The Strength of Coming Home

On Second Thought

There is something inside every one of us that longs for independence. From childhood forward, we measure growth by increasing autonomy. We remember milestone moments—the first day of school, the first set of car keys, the first paycheck earned by our own effort. Maturity, in our culture, is often defined by self-sufficiency. To need no one is seen as strength.

Then we open Luke 15 and encounter a story that gently unsettles that assumption.

The prodigal son stands as a mirror to the human heart. When he asks for his inheritance early, he is not merely requesting money; he is asserting independence. He is effectively saying, “Father, I want what is yours, but I do not want you.” That posture feels disturbingly familiar. The younger son travels to a distant country and squanders everything in reckless living. Freedom without guidance becomes bondage. Autonomy without wisdom becomes ruin.

The turning point comes in Luke 15:18: “I will arise and go to my father, and will say to him, ‘Father, I have sinned against heaven and before you.’” The Greek verb translated “I will arise” (anastas) carries the sense of standing up decisively. Repentance is not vague regret; it is a deliberate return. It is the recognition that self-rule has failed.

In one sense, the prodigal represents all believers when we choose to move in our own direction with disregard for the Father’s voice. We may not physically leave home, but our hearts can wander. We can grow competent, capable, and accomplished—and yet spiritually distant. The world applauds independence; the kingdom of God calls for dependence.

This is the paradox of Christian maturity. God does not want us irresponsible in daily life. He expects diligence, stewardship, and wise decision-making. Yet spiritually, He calls us to childlike dependence. Jesus Himself said, “Unless you are converted and become as little children, you will by no means enter the kingdom of heaven” (Matthew 18:3). The humility of a child is not immaturity; it is trust.

Tim Keller once observed, “The gospel is this: we are more sinful and flawed in ourselves than we ever dared believe, yet at the very same time we are more loved and accepted in Jesus Christ than we ever dared hope.” That tension explains why returning home is possible. The prodigal does not rehearse a defense; he prepares a confession. He acknowledges, “I have sinned against heaven and before you.” The Hebrew mind would understand “heaven” as reverence toward God Himself. Sin is vertical before it is horizontal.

And what does he find when he returns? A Father running.

The cultural context of the parable heightens the beauty. In first-century Jewish society, a patriarch did not run. It was undignified. Yet Jesus paints a picture of a father who sees his son “a great way off” and runs toward him (Luke 15:20). Dependence is not met with disdain but with embrace. The father does not negotiate terms; he restores relationship.

This reveals something about abiding in Christ. When we order our lives according to God’s Word, we are not surrendering joy; we are discovering it. Dependence is not weakness but alignment. The more we root our choices in Scripture, the more we relax into His care. We rest in His love, not because we are incapable, but because He is trustworthy.

In a culture that prizes control, trusting God can feel counterintuitive. We want to manage outcomes, engineer success, and insulate ourselves from risk. Yet every attempt to live independently of God ultimately leaves us hungry. The prodigal’s famine was not accidental; it exposed the fragility of his self-designed life.

It is never too late to be God’s dependent. That may be the most freeing truth in this passage. No matter how far we wander, the way home remains open. Repentance is not humiliation; it is restoration. The Father’s house is not a place of shame but of belonging.

Perhaps the deeper question is this: Where have I mistaken independence for maturity? Where have I quietly believed that relying on God is childish? Spiritual adulthood is not self-sufficiency; it is sustained reliance. The apostle Paul captured this when he wrote, “When I am weak, then I am strong” (2 Corinthians 12:10). Strength flows through surrendered weakness.

We often measure growth by how little we need others. In Christ, growth is measured by how deeply we trust Him.

On Second Thought

Here is the unexpected paradox: the journey toward independence often ends in dependence anyway. The prodigal left home seeking freedom and discovered hunger. He pursued autonomy and found himself feeding pigs. His grand declaration of independence collapsed into a desperate recognition of need. Yet that very recognition became the doorway to restoration. What if the strength we are striving to prove is actually the barrier keeping us from peace?

On second thought, perhaps the Father was never trying to keep the son confined. Perhaps He was guarding him from isolation. Independence without relationship breeds loneliness. Autonomy without guidance breeds anxiety. The son thought leaving would enlarge his life; instead, it diminished it. Only when he returned did he experience fullness. And here is the surprise—coming home did not reduce him; it redefined him. He was not restored as a servant but as a son.

We spend much of our lives proving that we can stand on our own. Yet the gospel gently whispers that we were never meant to. To be God’s dependent is not regression; it is redemption. It is not a retreat from adulthood but a return to identity. The Father’s embrace does not erase responsibility; it anchors it. In His house, obedience is not coerced but cultivated by love.

