Chosen Direction

Walking in God’s Will with Confidence
As the Day Begins

“It is God who works in you both to will and to do for His good pleasure.” — Philippians 2:13

There is a quiet tension many believers carry as they begin their day: Am I truly walking in God’s will, or am I simply following my own desires? The apostle Paul, writing under the inspiration of the Spirit, offers both reassurance and responsibility in this single verse. The Greek word for “works” here is energeō, meaning an active, ongoing operation. God is not distant or passive; He is actively shaping both our desires (to will) and our actions (to do). This means that the very longing you feel to follow Him is not self-generated—it is evidence of His presence within you.

Yet, discernment requires participation. To “get God’s viewpoint” is to immerse ourselves in His revealed truth. The psalmist declares, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path” (Psalm 119:105). The Hebrew word dabar (word) carries the sense of an active, living communication. Scripture does not merely inform; it transforms. When you align your decisions with the Word, you are not guessing your way forward—you are stepping into a path already illuminated. Like a traveler walking at dawn, you may not see the entire journey, but you can trust each step that is clearly revealed.

The role of the Holy Spirit deepens this guidance. Jesus said, “When He, the Spirit of truth, has come, He will guide you into all truth” (John 16:13). The Greek word hodēgēsei (guide) implies leading along a path, much like a shepherd guiding sheep. The Spirit’s promptings often come as a gentle conviction rather than a forceful command. Learning to recognize His voice requires stillness, sensitivity, and surrender. It is less about dramatic signs and more about daily obedience. When your heart is set—firmly resolved—to choose God’s way over your own, even when it costs comfort or convenience, you begin to experience the wisdom that carries you forward.

Perseverance becomes the proving ground of this alignment. Anyone can start well, but Scripture calls us to endure. James reminds us, “Blessed is the one who perseveres under trial because, having stood the test, that person will receive the crown of life” (James 1:12). The journey of obedience is not always linear or easy, but it is purposeful. Like a craftsman shaping clay, God uses both pressure and patience to form a life that reflects His glory. Over time, you will discover that walking in His will is not about constant uncertainty—it is about consistent trust.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I begin this day acknowledging that You are already at work within me. You are shaping my desires and directing my steps in ways I cannot always see. Give me clarity to recognize Your will and courage to follow it. When my heart is divided or uncertain, anchor me in Your truth. Teach me to value Your perspective above my own and to trust that Your plans are good, even when they stretch me beyond my comfort. I surrender this day to You, asking that every decision reflect Your purpose and bring You honor.

Jesus the Son, I thank You for walking the path of perfect obedience and showing me what it means to submit fully to the Father’s will. Strengthen me to follow Your example when the way feels difficult or unclear. Remind me that You are not only my Savior but also my guide. When I am tempted to turn back or take an easier road, call me forward with Your voice. Let my life echo Your words: “Not my will, but Yours be done.” Shape my character through every step I take today.

Holy Spirit, dwell richly within me and make me sensitive to Your leading. Quiet the distractions that compete for my attention and help me discern Your promptings. When You convict, let me respond quickly. When You guide, let me follow faithfully. Fill me with wisdom that is steady and peace that is grounded in truth. Produce in me the fruit that reflects God’s nature, so that my life becomes a testimony of Your presence. Lead me step by step into the will of God.

Thought for the Day
Choose obedience in the small decisions today, trusting that God is shaping both your direction and your destiny through each faithful step.

For further reflection, consider this helpful article:

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

May the Lord bless your walk today with clarity of heart and steadiness of spirit. The same God who began a good work in you is faithful to complete it, shaping your faith journey through each step of obedience and trust. Wherever you find yourself today, you are invited into the rhythm of daily devotions and Scripture reflections that draw you closer to His presence and purpose.

As you begin, Chosen Direction: Walking in God’s Will with Confidence (As the Day Begins) invites you to recognize that God is actively working within you. This devotional centers on aligning your will with His through Scripture, the Spirit’s prompting, and faithful perseverance. It sets the tone for your Christian walk by reminding you that guidance is not guesswork when you trust His leading.

In Feeding on Christ: Learning to Live from Daily Bread (A Day in the Life), you are drawn into the words of Jesus as the Bread of Life. This reflection explores how spiritual nourishment is not a one-time experience but a daily dependence on Christ. It encourages you to move beyond past encounters and develop a living, ongoing relationship with Him.

