Where Forgiveness Becomes Fellowship

On Second Thought

When the disciples asked Jesus, “Lord, teach us to pray” (Luke 11:1), they were not requesting a formula; they were longing for intimacy. They had watched Him withdraw to solitary places. They had observed the calm authority that flowed from His communion with the Father. Something in His life told them that prayer was not an accessory to ministry—it was its lifeblood.

In Luke 11:1–4, Jesus gives what we often call the Lord’s Prayer. Yet, as the study reminds us, He Himself never needed to pray, “Forgive us our sins.” He was sinless. He did not stand in need of pardon. Instead, He gave us words that reveal our condition and invite us into relationship. Prayer, in this sense, is both confession and communion. It is the honest acknowledgment that we are dependent creatures who regularly falter and yet are deeply loved.

Matthew 6:14–15 presses this further: “If you forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their trespasses, neither will your Father forgive your trespasses.” These words can unsettle us. Are we earning forgiveness by forgiving others? No. Scripture is clear that eternal forgiveness flows from grace through faith (Ephesians 2:8–9). Yet Jesus is addressing something relational, not transactional. An unforgiving heart contradicts the very grace it claims to receive.

Forgiveness is not peripheral to spiritual growth; it is central. When Jesus cried from the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do” (Luke 23:34), He revealed the heart of God toward sinners. Forgiveness is not weakness; it is strength under control. It is love that refuses to let bitterness define the relationship. If we withhold forgiveness, we close the door to deeper fellowship. The Greek word for forgiveness, aphiēmi, means to release, to send away. When we forgive, we release the debt. When we refuse, we chain ourselves to the offense.

Prayer, then, becomes the arena where this release occurs. It is easy to speak pious words about God’s holiness—“Hallowed be Your name”—and yet harbor resentment toward a brother or sister. But intimacy with the Father cannot coexist with a clenched heart. To pray sincerely is to say, “Father, I choose Your will, even when it costs me.” That choice often includes forgiving those who have wounded us.

Jesus teaches us to pray for daily bread. That request seems simple, even ordinary. Yet it reminds us that God is our Provider. He is not distant. He gives what we need for today. The daily bread is more than physical sustenance; it includes His Word. As Moses declared, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds from the mouth of God” (Deuteronomy 8:3). When we approach Scripture as daily bread, we discover that it nourishes our capacity to forgive. It renews our minds and softens our hearts.

Prayer changes us. It aligns our desires with God’s will. It confronts our pride. It exposes our grudges. And in that exposure, it invites healing. The deepest form of intimacy is not merely sharing requests with God; it is allowing Him to shape our inner life. Augustine once wrote, “He who created us without us will not save us without us.” In prayer, we participate in our transformation.

Perhaps we assume intimacy with God is measured by emotional experiences or spiritual highs. On second thought, intimacy may be measured by obedience in hidden places. It may be revealed in the quiet decision to forgive. It may appear in the steady practice of daily prayer. The Father is not impressed by eloquence; He responds to honesty. When we confess our sins and extend grace to others, we reflect His character.

If this reflection falls during a season of repentance in the Church calendar—perhaps Lent—it carries even greater weight. Lent invites us to examine our hearts, to repent, to forgive, to return. It reminds us that the cross stands at the center of our faith. And the cross speaks both justice and mercy. We have been forgiven much. How can we withhold forgiveness?

Prayer leads us into the Father’s presence. In that presence, we find both correction and comfort. We are reminded that we are children, not orphans. We are invited to release offenses and receive peace. Forgiveness is not merely a duty; it is a doorway.

On Second Thought

We often assume that intimacy with God means drawing closer to Him in comfort and reassurance. But what if the deepest intimacy is discovered when we allow Him to confront us? What if forgiveness—especially toward those who have wounded us—is the unexpected path to nearness? At first glance, forgiving someone feels like loss. It feels like surrendering our right to justice. Yet in reality, it is surrendering our right to control. And that surrender places us squarely in the hands of the Father.

Here is the paradox: the more tightly we cling to our grievances, the more distant God can seem. Not because He has moved, but because our hearts have hardened. When we forgive, we do not minimize wrongdoing; we magnify grace. We step into alignment with the cross. We reflect the heart of Christ. And in that alignment, we discover a fellowship that is deeper than we imagined.

Intimacy with God is not achieved through spiritual performance. It is cultivated through humility, confession, daily dependence, and extended grace. On second thought, perhaps the most sacred moments of prayer are not when we feel uplifted, but when we whisper, “Father, I release this. Shape my heart.” In that whisper, heaven leans close.