Perhaps today is not about proving strength but about embracing reliance. The Father still watches the horizon. The road home is shorter than you think.

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Bound Hearts and Burning Holiness

The Bible in a Year

Israel joined himself unto Baal-peor; and the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel” (Numbers 25:3). As we move through our year-long journey in Scripture, we arrive at a sobering scene. Israel is standing on the threshold of promise. The Jordan River lies ahead. The land sworn to Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob is within reach. Yet just before they step into fulfillment, corruption seeps into the camp.

The text says Israel “joined” itself to Baal-peor. The Hebrew word tsamad means to fasten, to cling, to bind oneself closely. This was not a momentary lapse or casual curiosity. It was attachment. They became spiritually entangled. Baal-peor was a Midianite fertility god, and his worship involved ritual immorality. Israel did not merely observe pagan practices; they participated. They absorbed the creed and adopted the conduct.

And here we see a pattern that runs throughout Scripture: belief shapes behavior. When Israel’s creed shifted from exclusive devotion to Yahweh toward syncretism with idols, their conduct inevitably followed. What they worshiped determined how they lived. John Calvin famously wrote, “The human heart is a perpetual factory of idols.” That insight feels uncomfortably current. Idolatry is not confined to carved statues. It is anything we fasten our identity and affection to in place of God.

The tragedy in Numbers 25 is intensified by its timing. Israel had witnessed deliverance from Egypt, provision in the wilderness, and the faithfulness of God in battle. Yet proximity to blessing did not guarantee purity of heart. Standing on the edge of promise, they compromised. It reminds me that spiritual milestones do not make us immune to moral failure. In fact, seasons of transition can expose what is truly bound to our hearts.

The result was severe: “the anger of the Lord was kindled against Israel.” The Hebrew word translated “kindled” carries the sense of something ignited or burning. We are reminded that God’s wrath is not capricious or unstable. It is holy. It is a response to sin that violates covenant relationship. Some are comfortable speaking only of divine love, but Scripture presents both love and wrath as attributes of the same holy God. To ignore one is to distort the other.

R.C. Sproul once said, “God’s wrath is not a blemish on His character; it is the expression of His holiness.” That statement helps us understand this passage. God’s anger was not arbitrary. It was stirred by covenant betrayal. Sin ignites divine wrath because sin opposes everything that is good, just, and life-giving. When we lose our sensitivity to sin, we begin to treat lightly what God takes seriously.

Yet even here, we must remember that wrath is not the final word. The broader narrative of Scripture points us to Christ, who bore the wrath we deserved. Paul writes, “God demonstrates His own love toward us, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8). The same God whose anger was kindled in Numbers is the God who provided atonement in Jesus. Holiness and mercy meet at the cross.

As we reflect on this chapter in our Bible reading plan, the question presses inward: What am I “joined” to? Where has my heart subtly fastened itself? Modern Baal-peors may look like status, comfort, ideology, or unchecked desire. The danger is rarely dramatic at first. It often begins with small accommodations, gradual compromises, quiet alignments. But attachment shapes direction.

We also learn that God’s judgment is not cruelty; it is correction. The consequences in Numbers 25 were devastating, but they served as a warning to a covenant people drifting from fidelity. Hebrews 12 reminds us that the Lord disciplines those He loves. Judgment in Scripture often functions as a severe mercy, turning hearts back before destruction becomes final.

In our society, we tend to grow numb to sin. We rename it, rationalize it, or celebrate it. But God remains holy. His standards do not evolve with culture. That truth should not drive us to fear, but to reverent self-examination. As David prayed, “Search me, O God, and know my heart” (Psalm 139:23). A soft conscience is a gift.

Walking through the Bible in a year is not merely about coverage; it is about transformation. Numbers 25 challenges us to guard our affections. It invites us to worship God exclusively, to remain unbound by competing loyalties. When our creed is anchored in truth, our conduct aligns accordingly.

If you would like a helpful overview of this chapter and its theological implications, The Gospel Coalition offers an insightful resource here: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/why-numbers-25-matters/

Let this passage settle into your reading today. Ask not only what Israel did, but what this story reveals about your own heart. Scripture does not merely recount history; it exposes and refines us as we journey with God.

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When Faith Forgets Its Mission

A Day in the Life

So, I brought him to Your disciples, but they could not cure him. Then Jesus answered and said, ‘O faithless and perverse generation … how long shall I bear with you?’” (Matthew 17:16–17). These are not the gentle tones we often associate with Jesus. They are sharp, urgent, almost pained. And when I read them slowly, I realize they are not aimed at outsiders. They are spoken to His own disciples—men who had already been given authority, power, and a clear mission.

