The Wealth That Does Not Wound

The Bible in a Year

“The blessing of the Lord, it makes rich, and he adds no sorrow with it.” — Proverbs 10:22

Proverbs 10:22 speaks into one of the deepest desires of the human heart: the desire for a life that is secure, fruitful, and genuinely blessed. Yet Scripture defines blessing very differently from the world around us. The world usually measures wealth by accumulation, influence, comfort, or purchasing power. Proverbs directs our attention beyond all of that and tells us that true enrichment comes from the Lord. The Hebrew word for blessing, berakhah, carries the sense of God’s favor, benefit, and life-giving generosity. This is not merely about possessions. It is about receiving from God what strengthens the soul rather than corrodes it.

The first truth in this verse is that God’s blessing is righteous because its source is righteous. “The blessing of the Lord” can never be the product of deception, exploitation, dishonesty, or cruelty. God does not enrich a person by leading that person into sin. Any gain that requires us to violate truth, mistreat others, conceal wrongdoing, or compromise conscience cannot rightly be called divine blessing. It may look like advancement, but it is spiritually expensive. What God gives is consistent with who God is.

This raises an important question for our daily lives: What kind of blessing are we actually seeking? Many people desire God’s help while pursuing the world’s methods. They pray for increase but rely on manipulation. They ask for peace but continue feeding habits that create disorder. They want spiritual strength but devote most of their attention to material gain. Proverbs calls us to seek blessings that bear the character of the Giver.

The second truth is that God’s blessing creates real richness. “It maketh rich” does not promise that every faithful believer will become financially wealthy. Scripture never reduces the favor of God to money. Biblical richness includes wisdom, contentment, integrity, faithful relationships, useful work, spiritual maturity, and hope that survives loss. Paul described this paradox when he wrote of being “as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing all things” (2 Corinthians 6:10). A person may have a modest bank account and still possess treasures that cannot be purchased.

Worldly riches are vulnerable. Markets change, economies weaken, possessions decay, and circumstances shift without warning. God’s blessings are different because their deepest value is eternal. Faith does not lose worth during a recession. A clear conscience does not depreciate. Christlike character is not erased by inflation. Hope in the resurrection is not controlled by the stock market. When God makes us rich in mercy, wisdom, love, and truth, He gives wealth that death itself cannot confiscate.

The final phrase is especially comforting: “He addeth no sorrow with it.” The Hebrew word translated “sorrow,” etseb, can refer to pain, toil, grief, or distress. This does not mean that those who receive God’s blessing will never suffer. Many deeply blessed people in Scripture endured severe trials. The point is that God’s blessing does not carry the poison of regret, corruption, or spiritual ruin within it. His gifts do not require us to destroy ourselves in order to enjoy them.

Worldly success often carries hidden burdens. Wealth may increase anxiety. Recognition may feed pride. Possessions may create fear of loss. Sudden gain may fracture relationships or expose appetites that were previously restrained. What appears to be a blessing can become a master. Jesus warned, “What shall it profit a man, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?” (Mark 8:36). The sorrow is not always in the possession itself; it is often found in the heart’s enslavement to it.

God’s blessings produce a different fruit. They lead toward gratitude rather than arrogance, stewardship rather than selfishness, generosity rather than fear, and worship rather than idolatry. When God gives influence, He calls us to serve. When He gives resources, He invites us to share. When He gives wisdom, He expects us to guide others. When He gives peace, He equips us to become peacemakers.

As we continue through the Bible this year, Proverbs 10:22 teaches us to evaluate blessing by more than its appearance. The decisive question is not simply, “Did I gain something?” but, “Did this gain draw me closer to God, strengthen my character, and enable me to love others more faithfully?” Divine blessing makes life richer without making the soul poorer.

Today, let us seek what God can give without shame, regret, or bondage. Let us ask for wisdom before wealth, character before recognition, contentment before increase, and faithfulness before success. The richest life is not the one that possesses the most. It is the life most fully possessed by God.

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When Need Becomes Pressure

In the Life of Christ

“Jesus withdrew with his disciples to the lake, and a large crowd from Galilee followed.” — Mark 3:7

When I walk beside Jesus through Mark 3:7–12, I am struck by how little His ministry resembles the peaceful religious scenes we sometimes imagine. Jesus is not sitting undisturbed beside the water while attentive listeners wait politely for Him to speak. People are arriving from Galilee, Judea, Jerusalem, Idumea, beyond the Jordan, and the coastal regions surrounding Tyre and Sidon. The geographical range shows that news of His works has crossed familiar ethnic and regional boundaries. Mark is already giving us a glimpse of the worldwide kingdom that Christ will later announce in the Great Commission. People from many backgrounds are being drawn toward the One who came to redeem people from every nation.

Yet a large crowd does not necessarily represent a multitude of disciples. One commentary observes, “For Jesus, crowds are no indication of success.” Many people came because they had heard what Jesus could do, not because they had understood who He was. They wanted healing, deliverance, relief, and perhaps a miracle they could witness for themselves. Their suffering was real, and Christ responded with compassion, but their interest was often centered on His gifts rather than His identity.

That distinction forces me to examine my own approach to Christ. Do I seek Jesus because He is the Son of God, or primarily because I want Him to solve what is hurting me? There is nothing wrong with bringing our needs to Him. The Gospels repeatedly show Jesus welcoming the sick, burdened, frightened, and desperate. The danger comes when I treat Him as a source of benefits rather than surrendering to Him as Lord. Faith asks more than, “What can Jesus do for me?” Faith eventually asks, “How may my whole life belong to Jesus?”

The crowd pressed upon Christ so intensely that He instructed His disciples to prepare a small boat. This was not an act of indifference. It was wise preparation that enabled Him to continue ministering without being crushed. The picture gives an insightful lesson to everyone who serves others. Compassion does not require the abandonment of every boundary. Jesus loved the people, yet He did not allow their urgency to dictate every detail of His movement.

Those who care for others will sometimes face relentless expectations. A pastor, parent, caregiver, teacher, chaplain, or faithful friend may discover that people see availability as an unlimited resource. They may assume that their crisis must immediately become our crisis. Jesus teaches us to remain compassionate without surrendering stewardship of our bodies, minds, time, and primary callings. The waiting boat reminds us that boundaries are not necessarily walls against people; they can become instruments that preserve our capacity to serve them well.