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When Justice Protects the Heart of a Nation

The Bible in a Year

“All Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall do no more any such wickedness as this is among you.” — Deuteronomy 13:11

As we continue our journey through Scripture in The Bible in a Year, we come to passages that are not easy to read. Deuteronomy 13 addresses false prophets—those who would lead God’s people away from covenant faithfulness. The prescribed punishment was severe. A false prophet was to be stoned, and the result, Moses says, would be that “all Israel shall hear, and fear, and shall do no more any such wickedness.”

At first glance, this feels distant from our modern sensibilities. Yet when we slow down and place this within its covenant context, we begin to see something important. Israel was not merely a nation; it was a theocratic community bound to the LORD (YHWH) by covenant. False prophecy was not simply misinformation—it was spiritual treason. It endangered the entire community’s relationship with God. The punishment, then, was not arbitrary cruelty. It was protective justice.

The verse itself reveals three purposes behind punishment: the fact of punishment, the fear produced by punishment, and the fidelity that flows from punishment. “All Israel shall hear.” Justice was meant to be visible. The news of judgment would spread, not to sensationalize sin, but to reinforce moral clarity. Public knowledge of consequences guarded the community. In biblical terms, justice served as instruction. Psalm 19:9 reminds us, “The fear of the LORD is clean, enduring forever; the judgments of the LORD are true and righteous altogether.” God’s judgments were not vindictive; they were righteous and instructive.

In our cultural moment, the concept of punishment is often debated, minimized, or reframed. Yet Scripture consistently affirms that consequences restrain evil. The book of Ecclesiastes offers an insightful observation: “Because the sentence against an evil work is not executed speedily, the heart of the sons of men is fully set in them to do evil” (Ecclesiastes 8:11). When wrongdoing carries no visible cost, the human heart is emboldened toward further rebellion. Deuteronomy recognizes this dynamic. “All Israel shall hear, and fear.”

This fear is not terror of arbitrary power; it is a holy recognition that evil has weight and consequence. The Hebrew word for fear here, yare’, often carries the sense of reverence and awe. It is the same root used in Proverbs 9:10: “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom.” A society—or a soul—that no longer fears evil drifts toward moral confusion. Fear, rightly ordered, protects life.

And then comes the third result: “shall do no more any such wickedness.” Properly administered justice curbs further sin. It restrains both the offender and the observer. It guards the innocent. In Romans 13:4, the apostle Paul affirms the continuing principle that governing authority “is God’s minister, an avenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.” Even in the New Testament, after the cross of Christ, God’s design for civil justice remains rooted in the preservation of good and the restraint of harm.

Yet as we reflect devotionally, we must also examine our own hearts. Deuteronomy 13 is not merely about national law; it is about spiritual fidelity. False prophets led people away from the living God. The ultimate concern was covenant loyalty. Punishment was a means of protecting worship.

What about us? Where does correction operate in our spiritual lives? Hebrews 12:6 reminds us, “For whom the Lord loveth he chasteneth.” Divine discipline is not rejection; it is evidence of sonship. Just as societal justice restrains public evil, God’s loving discipline restrains private drift. He corrects to preserve relationship.

John Calvin once noted that God’s judgments are “medicinal”—designed not simply to punish but to restore order and faithfulness. That is a helpful lens. Even the stern passages of the Old Testament reveal a God who takes sin seriously because He takes covenant seriously. He values holiness because He values His people.

As we read Deuteronomy today, especially if this season aligns with Lent or a reflective period in the Church calendar, we are reminded that holiness is not optional. The cross of Christ does not trivialize sin; it reveals its gravity. Jesus bore judgment so that we might receive mercy. Yet the seriousness of the cross affirms the seriousness of wrongdoing.

The application for us is both communal and personal. As believers, we must not romanticize evil or normalize what Scripture calls wickedness. Nor should we confuse compassion with moral indifference. Grace does not abolish justice; it fulfills it in Christ. At the same time, we examine our own lives. Where has God’s gentle correction kept us from harm? Where has conviction served as a safeguard?

The purpose of punishment in Deuteronomy was to preserve the covenant community. The purpose of Christ’s redemptive work is to create a holy people zealous for good works (Titus 2:14). Justice and mercy meet at the cross.

If you would like a deeper overview of Deuteronomy’s covenant framework, this article from The Gospel Coalition offers helpful context:
https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/the-book-of-deuteronomy/

As we continue our journey through The Bible in a Year, let us not shy away from challenging passages. They reveal a God who is just, protective, and committed to the moral health of His people. Justice is not cruelty; it is covenant care.