When Small Compromises Shape a Nation (The Bible in a Year) offers a sobering look at the life of Ahab. Through Scripture, it reveals how subtle compromises in walk, relationships, and worship can lead to deeper spiritual drift. This entry challenges you to examine your own life with honesty and realign your devotion to God.

In When Weakness Becomes the Doorway to Strength (On Second Thought), you are reminded that God’s power is most fully revealed in your weakness. This reflection reframes struggle as an opportunity for divine strength, encouraging you to lean into God’s grace rather than your own resources.

When Words Burn or Bless: The Power Hidden in Your Tongue (Did You Know) brings attention to the influence of your speech. It highlights how words reflect the heart and invites you to surrender your speech to God, allowing Him to transform even your weakest areas into places of growth.

Finally, Resting in the Light That Cannot Be Dimmed (As the Day Ends) prepares your heart for peace. This evening meditation centers on God as your light and stronghold, helping you release fear and rest confidently in His presence as the day concludes.

May these spiritual disciplines guide you, strengthen you, and deepen your awareness of God’s presence throughout your day.

Pastor Hogg

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Victory in the Struggle

Resting in the One Who Intercedes
As the Day Ends

“Who is he that condemns? Christ Jesus, who died—more than that, who was raised to life—is at the right hand of God and is also interceding for us… No, in all these things we are more than conquerors through him who loved us.”Romans 8:33–34, 37

As the day comes to a close, I find myself reflecting on a truth that is both comforting and challenging: we will never take our place as “more than overcomers” if there is nothing to overcome. The Christian life is not defined by the absence of struggle, but by the presence of Christ within it. The Greek phrase hypernikōmen—“more than conquerors”—suggests not just victory, but overwhelming victory, one that surpasses expectation. Yet this victory is not found in our own strength or perfection, but in our union with Christ.

There is a quiet tension in this truth. We often long for a life where temptation fades and difficulty disappears, but Scripture does not promise that. Instead, it assures us that Christ intercedes for us in the midst of it. The image is powerful—Jesus, seated at the right hand of the Father, speaking on our behalf. When I fail, when I fall short, when I feel the weight of my own inconsistency, I am reminded that my standing before God is not determined by my performance but by Christ’s finished work. The question, “Who is he that condemns?” is not rhetorical—it is declarative. No accusation can stand where Christ has already justified.

And yet, even with that assurance, I know the pull of old patterns. Hebrews 10:10 reminds me that I have been made holy—hagiazō, set apart for sacred use. That identity is already established, but my thoughts do not always align with it. There are moments when I am tempted to think like the person I used to be, to respond out of fear, pride, or impatience. This is where the battle lies—not in earning holiness, but in living from it. The Lord’s instruction in Acts 10:15, “Do not call anything impure that God has made clean,” becomes deeply personal. It speaks not only to how I view others, but how I view myself. If God has declared me clean, I must learn to walk in that truth.

So tonight, as I settle my heart, I do not measure my day by whether I struggled, but by whether I turned to Christ in the midst of it. Overcoming is not the absence of conflict; it is the presence of faith. It is choosing to believe that God is at work even when the outcome is unfinished. There is peace in knowing that the same Savior who secured my victory is also sustaining me through the process.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I come before You at the close of this day with gratitude for Your patience and faithfulness. You have seen every moment—every success and every failure—and yet Your love has not wavered. Thank You for setting me apart, for calling me holy even when I feel unworthy. Help me to rest in Your truth rather than my emotions. Teach me to trust that Your work in me is ongoing and that You are shaping me with purpose. As I lay down to rest, quiet my mind and remind me that I am held securely in Your care.

Jesus the Son, I thank You for Your sacrifice and for Your continual intercession on my behalf. It is humbling to know that even now, You are speaking for me before the Father. When I feel the weight of my shortcomings, remind me that You have already carried them to the cross. Strengthen me to live in the victory You have secured, not striving to earn it but trusting in Your love. Help me to see my struggles not as defeats, but as opportunities to lean more deeply into Your grace.

Holy Spirit, dwell within me and renew my thoughts as I rest. Where my mind has wandered today, bring it back into alignment with truth. Where I have been tempted to believe lies about myself or my worth, replace them with the assurance of who I am in Christ. Give me clarity for tomorrow and the strength to walk in obedience. Let Your presence bring peace to my heart and restore what has been drained by the demands of the day.

Thought for the Evening:
Do not measure your day by the battles you faced, but by the One who stood with you in them—and trust that His victory is already at work within you.