Mark then shifts our attention from the demanding crowd to the unclean spirits. Whenever they saw Jesus, they fell before Him and cried out, “You are the Son of God.” Their confession was factually accurate, but Jesus refused their testimony. As one commentator explains, Jesus would not accept the philosophy that “any publicity is good publicity.” Another notes that the Gospel of Mark repeatedly emphasizes Christ’s authority as the mighty Messiah and Son of God.

Jesus silenced the demons because truth must not be separated from its source, meaning, and divine timing. The demons knew His title, but they did not love His character or submit willingly to His mission. Their words could create confusion about the kind of Messiah Jesus had come to be. He would not be correctly revealed through demonic publicity, popular excitement, or political expectation. His identity would be displayed through obedient suffering, sacrificial love, the cross, and the resurrection. Jesus would complete the Father’s mission on the Father’s terms.

That truth reaches directly into our discipleship. Not every opportunity that carries our name advances our calling. Not every compliment should be trusted. Not every open door has been opened by God. People may praise us because they hope to influence us, position us, or use us for purposes that do not honor Christ. We therefore need spiritual discernment to distinguish affirmation from manipulation.

Jesus was neither controlled by the needs of the crowd nor distracted by the declarations of demons. He remained compassionate without becoming captive to public pressure. He healed those who suffered, confronted the powers of darkness, protected the integrity of His mission, and continued moving toward Calvary.

Today, I must ask whether pressure is controlling my obedience. Am I allowing another person’s urgency, praise, disappointment, or expectation to determine what faithfulness looks like? The life of Christ teaches me to listen carefully, love generously, establish wise boundaries, and remain firmly submitted to the Father. Christian ministry is not doing everything people demand. It is doing God’s will, in God’s way, according to God’s timing.

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When Comfort Costs Us Courage

As the Day Begins

“And others were tortured, not accepting deliverance; that they might obtain a better resurrection.” — Hebrews 11:35

Hebrews 11 reminds us that faith is not measured merely by what we receive from God, but also by what we are willing to endure because we trust Him. Some believers experienced miraculous deliverance, while others refused freedom when it required them to abandon their loyalty to God. They looked beyond immediate relief toward what Scripture calls “a better resurrection.” Their hope was anchored in eternity rather than comfort.

This challenges the comfortable faith many of us have learned to accept. We may possess the beliefs of earlier generations without being possessed by their conviction. We can attend worship, know Christian language, and enjoy God’s blessings while remaining hesitant to sacrifice convenience, reputation, time, or security. Yet Christ did not call us simply to admire the faith of our fathers. He calls us to walk by faith today. As this day begins, we should ask whether our routines are strengthening our devotion or quietly replacing it. God has placed eternity within our hearts, and He invites us to live today with tomorrow’s resurrection clearly in view.

Heavenly Father, I thank You for the faithful believers who chose obedience over comfort and eternity over temporary relief. Forgive me when I settle for an undisturbed life instead of a surrendered life. Awaken my heart to Your eternal purposes. Help me remember that my time, opportunities, abilities, and resources belong to You. Give me courage to obey when obedience is inconvenient and faithfulness requires sacrifice.

Jesus the Son, You did not remain in heavenly comfort but entered our suffering, carried the cross, and gave Yourself for my redemption. Teach me to follow You without bargaining over the cost. Free me from a faith that seeks only protection, ease, and personal benefit. Let Your resurrection shape my priorities so that I will choose what honors You even when another path appears easier.

Holy Spirit, search the comfortable places in my heart where spiritual complacency has begun to grow. Stir within me holy courage, compassionate action, and renewed zeal. Guide my decisions today so that my faith becomes visible through patience, generosity, witness, service, and obedience. Keep eternity before me and empower me to live as a faithful participant in God’s continuing work.

Thought for the Day

Today I will identify one area where comfort has weakened my obedience, and I will take one deliberate step toward faithful action.

Hebrews 11:35 teaches that biblical faith values eternal resurrection above temporary deliverance. The verse does not glorify suffering for its own sake; it honors believers whose confidence in God was stronger than their desire for immediate comfort. Christian courage therefore begins when resurrection hope reshapes present priorities. A church becomes spiritually compelling not simply by offering comfortable gatherings, but by forming people who love Christ enough to serve, sacrifice, endure, and live for God’s eternal kingdom.

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

Welcome, wherever you are and whatever this day may hold. These daily devotions are an invitation to pause, listen, reflect, and walk more consciously in the presence of God. Spiritual disciplines are not burdens meant to impress God; they are faithful rhythms through which our hearts become more attentive to His voice, more responsive to His truth, and more deeply rooted in His grace.

When Comfort Costs Us Courage

Our morning Scripture reflection begins with Hebrews 11:35 and the faith of those who valued eternal resurrection above immediate relief. This devotional challenges us to recognize where comfort may have weakened obedience and invites us to take one deliberate step of courageous faith.

When Need Becomes Pressure

In the Life of Christ takes us into Mark 3:7–12, where Jesus faces demanding crowds and deceptive spiritual opposition. We will learn from His compassion, His wise boundaries, and His refusal to let public pressure or misleading praise control the Father’s mission.

The Wealth That Does Not Wound

The Bible in a Year considers Proverbs 10:22 and the true nature of divine blessing. This meditation distinguishes spiritual richness from temporary gain and reminds us that what comes from God strengthens the soul without requiring dishonesty, regret, or bondage.

When Holding On Becomes the Heavier Burden

On Second Thought explores Psalm 55:22 and Philippians 4:6–9 as invitations to release anxiety into the care of God. We will consider the surprising possibility that worry often survives because it gives us the illusion of control, while surrender restores clarity for faithful action.

Hope That Outlives the Hills

DID YOU KNOW turns to Psalm 121 and 1 Peter 1 to examine eternal hope. This devotional shows how ordinary comforts can quietly become substitutes for God and how resurrection hope gives strength not only in major trials but also in the daily pressures that shape our Christian walk.