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When Trust Becomes the Turning Point

A Day in the Life

“Without faith it is impossible to please Him, for he who comes to God must believe that He is, and that He is a rewarder of those who diligently seek Him.” — Hebrews 11:6

When I read Hebrews 11:6, I am immediately drawn into the simplicity and gravity of the statement. “Without faith it is impossible to please Him.” Not difficult. Not unlikely. Impossible. That word alone forces me to slow down. In a world that measures success by productivity and visible results, God measures relationship by faith. The Greek word for faith here, pistis, carries the idea of trust, confidence, and reliance. It is not mere intellectual agreement; it is relational dependence.

When I think about a day in the life of Jesus, I see this lived out constantly. Jesus rose early to pray (Mark 1:35), withdrew to lonely places (Luke 5:16), and entrusted Himself fully to the Father’s will—even when that will led to the cross. He did not operate from visible guarantees. He walked in perfect trust. In John 5:19, He said, “The Son can do nothing of Himself, but what He sees the Father do.” That is faith expressed in daily obedience. He believed the Father is—and that the Father rewards those who seek Him.

Hebrews tells us that when we come to God, we must believe two foundational truths: that He exists, and that He responds to those who earnestly seek Him. At first glance, that seems basic. Of course we believe God exists. But biblical faith is not abstract belief; it is active trust in who He has revealed Himself to be in Scripture. It is believing that His character—holy, just, merciful, sovereign—is not theoretical but reliable. A.W. Tozer once wrote, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” If I secretly doubt His goodness or question His attentiveness, my fellowship with Him becomes strained.

It is possible to be religious without being faithful. The study reminds us how tempting it is to substitute religious activity for faith. I can serve, give, attend, speak, and sacrifice—yet still operate from sight rather than trust. Hebrews 11:1 defines faith as “the substance of things hoped for, the evidence of things not seen.” Faith is confidence in God’s promises before they are visible. When I refuse to obey until I can see all the resources lined up, I am not being practical—I am being cautious in a way that limits trust.

And here is where this becomes personal. How often do I say, “Lord, I trust You,” while quietly holding back the final step of obedience? I may tell myself I am being wise, that I am counting the cost. But wisdom and unbelief are not the same. Faith does not eliminate problems; it keeps me in relationship with God in the midst of them. It does not promise smooth paths; it promises divine companionship.

Some might say, “I am just not a person of faith; I am practical.” Yet nothing is more practical than trusting the One who holds all things together. The apostle Paul declares, “For we walk by faith, not by sight” (2 Corinthians 5:7). That is not poetic exaggeration; it is daily reality for a disciple of Christ. Every decision—financial, relational, vocational—reveals whether I trust what I see or whom I know.

In the Gospels, Jesus consistently honored faith. To the centurion He said, “I have not found such great faith, not even in Israel!” (Matthew 8:10). To the woman who touched His garment, He said, “Your faith has made you well” (Mark 5:34). Faith pleases God because faith takes Him at His word. It acknowledges His authority. It leans into His character. John Calvin noted that faith “rests not on ignorance, but on knowledge”—knowledge of who God is and what He has promised.

When I internalize this truth, I begin to understand that faith is not merely the entry point into salvation; it is the atmosphere of daily discipleship. It shapes how I respond to delay. It influences how I handle uncertainty. It steadies me when outcomes remain unclear. Faith says, “God is who He says He is, even when I cannot trace His hand.”

So what does this look like today? It may mean obeying a prompting to forgive, even when reconciliation seems uncertain. It may mean giving generously when finances feel tight. It may mean stepping into a calling without seeing every provision ahead of time. Faith is not reckless; it is relational. It acts because it trusts the character of the One who calls.

Hebrews 11 is often called the “Hall of Faith,” yet every story there includes struggle, delay, and unanswered questions. Abraham went out not knowing where he was going. Moses chose reproach over royalty. They did not please God because life was smooth; they pleased Him because they trusted Him.

As I reflect on a day in the life of Jesus, I realize that faith was not an occasional virtue for Him—it was His constant posture toward the Father. If I desire vibrant fellowship with God, I cannot struggle at the core of trust and expect spiritual vitality. Faith is not optional for pleasing God; it is essential.

For further study on Hebrews 11 and biblical faith, consider this helpful overview from BibleProject: https://bibleproject.com/guides/book-of-hebrews/

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Peace That Is Not a Mirage

As the Day Begins

“My peace I give to you; not as the world gives.” — John 14:27

When Jesus spoke these words in John 14:27, He was preparing His disciples for turbulence. The cross was near. Confusion would follow. Fear would grip their hearts. Yet in that fragile moment He declared, “My peace I give to you; not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.” The Greek word He used for peace, eirēnē, echoes the rich Hebrew concept of shalom—wholeness, completeness, harmony with God. This is not mere calmness. It is not the absence of conflict. It is the settled assurance that comes from being rightly related to the Father.

