in As the Day Begins. This morning meditation explores Abraham’s response to God’s call in Genesis 12, reminding us that faith often requires obedience before every question is answered. We will discover that God’s prevenient grace always reaches toward us before we fully understand His purposes.

Next comes “The Guest List That Changed the World” in In the Life of Christ. We enter Levi’s home and witness Jesus welcoming those society had rejected. This devotional invites us to see the heart of Christ, whose grace reaches beyond human prejudice and calls every repentant sinner into fellowship with Him.

Our midday study, “Forgiven Yet Still Formed” in The Bible in a Year, examines Psalm 99:8 and the relationship between God’s forgiveness and His loving discipline. We will see that while grace completely removes our guilt before God, His fatherly correction continues shaping our character into Christlikeness.

In “When Strong Becomes Small” from On Second Thought, we revisit Jesus’ conversation with Nicodemus and reflect on the beauty of childlike faith. This article reminds us that genuine spiritual maturity is measured not by increasing self-confidence but by growing dependence upon the grace of God.

This evening’s “Finding Stability When Life Refuses to Stand Still” in Did You Know explores James 1 and the certainty God provides during seasons of conflict. Rather than fearing life’s storms, we learn to anchor ourselves in God’s wisdom and His unchanging promises.

Finally, we conclude with “The Savior Who Never Changes” in As the Day Ends. As the day closes, we rest in the comforting truth that while circumstances continually change, Jesus Christ remains the same yesterday, today, and forever. His compassion, His love, and His invitation to draw near remain constant.

May these daily devotions encourage your heart, deepen your understanding of Scripture, and strengthen your confidence in the Lord as you continue your faith journey.

Pastor Hogg

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天使也尊重神所设立的权柄

标题:天使与邪灵

在前面的学习中,我们已经看到属灵世界并不是一个混乱无序的领域,而是一个建立在神权柄之上的国度。无论是忠心服事神的天使,还是悖逆神的邪灵,都明白权柄的存在,也都按照不同的原则运作。如今,我们要将这个真理带进教会生活,因为使徒保罗指出,神所设立的权柄不仅影响人与人之间的关系,也影响属灵世界中天使的工作。

在《哥林多前书》11:3-10中,保罗讨论了教会聚会中的秩序,并借着当时妇女蒙头这一文化性的表达,说明一个永恒不变的属灵原则——神所设立的权柄必须受到尊重。今天,大多数文化已经不再要求妇女蒙头,因此这段经文的重点并不是帽子、头巾或外在形式,而是人是否甘心承认神所建立的属灵秩序。

保罗首先说明这条权柄链:“基督是各人的头,男人是女人的头,神是基督的头。”(林前11:3)这里的“头”希腊文是 κεφαλή(kephalē),除了表示“首领”之外,也带有“源头”和“承担责任”的含义。保罗不是讨论谁更有价值,而是在说明神如何让祂的百姓彼此配搭、彼此服事。正如圣父、圣子、圣灵同享完全的神性,却在救赎计划中承担不同的职分一样,教会中的属灵权柄也是为了秩序,而不是为了高低贵贱。

因此,保罗特别提到:“女人为天使的缘故,应当在头上有服权柄的记号。”(林前11:10)许多人对“因为天使”的这句话感到困惑。然而,当我们从整本圣经来看,就会发现天使一直都是神国度秩序的执行者。他们顺服神,执行神的命令,也喜悦看到神的百姓活在神所设立的秩序之中。保罗似乎提醒我们,当教会尊重神的权柄时,就与天上的秩序保持一致,使教会成为神荣耀同在的地方。

今天,我们若把焦点放在是否必须蒙头,就可能错过保罗真正的重点。真正的问题是:我的生命是否愿意顺服神?丈夫是否顺服基督?教会领袖是否忠心顺服神的话语?信徒是否彼此尊重神所安排的属灵责任?权柄若脱离爱,就会变成辖制;顺服若脱离真理,也会成为盲从。但圣经所教导的权柄,是建立在彼此相爱、彼此服事和共同顺服基督的基础之上。

事实上,整本圣经不断强调,属灵的能力与顺服密不可分。大天使米迦勒没有越过神的权柄擅自责备撒但,而是说:“主责备你吧!”(犹9)连主耶稣在地上也宣告:“我不求自己的意思,只求那差我来者的意思。”(约5:30)如果天使尊重神的权柄,如果主耶稣也甘心顺服天父,那么我们又怎能认为顺服会降低自己的价值呢?真正的自由,并不是摆脱一切权柄,而是在神的旨意中找到生命真正的秩序和平安。