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Unlocked by Honesty

The Freedom Found in Confession
DID YOU KNOW

Did you know that confession is not about informing God, but transforming you?

When David cries out in Psalm 51:2–3, “Wash me thoroughly from my iniquity, and from my sin cleanse me. For I, myself, know my transgressions, and my sin is ever before me,” he is not telling God something new. The Hebrew word for confession, yadah, carries the sense of acknowledging or agreeing with God about what is true. In other words, confession is not revelation to God—it is alignment with Him. This shifts the entire posture of how we approach it. God already knows the depths of our hearts, yet He invites us to step into honesty, not for His benefit, but for ours. There is something spiritually liberating about bringing what is hidden into the light.

When I hold onto unconfessed sin, I am not protecting myself—I am imprisoning myself. The weight of silence creates distance in my relationship with God, not because He withdraws, but because I do. Confession, then, becomes a doorway back into intimacy. As one commentator from BibleHub notes, “Confession is the soul’s agreement with God’s diagnosis.” That is an insightful way to see it. When I confess, I stop arguing with God about my condition and begin receiving His healing. It is not about shame; it is about restoration.

Did you know that confession weakens the power of temptation?

James writes in James 5:16, “Confess your sins to one another and pray for one another, that you may be healed.” There is a connection here between confession and healing that is often overlooked. The Greek word exomologeō means to openly acknowledge, to bring something into the open. Sin thrives in secrecy because it draws strength from concealment. But once it is spoken—once it is named—it begins to lose its grip. What once felt overwhelming becomes manageable when exposed to truth and prayer.

I have seen this play out in both subtle and significant ways. A struggle that feels insurmountable in isolation becomes less intimidating when shared with a trusted believer. This does not mean confessing to everyone indiscriminately, but it does mean cultivating relationships where honesty is safe. The early church practiced this as a normal part of their spiritual life, not as a ritual, but as a means of grace. As Dietrich Bonhoeffer wrote, “He who is alone with his sin is utterly alone.” That statement carries weight. Confession invites others into the battle, and in doing so, it breaks the illusion that we must fight alone.

Did you know that confession restores your joy, not just your forgiveness?

David’s prayer continues in Psalm 51:10–12: “Create a clean heart for me, O God, and renew a steadfast spirit within me… Restore to me the joy of your salvation.” Notice that David does not ask for forgiveness alone—he asks for restoration. The Hebrew word for “restore,” shuv, means to return or bring back. Sin does more than create guilt; it erodes joy. It dulls the vibrancy of our relationship with God and replaces it with distance and heaviness.

Confession, then, is not merely about clearing a record; it is about reclaiming a relationship. When I confess, I am not just stepping away from sin—I am stepping back into fellowship. The joy David speaks of is not circumstantial happiness, but the deep assurance of being right with God. It is the difference between knowing I am forgiven and feeling the freedom of that forgiveness. Many believers live forgiven but not free, simply because they have not embraced the ongoing practice of confession.

Did you know that confession is a pathway to spiritual strength, not weakness?

Paul’s concern in 2 Corinthians 11:3 reflects a deeper spiritual reality: “I fear, lest somehow, as the serpent deceived Eve by his craftiness, so your minds may be corrupted from the simplicity that is in Christ.” Sin often begins in subtle deception—convincing us that hiding is safer than revealing, that silence is strength. But Scripture turns that idea upside down. True strength is found in humility, in the willingness to stand honestly before God.

When I confess, I am not admitting defeat; I am declaring dependence. I am acknowledging that I cannot overcome sin on my own and that I need the cleansing power of Christ. This is where the gospel meets daily life. 1 John 1:9 reminds us, “If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us… and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.” The promise is not partial—it is complete. Confession positions me to receive not only forgiveness but transformation. It is the starting point for change, not the end of the conversation.

As I reflect on all of this, I am reminded that confession is not a burden placed upon us, but a gift given to us. It is God’s way of keeping our hearts tender, our relationships honest, and our lives aligned with His truth. The psalms provide language when words fail us, guiding us into prayers that are raw, real, and redemptive. They teach us that God is not intimidated by our honesty; He welcomes it.

So today, I invite you to consider where you might need to practice this “lost art.” Is there something you have been carrying in silence? Something you have justified, minimized, or avoided? Begin with God. Speak honestly. Let His truth meet your reality. And if the Lord leads, bring a trusted brother or sister into that space. You may find that what once held you captive begins to lose its power.