The world offers what looks like peace, but it often functions like a desert mirage. It promises security if we achieve enough, earn enough, say the right things, or curate the right image. Yet every worldly standard shifts like sand beneath our feet. Performance-based peace evaporates under pressure. Jesus contrasts that fragile substitute with something entirely different—peace that flows from union with Him. It is covenantal, not circumstantial. It is relational, not transactional.

True peace does not originate in our accomplishments; it originates in reconciliation. The Apostle Paul later writes, “Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 5:1). Notice the order: justification, then peace. The peace of Christ rests upon the finished work of Christ. When we trust Him, we are no longer striving to manufacture calm; we are receiving what He has already secured. As Matthew Henry once observed, “Peace with God is the fruit of Christ’s purchase.” That is the difference between illusion and inheritance.

As this day begins, you may carry unfinished tasks, relational tensions, or quiet anxieties. Jesus does not promise the removal of every storm. He promises His presence within it. His peace is not fragile like glass; it is steady like bedrock. When you ground your identity in Him, your heart is anchored. When you rest in His righteousness, your mind is steadied. When you walk in fellowship with Him, your spirit breathes easier.

Let today not be driven by the pursuit of mirages. Let it be shaped by abiding in Christ. Peace is not something you chase—it is Someone you receive.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, You are the covenant-keeping LORD, the One who declares, “I AM WHO I AM.” I thank You that my peace does not depend on my perfection but on Your faithfulness. Forgive me for the ways I seek validation in performance and stability in circumstances. Teach my heart to rest in the finished work You have ordained through Christ. As this day unfolds, steady my thoughts and quiet my anxieties. Anchor me in the truth that I belong to You. Let Your fatherly care shape my responses and guard my heart from fear.

Jesus the Son, Prince of Peace, You did not offer empty words to anxious disciples; You offered Yourself. Thank You for the cross that reconciles me to the Father and for the resurrection that secures my hope. I receive Your peace today—not as the world gives, but as You give. Guard my mind when distractions rise. When pressures mount, remind me that my identity is rooted in Your righteousness. Let Your presence walk with me into every meeting, every conversation, every unseen moment. Keep my heart from being troubled, and teach me to live from the assurance of Your grace.

Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth and Comforter, dwell richly within me. Where worry seeks to take hold, breathe calm. Where confusion clouds my thinking, illuminate truth. Where striving tempts me, draw me back to trust. Form in me the fruit of peace as evidence of Your indwelling presence. Help me discern between the mirages of this world and the lasting assurance that comes from God alone. Lead me step by step today, that my life may reflect the steady confidence of one who walks with You.

Thought for the Day

Before you chase solutions, pause and receive Christ’s peace. Begin every task today not striving for calm, but resting in reconciliation.

For further reflection on biblical peace, see this helpful article from GotQuestions.org: https://www.gotquestions.org/peace-of-God.html

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

May the Lord bless your steps today and strengthen your Christian walk with steady grace. As you enter this rhythm of daily devotions and Scripture reflections, may you sense God’s commitment to complete the good work He has begun in you. Spiritual disciplines are not burdens to carry but pathways into divine presence. Wherever you are reading from—home, office, hospital room, or quiet corner—know that the Lord meets His people in every place.

This morning begins with “Peace That Is Not a Mirage” (As the Day Begins) from John 14:27. This meditation reminds us that Christ’s peace is not circumstantial but relational. It calls us to rest in reconciliation with God rather than chase the illusions the world labels as peace.

Later, we walk through “When Trust Becomes the Turning Point” (A Day in the Life) centered on Hebrews 11:6. This reflection explores how faith pleases God, emphasizing that trust—not performance—forms the foundation of vibrant fellowship with Him.

In “When Justice Protects the Heart of a Nation” (The Bible in a Year) from Deuteronomy 13:11, we reflect on the purpose of biblical justice. This Scripture reflection reminds us that God’s holiness and covenant faithfulness safeguard both communities and individual hearts.

Midday, “Where Forgiveness Becomes Fellowship” (On Second Thought) draws us into Luke 11 and Matthew 6. Here we consider how prayer and forgiveness shape the deepest intimacy with God, inviting us to release what binds us and walk in grace.

In the evening feature, “When the Lists Come Alive” (DID YOU KNOW) from Numbers 3, John 12, and Psalms 3–4, we discover that even genealogies reveal God’s providence. This devotion encourages faithfulness in small assignments, reminding us that ordinary obedience carries eternal significance.

As the day concludes, “Ruled by Truth, Resting in Freedom” (As the Day Ends) reflects on John 8:31–32. It guides us into surrendering to God’s rightful authority and finding liberty through alignment with His truth.