Victory Before Sleep

As the Day Ends reflects on James 4:7 and the believer’s position in Christ. We will be encouraged to submit ourselves to God, resist fear and deception, and rest in the finished victory of Jesus rather than in our own strength.

May these Scripture reflections guide your faith journey, strengthen your daily devotions, and help you recognize God’s presence in both the quiet and demanding moments of life. The Lord who begins His good work in us remains faithful to continue it, one surrendered thought, one obedient decision, and one prayer at a time.

Pastor Hogg

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现在的天堂是一个真实而有形的地方吗?

Is the Present Heaven a Physical Place?

Heaven

One of the most common assumptions about Heaven is that it must be entirely immaterial—a place of mist, light, floating spirits, and abstract worship. Yet when Scripture describes the present Heaven, it repeatedly uses language that suggests order, location, activity, recognizable persons, and even objects with physical qualities. We should be cautious because some passages, especially in Revelation, contain symbolic imagery. At the same time, we should be equally cautious about dismissing every description as merely symbolic. The Bible appears to present Heaven not as less real than Earth, but as a higher and more enduring realm from which earthly realities derive their meaning.

In Revelation 7:9, John sees an innumerable multitude from every nation, tribe, people, and language standing before God’s throne and the Lamb. They wear white robes and hold palm branches. The scene conveys redemption, victory, worship, and unity among God’s people. The robes may symbolize purity, and the palm branches may symbolize triumph, but symbols are not necessarily unreal. A wedding ring symbolizes a covenant, yet the ring itself is physical. A national flag symbolizes a people, yet the fabric remains real. Likewise, the symbolic meaning of heavenly objects does not automatically require that those objects lack substance.

Revelation also describes angels holding trumpets, an eagle flying overhead, scrolls being opened, elders seated on thrones, and martyrs clothed in garments. Some of this imagery may communicate truths through visions, but the repetition of spatial and tangible language is significant. People stand, speak, worship, receive clothing, and interact with their surroundings. Heaven is presented as a place where conscious beings exist in relationship with God, with one another, and with their environment.

Hebrews 8:5 adds an important dimension. It says that the earthly priests served in a sanctuary that was a copy and shadow of the heavenly reality. Moses was commanded to build the Tabernacle according to the pattern God showed him on the mountain. This means the earthly sanctuary did not create the idea of heavenly worship. Rather, earthly worship reflected something already real in God’s presence.

We often think of Earth as concrete and Heaven as vague. Hebrews encourages us to reverse that assumption. Heaven is the source realm; Earth is the derivative realm. The earthly Tabernacle was temporary, but it reflected an enduring heavenly order. The earthly priesthood was imperfect, but it pointed to Christ’s perfect priesthood. The earthly Most Holy Place was restricted, but it anticipated direct access to God through Jesus. In this sense, heavenly reality is not less substantial than earthly reality. It is more foundational.

Hebrews 12:22 speaks of Mount Zion, the city of the living God, the heavenly Jerusalem, and countless angels gathered in joy. The word “city” suggests community, structure, belonging, government, and shared life. The New Jerusalem will eventually descend to the New Earth as a physical city. If a heavenly Jerusalem presently exists, it is reasonable to consider that it may already possess real spatial and material characteristics, even if they are unlike anything our current bodies can fully perceive.

Revelation 2:7 presents another intriguing detail. Jesus promises that the victorious will eat from the tree of life, which is presently in the paradise of God. The tree of life appeared physically in Eden, is presently associated with God’s paradise, and will stand in the New Jerusalem according to Revelation 22. Scripture seems to trace continuity rather than replacement. The same God who created physical trees, rivers, fruit, bodies, cities, and gardens is also the God of Heaven. Physicality is not opposed to spirituality. God created matter and called it good.

This helps correct an important misunderstanding. Christianity does not teach that salvation means escaping physical existence forever. Our hope is resurrection. Jesus rose bodily from the grave. He could be seen, touched, and recognized. He ate with His disciples, yet His resurrected body was transformed and no longer subject to death. The final Christian hope is not that we become disembodied spirits forever, but that God raises us and gives us glorified bodies fit for life in the renewed creation.

The present Heaven is the intermediate dwelling place of believers who die before the resurrection. Their condition is blessed because they are with Christ, but it is not yet the final state. The full biblical hope includes the resurrection of the body, the judgment of evil, the renewal of creation, and the joining of Heaven and Earth under the reign of Christ. Whatever physical properties the present Heaven possesses, it points toward the day when God’s redeemed people will live bodily in the New Heavens and New Earth.

This truth brings Heaven into real life. The Christian future is not vague, impersonal, or detached from everything we recognize as meaningful. God preserves identity, relationship, worship, beauty, community, and purposeful activity. The people before the throne come from different nations and languages, yet their diversity is not erased. Redemption gathers human history into the worship of Christ. The city, the tree, the gathering, the robes, and the songs all communicate that eternal life is rich, ordered, relational, and full of joy.

When we grieve a believer who has died, we need not imagine that person dissolving into some nameless spiritual energy. Scripture presents the departed faithful as conscious, known, secure, and present with Christ. They await resurrection, but they are not lost. Their present existence is real because Christ is real, Heaven is real, and God’s promises are real.

The physical imagery of Heaven also teaches us to value the life God has given us now. Our bodies matter. Creation matters. Faithful work matters. Worship matters. Relationships matter. God is not preparing to discard everything He made; He is preparing to redeem and restore His creation. The continuity between Eden, the present Heaven, the New Jerusalem, and the New Earth assures us that God’s redemptive purpose is not destruction but renewal.

We should therefore avoid speaking of Heaven as though it were a thin, colorless waiting room. The Bible describes a realm alive with worship, angels, redeemed people, divine government, beauty, movement, and joyful expectation. We may not understand exactly how its physical properties relate to our present world, but we can confidently say that Heaven is not less real than Earth. It is the realm of God’s throne, Christ’s presence, and the believer’s secure hope.

Is the present Heaven a physical place? Scripture does not answer every scientific or philosophical question we might raise. Yet it gives substantial reason to believe that the present Heaven has genuine spatial and tangible qualities suited to those who inhabit it. More importantly, it assures us that our destiny in Christ is not an empty abstraction. We are moving toward resurrection, renewed creation, restored fellowship, and everlasting life in the presence of God.