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When God Rewrites the Dream You Thought Was Yours

On Second Thought

“For I know the thoughts that I think toward you, says the Lord, thoughts of peace and not of evil, to give you a future and a hope.”Jeremiah 29:11

There is something deeply personal in the way God speaks through Jeremiah. The Hebrew word for “thoughts” here is machashavot, which carries the sense of intentional designs, carefully formed plans rather than passing ideas. God is not reacting to your life; He is actively shaping it. Yet this promise was originally spoken to a people in exile—far from home, living in uncertainty. That alone reshapes how we understand hope. It is not born out of comfort, but out of trust in a God who sees beyond our present condition. When I read this alongside John 16:23–24, where Jesus says, “Ask, and you will receive, that your joy may be full,” I begin to see that God’s vision for my life is not simply about outcomes, but about relationship—walking with Him in trust, even when the path is unclear.

The first requirement for experiencing God’s best is an open and willing heart. That sounds simple until I realize what it actually asks of me. Openness to God is not just readiness to receive blessings I would have chosen for myself; it is surrender to receive what He knows is best. The Greek word aiteō (ask) used by Jesus implies a posture of dependence, like a child asking a father. But that relationship assumes trust—that the Father knows what the child cannot yet understand. I often find that my prayers are specific, even narrow. I ask God to bless my plans, when He is inviting me into His. This is where openness becomes transformative. It moves me from controlling outcomes to trusting His intentions.

Obedience follows closely behind. It is rarely dramatic, often unseen, and sometimes misunderstood. Yet Scripture consistently ties obedience to blessing, not as a transaction, but as alignment. When I obey, I place myself in the flow of what God is already doing. Jesus modeled this perfectly, saying, “I do nothing on My own but speak just what the Father has taught Me” (John 8:28). His life was not driven by ambition but by submission. That challenges me, because obedience often requires me to move before I fully understand. It may mean forgiving when I would rather hold on, stepping forward when I feel uncertain, or letting go of something I thought was essential. A.W. Tozer once wrote, “The man who would truly know God must give time to Him.” I would add that he must also give trust, expressed through obedience, even when the outcome is not immediately visible.

Then there is the ability to dream. This may be the most overlooked aspect of faith. We often think of dreaming as something youthful or idealistic, yet Scripture presents it as deeply spiritual. Joel prophesied, “Your old men shall dream dreams” (Joel 2:28), suggesting that hope is not tied to age or circumstance but to the presence of God. To dream is to believe that God is still at work, still writing, still unfolding His purposes. But dreams are fragile. Disappointment, delay, and hardship can quietly erode them. When that happens, something within us begins to shut down—not outwardly, but inwardly. We stop expecting, stop hoping, and eventually stop asking.

Yet God does not ask us to preserve our dreams unchanged; He invites us to surrender them so He can reshape them. That is where many struggle. We fear that if we release our dreams, we will lose them entirely. But Scripture suggests the opposite. In God’s hands, what we surrender is not diminished but refined. The question becomes not, “Will God fulfill my dream?” but “Will I trust Him enough to let Him redefine it?” That is where hope becomes anchored—not in a specific outcome, but in the character of God.

On Second Thought

There is a quiet paradox woven through all of this, one that I have come to recognize only after walking with God through both fulfilled and unfulfilled expectations. We often believe that hope is sustained by clarity—that if we just knew what God was going to do, we could trust Him more fully. But Scripture reveals something different. Hope is not strengthened by certainty; it is strengthened by surrender. The very act of releasing our need to control the outcome is what deepens our trust in God’s intention.

It is possible to hold tightly to a dream and yet drift from God, just as it is possible to release a dream and draw closer to Him than ever before. That is the tension we rarely talk about. Sometimes the obstacle to experiencing God’s best is not sin in the obvious sense, but attachment in the subtle sense—holding so firmly to what we want that we cannot receive what He is giving. When Jesus invited His disciples to ask, He did not promise that every request would be granted in the form they expected. He promised that their joy would be made full. That distinction matters. Joy is not dependent on outcomes; it is rooted in relationship.

So I find myself asking a different question today. Not, “What do I want God to do?” but “What is God doing, and am I willing to join Him there?” That shift changes everything. It moves me from expectation to participation, from anxiety to trust. It reminds me that God’s plans are not just better—they are wiser, deeper, and more aligned with who I am becoming in Him.