May these daily devotions enrich your faith journey and anchor your spiritual disciplines in Scripture. Walk thoughtfully, pray sincerely, and rest confidently in the Lord.

Pastor Hogg

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今日的属灵操练

愿主赐福你今日的脚步,在你的基督徒生命中加添稳固与恩典。当你进入这每日灵修与圣经默想的节奏时,愿你深知神必成就祂在你生命中所开始的善工。属灵操练不是重担,而是通往神同在的道路。无论你此刻身在何处——家中、办公室、医院病房,或安静的一角——神都乐意在那地方与你相遇。

清晨的默想是 《不是海市蜃楼的平安》(As the Day Begins),取自约翰福音14:27。这篇信息提醒我们,基督所赐的平安不是建立在环境之上,而是根植于与神的关系之中。它呼召我们停止追逐世界所谓的“安全感”,而是安息在与神和好的真实里。

接着在 《信心成为转折点》(A Day in the Life) 中,我们默想希伯来书11:6。文章带领我们明白,讨神喜悦的不是宗教行为,而是对祂坚定的信靠。真正活泼的团契,始于信心,而不是表现。

《当公义守护一个民族的心》(The Bible in a Year) 中,我们思想申命记13:11。透过这段经文,我们看到神的圣洁与盟约的信实如何保护祂的百姓,也提醒我们在个人生命中尊重神的法则与权柄。

午后的 《当饶恕成为相交》(On Second Thought) 引领我们进入路加福音11章与马太福音6章。祷告与饶恕不是附加条件,而是与神亲密关系的核心。放下怨恨,就是走向更深的自由。

《当名单开始发光》(DID YOU KNOW) 中,我们透过民数记3章、约翰福音12章与诗篇3–4篇,看见神在看似平凡的名单与职责中彰显祂的护理。这提醒我们,忠心于小事同样承载永恒意义。

夜晚的 《在真理中得自由》(As the Day Ends) 以约翰福音8:31–32为中心,带领我们安静反思:当我们顺服神的权柄时,真正的自由就临到。顺服不是失去,而是得着安息。

愿今日的属灵操练帮助你在信心旅程中更加扎根,在圣经默想中得着力量,在每日生活中经历神的同在。

Pastor Hogg

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Empty of Self, Filled with the Spirit

As the Day Ends

As the evening settles in and the noise of the day begins to fade, we are left alone with our thoughts—and with God. It is often in these quiet hours that we become most aware of the subtle ways pride has crept into our hearts. The statement is searching: the most effective means the enemy has to keep believers from being full of the Spirit is to keep us full of ourselves. Pride does not always shout. Sometimes it whispers in self-justification, defensiveness, or the quiet insistence that we are right.

Psalm 73:6 says of the wicked, “Therefore pride compasses them about as a chain; violence covereth them as a garment.” Pride is pictured as jewelry—something worn openly, even admired. Yet Scripture links pride with violence. The Hebrew word for violence, chamas, conveys cruelty and destructive force. When pride dominates the heart, it inevitably harms relationships. Even quarrels can be traced back to a refusal to yield. Proverbs 13:10 reminds us, “Only by pride cometh contention: but with the well advised is wisdom.” If today held tension, disagreement, or inner turmoil, it is wise tonight to ask whether pride played a role.

The fear of the Lord offers the remedy. Proverbs 8:13 declares, “The fear of the LORD is to hate evil: pride, and arrogancy… do I hate.” The fear of the Lord is not dread of rejection but reverent awareness of His holiness. When we see God rightly, self-importance begins to shrink. The Spirit cannot fill what is already full. But when we empty ourselves—confessing arrogance, surrendering our need to win, admitting our weakness—we make room for divine fullness.

As this day closes, perhaps it is fitting to lay down not only our worries but also our pride. The Spirit longs to fill humble hearts. Tomorrow’s strength begins with tonight’s surrender.

For further reflection on humility and spiritual growth, consider this helpful resource from Ligonier Ministries: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/the-sin-of-pride

Triune Prayer

Father, You see me more clearly than I see myself. As this day ends, I confess that pride often disguises itself as confidence or conviction in my life. Forgive me for moments when I defended myself rather than seeking peace. Cleanse my heart from arrogance and quiet self-reliance. Teach me to fear You rightly—to stand in awe of Your holiness so that pride loses its grip. I thank You that Your love is steady and corrective, never harsh but always true.

Jesus, You are the Son of God who humbled Yourself, even to the death of the cross. When I consider Your life, I see no trace of selfish ambition. You washed feet. You bore insults without retaliation. Shape my heart to reflect Yours. When quarrels rise within me, remind me of Your gentleness. Guard my tongue from perverse speech and my spirit from hidden resentment. I long to decrease so that Your life may increase in me.

Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth, search me tonight. Illuminate the corners of my heart where pride still lingers. Fill me afresh—not with self-confidence, but with Christ-confidence. Empower me to walk humbly tomorrow. Replace defensiveness with teachability. Replace quarrelsomeness with wisdom. As I rest, quiet my soul and prepare me to rise renewed, emptied of self and filled with Your presence.

Thought for the Evening

Before you sleep, ask the Lord to reveal one area where pride may have influenced your words or actions today. Confess it, surrender it, and trust Him to replace it with humility and peace.

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When Glory Walks into the Graveyard

DID YOU KNOW

Our daily confession is that God is powerful. We sing it. We teach it. We tell others to trust it. Yet Scripture gently reveals that sometimes we do not fully grasp the extent of what we claim to believe until we stand in the middle of a trial. The readings from Numbers 1–2, John 11, and Psalm 2 pull back the curtain on both the power and the glory of God. They invite us to reconsider what we mean when we say, “God is able.”

Did you know that God sometimes arranges circumstances to reveal a greater glory than we would have chosen for ourselves?

In John 11, Jesus deliberately delays His arrival after hearing that Lazarus is sick. The disciples misunderstand His language about sleep and death. Mary and Martha both say, “Lord, if you had been here, my brother would not have died” (John 11:21, 32). Their statement is filled with faith, yet it is also bounded by limitation. They believe Jesus can prevent death, but they do not yet see that He can conquer it. Jesus had already told His disciples, “This sickness is not unto death, but for the glory of God” (John 11:4). The Greek word for glory, doxa, carries the idea of revealed splendor. The delay was not neglect; it was preparation for revelation.

Trials often feel like divine silence. We wonder why God did not intervene sooner. Yet Jesus knew precisely what He was doing. His timing was not accidental; it was purposeful. Before He raised Lazarus, He asked Martha a deeply personal question: “Do you believe this?” (John 11:26). The miracle was not only about restoring Lazarus; it was about expanding their understanding of who He is. Sometimes the greatest display of God’s power emerges from the very place where hope seemed buried.

Did you know that Jesus does not merely manage life—He is the source of it?

When Jesus declares, “I am the resurrection and the life” (John 11:25), He is not offering comfort alone. He is making a claim of divine identity. The phrase “I am” echoes the covenant name revealed in Exodus 3:14. He is identifying Himself with the eternal God. Resurrection is not merely an event; it is embodied in Christ. He does not borrow power from heaven; He possesses it inherently. Death itself becomes a stage for His authority.

The crowd standing at the tomb asked, “Was not this man who opened the eyes of the blind able…?” (John 11:37). Their question reveals a common struggle. We measure God’s power by past experiences rather than by His revealed nature. Yet Psalm 2 reminds us that earthly opposition never threatens divine sovereignty: “He that sitteth in the heavens shall laugh” (Psalm 2:4). God is not scrambling to maintain control. He reigns. When Jesus calls Lazarus from the grave, it is not merely compassion—it is cosmic authority in action.

Did you know that God’s order and sovereignty are displayed even in what appears ordinary?

Numbers 1–2 may seem distant from John 11, yet they frame our understanding of divine power. Israel is counted, arranged, and positioned around the tabernacle with precision. Every tribe has a place. Every banner is assigned. God is not chaotic. His glory rests at the center of His people. The census and camp formation reveal divine intentionality. What appears administrative is actually theological. God orders His people because He dwells among them.

In the same way, the raising of Lazarus was not an isolated display of emotion; it was a deliberate revelation of divine authority within history. The God who arranged Israel’s camp also orchestrated the timing at Bethany. Sovereignty is not cold control; it is purposeful guidance. Even when circumstances appear disordered, God’s glory remains central.

Did you know that belief in Christ transforms how we face death itself?

Jesus’ words stretch beyond Lazarus’ tomb. “The one who believes in me, even if he dies, will live” (John 11:25). The promise is not merely temporary restoration; it is eternal life. The Greek verb pisteuo (to believe) implies ongoing trust, not momentary agreement. Faith is not intellectual assent; it is relational reliance. When we believe in Christ, we anchor ourselves to the One who has authority over both life and death.

Psalm 2 concludes with a tender invitation: “Blessed are all they that put their trust in him” (Psalm 2:12). The Hebrew word chasah means to take refuge. Faith is refuge-taking. It is leaning fully into the sovereignty and goodness of God. Martha’s confession grows stronger as the chapter unfolds. What began as limited expectation matures into deeper trust. That is the journey of discipleship. Trials refine what we thought we knew and draw us into greater confidence in who Christ truly is.