今天的教会尤其需要重新认识这一真理。一个家庭若人人坚持自己的意思,最终只会充满冲突;一个教会若人人拒绝属灵责任,就很难经历神同在的大能。当每一位信徒都甘心顺服基督,让神的话成为生命最高的权威时,整个教会便与天上的秩序一致,也更容易经历神借着祂的使者所施行的保护、引导和供应。

愿我们每天都学习把自己放在神权柄的遮盖之下,不是因为害怕,而是因为信靠;不是因为自己没有价值,而是因为知道基督才是真正的元首。当我们尊荣祂,顺服祂,并彼此以爱相待时,我们就在地上反映了天国的秩序,也见证了神荣耀的同在。

愿主耶稣基督赐给你一颗谦卑顺服的心,使你乐意尊荣神所设立的权柄,活在祂完全的保护、平安和恩典之中。愿圣灵天天引导你,使你的生命与天国的秩序同行,在基督里经历属天的能力和丰富的祝福。

—— Pastor Hogg

 

The God Who Never Leaves the Controls

As the Day Ends

Genesis 1:31 says, “And God saw every thing that he had made, and, behold, it was very good.” As the day ends, that verse invites us to rest beneath a truth our anxious minds often forget: God is not improvising His universe. Creation was not thrown together without order, purpose, or wisdom. The heavens, the seas, the dry land, the seasons, the creatures, and human life itself were made under the gaze of a God who knew exactly what He was doing. What He made was not merely functional; it was “very good.”

There are many parts of life that feel like the controls of a great engine. We see buttons, levers, wires, movement, noise, and power, but we do not always understand what any of it means. A surgeon knows the purpose of instruments that would confuse the patient. An engineer knows the controls that would bewilder the passenger. In the same way, God knows the meaning of what we cannot interpret. The Hebrew word behind “good,” tov, carries the sense of what is fitting, beneficial, and ordered according to God’s design. Tonight, I do not have to understand every instrument in the room or every switch in the cab. I only need to trust the One whose hands are steady.

Father, I thank You that this day has not slipped outside Your care. Where I saw confusion, You saw order. Where I felt delay, You knew purpose. Help me lay down my need to explain everything before I trust You. Let Genesis 1:31 quiet my heart and remind me that Your wisdom is older, wider, and stronger than my understanding.

Son, Lord Jesus Christ, I thank You that the Creator entered His own creation to redeem what sin had wounded. You calmed storms, touched broken bodies, forgave sinners, and carried the cross with perfect obedience. As I rest tonight, teach me to trust Your rule over the visible and invisible places of my life. Hold me close when I cannot see the road ahead.

Holy Spirit, breathe peace into my mind and order into my thoughts. Guard me from suspicion, fear, and restless striving. Help me end this day with worship instead of worry. Open my heart to the insightful truth that God’s purposes are not cancelled by what I do not understand.

Thought for the Evening

Before sleep, name one thing you do not understand, surrender it to God, and rest in the truth that He remains at the controls.

For readers seeking an evening devotional on Genesis 1:31, God’s sovereignty, creation’s purpose, and trusting God at day’s end, the central truth is clear: the God who made all things very good still governs His universe with wisdom, order, and faithful care.

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God Can Make Grace Grow in Hard Ground

DID YOU KNOW

Did You Know? God can redeem the trouble created by human weakness.

Elkanah’s household in 1 Samuel 1 was not a picture of peaceful spiritual order. His marriage to two wives brought tension into the home, and the rivalry between Peninnah and Hannah became a source of deep grief. Scripture says of Hannah, “Her adversary also provoked her sore, for to make her fret, because the LORD had shut up her womb” (1 Samuel 1:6). Elkanah tried to comfort Hannah by giving her a double portion, but his kindness could not heal the deepest wound in her soul. There are times when human love, even when sincere, cannot reach the place where pain has settled. Hannah did not merely need more attention at the family table; she needed the living God to meet her in the secret chamber of sorrow.

This is one of the insightful truths in Hannah’s story: God does not require perfect circumstances before He begins a holy work. He often steps into complicated homes, bruised relationships, misunderstood tears, and long seasons of disappointment. The mistakes of people do not cancel the mercy of God. Elkanah’s failures, Peninnah’s cruelty, and Hannah’s barrenness all became part of a larger stage on which the Lord would reveal His faithfulness. That does not mean God approves every wrong thing that happens. It means He is sovereign enough to bring good even from what others mishandle. Romans 8:28 later gives the same confidence when Paul writes, “All things work together for good to them that love God.” God does not waste the trouble of those who bring their pain to Him.

Did You Know? Prayer can turn pain into worship before the circumstances change.