And perhaps that is the greater hope—that God is not merely working to fulfill my dreams, but to transform me into someone who can fully receive His.

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The Cost of a Compromised Heart

 When Sin Shapes a Nation
The Bible in a Year

“And he shall give Israel up because of the sins of Jeroboam, who did sin, and who made Israel to sin.”1 Kings 14:16

As I read through this portion of Scripture, I cannot help but pause over the weight of that phrase, “He shall give Israel up.” It is one of the most sobering realities in the biblical narrative. The Hebrew expression behind “give up” carries the idea of being abandoned to the natural consequences of one’s chosen path. This is not a moment of divine impatience but the result of persistent rebellion. Jeroboam’s life becomes a case study in how sin, left unchecked, moves from a private act to a public legacy. What began as a political decision to secure his throne became a spiritual collapse that shaped an entire nation.

Jeroboam’s sin was not merely personal failure; it was theological distortion. He introduced alternative worship, crafting golden calves and redefining how Israel approached God (1 Kings 12:28–30). The danger here lies in how easily truth can be reshaped to fit convenience. The Hebrew concept of sin, chata’, means “to miss the mark,” but Jeroboam did more than miss it—he moved the target altogether. As I walk through this passage, I see how subtle compromise can become systemic corruption. One decision, justified in the moment, becomes a pattern, and that pattern becomes influence.

The text highlights two dimensions of sin that demand our attention: its infliction and its influence. The infliction is seen in God’s judgment. When Scripture says God “gave them up,” it echoes what the Apostle Paul later writes in Romans 1:24, 26, 28: “God gave them over.” The Greek phrase paredōken autous suggests a handing over, as though God releases His restraining grace and allows individuals to experience the full weight of their choices. This is not cruelty; it is consequence. It reminds me that God’s patience is vast, but it is not without boundary. Persistent sin hardens the heart to the point where correction is no longer received.

Yet the second dimension may be even more unsettling—the influence of sin. Jeroboam “made Israel to sin.” That phrase is repeated throughout the historical books, almost like an epitaph engraved upon his life. Sin is never contained. It spills over into relationships, communities, and generations. When Abraham went down to Egypt in a moment of fear (Genesis 12:10), Lot followed. The ripple effect of disobedience extends far beyond what we initially see. Charles Spurgeon once remarked, “Sin is like a stone cast into the water; it sends forth a thousand ripples.” That image stays with me because it captures how even what we consider small compromises can influence others in ways we never intended.

As I reflect on this, I am drawn to consider my own life. Where might my choices be shaping others? Influence is not reserved for leaders alone; it belongs to anyone whose life intersects with another. Family members, friends, coworkers—all are affected by the direction of our hearts. The New Testament reinforces this truth in 1 Corinthians 15:33: “Bad company corrupts good character.” The reverse is also true—godly living strengthens and encourages those around us. The call, then, is not merely to avoid sin but to actively pursue righteousness in a way that benefits others.

There is also a redemptive contrast found in the life of Jesus. Where Jeroboam led people away from God, Christ leads people toward Him. Jesus declared, “I am the way, the truth, and the life” (John 14:6), restoring what sin had distorted. His influence does not corrupt; it transforms. When I align my life with Christ, I become a conduit of that same redemptive influence. This is why the Christian life is not simply about personal holiness—it is about communal impact. My obedience can strengthen another’s faith just as my disobedience can weaken it.

A commentator from BibleHub notes, “Jeroboam’s sin became a pattern that defined the spiritual decline of Israel for generations.” That observation carries an insightful warning. Patterns matter. What I repeat, I reinforce. What I reinforce, I eventually reproduce in others. The question is not whether I am influencing those around me, but what direction that influence is taking. Am I pointing people toward Christ, or am I subtly redirecting them elsewhere through inconsistency or compromise?

As we continue through this year-long journey in Scripture, passages like this serve as necessary checkpoints. They remind us that sin is never neutral. It carries both consequence and contagion. Yet within that warning is also an invitation—to live differently, to choose faithfulness, and to allow God’s Spirit to shape our influence for good. The same God who gave Israel over to their choices also extends grace to those who turn back to Him. His desire is not abandonment but restoration.

So today, I walk forward with a renewed awareness. My life is not lived in isolation. Each decision, each attitude, each act of obedience or disobedience carries weight. By God’s grace, may my life reflect a pattern that draws others closer to Him rather than away.