As you reflect on these Scriptures, consider this: Where have you limited your understanding of God’s power? Have you believed He could intervene before the crisis but doubted He could redeem after it? Have you acknowledged His glory in theory yet hesitated to trust Him in practice? The resurrection at Bethany was not only about Lazarus; it was about revealing the heart of God to those who stood in grief.

Perhaps today you are facing a situation that feels beyond repair. Remember that Jesus does not merely sympathize with loss; He commands life. He may not answer in the timing you expect, but His purposes are never empty. The God who orders nations, who reigns above rulers, and who calls the dead from their graves is attentive to your story.

Let this truth settle deeply within you: the power and the glory belong to Him, and His glory is most clearly revealed when hope seems weakest. The tomb is not the end of the narrative when Christ is present.

Take a moment today to ask yourself the same question Jesus asked Martha: Do you believe this? Let your answer shape how you face both joy and sorrow. Trust Him not only before the crisis but within it.

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Behind the Closed Door

On Second Thought

“You, when you pray, go into your room, and when you have shut your door, pray to your Father who is in the secret place; and your Father who sees in secret will reward you openly.” — Matthew 6:6

There is something deeply disarming about Jesus’ instruction on prayer in Matthew 6. In the middle of the Sermon on the Mount—a discourse filled with ethical weight and kingdom authority—He shifts from public righteousness to private communion. He does not first emphasize technique, eloquence, or length. He points to relationship. “Pray to your Father.” That single word reshapes everything.

A. B. Simpson observed that this would have startled Jewish ears. The covenant name of God, Yahweh, was revered with trembling. Yet here is Jesus inviting ordinary disciples to address God as Father. Not a distant monarch, not merely a lawgiver, but Father. This was not casual familiarity; it was covenant intimacy. The Greek term Jesus uses in Matthew 6:9, Pater, carries both reverence and tenderness. It implies authority without coldness, majesty without distance.

When I step into the quiet place of prayer, I am not approaching a reluctant deity who must be persuaded to listen. I am entering the presence of One who already inclines His ear. Psalm 103:13 echoes this truth: “As a father pitieth his children, so the LORD pitieth them that fear him.” The Hebrew word racham conveys compassion rooted in deep affection. God’s love is not abstract; it is attentive.

Yet Jesus also instructs us to “shut your door.” The command is intentional. Prayer is not performance. It is not designed for applause. The secret place strips away comparison and religious display. In the quiet room, titles fall away. There are no platforms, no audiences, no reputations to maintain. There is only the Father and the child.

This challenges me. It is easier to talk about prayer than to practice it. It is easier to pray publicly than privately. But the health of my spiritual life is measured in the hidden room. Jesus’ emphasis is clear: intimacy precedes impact. The Father who sees in secret rewards openly, but the reward is not always material or visible success. Often, the reward is transformed character, steady peace, and deeper assurance of His presence.

The Lord’s Prayer begins not with our needs but with His name: “Our Father in heaven, hallowed be Your name.” Worship frames petition. Before I ask for daily bread, I acknowledge His holiness. Before I seek forgiveness, I recognize His authority. This order is not accidental. It teaches my heart to align with His will rather than demand my own.

Simpson’s insight that no sinful man had dared to call God Father without mediation underscores the radical nature of Jesus’ teaching. Through Christ, we are invited into filial confidence. Romans 8:15 declares, “You have received the Spirit of adoption, whereby we cry, Abba, Father.” The Aramaic Abba carries the warmth of relational trust. Prayer becomes not ritual obligation but relational expression.

And here is the beautiful truth: regardless of what our earthly fathers were like—faithful or flawed—God’s fatherhood remains untainted. His love is not moody. His patience is not thin. His care is not distracted by the size of the universe. He governs galaxies and still bends toward the whispered cry of His child.

Prayer, then, is not an interruption to God’s schedule. It is participation in His heart. When I close the door, I am not isolating myself from reality; I am entering deeper reality. The secret place becomes the anchor of public faithfulness. The more I understand that He delights to hear me, the more naturally I return to Him.

For further reflection on the Lord’s Prayer and the fatherhood of God, you may find this resource helpful: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/devotionals/our-father

Now let me leave you with an unexpected turn.

On Second Thought

We often assume that going into the secret place is about privacy, about removing distractions so we can speak freely. But perhaps the deeper paradox is this: the closed door is not primarily to keep others out; it is to keep pretension out. The Father already sees everything. The One who knows our motives, fears, and hidden sins is the One who invites us near. The room is not secret because God is hidden. It is secret because our defenses are stripped away there.