Hannah went to the house of the Lord with a broken heart, and Scripture says, “She was in bitterness of soul, and prayed unto the LORD, and wept sore” (1 Samuel 1:10). Her prayer was not polished performance. It was not religious language designed to impress Eli the priest. She poured out her soul before the Lord. Eli misunderstood her at first and thought she was drunk, but Hannah explained, “I am a woman of a sorrowful spirit… but have poured out my soul before the LORD” (1 Samuel 1:15). That phrase is worth carrying into the day. She did not pour out her soul before her enemy, her frustration, her public reputation, or her unanswered questions. She poured it out before the Lord.

There is a kind of prayer that begins before the answer arrives. Hannah rose from prayer with peace before she rose with Samuel in her arms. After Eli blessed her, the Scripture says, “So the woman went her way, and did eat, and her countenance was no more sad” (1 Samuel 1:18). Her circumstances had not yet visibly changed, but her heart had been placed into the hands of God. This teaches us that prayer is not only the road to receiving from God; it is also the place where God receives us. Many believers wait to worship until after the trouble has lifted, but Hannah shows us that sincere prayer can become the first note of worship while tears are still fresh. The altar becomes the place where bitterness begins to loosen its grip.

Did You Know?

God’s answer to one person’s prayer may bless generations beyond them. Hannah prayed for a son, but God gave Israel a prophet. She asked for the gift of a child, but the Lord was preparing Samuel, who would become one of the great spiritual leaders in Israel’s history. After Samuel was born, Hannah brought him to the house of the Lord and said, “For this child I prayed; and the LORD hath given me my petition which I asked of him” (1 Samuel 1:27). Her words are tender because they show the personal side of answered prayer. Samuel was not an abstract blessing; he was the child for whom she had wept, prayed, waited, and trusted. Yet God’s work was larger than Hannah’s household.

This is where Hannah’s story opens into the wider story of redemption. Her song in 1 Samuel 2 celebrates the God who raises the poor, brings down the proud, strengthens the weak, and guards the feet of His saints. Mary’s song in Luke 1:46–56 echoes similar themes when she praises God for exalting the humble and remembering His mercy. Hannah’s prayer did not end with Hannah, and Mary’s praise did not begin from nowhere. The faithfulness of God moves across generations like a river fed by many hidden springs. Sometimes we pray because of our immediate pain, but God answers in ways that reach people we may never meet. A mother’s tear becomes a prophet’s voice. A private prayer becomes public mercy. A barren womb becomes a doorway into national renewal.

Did You Know?

Trials can produce maturity when faith keeps turning toward God. James writes, “My brethren, count it all joy when ye fall into divers temptations; knowing this, that the trying of your faith worketh patience” (James 1:2–3). This does not mean trials feel joyful. Hannah’s story certainly does not make grief look easy. She wept, stopped eating, and felt the weight of shame and provocation. Yet James teaches that trials can become spiritually productive when they drive us toward steadfast trust. The word “patience” carries the idea of endurance, the ability to remain under pressure without abandoning faith. Hannah endured not because she had no sorrow, but because her sorrow kept leading her back to God.

Psalm 119:1–2 adds another helpful witness: “Blessed are the undefiled in the way, who walk in the law of the LORD. Blessed are they that keep his testimonies, and that seek him with the whole heart.” Hannah sought the Lord with her whole heart, and that is the difference between suffering that hardens and suffering that deepens. Trouble does not automatically make a person wiser. Pain can make people bitter, suspicious, proud, or withdrawn. But when pain is carried into the presence of God, it can become a classroom of grace. The Lord teaches us to wait, pray, surrender, and trust. He matures us not by pretending life is easy, but by proving that His goodness is steady even when life is not.

The life lesson from Hannah’s story is not that every prayer will be answered in the exact way we imagine or on the timeline we desire. The deeper lesson is that God meets His people in trouble and can make good grow from hard ground. The home may be strained, the heart may be weary, and the answer may seem delayed, but none of that places us beyond the reach of the Lord. Today, we can bring our sorrow to Him honestly, pour out our souls without pretending, and ask Him for wisdom as James instructs: “If any of you lack wisdom, let him ask of God” (James 1:5). God’s goodness is not fragile. It is strong enough to enter our trouble, redeem our tears, shape our endurance, and use our story to bless others.

For readers seeking a clear devotional study on Hannah, 1 Samuel 1:1–2:21, James 1:1–8, Psalm 119:1–16, and the theme “God makes good out of trouble,” the central truth is this: God often works through painful circumstances to form endurance, answer sincere prayer, and create blessings that reach beyond one person’s immediate need. Hannah’s story teaches believers that trials are not wasted when they are surrendered to God, and prayer becomes the place where sorrow is transformed into trust.