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When the Well Never Runs Dry

Returning to the Source
A Day in the Life

“For My people have committed two evils: they have forsaken Me, the fountain of living waters, and hewn themselves cisterns—broken cisterns that can hold no water.”Jeremiah 2:13

As I sit with this passage, I find myself walking alongside Jesus in John 4, where He meets the Samaritan woman at the well. It is no coincidence that He chooses a setting defined by thirst. She comes with a jar, expecting ordinary water, yet Jesus begins to speak of something deeper: “Whoever drinks of the water that I shall give him will never thirst” (John 4:14). In that moment, I begin to see the connection—Jeremiah’s lament is not just about Israel’s past, but about the human tendency to leave what is living for what is lifeless. The Hebrew phrase maqor mayim chayyim—“fountain of living waters”—speaks of a source that is active, flowing, and self-renewing. Yet the people chose borot nishbarim, broken cisterns, containers that must be filled externally and inevitably leak.

I have to ask myself, as you likely do: how often do I live like that woman before she understood who stood before her? I carry my own “cisterns”—expectations, achievements, distractions—hoping they will satisfy. But like cracked stone, they cannot hold what my soul truly needs. Jesus did not condemn her thirst; He redirected it. That is an insightful truth for us today. Spiritual dryness is not the absence of water—it is the misplacement of our source. When people say they are in a “dry spell,” I gently wonder if, like Israel, they have shifted from dependence on God to reliance on something constructed by their own hands.

There is a moment in John 7:37 that echoes this truth with urgency: “If anyone thirsts, let him come to Me and drink.” The Greek word dipsaō (to thirst) conveys an intense craving, not a mild desire. Jesus is not speaking to the casually interested but to the deeply aware of their need. What strikes me is that He does not say, “Go find water,” but “Come to Me.” This is where the Christian life is often misunderstood. We search for renewal in events, teachings, or experiences, and while these can be helpful, they are not the source. As Matthew Henry once observed, “The streams of living water spring from Christ, and they never fail those who come to Him.” The Spirit of God within the believer is not a reservoir that empties but a spring that flows.

I think of the many times in the Gospels where Jesus withdrew to pray—not because He lacked power, but because He remained in constant communion with the Father. His life models what it means to live from the source rather than chasing after substitutes. In theological terms, this is the difference between zoē (life as God intends it) and mere existence. When I neglect that communion, I begin to operate from my own strength, and the flow diminishes—not because God has withdrawn, but because I have turned away. A commentator from Bible.org insightfully notes, “Spiritual dryness is often a signal, not of God’s absence, but of our redirection toward lesser sources.”

So what does this mean for us today? It means I do not need to travel far to find renewal. The Spirit who raised Christ from the dead dwells within me (Romans 8:11). The artesian well described in the study is not poetic exaggeration—it is a theological reality. The question is not whether the water is present, but whether I am drawing from it. Am I pausing long enough to drink? Am I bringing my thirst to Christ, or am I trying to patch together broken systems to sustain myself? These are not questions of guilt, but of invitation.

There is a quiet promise embedded in this truth. Jesus does not ration His water. He offers it freely, abundantly, and continually. The same Savior who spoke to the Samaritan woman speaks to us now, inviting us to lay down our empty containers and receive what only He can give. As I walk through this day, I am reminded that every decision, every challenge, and every moment of fatigue is an opportunity to return to the source. The well has not run dry. It never will. The only question is whether I will draw near enough to drink.

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Guided by Grace

Hearing God in Everyday Decisions
As the Day Begins

“Happy is he who has the God of Jacob for his help, whose hope is in the Lord his God.” — Psalm 146:5

The psalmist uses the word “happy,” yet the Hebrew term ’ashrê carries a deeper sense of blessedness—a settled joy rooted not in circumstance but in relationship. This is not the fleeting happiness tied to outcomes, but a steady assurance anchored in the character of God. When the text speaks of “help,” it draws from the Hebrew ‘ezer, often used of divine assistance that is both timely and powerful. The believer is not left to navigate life’s decisions alone; rather, there is an active, personal involvement from God Himself. Each day brings choices, some seemingly small and others life-shaping, yet all are arenas where faith is either exercised or neglected.