May the Lord steady your heart with the assurance that Heaven is real, Christ is waiting, and resurrection life is ahead. May your hope become stronger than your fear, and may the promise of God’s renewed creation give courage to your faith today.

Blessings,

Pastor Hogg

 

 

天堂

许多人一想到天堂,就会把它想象成一个完全没有实体的地方:那里只有光、云彩、漂浮的灵魂,以及某种抽象的敬拜。然而,当圣经描述现在的天堂时,却一再使用有关地点、秩序、行动、人物和物体的语言。我们当然需要谨慎,因为《启示录》中有许多象征性的异象。但我们也应该同样谨慎,不要因为其中有象征,就把所有描述都解释成虚幻的图画。圣经所呈现的天堂,并不是比地球更不真实的地方,而是一个更高、更持久的领域。地上的许多事物,正是从那个属天的真实中得到意义。

《启示录》七章九节记载,约翰看见有许多人,多得没有人能够数过来。他们来自各国、各族、各民和各种语言,站在宝座和羔羊面前,身穿白衣,手拿棕树枝。这幅景象表达了救赎、得胜、敬拜以及神子民的合一。白衣可能象征洁净,棕树枝可能象征胜利,但象征并不表示事物本身一定不存在。结婚戒指象征婚约,但戒指仍然是真实的。国旗象征一个国家和人民,但那面旗帜仍有真实的形状和材质。同样,天堂中的物体具有象征意义,并不等于它们没有任何实际存在。

《启示录》也提到天使拿着号筒、鹰在天空飞翔、书卷被打开、长老坐在宝座上,以及殉道者身穿衣服。这些异象有些可能是用图像传达属灵真理,但其中不断出现空间和实体性的语言,仍然值得我们认真思想。人们站立、说话、敬拜、领受衣袍,并与周围的环境发生关系。天堂不是一个没有形态的虚空,而是一个有意识的生命与神相交、与他人相交,并存在于某种真实环境中的地方。

《希伯来书》八章五节提供了重要的理解角度。经文说,地上的祭司在会幕中事奉,而那会幕不过是天上事物的样式和影子。摩西在山上领受神的吩咐,要按照所看见的样式建造会幕。这表示,不是人先创造了地上的敬拜,然后把这种想法投射到天堂;恰恰相反,地上的敬拜是根据天上的真实而设立的。

我们常常认为地球是具体的,天堂是模糊的。但《希伯来书》帮助我们改变这种想法。天堂才是源头,地上则是反映。地上的会幕是暂时的,却反映了天上长存的秩序。地上的祭司不完全,却指向基督完全的大祭司职分。地上的至圣所只有少数人可以进入,却预表了信徒藉着耶稣可以坦然来到神面前。这样看来,天上的真实并不比地上的真实更薄弱,反而更加根本和稳定。

《希伯来书》十二章二十二节说,信徒已经来到锡安山、永生神的城、天上的耶路撒冷,以及千万天使欢聚的地方。“城”这个词会使人想到群体、秩序、归属、管理和共同生活。将来,新耶路撒冷会降临在新地上,成为一座真实的城。既然现在天上已经有一座被称为“天上的耶路撒冷”的城,那么我们完全有理由认为,它可能已经具有真实的空间和某种实体特征,只是这些特征可能超越我们现在身体能够理解的范围。

《启示录》二章七节还有一个十分值得注意的细节。耶稣应许得胜的人,要吃神乐园中生命树的果子。生命树曾经真实地出现在伊甸园中,现在它在神的乐园里,将来也会出现在新耶路撒冷中。圣经似乎强调的是连续性,而不是完全不同的替代。创造树木、河流、果实、身体、城市和花园的神,也是天堂的神。物质并不与属灵相敌对,因为物质本来就是神所创造的,而且神称它为美好。

这一点可以纠正一个常见的误解。基督信仰并不是教导人永远逃离身体和受造世界。基督徒最终的盼望是复活。耶稣从坟墓中身体复活,门徒可以看见祂、触摸祂、认出祂。祂也与门徒一同吃东西。然而,祂复活后的身体已经改变,不再受死亡辖制。基督徒最终的盼望,不是永远成为没有身体的灵,而是神使我们复活,赐给我们荣耀的身体,使我们适合生活在更新的创造中。

现在的天堂,是那些在身体复活之前离世信徒所居住的中间状态。他们因为与基督同在而蒙福,但那还不是最终的完成。完整的圣经盼望包括身体复活、罪恶受审判、受造界被更新,以及天与地在基督统治下重新联合。无论现在的天堂具有怎样的实体特征,它都指向将来的那一天:神所救赎的百姓将以复活的身体,生活在新天新地中。

这项真理能够把天堂的教义带进我们的现实生活。基督徒的未来不是模糊的、没有个性的,也不是与我们所珍视的一切完全断开的。神保守人的身份、关系、敬拜、群体、美好和有意义的行动。站在宝座前的人来自不同国家和语言,他们的差异没有被消除,而是在基督里成为和谐的敬拜。那座城、那棵树、那群人、那些白衣和歌声,都在告诉我们:永生是丰富的、有秩序的、充满关系和喜乐的。

当我们为一位已经离世的信徒悲伤时,不需要把他想象成消散在宇宙中的一股无名能量。圣经把离世的信徒描写成有意识的、被神认识的、安全的,并且与基督同在。他们正在等待身体复活,但他们并没有失去身份,也没有被遗忘。他们的存在是真实的,因为基督是真实的,天堂是真实的,神的应许也是真实的。

天堂的实体性描述也提醒我们,要珍惜神现在赐给我们的生命。我们的身体有价值,受造界有价值,忠心的工作有价值,敬拜有价值,关系也有价值。神并不是准备丢弃祂所创造的一切,而是要救赎、洁净和更新祂的创造。从伊甸园到现在的天堂,从新耶路撒冷到新天新地,圣经所呈现的连续性使我们确信,神救赎的目标不是彻底毁灭,而是荣耀的更新。