Earlier, Jesus had commissioned them: “Heal the sick, cleanse the lepers, raise the dead, cast out demons” (Matthew 10:8). The authority was real. The power was delegated. But somewhere between the calling and the crisis, they lost focus. Mark tells us that they had been arguing about who was the greatest (Mark 9:34). Their energy had shifted from compassion to comparison. Instead of being attentive to the father who brought his tormented son, they were preoccupied with position. That subtle inward turn rendered them spiritually ineffective.

I find that uncomfortably relatable. How often do I become so absorbed in my own responsibilities, ambitions, or even ministry roles that I lose sight of the hurting person standing right in front of me? It is possible to be busy with religious activity and still miss the heart of Christ. As Oswald Chambers once wrote, “The greatest competitor of devotion to Jesus is service for Him.” That statement carries weight. We can work for God and yet drift from intimate dependence on Him.

Jesus’ rebuke—“faithless and perverse generation”—uses the Greek word apistos for unbelieving and diestrammenē for twisted or distorted. The issue was not ignorance but misalignment. They had the tools but lacked the trust. They had the calling but lost the connection. Faith is not merely believing that God can act; it is remaining oriented toward Him in humility and obedience. Without that alignment, power dissipates.

The father’s desperation in this passage moves me. He came expecting help because the disciples represented Jesus. Imagine his disappointment when nothing happened. God had sent him to them, but they were unprepared to respond. That question lingers in my heart: Whom is God sending to me today? The coworker carrying silent grief? The neighbor wrestling with addiction? The family member drowning in anxiety? If I am distracted by status, insecurity, or busyness, I may miss the sacred assignment.

Dietrich Bonhoeffer observed, “The Church is the Church only when it exists for others.” That insight reaches into this text. The disciples were not called to self-advancement but to sacrificial service. When Jesus later takes the child in His arms and teaches about humility (Mark 9:36–37), He re-centers their vision. Greatness in His kingdom is measured by service, not prominence. Spiritual authority flows from surrender, not self-promotion.

I also notice that Jesus does not abandon them. His rebuke is corrective, not dismissive. He heals the boy. He restores hope. And later, when the disciples privately ask why they failed, He points to prayer and faith (Matthew 17:20–21). Dependence is the difference. Ministry is not sustained by talent, structure, or charisma. It is sustained by abiding in Christ. As He declared elsewhere, “Apart from Me you can do nothing” (John 15:5).

So I pause and take inventory. Am I spiritually available? Am I attentive to divine appointments? Or have I allowed ambition, comparison, or fatigue to dull my sensitivity? God ought to be able to send hurting people to any of His children and expect they will encounter grace. That thought is both humbling and motivating. I cannot manufacture power, but I can cultivate closeness. I cannot heal on my own, but I can remain aligned with the Healer.

Today, I ask myself not how impressive my ministry appears, but how faithful my heart remains. When someone steps into my life carrying pain, will they find a distracted disciple or a surrendered servant? The answer depends on where my focus rests.

For further study on this passage and its implications for discipleship, consider this article from The Gospel Coalition: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/article/why-couldnt-disciples-cast-out-demon/

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Open Hands at Dawn

As the Day Begins

Blessed be the Lord God, the God of Israel, who only does wondrous things!” (Psalm 72:18). The psalmist’s doxology rises like the first light of morning, steady and confident. The Hebrew word for “wondrous things” is nifla’ot, works that are extraordinary, set apart, beyond human capacity. David reminds us that our God is not reluctant, not stingy, not hesitant in His dealings with His children. He is generous in character and faithful in covenant. When we wake to a new day, we do not step into uncertainty alone; we rise under the watchful care of the One who only does what is good and fitting for His glory and our eternal good.

It is easy to project human limitation onto divine love. We sometimes fear that God might withhold what we need, conceal part of Himself, or delay His promises. Yet Scripture consistently counters that suspicion. James tells us, “Every good and perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights” (James 1:17). The Greek term dosis agathē emphasizes a gift that is intrinsically beneficial. Our Heavenly Father does not ration grace. He does not deny what aligns with His will and our purpose. If something is withheld, it is not out of neglect but wisdom. A loving parent does not give a child everything requested, but everything that is rightfully needed.

Consider this: God has already prepared the resources for your day before you ever open your eyes. Psalm 139:16 assures us that all our days were written in His book. That means no conversation, no trial, no opportunity surprises Him. The Lord who does “wondrous things” has equipped you with daily bread, daily mercy, and daily strength. When you begin this morning, you do so with open hands, not clenched fists. You do not have to grasp or manipulate outcomes. Instead, you receive what He has already ordained for your spiritual growth and faithful service.