Discernment, then, becomes a spiritual discipline rather than a natural instinct. The Holy Spirit works within the believer, illuminating truth and exposing what lies beneath appearances. Jesus promised this in John 16:13, saying, “When he, the Spirit of truth, comes, he will guide you into all the truth.” The Greek word hodēgēsei (guide) paints the picture of leading someone along a path, step by step, not handing them a map and sending them alone. Many of our decisions fall into areas not explicitly outlined in Scripture, yet they are not outside the scope of God’s concern. Whether choosing a direction for our family, responding to a difficult conversation, or weighing a financial commitment, the Spirit brings a quiet but steady clarity.

Think of discernment like tuning a radio. The signal is always present, but interference can distort it. Our hurried schedules, emotional reactions, and preconceived desires often act as static. Yet when we slow down and intentionally listen, the signal becomes clearer. The Spirit’s voice rarely competes with chaos; it invites stillness. This is why Scripture repeatedly calls us to trust and lean not on our own understanding (Proverbs 3:5–6). Trust, in Hebrew batach, implies a confident reliance that rests its full weight upon God. As we begin this day, the invitation is not merely to make better decisions but to walk in deeper dependence, trusting that God is actively shaping both our choices and our character through them .

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I come before You at the start of this day with a heart that desires Your wisdom more than my own understanding. You see the decisions that lie ahead of me, both the obvious and the hidden. I thank You that You are not distant but actively involved, guiding me with a steady hand. Teach me to trust You fully, to rest in Your sovereignty, and to release my need to control outcomes. Shape my thoughts, refine my motives, and align my desires with Your will so that every choice I make reflects Your truth and goodness.

Jesus the Son, You walked this earth and faced the weight of human decisions, yet You always moved in perfect obedience to the Father. I look to You as my example and my Savior. Thank You for making a way for me to walk in righteousness, not by my strength but through Your grace. Help me to follow Your voice today, to recognize Your leading even in subtle moments, and to respond with faith. When I feel uncertain, remind me that You are the Good Shepherd who calls His sheep by name and leads them in paths of life.

Holy Spirit, dwell within me and sharpen my discernment. Quiet the noise that competes for my attention and tune my heart to Your prompting. Give me clarity when I am unsure, restraint when I am impulsive, and courage when I am hesitant. Teach me to distinguish between what is merely acceptable and what is truly pleasing to God. Fill me with a sensitivity to Your presence so that every decision becomes an opportunity to walk more closely with You.

Thought for the Day:
Before making any decision today—large or small—pause long enough to invite the Holy Spirit into it, trusting that His guidance will lead you toward what is not only right, but best.

For further reflection on discernment, consider this helpful resource: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/how-does-the-holy-spirit-guide-us

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

May the Lord bless your steps today and strengthen your heart for the journey ahead. The God who began a good work in you remains faithful to complete it, shaping your life through each moment of reflection, obedience, and grace. Wherever you find yourself today, you are invited into a rhythm of spiritual disciplines that draw you deeper into His presence and steady your Christian walk.

In Guided by Grace: Hearing God in Everyday Decisions, we begin the day by reflecting on discernment. This devotional reminds us that the Holy Spirit actively guides our choices, helping us distinguish between what is merely acceptable and what is truly best. It encourages us to slow down and invite God into even the smallest decisions, trusting that His wisdom will direct our path.

In When the Well Never Runs Dry: Returning to the Source, we walk alongside Jesus as He reveals Himself as the source of living water. This reflection challenges us to examine whether we have turned to broken cisterns instead of the Spirit within us. It calls us back to the refreshing, constant presence of Christ as the only true source of spiritual renewal.

In The Cost of a Compromised Heart: When Sin Shapes a Nation, we are confronted with the sobering influence of sin through the life of Jeroboam. This Scripture reflection highlights how personal compromise can extend far beyond ourselves, shaping others in ways we may not see. It also reminds us that faithfulness has the power to influence others toward righteousness.

In When God Rewrites the Dream You Thought Was Yours, we are invited to reconsider our hopes and dreams in light of God’s greater plan. This devotional explores the necessity of an open heart, obedience, and the courage to keep dreaming, even when circumstances challenge our expectations. It reassures us that God’s intentions are always rooted in His love and wisdom.

In Unlocked by Honesty: The Freedom Found in Confession, we rediscover confession as a pathway to healing and restored joy. This reflection emphasizes that confession is not about informing God, but about aligning ourselves with His truth. It encourages us to practice honesty before God and within trusted relationships as a means of spiritual growth.