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Small Faith, Mountain Roads

On Second Thought

Jesus said in Matthew 17:20, “If ye have faith as a grain of mustard seed, ye shall say unto this mountain, Remove hence to yonder place; and it shall remove; and nothing shall be impossible unto you.” That verse has encouraged generations of believers, but it has also been misunderstood. Mustard seed faith is not a spiritual trick for getting whatever we want. It is not faith in faith. It is not religious optimism dressed in Bible language. It is trust in God that becomes obedience, even when the task before us looks larger than our resources, our background, our strength, or our opportunity.

In Mark 11:23–26, Jesus connects mountain-moving faith with prayer, forgiveness, and confidence in God. That setting matters. Faith is not merely the ability to speak boldly; it is the posture of a surrendered heart before the Father. Jesus says, “Have faith in God” (Mark 11:22). That is the anchor. The mountain is not moved because our words are magical, but because the living God is mighty. The Greek phrase behind “have faith in God” carries the sense of holding trust toward God Himself. Faith does not stare at the mountain until fear grows stronger. Faith looks to the Lord until obedience becomes possible.

That is why Mary Damron’s story fits this passage so well. Mary came from the coal mining hollows of West Virginia, a place many would associate with hardship, poverty, and limitation. Yet when she heard that Franklin Graham needed gift-filled shoe boxes for children suffering in Bosnia, she did not begin with what she lacked. She began with the God she trusted. She did not have wealth, influence, or a national platform. She had a burden, a willingness, and a mustard seed of faith. She went through her community asking churches and groups to help, and what began as a small response became a twenty-ton truck carrying twelve hundred shoe boxes. A year later, that number grew to more than six thousand.

The beauty of that story is not merely the number of boxes. The beauty is that faith became love with work boots on. Mary’s mountain was not only poverty. It was distance, logistics, discouragement, and the quiet temptation to believe that someone like her could not make a difference. Many believers lose the battle right there. They do not deny God with their mouths, but they quietly decide that obedience is for people with more money, more education, more connections, or more confidence. Yet Scripture keeps reminding us that God delights to use unlikely servants because then the glory cannot be stolen by human pride.

Mustard seed faith does not mean small expectations of God. It means even small faith, when placed in a great God, can become the beginning of something far beyond us. A seed is small, but it is alive. It carries within it a future that cannot be seen at first glance. Faith works the same way. The first prayer may feel small. The first act of obedience may seem unnoticed. The first gift, phone call, invitation, apology, visit, or word of witness may look insignificant. But when it is rooted in God’s will and watered by perseverance, it can grow into shade for someone else’s weary soul.

There is also a searching word here. In Mark 11, Jesus speaks of forgiveness immediately after speaking of prayer. “And when ye stand praying, forgive, if ye have ought against any” (Mark 11:25). Sometimes the mountain God wants to move first is not outside us, but within us. It may be resentment, bitterness, fear, unbelief, or the pride that refuses to ask for help. We often want God to move circumstances while He is working to move our hearts. The faith that can trust God with a mission must also trust Him with wounds.

Mary Damron’s story reminds us that the Lord often begins with a burden placed in an ordinary heart. She saw children scarred by war and believed love could travel farther than poverty could reach. That is a Christ-shaped instinct. Jesus did not remain at a safe distance from human need. He entered our broken world, carried our griefs, bore our sins, and opened the way of salvation through His death and resurrection. Every act of Christian compassion is a small echo of His larger mercy.

On Second Thought, the surprising lesson of mustard seed faith is that Jesus never told us to admire the seed; He told us to trust the God who gives it life. The paradox is that believers often wait for “greater faith” before taking the first step, while Scripture shows that faith grows through obedient motion. The seed does not become a tree by being studied in a jar. It must be planted. In the same way, faith does not mature while we only discuss possibilities, rehearse obstacles, or compare ourselves to people who seem better equipped. It grows when we pray, forgive, give, go, speak, serve, and obey. The mountain may look immovable, but the real question is not whether the mountain is large. The real question is whether God has called us to take the next faithful step. Mary did not move Bosnia by herself. She filled boxes. She asked for help. She drove what she had gathered toward the need God placed before her. Mustard seed faith is not loud self-confidence; it is humble obedience that refuses to let visible limitation cancel invisible grace.

For readers seeking a devotional explanation of mustard seed faith, Matthew 17:20, Mark 11:23–26, and mountain-moving prayer, the central truth is this: Jesus teaches that small faith in a mighty God can become courageous obedience when it is aligned with His will, shaped by forgiveness, and expressed in love. Mustard seed faith does not deny the mountain; it trusts God enough to move toward it.

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