When we internalize this truth, anxiety loosens its grip. Trust replaces fear. Generosity begins to shape our own lives because we reflect the One we worship. As you move through this day, remember that you serve a God whose character is consistent, whose promises are secure, and whose blessings are purposeful.

Triune Prayer

Heavenly Father, You are the God of Israel who performs nifla’ot, wondrous works beyond my comprehension. I begin this day acknowledging that You are not withholding anything that is rightfully mine in Christ. Forgive me for the times I have doubted Your generosity or assumed scarcity where there was abundance. Teach me to trust Your timing and Your provision. Let my heart rest in the assurance that You have already prepared what I will need today. Shape my desires so they align with Your will, and help me walk in gratitude rather than grasping. I entrust this day to You with confidence in Your faithful character.

Jesus the Son, You are the visible expression of the Father’s generosity. In You, all the promises of God are “Yes” and “Amen” (2 Corinthians 1:20). Thank You for revealing the fullness of God’s love through Your life, death, and resurrection. Guard my heart from striving for what You have already secured. Remind me that my identity is not earned but received. As I walk through this day, let Your example of trust and obedience guide my steps. Help me to reflect Your generosity toward others, offering grace freely as it has been given to me.

Holy Spirit, Comforter and Spirit of Truth, dwell actively within me today. Illuminate the Scriptures so that I may recognize the gifts already placed in my path. Quiet the anxious thoughts that whisper of lack, and replace them with assurance of divine sufficiency. Empower me to live generously, to speak kindly, and to serve faithfully. Lead me in alignment with the Father’s will and the Son’s example. I yield this day to Your guidance and ask for strength to walk in steady trust.

Thought for the Day: Begin with open hands, trusting that the God who does wondrous things has already prepared what you need for today.

For further reflection on God’s generous character, see this helpful article from Desiring God: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/god-is-most-glorified-in-us

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Today’s Spiritual Disciplines

May the Lord bless your spiritual walk today and gently remind you that He who began a good work in you will carry it to completion. Wherever you are reading—from a quiet kitchen table, a busy office, or a hospital room—God’s presence meets you there. These daily devotions are more than routine; they are invitations into a deeper Christian walk, steady Scripture reflections, and a faith journey shaped by intentional spiritual disciplines.

This morning begins with “Open Hands at Dawn – As the Day Begins.” We reflect on Psalm 72:18 and the generous character of God who “only does wondrous things.” This meditation invites us to start the day with trust rather than anxiety, remembering that our Heavenly Father withholds nothing necessary for our eternal good and daily calling.

Next, “When Faith Forgets Its Mission – A Day in the Life” walks us into Matthew 17, where the disciples’ distraction led to spiritual powerlessness. We consider whom God may be sending into our lives and how humility and dependence restore effectiveness in ministry.

In “Bound Hearts and Burning Holiness – The Bible in a Year,” we journey through Numbers 25 and confront the sobering reality of idolatry and God’s holy response to sin. This Scripture reflection challenges us to examine what we are “joined” to and to renew covenant faithfulness.

The afternoon brings “The Strength of Coming Home – On Second Thought,” revisiting Luke 15 and the prodigal son. Here we see that spiritual maturity is not independence from God but renewed dependence upon Him.

Later, “When the Light Breaks In – DID YOU KNOW” explores John 8:12 and the powerful claim of Jesus as the Light of the World. We consider how humility allows us to walk in clarity rather than remain comfortable in the shadows.

Finally, “Freedom That Rests in the Rock – As the Day Ends” leads us through Galatians 5:13 and Psalm 62. As night falls, we release what holds us captive and rest in the Rock who secures our freedom.

May these spiritual disciplines guide your heart, steady your thoughts, and anchor your faith journey today.

Pastor Hogg

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今日属灵操练

愿主赐福你今天的属灵道路,并温柔地提醒你,那在你里面动了善工的神,必成全这工。无论你是在安静的厨房桌旁、忙碌的办公室里,还是在病房中阅读,神的同在都与你相遇。每日灵修不仅是一种习惯,更是一种邀请——邀请我们进入更深的属灵操练、扎实的经文默想,以及持续成长的信仰旅程。

今天清晨从 《黎明中的敞开双手——As the Day Begins》 开始。我们默想诗篇72:18,思想那“独行奇事”的神何等慷慨良善。这篇晨更提醒我们以信靠代替忧虑,相信天父不会扣留任何对我们永恒益处和今日使命有帮助的祝福。