因此,我们不应把天堂说成一个苍白、单调、没有生活气息的等候室。圣经所描述的天堂充满敬拜、天使、蒙救赎的人、神圣的治理、美丽、行动和充满喜乐的期待。我们也许无法完全解释天堂的实体性质与现在世界之间的关系,但我们可以肯定:天堂并不比地球更不真实。那里是神宝座所在之处,是基督同在之处,也是信徒稳固盼望所在之处。

现在的天堂是一个有形的地方吗?圣经没有回答我们可能提出的每一个科学或哲学问题,但它给了我们充分理由相信,现在的天堂具有真实的空间和适合其中居民的实体性质。更重要的是,圣经保证我们在基督里的归宿不是一种空洞的观念。我们正走向身体复活、创造更新、关系恢复,以及永远活在神面前的生命。

愿主用天堂真实的应许坚固你的心。愿你知道基督正在等候祂的百姓,复活的生命正在前面。愿你的盼望胜过惧怕,也愿神更新万有的应许,使你今天更有勇气忠心生活。

愿神赐福你,

Hogg牧师

关键词:现在的天堂,复活的盼望,新耶路撒冷,永生

When Christ Takes the Throne Within

As the Day Ends

“For the flesh lusts against the Spirit, and the Spirit against the flesh: and these are contrary the one to the other.” — Galatians 5:17

As this day closes, Galatians 5:17 invites me to examine the struggle within my heart without pretending that spiritual conflict means spiritual failure. Paul’s word for “flesh,” sarx, refers here not merely to the physical body but to fallen human nature seeking independence from God. The flesh wants control, recognition, comfort, and self-protection. The Holy Spirit desires truth, humility, obedience, and the character of Christ. These opposing desires explain why I may sincerely want to please God yet still feel resistance when obedience requires surrender.

The answer is not to improve the old self until it becomes acceptable. Romans 6 teaches that my former life was crucified with Christ; Romans 7 exposes the frustration of self-powered religion; Romans 8 reveals freedom through the indwelling Spirit. Yet surrender is not forced upon me. God calls for my willing consent. I must allow the Spirit to expose pride, selfish ambition, hidden resentment, and the desire to appear spiritually superior. A religious experience that feeds self-congratulation has not made me more like Jesus. Whatever comes from God will magnify Christ, deepen humility, and increase love. Tonight, I can stop defending the throne of self and quietly invite Christ to reign more fully within me.

Heavenly Father, I come before You at the end of this day grateful for Your patience. Search my heart and show me where self has demanded control, praise, or recognition. Forgive the moments when I acted as though my wisdom were sufficient. I willingly surrender what I have tried to protect. Teach me to rest beneath Your authority and trust Your purposes even when they contradict my preferences.

Jesus the Son, thank You for carrying my old life to the cross and giving me a new identity in You. I confess that I sometimes want Your blessings while resisting Your rule. Dethrone pride, self-pity, and the need to be admired. Let Your humility shape my reactions, Your love govern my relationships, and Your obedience become the pattern of my life.

Holy Spirit, I give You consent to continue Your transforming work within me. Expose every desire that competes with Christ, but do so with the assurance of grace. Strengthen me to say no to the flesh and yes to Your direction. As I sleep, quiet my striving and renew my mind so that tomorrow I may walk in dependence rather than self-confidence.

Thought for the Evening

Before sleeping, I will name one area where self demanded control today, surrender it to Christ, and ask the Holy Spirit to guide my response tomorrow.

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The Kind of Friendship That Keeps Faith Alive

DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that biblical friendship is deeper than frequent communication because it joins one life to another in loyal love?

“The soul of Jonathan was knit to the soul of David, and Jonathan loved him as his own soul.” — 1 Samuel 18:1

We live in an age of constant contact. Messages arrive throughout the day, photographs are shared instantly, and people can remain digitally connected across great distances. Yet communication is not the same thing as communion. A person may have hundreds of contacts and still have no one with whom they can speak honestly about fear, temptation, disappointment, or faith. Scripture presents friendship as something more substantial than convenience. Jonathan’s soul was “knit” to David’s soul. The Hebrew verb qāshar can describe tying, binding, or joining things securely together. Their friendship was not built merely upon shared interests. It became a covenantal loyalty in which each man recognized that God had joined their lives for a larger purpose.

Jonathan’s response is especially insightful because David’s success could have threatened his future. Jonathan was the king’s son and natural heir, while David had been anointed for a destiny that would eventually place him on Israel’s throne. Jealousy would have been understandable from a merely human perspective. Instead, Jonathan loved David. Authentic friendship is revealed when another person’s blessing does not become our bitterness. A faithful friend can celebrate what God is doing in someone else without treating that person’s progress as a personal loss. In our walk with God, we need relationships strong enough to survive differences in opportunity, recognition, and calling. A genuine friend does not secretly compete with us while publicly congratulating us. He or she helps us receive God’s will, even when that will rearranges familiar expectations.

Did you know that true friendship becomes visible through costly action rather than affectionate words alone?

“Jonathan stripped himself of the robe that was on him and gave it to David, with his armor, even to his sword and his bow and his belt.” — 1 Samuel 18:4

Jonathan’s gift was more than an act of generosity. His robe and weapons represented identity, status, and royal privilege. By placing them upon David, Jonathan was honoring him in a way that carried personal cost. Friendship became tangible. Jonathan did not merely tell David, “I support you.” He demonstrated support by placing something valuable into David’s hands. Biblical love is never content to remain an emotion when action is possible. It listens when listening is inconvenient, shows up when absence would be easier, protects another person’s reputation, and gives without demanding repayment.

This does not mean healthy friendship requires the surrender of wisdom, boundaries, or discernment. Jonathan did not support every action indiscriminately; he supported God’s work in David’s life. Sacrifice becomes Christian when it serves truth and righteousness rather than enabling sin. Jesus gave the clearest pattern when He said, “Greater love has no one than this, than to lay down one’s life for his friends” (John 15:13). Christ’s sacrifice teaches us that love asks, “What can I give for another person’s good?” rather than, “What can I gain from this relationship?” In practical terms, this may mean offering time to someone who is grieving, sharing resources with a family in need, defending a friend who is being misrepresented, or speaking a difficult truth with gentleness. Friendship deepens when loyalty moves from sentiment into faithful action.