Finally, in Victory in the Struggle: Resting in the One Who Intercedes, we end the day grounded in the assurance that we are more than conquerors through Christ. This evening devotional reminds us that overcoming does not mean avoiding struggle, but trusting in the One who intercedes for us. It invites us to rest in God’s presence, knowing His victory is already at work within us.

May these daily devotions guide your faith journey, deepen your Scripture reflections, and strengthen your commitment to the spiritual disciplines that shape a life devoted to Christ.

Pastor Hogg

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Grace That Replaces Judgment

As the Day Ends

As the day comes to a close, I find myself reflecting on the weight of Paul’s words in Romans 14:10–13: “For we shall all stand before the judgment seat of Christ… So then each of us shall give account of himself to God.” There is a quiet humbling that settles in when I remember that I am not the judge—I am the one being formed, examined, and guided by God. The Greek phrase βῆμα (bēma), translated “judgment seat,” refers to a place of evaluation, not condemnation for those in Christ, but an honest accounting of our lives. That truth gently shifts my posture. It invites me to release my grip on evaluating others and instead look inward with honesty and humility.

It is easy, if I am not careful, to carry subtle judgments throughout the day. They often appear justified, even necessary. Yet Scripture calls me to a different standard—not merely to avoid judgment, but to actively remove obstacles from another person’s path. That phrase, “stumbling block,” comes from the Greek πρόσκομμα (proskomma), meaning something that causes another to trip or fall. When I consider that my words, attitudes, or assumptions could hinder someone else’s walk with God, I begin to see love in a more serious light. Love is not passive; it is protective. It seeks not only to avoid harm, but to create space for others to grow.

There is also a deeper connection between belief and behavior that surfaces in this reflection. A lifestyle of believing God—truly trusting His grace, His mercy, and His sovereignty—reshapes how I treat others. When I am confident in God’s work in my own life, I do not feel the need to control or critique the journey of someone else. Instead, I become bold in love. I begin to believe that God can work in them just as He has worked in me. This is what the writer of Hebrews points toward when he reminds us, “For I will forgive their wickedness and will remember their sins no more” (Hebrews 8:12). The Greek term μνησθήσομαι (mnēsthēsomai)—“I will remember”—in this context means God chooses not to hold our sins against us. That is grace at its deepest level: not just forgiveness, but release.

As I wind down this evening, I realize that grace is not something I simply receive—it is something I am called to reflect. If God has chosen not to hold my failures against me, how can I justify holding others to their past? This does not mean ignoring truth or abandoning discernment; it means allowing mercy to shape my response. The more I understand the depth of God’s forgiveness, the more I am freed from the burden of judgment. And in that freedom, I find peace—not only with others, but within my own heart.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, I come before You tonight with gratitude for the grace You have extended to me. You have seen every part of my life—the victories and the failures—and yet You have chosen to love me fully. I acknowledge that I have not always reflected that same grace toward others. There have been moments when I judged too quickly, spoke too harshly, or held onto thoughts that did not honor You. Forgive me, Lord, and soften my heart. Help me to rest in the truth that I will stand before You, not to be condemned, but to be shaped and refined. Teach me to trust Your justice so that I can release my need to evaluate others. As I lay down tonight, let Your peace settle over me, reminding me that You are at work in every life, including my own.

Jesus the Son, I thank You for the sacrifice that made grace possible. You bore the weight of my sin so that I could walk in freedom. When I consider Your life, I see a love that was patient, compassionate, and unwavering—even toward those who misunderstood You. Help me to follow that example. When I am tempted to judge, remind me of the mercy You have shown me. When I encounter others who are struggling, give me the courage to love them with the same boldness You demonstrated. Let my life reflect Your heart, so that others may experience the kindness that leads to transformation. As I rest tonight, I place my trust in Your finished work, knowing that You continue to intercede for me.

Holy Spirit, I invite You to search my heart and reveal anything that does not align with God’s love. You are my guide and my comforter, and I need Your presence to walk this path of grace. Help me to recognize the subtle ways I may be placing obstacles in the lives of others. Give me sensitivity in my words, patience in my responses, and wisdom in my actions. Empower me to choose love, even when it is difficult. As I close my eyes tonight, fill me with assurance that You are working within me, shaping me into the likeness of Christ. Let Your peace guard my heart and mind, and prepare me to walk in greater grace tomorrow.

Thought for the Evening:
Release judgment, embrace grace, and trust that the same God who is working in you is faithfully working in others.

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