接着在 《当信心忘记使命——A Day in the Life》 中,我们走进马太福音17章。门徒因分心与骄傲而失去属灵能力,这段经文提醒我们省察自己:神今天要把谁带到我们面前?谦卑与依靠,能恢复我们服事的果效。

中午的 《被捆绑的心与燃烧的圣洁——The Bible in a Year》 带领我们进入民数记25章。以色列人与巴力毗珥“联合”,引发神的圣怒。这篇经文反思呼召我们检视自己心所依附的对象,重新回到对神专一的忠诚。

下午的 《回家的力量——On Second Thought》 重新思想路加福音15章浪子的故事。真正的成熟不是离开父亲的独立,而是回到父亲怀中的依靠。悔改不是羞辱,而是恢复身份。

随后在 《当光照进来——DID YOU KNOW》 中,我们默想约翰福音8:12,耶稣宣告祂是“世界的光”。光不仅引导,也显明隐藏之处。唯有谦卑,我们才能在光中行走,经历真正的释放。

夜晚,我们在 《安息在磐石中的自由——As the Day Ends》 里,以加拉太书5:13和诗篇62篇结束一天。我们将拦阻丰盛生命的重担交托给神,在祂这稳固的磐石上得着安息。

愿这些属灵操练引导你的心思,坚固你的脚步,使你的信仰旅程更加稳健。

Pastor Hogg

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Who Is Helping You Unwrap the Grave Clothes?

As the Day Ends

There is a sober wisdom in the words of Proverbs: “He who walks with the wise grows wise, but a companion of fools suffers harm” (Proverbs 13:20). As the day winds down and the noise quiets, we are left with our thoughts—and often with the influence of those we have allowed closest to us. Some believers help free us from our grave clothes. Others, knowingly or not, keep handing them back.

When Jesus raised Lazarus from the dead, He commanded, “Loose him, and let him go” (John 11:44). Resurrection was His work; unwrapping was entrusted to the community. That image lingers. Salvation is the gift of Christ alone, but sanctification often unfolds in the company we keep. Proverbs 14:9 reminds us, “Fools mock at making amends for sin, but goodwill is found among the upright.” There are voices that excuse, minimize, and laugh off repentance. Then there are friends who, though sometimes wounding, call us to wholeness.

Open rebuke can sting. “Open rebuke is better than hidden love… Faithful are the wounds of a friend” (Proverbs 27:5–6). The Hebrew word for “faithful,” נֶאֱמָן (ne’eman), carries the sense of reliability and firmness. A true friend does not flatter us into bondage; they speak truth that leads to freedom. As we reflect tonight, perhaps during a season in the Church calendar that emphasizes repentance and renewal, we must ask: Who sharpens me? Who challenges my blind spots? Who gently but firmly helps remove what Christ has already broken?

At the same time, this reflection turns inward. Have I made necessary amends today? Have I dismissed conviction or resisted correction? Wisdom is not proven by how often we speak, but by how humbly we listen. Some companions help unwrap the grave clothes of pride, bitterness, and secret sin. Others reinforce them with comforting lies. As the day ends, we entrust our relationships and our hearts to God, asking Him to refine both.

Let us rest tonight knowing that the Lord, in His mercy, surrounds us with companions who point us toward life. And let us commit to being that kind of companion for others.

Triune Prayer

Father, You are the giver of every good gift, including the people You place around me. I thank You for those who have loved me enough to speak truth when it was difficult. Forgive me for the times I resisted correction or clung to my grave clothes out of pride or fear. Search my heart tonight. Reveal any necessary amends I must make. Give me humility to repair what I have harmed and courage to receive loving rebuke without resentment. Shape my character so that I may walk among the wise and grow in grace.

Jesus, my Savior and Lamb of God, You called Lazarus from the tomb and commanded others to set him free. You have called me from death to life. Thank You for breaking the power of sin over me. Help me not to return to what You have already conquered. When friends confront me in love, remind me that freedom often comes through discomfort. Teach me to forgive those who have wounded me in an effort to help me grow. May I reflect Your balance of mercy and truth in all my relationships.

Holy Spirit, You are the Spirit of Truth and my faithful Comforter. Guide me in discerning wise companions from harmful influences. Give me sensitivity to conviction and peace in repentance. Help me to be a trustworthy friend—one who removes grave clothes rather than replaces them. Guard my speech, refine my motives, and deepen my discernment. As I lay down to rest, quiet my heart with the assurance that You are continually shaping me into Christ’s likeness.

Thought for the Evening:
Before you sleep, ask yourself: Who is helping me grow in holiness, and am I willing to receive their insight? Thank God for wise companions—and ask Him to make you one.