Did you know that authentic Christian community responds to suffering with presence, prayer, and practical care?

“Is anyone among you sick? Let him call for the elders of the church, and let them pray over him.” — James 5:14

James describes a church in which pain is not hidden behind polished appearances. The sick person calls for the elders, and the elders come. They pray, anoint with oil, confess sin, and remain spiritually engaged with the suffering person. The passage assumes that believers will not endure every burden privately. The church is not merely a weekly audience gathered to receive religious information. It is a spiritual family in which people carry one another before God.

There is a meaningful difference between saying, “I will pray for you,” and actually stopping to pray. The promise may be sincere, but immediate prayer transforms concern into ministry. James writes, “The effective, fervent prayer of a righteous man avails much” (James 5:16). The Greek word translated “fervent” reflects prayer that is active and working. Prayer is not a polite way to end a difficult conversation. It is participation in the care of God. The early church strengthened its fellowship by entering one another’s suffering rather than observing it from a safe distance.

This challenges the individualism that can quietly enter our spiritual lives. We may assume that maturity means handling everything alone. Scripture teaches something different. Mature believers know when to call for help, when to confess weakness, and when to let trusted Christians pray over circumstances they cannot repair themselves. Community does not eliminate every sickness or sorrow, but it prevents suffering from becoming isolation. Sometimes God changes the circumstance; sometimes He sustains the person within it. In both cases, the faithful presence of the church becomes part of His provision.

Did you know that a faithful friend can help us remain truthful and peaceful in a world filled with deception and conflict?

“In my distress I cried to the LORD, and He heard me. Deliver my soul, O LORD, from lying lips and from a deceitful tongue.” — Psalm 120:1–2

Psalm 120 begins the Songs of Ascents, prayers sung by worshipers traveling toward Jerusalem. The journey begins with distress. The psalmist lives among people whose words are deceptive and whose hearts are inclined toward conflict. He laments, “I am for peace; but when I speak, they are for war” (Psalm 120:7). This is the language of someone emotionally exhausted by hostility. He wants peace but cannot manufacture it in those around him.

Friendship becomes especially valuable in such seasons. David needed Jonathan because Saul’s court had become a place of suspicion, manipulation, and danger. Jonathan helped David distinguish truth from accusation. He warned him, encouraged him, and reminded him of God’s purpose when circumstances became threatening. We need friends who will not strengthen our paranoia or inflame every offense. A godly friend does not automatically agree with every interpretation we make. That friend helps us test our thoughts against Scripture, pray before reacting, and remain peaceful without becoming naive.

Psalm 120 also reminds us that our first cry must be directed toward the Lord. Human friendship is precious, but no friend can carry the full weight of our soul. David and Jonathan’s relationship was strong because it existed beneath the sovereignty of God. The Lord remains the ultimate hearer, protector, and keeper of His people. Healthy friendship does not replace dependence upon God; it reinforces it. A true friend helps redirect our attention toward the One who hears us in distress.

The life lesson before us is both simple and demanding: seek to become the kind of friend you hope to find. Ask God to make your relationships more honest, loyal, prayerful, and generous. Consider who may need your presence rather than another quick message. Is there someone whose success you should celebrate without comparison? Is there a burden you have promised to pray about but have not yet carried before the Lord? Is there a lonely believer who needs to be invited into genuine fellowship?

Authentic community usually begins with one faithful decision. Jonathan chose loyalty over jealousy. The elders chose presence over distance. The psalmist chose prayer over retaliation. Christ chose sacrificial love over self-preservation. We may not create “best friends forever” through a single conversation, but we can begin weaving trust through repeated acts of truth, kindness, confidentiality, prayer, and steadfast love. In a world full of connections but hungry for relationships, Christian friendship can become a living witness that no believer was meant to walk alone.

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When Letting Go Becomes the Strongest Thing You Do

On Second Thought

“I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me.” — Galatians 2:20

An anxious spirit often begins with a hidden assumption: everything depends on me. I may not say those words aloud, but I live as though I must hold every relationship together, anticipate every problem, prevent every disappointment, and manage every outcome. When life does not cooperate, fear rises quickly. Anxiety then becomes more than concern about circumstances; it becomes the emotional weight of trying to occupy a place that belongs only to God.

There is a form of responsibility that is faithful and necessary. Scripture does not call us to carelessness, passivity, or indifference. Yet there is also a kind of striving that quietly turns responsibility into control. I begin believing that if I work hard enough, think carefully enough, pray correctly enough, and perform consistently enough, I can secure the outcome I desire. When that outcome does not come, I interpret it as personal failure. Performance-based acceptance then creeps into my relationship with God, and I begin acting as though His love rises and falls with my success.

Galatians 2:20 confronts that anxious way of living with a radically different identity. Paul does not merely say that Christ helps him live better. He says, “Christ lives in me.” The Christian life is not simply my old life improved by religious effort. It is a new life created through union with Jesus Christ. The Greek verb translated “I have been crucified with” is systauroō, describing participation with another in crucifixion. Paul’s old identity as a self-righteous performer had been brought to the cross. His standing with God no longer depended upon his ability to prove himself worthy.

Romans 6:1–8 develops this same truth. Paul teaches that those who belong to Christ have been united with Him in His death and resurrection. “Our old man was crucified with Him, that the body of sin might be done away with, that we should no longer be slaves of sin.” The “old man” is the person I was in Adam, governed by sin and separated from God. Through Christ, that former identity has lost its ruling claim. I still live in a mortal body, face temptation, experience weakness, and encounter anxiety, but these things no longer possess final authority over me.

This does not mean that spiritual maturity appears overnight. Anabel Gillham honestly acknowledged that when she received the truth of Galatians 2:20 by faith, her circumstances and habits did not change instantly. What changed was the source from which she began to live. She became more conscious of her thoughts and choices and began trusting Christ as her strength, wisdom, and life. That is a helpful correction to the expectation that surrender should immediately remove every struggle.