And here is the paradox: the God who rules the universe does not need our prayers, yet He chooses to bind His heart to them. The Father who “sees in secret” does not reward us because He is impressed with our devotion. He rewards us because intimacy with Him reshapes who we are. The more time we spend with our Father, the less we crave the applause of others. The quieter the room, the louder His love becomes.

Perhaps the greatest transformation in prayer is not that our circumstances change, but that our perception changes. We begin to see ourselves not as spiritual orphans striving for attention, but as beloved children resting in affection. The door closes, the noise fades, and the Father listens. On second thought, that may be the greatest reward of all.

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The God Who Stands Above All

The Bible in a Year

“The Lord your God is God of gods, and Lord of lords, a great God, a mighty, and a terrible, which regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward.” — Deuteronomy 10:17

As we continue our journey through Scripture, we arrive at a verse that recalibrates our entire understanding of who God is. Deuteronomy 10 is part of Moses’ final sermons to Israel. The wilderness years are nearly behind them. The Promised Land lies ahead. Before they step into blessing, Moses lifts their eyes upward. He wants them to know not merely the commandments of God, but the character of God. Right theology fuels right living.

First, we encounter the preeminence of God. He is “God of gods, and Lord of lords.” In a world filled with competing allegiances, visible idols, and subtle modern substitutes for worship, this declaration stands unshaken. The Hebrew construction intensifies the point: He is supreme over every so-called power. There is no rival throne. There is no shared sovereignty. When Scripture calls Him “Lord of lords,” it affirms absolute authority. Paul echoes this truth in 1 Timothy 6:15, describing God as “the blessed and only Potentate, the King of kings, and Lord of lords.” Our faith rests not in a regional deity or a cultural construct, but in the sovereign Lord of all existence.

As I reflect on this, I ask myself what truly governs my decisions. If He is preeminent, then my career, reputation, fears, and ambitions must submit to His rule. A. W. Tozer once wrote, “What comes into our minds when we think about God is the most important thing about us.” If my view of God is small, my obedience will be hesitant. But when I see Him as supreme, trust grows naturally.

Second, the verse highlights the prominence of God. He is called “a great God.” Our culture uses the word “great” casually—great deals, great meals, great performances. Yet Scripture reserves true greatness for God alone. The Hebrew word gadol speaks of magnitude and majesty. Psalm 145:3 declares, “Great is the LORD, and greatly to be praised; and His greatness is unsearchable.” His greatness is not hype; it is intrinsic. He does not become great because we acknowledge Him; He is great whether we recognize it or not.

When I meditate on God’s greatness, anxiety begins to shrink. My challenges may feel overwhelming, but they are not greater than God. His greatness is not abstract; it is active. He governs history, sustains creation, and shepherds His people with unwavering wisdom.

Third, Moses reminds Israel of the power of God. He is “mighty, and a terrible.” The Hebrew word translated “terrible” here is yare’, which conveys awe-inspiring majesty rather than something morally bad. It speaks of reverent fear. God’s power is not chaotic or cruel; it is awesome and righteous. He spoke the universe into being (Genesis 1). He parted the Red Sea. He fed Israel in the wilderness. Yet how often do my prayers shrink His power? I sometimes approach Him as though He were limited, as though my situation might exceed His strength.

When we grasp God’s might, worship deepens. Prayer becomes bold rather than timid. Faith becomes anchored rather than fragile. As Charles Spurgeon observed, “There is no attribute of God more comforting to His children than the doctrine of divine sovereignty.” His power assures us that nothing escapes His oversight.

Finally, we see the propriety of God. He “regardeth not persons, nor taketh reward.” In other words, He is impartial and incorruptible. The Hebrew phrase lo yissa panim means He does not show favoritism. He cannot be bribed or manipulated. Human systems often bend under influence or advantage, but God’s justice remains perfectly balanced. Acts 10:34 affirms this continuity in the New Testament: “God is no respecter of persons.”

This truth comforts me deeply. God does not treat me unjustly. His dealings are never arbitrary. Even when I do not understand His ways, I can trust His character. His judgments are pure. His mercy is consistent with His holiness. There is no shadow of corruption in Him.

As we move through this year-long journey in the Bible, this verse anchors our theology. God is preeminent over every authority, prominent in unmatched greatness, powerful beyond comprehension, and proper in flawless justice. If we align our creed with this portrait of God, our lives will gradually reflect greater reverence, trust, and obedience.

Today, let Deuteronomy 10:17 reshape your understanding of God. Allow His supremacy to quiet your fears. Let His greatness humble your pride. Trust His power in your weakness. Rest in His justice when circumstances feel unfair. For further reflection on the character of God, you may find this article helpful: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/attributes-of-god

As we continue The Bible in a Year, remember that knowing Scripture is not merely accumulating information—it is encountering the living God who stands above all.

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