For further reflection on biblical friendship and accountability, consider this helpful article from Desiring God: https://www.desiringgod.org/articles/the-grace-of-godly-correction.

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When Blood and Mercy Meet

DID YOU KNOW

There are passages in Scripture that make us uncomfortable. Leviticus 9–11 is filled with detailed descriptions of slaughtered animals, blood sprinkled on altars, and flesh burned in fire. “Then he slaughtered the burnt offering… and he burned them on the altar” (Leviticus 9:12–13). It is graphic. It is raw. And yet, hidden within those scenes is a message of astonishing grace that finds its fullest expression in Jesus Christ. When we place Leviticus beside John 7:53–8:11 and even the radiant poetry of Song of Solomon 6:6–10, something beautiful emerges: sacrifice, forgiveness, and restored love are inseparably connected.

Did you know that the graphic sacrifices in Leviticus were meant to teach us the seriousness of sin and the cost of grace?

The Hebrew word often translated “offering” in Leviticus carries the idea of drawing near. Sacrifice was not merely ritual; it was relational. When Aaron sprinkled blood on the altar, it symbolized atonement—כָּפַר (kaphar)—a covering for sin. The vividness of the scene was intentional. Sin is not a minor mistake; it ruptures fellowship with a holy God. The costliness of the offering reminded Israel that reconciliation requires life given in place of life.

In our modern world, we prefer sanitized spirituality. We want forgiveness without confrontation, grace without gravity. But Leviticus will not allow that. It presses upon us the weight of holiness. And when we understand the severity of sin, the cross of Christ shines brighter. Hebrews 9:22 tells us, “Without shedding of blood there is no remission.” The sacrifices in Leviticus were shadows; Jesus is the substance. What looked harsh in the Old Testament becomes hopeful when we see it pointing forward to the Lamb of God.

Did you know that Jesus chose mercy even though He knew He would become the ultimate sacrifice?

In John 8, the religious leaders drag a woman caught in adultery before Jesus. The law demanded death. Stones were ready. Yet Jesus stoops and writes on the ground. Then He says, “The one of you without sin, let him throw the first stone at her!” (John 8:7). One by one, they leave. Finally, He tells her, “Neither do I condemn you; go, and sin no more” (John 8:11).

What makes this moment even more striking is that Jesus knew the cost of such mercy. He understood that He Himself would be brutalized like the animals in Leviticus. The One without sin could have thrown the stone. Instead, He chose to carry the cross. Augustine once remarked that in this scene, “There were left two—misery and mercy.” The sin was real. The consequences were serious. But grace intervened. Jesus did not dismiss sin; He absorbed its penalty.

Did you know that grace is not permission to continue in sin but power to leave it behind?

It is tempting to read John 8 and stop at the words, “Neither do I condemn you.” But Jesus continues, “Go, and sin no more.” Grace forgives, but it also transforms. Paul echoes this in Romans 6:1–2: “Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound? Certainly not!” The cross is not a loophole; it is liberation. Because Christ has paid the price, we are free to walk in newness of life.

The sacrifices in Leviticus were repeated again and again because they could not fully cleanse the conscience. Christ’s sacrifice, however, was once for all. When we remember the brutality of the cross, it humbles us. His body was torn. His blood was shed. Not to shame us, but to free us. Grace calls us forward. It invites us to reflect the holiness of the God who has reconciled us.

Did you know that grace restores not only forgiveness but also beauty and intimacy with God?

At first glance, Song of Solomon 6:6–10 seems out of place among Leviticus and John 8. Yet its imagery of radiant beauty and beloved intimacy reminds us of the goal of redemption. God’s desire is not merely to pardon sinners but to draw them into loving fellowship. In Christ, we are not tolerated; we are treasured. The church, forgiven and cleansed, becomes like a bride described as “fair as the moon, clear as the sun.”

The same Jesus who stooped in the dust lifts us into communion. The same sacrifice that atoned for sin also unites us to God. Grace does not leave us in ashes; it crowns us with steadfast love. When we grasp this, our worship deepens. We realize that the graphic scenes of Leviticus and the tender mercy of John 8 converge at Calvary.

As we reflect on these passages—especially in seasons of the Church year that call us to repentance and renewal—we are reminded that grace is costly and beautiful. It confronts us, forgives us, and transforms us. The next time you encounter a difficult or graphic passage in Scripture, do not turn away too quickly. Ask what it reveals about the holiness of God and the depth of His mercy.

Today, consider where you may need both truth and grace. Are you quick to throw stones? Are you tempted to excuse sin lightly? Or are you walking in the freedom Christ purchased for you? Let the reality of His sacrifice renew your gratitude and guide your obedience. Remember: Jesus died not so we could continue in sin, but so we could live in restored fellowship with God.