Growth usually happens through repeated dependence. I recognize an anxious thought and bring it to Christ. I notice my desire to control another person and release that person to the Lord. I feel the pressure to perform and remind myself that I am already accepted in the Beloved. I face a difficult decision and ask the Holy Spirit for wisdom rather than assuming that I must create certainty before taking the next step. Over time, these acts of trust reshape the habits of the heart.

Paul says that the life he now lives “in the flesh” he lives “by faith in the Son of God.” Faith is not denial of reality. It is confidence that Christ is present and sufficient within reality. Faith does not say that the situation is easy; it says that I am not facing it alone. Faith does not promise that I will control the outcome; it assures me that God will remain faithful regardless of the outcome.

The most healing phrase in Galatians 2:20 may be the final one: Christ “loved me and gave Himself for me.” Paul makes the gospel personal without making it private. The Son of God did not merely love humanity in an abstract sense. He loved Paul, and Paul knew himself to be personally included in Christ’s self-giving sacrifice. Anxiety often asks, “What if I am not enough?” The gospel answers, “Christ is enough, and He has given Himself for you.”

That truth changes the way I approach today. I am not required to manufacture strength I do not possess. I am invited to depend upon the One who lives within me. My task is not to force Christ to assist my plans, but to surrender my plans to His life. I still make decisions, complete responsibilities, confess failures, and practice obedience. Yet I do these things from acceptance rather than for acceptance.

On Second Thought

We often imagine that confidence comes from gaining greater control, but the gospel teaches the opposite. The strongest Christian is not necessarily the person who has mastered every circumstance, eliminated every weakness, or formed a perfect plan. Spiritual confidence grows when I admit that I cannot live the Christian life by my own power and trust Christ to express His life through me. That sounds like weakness, yet it is the beginning of genuine strength.

The paradox is that the crucified life is the truly liberated life. When Paul says, “It is no longer I who live,” he is not describing the loss of personality, responsibility, or meaningful action. He is describing freedom from the exhausting demand to be his own savior. The self that must always prove, control, impress, and secure itself has been brought to the cross. In its place emerges a life rooted in Christ’s love, animated by Christ’s presence, and sustained by faith.

On second thought, perhaps anxiety is not always telling me that my circumstances are too large. Sometimes it is revealing that my view of myself has become too large. I have assumed a responsibility God never assigned to me—the responsibility of guaranteeing results. Christ calls me to obedience, but He retains sovereignty. He asks me to trust, but He does not ask me to predict every turn. He invites me to act faithfully, but He remains responsible for the final outcome.

The way forward is therefore neither frantic effort nor passive resignation. It is active dependence. I can pray, plan, work, and serve without treating myself as the center upon which everything rests. I can say, “Lord, I cannot carry tomorrow, but I can trust You today.” I can release what I cannot control while remaining faithful in what God has placed before me. The life of faith does not remove all tension, but it gives that tension a new foundation: Christ lives in me, Christ loves me, and Christ will supply what He commands.

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The Rope We Weave One Choice at a Time

The Bible in a Year

“His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins.” — Proverbs 5:22

As we journey through the Bible this year, Proverbs repeatedly teaches us to look beyond the immediate appearance of a choice and consider where that choice will eventually lead. Sin rarely introduces itself honestly. It does not arrive saying, “I have come to damage your relationships, weaken your character, trouble your conscience, and separate you from fellowship with God.” Sin advertises freedom while concealing bondage. It promises pleasure without displaying the price that will be collected later.

Proverbs 5 originally warns a young man about sexual temptation and marital unfaithfulness, but the principle in verse 22 applies to every form of sin. What begins as a seemingly private choice can become a controlling pattern. The sinner is eventually captured by his “own iniquities.” The Hebrew imagery is that of being seized in a trap or caught in a net. One translation commentary explains that the “cords” are ropes or bands forming a net in which a bird or animal becomes trapped. The picture is of a person being caught in a net his own sins have made.

That image makes me examine the choices I am making today. A trap does not look dangerous to the creature approaching it. If it appeared threatening, the animal would avoid it. The bait must appear harmless, attractive, and satisfying. Sin works in much the same way. It directs our attention toward the immediate benefit while hiding the eventual captivity. A dishonest word may offer temporary escape. Bitterness may provide a momentary sense of power. Lust may promise intimacy. Greed may look like security. Pride may feel like strength. Yet every repeated surrender adds another strand to the rope.

The verse places personal responsibility directly before us: “His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself.” This does not mean that other people never harm us or influence us toward evil. Scripture recognizes temptation, injustice, abuse, and destructive examples. Nevertheless, Proverbs will not allow me to explain every spiritual difficulty by pointing toward someone else. The sins of others may wound me, but my own sinful responses can bind me. I may not be responsible for what another person has done, but I remain responsible for what I permit resentment, deception, or revenge to produce within me.

Matthew Henry summarized the warning by saying that “sin will find them out.” That statement does not merely mean that hidden behavior will eventually become publicly known. It means that sin carries consequences within itself. The deceitful person becomes unable to trust. The habitually angry person becomes governed by irritation. The one who continually indulges appetite discovers that appetite has become a master. The sinner does not simply possess the habit; eventually the habit possesses the sinner.

The second half of the verse describes bondage: “He shall be holden with the cords of his sins.” Another commentary explains that the Hebrew expression means “the cords which his sin weaves around him.” Sin often binds gradually. One choice becomes a repetition, repetition becomes a habit, habit shapes character, and character influences direction. The cords may feel thin at first, but many thin strands twisted together become difficult to break.

This helps us understand why Scripture never treats sin casually. God’s commands are not arbitrary restrictions designed to remove joy from life. They are loving boundaries given by the One who knows where every road leads. The world may portray obedience as confinement, but Jesus said, “Whoever commits sin is a slave of sin” (John 8:34). The person who cannot say no is not free, regardless of how loudly the culture celebrates the behavior.

Yet Proverbs 5:22 is not intended to drive the repentant sinner into despair. It prepares us to recognize our need for a Deliverer. Jesus did not come merely to tell captives that their ropes were tight. He came to break the power of sin. Christ declared, “If the Son makes you free, you shall be free indeed” (John 8:36). Through His death and resurrection, Jesus provides forgiveness for sin’s guilt and power for a new pattern of life.