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Running Everything Through the Right Grid

On Second Thought

There are seasons in the Church calendar when we are especially mindful of truth—Epiphany, when Christ is revealed; Lent, when we examine our hearts; Easter, when the gospel stands blazing at the center of history. Yet in every ordinary week, the same quiet danger persists: drifting from the simplicity of Christ. That was the concern weighing on the apostle Paul as he wrote to the believers in Colosse. Imprisoned and unable to visit them, he had heard troubling news. A mixture of Eastern philosophy, Jewish legalism, and early Gnostic speculation was threatening to distort the gospel.

Paul responds not with panic but with prayer. In Colossians 1:3–13, he thanks God for their faith and asks that they be filled with the knowledge of His will “in all wisdom and spiritual understanding.” The Greek word for knowledge here is ἐπίγνωσις (epignōsis)—a deep, relational knowledge rooted in truth, not secret speculation. The false teachers in Colosse emphasized a supposed elite insight. They claimed that the body was inherently evil and that Jesus could not truly have come in the flesh. To them, Christ was an emanation, not the incarnate Son. In doing so, they subtly stripped the gospel of its power. If Jesus is not fully God and fully man, then He cannot reconcile God and humanity.

The psalmist gives us a contrasting picture in Psalm 119:167–168: “My soul keeps Your testimonies, and I love them exceedingly. I keep Your precepts and Your testimonies, for all my ways are before You.” The Hebrew word for “keeps” is שָׁמַר (shamar), meaning to guard, to watch over attentively. The psalmist does not flirt with alternative voices; he guards the Word as one guards treasure. He recognizes that all his ways are before God. Scripture becomes the grid through which he evaluates life.

That image of a grid is helpful. In construction, a grid establishes alignment. It ensures that walls are straight and foundations secure. Without it, the entire structure leans. In the same way, God’s Word is the measuring line for doctrine, experience, and even emotion. When Paul confronts error in Colosse, he does not simply condemn false teachers; he exalts Christ. Later in the chapter he declares that Christ is “the image of the invisible God” and that “in Him all the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily” (Colossians 1:15; 2:9). Orthodoxy is preserved by a clear, exalted view of Jesus.

We face similar currents today. The language may differ—New Age spirituality, self-styled enlightenment, religious syncretism—but the pattern is familiar. Add a little human philosophy. Subtract a little from Christ’s uniqueness. Suggest that salvation lies in technique or hidden insight rather than grace. The result is always the same: a diminished Savior and a confused church.

John Stott once wrote, “We must allow the Word of God to confront us, to disturb our security, to undermine our complacency.” That confrontation is not harsh; it is protective. The Word exposes deviations before they harden into belief. It reminds us that God does not respond only to human perfection—He responds to repentance and faith. It anchors us in the truth that Jesus Christ came in the flesh, lived righteously, died sacrificially, and rose bodily.

Running everything through God’s grid requires humility. It means asking, “Does this teaching align with the whole counsel of Scripture?” It means resisting the allure of novelty for novelty’s sake. The Bereans in Acts 17 were commended because they examined the Scriptures daily to see whether what they heard was true. That practice remains a spiritual discipline for us.

If you would like a helpful overview of the historical challenges faced by the Colossian church and Paul’s response, The Gospel Coalition offers a thoughtful article on the theology of Colossians: https://www.thegospelcoalition.org/essay/the-letter-to-the-colossians/. It highlights how the supremacy of Christ safeguards the church against distortion.

When we love God’s testimonies “exceedingly,” as Psalm 119 says, we begin to see them not as restrictive but as liberating. The grid does not confine us; it keeps us aligned. It ensures that our faith rests on revelation, not speculation. In a world saturated with opinions, Scripture remains steady.

On Second Thought

On second thought, the paradox is this: many fear that running everything through Scripture will narrow their minds, yet it is the only way to enlarge their hearts safely. We assume that a grid limits creativity, but in truth, it protects authenticity. A builder who ignores measurements does not create freedom; he creates collapse. In the same way, a believer who sets aside the Word in pursuit of spiritual novelty does not gain insight; he risks confusion. What feels like openness can quietly become drift.

And yet, there is another layer. The very Word that functions as a grid also reveals grace. It does not merely expose heresy; it exalts Christ. It does not only guard doctrine; it fuels devotion. When we measure our thoughts against Scripture, we often discover not only error but invitation—an invitation to know Christ more deeply, to trust Him more fully, to walk in a manner worthy of the Lord. The grid that corrects us is the same grid that holds us secure.

So the next time a new teaching, trend, or spiritual idea captures your attention, pause. Run it through the Word. Ask whether it magnifies Jesus as Lord in the flesh, crucified and risen. Ask whether it aligns with the testimony God has already given. In doing so, you will find that your faith is not constricted but strengthened, not diminished but clarified.

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Living Now for the Way You Want to Die

The Bible in a Year

“Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” — Numbers 23:10

As we journey through Scripture together in this year-long reading plan, we eventually meet a curious and troubling figure: Balaam. In Numbers 23:10, he utters one of the most arresting statements in the Old Testament: “Let me die the death of the righteous, and let my last end be like his.” It is a beautiful request. It is thoughtful. It is even spiritually perceptive. Yet it comes from a man whose heart was divided.

Balaam was a prophet who knew how to speak truth. When constrained by God, he could bless instead of curse. He recognized the distinct calling of Israel and the favor of the LORD upon them. His statement about dying the death of the righteous reveals that he understood something critical: death is not the end of the story. Hebrews 9:27 reminds us, “It is appointed unto men once to die, but after this the judgment.” Balaam did not dodge the reality of death. In that sense, his request was intelligent. He faced what many prefer to ignore.

In our own time, we often sanitize death or push it to the margins of our thinking. We prepare for retirement, careers, vacations, and emergencies, yet rarely do we prepare our souls. The wisdom literature consistently urges us to number our days (Psalm 90:12). To consider death soberly is not morbid; it is wise. John Calvin once wrote, “We are not our own; therefore let us not set it as our goal to seek what is expedient for us.” To think about death rightly is to remember that our lives belong to God and that eternity outweighs temporal gain.

Yet Balaam’s request is not only intelligent; it is instructive. When he says, “Let me die the death of the righteous,” he acknowledges that not all deaths are the same. Physically, every human heart will one day stop beating. Spiritually, however, there is a world of difference between dying reconciled to God and dying in rebellion against Him. Jesus Himself said in John 8:24, “If you do not believe that I am He, you will die in your sins.” That is a sobering statement. The New Testament makes clear that righteousness is not self-generated morality but a gift secured in Christ. Paul writes in 2 Corinthians 5:21 that God made Christ “who knew no sin to be sin for us, that we might become the righteousness of God in Him.”

The word “righteous” in Hebrew, צַדִּיק (tsaddiq), describes one who is just, upright, and aligned with God’s covenant standards. In the New Testament, the Greek δίκαιος (dikaios) carries the idea of being declared right before God. Balaam admired the end of such people. He saw that the righteous possess a hope that extends beyond the grave. But admiration is not transformation.

And here is where his request becomes incomplete. Balaam wanted to die like the righteous, but he did not choose to live like them. Numbers 31:8 records his end—he died among the enemies of Israel. The man who longed for a righteous death aligned himself with unrighteous gain. He loved reward more than obedience. As the apostle Peter later warns, Balaam “loved the wages of unrighteousness” (2 Peter 2:15). He desired heaven’s comfort without heaven’s King.

This tension confronts us as we read the Bible in a year. It is possible to appreciate biblical truth, to speak about faith, even to feel stirred by godly examples—yet remain unchanged in our daily choices. A.W. Tozer once observed, “The true Christian ideal is not to be happy but to be holy.” Balaam wanted the happy ending without the holy journey.

So what does this mean for us today? It means that if we desire to die the death of the righteous, we must first be made righteous by Jesus Christ and then walk in that righteousness. Salvation is by grace alone through faith alone. But that faith produces a life increasingly shaped by obedience. We do not earn heaven by our works; yet a heart transformed by Christ will bear fruit.

In the flow of the Church year, whether we are in an ordinary week or approaching a holy season such as Lent, this theme is always relevant. Lent, in particular, calls us to examine not only how we wish to end our lives but how we are living them now. Repentance is not simply sorrow over sin; it is a reorientation of the heart.

As we continue through Scripture, Balaam’s story stands as both warning and invitation. It warns us not to separate destination from direction. It invites us to anchor our hope fully in Christ. The righteousness that secures a blessed end is not found in vague spiritual sentiment but in union with Jesus.

For further reflection on biblical righteousness and eternal hope, you may find this article from Ligonier Ministries helpful: https://www.ligonier.org/learn/articles/what-is-righteousness. It thoughtfully explains how righteousness is grounded in the work of Christ and applied to believers.

Today, as we read and reflect, let us not merely say, “I hope to die well.” Let us ask, “Am I living faithfully now?” Eternity is shaped not in our final hour, but in the daily pattern of trust, repentance, and obedience.

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