Freedom, however, should never be confused with passive wishing. Christ calls us to repentance, which means turning from sin toward God. We bring hidden behavior into the light, confess it without excuses, remove opportunities for repeated temptation, seek accountability, and replace destructive habits with obedient practices. We do not cut one cord while continuing to weave three others.

As I read this verse today, I am reminded that temptation must be resisted early. It is easier to refuse the bait than to escape the trap. I should not ask how close I can come to sin without suffering consequences. A wiser question is, “What choice will keep my heart close to Christ?” The safest distance from bondage is not found at the edge of temptation but in active fellowship with the One who sets captives free.

Proverbs 5:22 teaches that sin is both deceptive and enslaving. It catches the sinner through attractive promises and then holds him through accumulated choices. Its cords may include habit, secrecy, shame, damaged trust, and weakened spiritual sensitivity. Biblical freedom is therefore not permission to follow every desire; it is the grace-enabled ability to obey God. Through repentance, faith in Jesus Christ, the guidance of the Holy Spirit, and wise accountability, the patterns that once held us do not have to determine our future.

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When Doing Good Draws Fire

In the Life of Christ

“Then the Pharisees went out and immediately plotted with the Herodians against Him, how they might destroy Him.” — Mark 3:6

When I read Mark 3:1–6, I am struck by how quickly a beautiful act of mercy becomes the occasion for hostile opposition. Jesus enters the synagogue and sees a man with a withered hand. The religious observers also see him, but they do not appear concerned about his suffering. They watch Jesus closely, hoping He will heal on the Sabbath so they can accuse Him. Jesus sees a person who needs restoration; they see an opportunity to build a case. The same event is before everyone, yet the condition of each heart determines what each person notices.

Jesus asks, “Is it lawful on the Sabbath to do good or to do evil, to save life or to kill?” Their silence exposes the contradiction within them. They claim to defend God’s law while refusing to celebrate God’s mercy. Jesus then tells the man, “Stretch out your hand.” The hand is restored, but the hardened hearts remain unchanged. One commentator captures the irony plainly: “Jesus did good, but they would do harm. Jesus came to save life, but they would do violence.”

This moment teaches me that doing what is right does not guarantee approval. Sometimes goodness exposes attitudes that people would rather leave hidden. Jesus did not violate God’s Sabbath command; He challenged human traditions that had turned the Sabbath from a gracious gift into a burden. H. A. Ironside wrote that the Sabbath was “God’s gracious provision for man’s comfort—never intended to add to man’s burdens but rather to relieve them.” Jesus restored the man because mercy expressed the true purpose of God’s law.

That truth reaches into my discipleship. I may be criticized not because I have done evil, but because I have not followed someone else’s preferred method, custom, or expectation. There are times when people agree with the destination but object to the route. They may approve of helping others, provided the help is offered according to their accepted procedures. Jesus reminds me that obedience to God must remain more important than the preservation of human approval.

Mark also introduces an unsettling alliance. The Pharisees and Herodians ordinarily had little in common. The Pharisees emphasized religious purity and resisted many Greco-Roman influences. The Herodians supported the ruling Herodian dynasty and were closely associated with the existing political order. Yet their common rejection of Jesus was strong enough to bring them together. BibleRef observes that philosophically the two groups had “nothing in common,” since the Pharisees concentrated on Mosaic law while the Herodians were primarily loyal to the king and Roman rule. Former opponents became temporary partners because both believed Jesus threatened what they valued.

Their alliance warns me about the power of fear. People often seek to destroy what they cannot control. Jesus possessed an authority the Pharisees could not regulate and the Herodians could not domesticate. His goodness exposed their hardness, His freedom challenged their systems, and His growing influence threatened their positions. Instead of reconsidering their assumptions, they plotted to remove Him.

I must therefore ask what happens in my own heart when Christ challenges something I wish to protect. Do I surrender to His authority, or do I become defensive? Do I rejoice when He restores someone, even if He works outside my preferred expectations? Religious familiarity does not guarantee spiritual openness. A person may know the language of faith and still resist the living Lord when His actions disturb established patterns.

Jesus’ response is equally instructive. He does not allow hostility to interrupt His mission. He knows they are watching, yet He calls the suffering man forward. He does not perform the healing secretly to avoid criticism. Nor does He become cruel toward His critics. Mark says He looked at them with anger while being grieved by the hardness of their hearts. His anger was not wounded pride; it was holy sorrow over people who valued their position more than another person’s restoration.

The expression “hardness of heart” describes more than intellectual disagreement. The Greek term pōrōsis conveys dullness, insensibility, or a heart that has become calloused. Their greatest disability was not the man’s withered hand but their inability to rejoice when God made it whole. Christ could restore the hand immediately, but they resisted the healing of their own hearts.

Peter later summarized the ministry of Jesus by saying that He “went about doing good and healing all who were oppressed by the devil, for God was with Him” (Acts 10:38). Doing good was not a public-relations strategy for Jesus; it was an expression of His identity and mission. He healed bodies, welcomed outsiders, forgave sinners, confronted hypocrisy, and ultimately gave His life for those who opposed Him.

The hostility beginning in Mark 3 points toward the cross. The plan to destroy Jesus does not surprise God or defeat His mission. Human hatred will eventually place Christ upon the cross, but divine grace will transform that instrument of death into the means of salvation. The One who restored a withered hand would stretch out His own hands to receive the nails. His enemies intended destruction, but through His sacrifice God accomplished redemption.

As I follow Christ, I should not measure obedience by applause. The question is not whether everyone approves of what I do, but whether my actions reflect the mercy, truth, and character of Jesus. Opposition may accompany faithfulness, yet criticism does not excuse bitterness. I am called to keep doing good, remain tenderhearted, and entrust the consequences to God.

The lesson of Mark 3:6 is clear: it is always right to do good for the glory of God. I should examine my motives, listen humbly to correction, and make certain that my actions align with Scripture. Once that is settled, however, I must not allow fear of criticism to silence compassion. Christ did not abandon the man because hostile eyes were watching. Neither should I withhold mercy merely because someone may misunderstand it.

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