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July 07, 2025 0

 

Acts 19:23-27
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In Acts 19, we meet Demetrius. He was a silversmith who made a good living crafting silver shrines of the goddess Artemis. For Demetrius and his colleagues, business was booming.

Until it wasn’t.

The gospel began spreading and people started turning from idol worship and toward The Way. Suddenly, idolatry was losing its profitability. Demetrius, worried about losing income and, perhaps, influence, stirred up the city. His no little protest against Paul quickly led to a riot.

To our ears, Paul's message may not sound controversial. For us, faith is a matter of choice. But don't miss how irrational and disruptive his message was to a poly-theistic world. To reject the gods of the Roman world would be to reject Roman civil life itself. You can hear that nervousness when Demetrius acknowledged that Artemis' reputation might suffer.

But the real trouble for Demetrius happened when people began living differently. That’s what I appreciate most about this moment. The problem wasn’t so much the preacher and his sermons but the response of the people. Panic didn’t set in when the word was in the pulpit but when faith got real.

As a preacher, that's something I pray for. Not good sermons, but real faith. Faith that reshapes priorities. Discipleship that impacts more than Sunday mornings.

When people follow Jesus with intention, things shift. Hearts change. Families change. Whole communities can change. Acts 19 shows us that even profit margins can tremble at the name of Jesus.

That's the kind of change we long for. A world where industries built on insecurity, exploitation or illusion feel pressure to change, too.




What are the Artemis industries around us today? What do we keep funding, clicking and consuming? You can disrupt entire systems just by refusing to feed them.

That means you don’t have to shout at the darkness. Just stop paying for it.

Stay blessed...john

A burden-bearing church

July 06, 2025 0

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Monday: Understanding Burdens

Scripture: Galatians 6:2 – "Carry each other’s burdens, and in this way, you will fulfill the law of Christ."

Devotional:
Today, we are called to reflect on what it means to carry each other's burdens. The scripture from Galatians emphasizes the importance of community and shared responsibility. We are not meant to carry our burdens alone. Just as physical burdens can weigh us down, emotional, spiritual, and financial burdens can have the same effect. As a community of faith, we are called to support one another and share in the weight of these burdens.

Reflection Questions:

  1. What burdens are you carrying right now that you haven't shared with others?
  2. How does sharing burdens with others change the way you experience them?
  3. Who in your life might need help carrying their burdens?

Additional Scripture: Matthew 11:28-30


Tuesday: Recognizing the Power of Presence

Scripture: Job 2:11-13 – Job’s friends sat with him in silence, sharing in his suffering.

Devotional:
Job's friends demonstrate the importance of presence without words. They were at their most compassionate when they simply sat with Job in his suffering. Sometimes, our presence is the greatest gift we can offer to those enduring hardships. This silent empathy can speak louder than words and provide comfort in profound ways.

Reflection Questions:

  1. Reflect on a time when someone’s presence helped you through a difficult situation. How did it make you feel?
  2. In what ways can you be present for someone in need this week?
  3. Why do you think silence can sometimes be more comforting than words?

Additional Scripture: Romans 12:15


Wednesday: The Contagious Nature of Love

Scripture: John 13:34-35 – "A new command I give you: Love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another."

Devotional:
Love is not just a feeling but an action that fulfills the law of Christ. When we love others by helping to carry their burdens, it becomes a testimony of our faith and an act of imitating Christ. Love in action is contagious; it can spread kindness, change hearts, and create a community known for compassion.

Reflection Questions:

  1. How can your actions demonstrate love as Christ loved?
  2. Can you recall a time when witnessing someone else's act of love inspired you?
  3. What steps can you take to make love in action contagious in your community?

Additional Scripture: 1 John 4:7-12


Thursday: Empathy as Spiritual Action

Scripture: Colossians 3:12 – "Therefore, as God’s chosen people, holy and dearly loved, clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience."

Devotional:
Empathy involves feeling with others and taking action based on that feeling. It is a spiritual gift and a call to action. When we feel another's pain and move together in compassion, we reflect the character of Christ. This spiritual action is transformative for both the giver and the receiver, fostering a stronger bond within the community.

Reflection Questions:

  1. How can you cultivate a deeper sense of empathy in your daily life?
  2. What is one way you can transform empathy into action today?
  3. How does empathy strengthen your connection with God and others?

Additional Scripture: Philippians 2:1-4


Friday: Living Out Our Calling

Scripture: James 2:14-17 – Faith without works is dead.

Devotional:
Our faith is demonstrated by our works, especially through acts of burden-bearing and support for others. While faith alone is essential, James reminds us that it must be accompanied by action to be alive and effective. When we carry each other's burdens, we live out our calling as followers of Christ and participate in God's healing work in the world.

Reflection Questions:

  1. What barriers prevent you from actively living out your faith through works?
  2. How can you intentionally incorporate burden-bearing as a regular practice of your faith?
  3. Reflect on how living out your faith through actions has deepened your spiritual journey.

Additional Scripture: Matthew 25:35-40

God's cause

July 04, 2025 0

 

Psalm 140:12-13
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Sometimes it feels like the world doesn't just ignore the poor. It runs right over them.

The people with the most power or platform seem to have the loudest and more important voice. Meanwhile, those carrying the heaviest burdens get pushed further to the margins. And far too often, we not only overlook this reality, we participate in it. We let it happen. We might even benefit from it. 

But the psalmist doesn’t say, “I hope the Lord will help.” He says, “I know that the Lord maintains the cause of the needy and executes justice for the poor.” That’s faith rooted in trust and experience. That’s someone who has seen God act before and expects God to act again in a particular way with a particular alignment.

God defends the vulnerable. God notices when others overlook. God doesn’t take a that's-too-bad approach. God upholds their cause. That means God is involved, not distant. Active, not passive. "So you say you love the poor? What are their names," Gustavo Gutiérrez asked. God knows their name. Do we?

God secures justice and takes up the cause of the needy. And if that’s who God is, then we should resist anything that harms, silences or exploits the most vulnerable among us. As we do, we know we don’t carry the burden alone. We don’t have to fix everything ourselves. This already matters to the Lord.



So, we can’t stay quiet or still. We join God's people in the work. We join God in the work. We align ourselves with God’s heart. As Rowan Williams observed, "To be with the poor is to be where God is."

Stay blessed...john

When the wicked win

July 03, 2025 0

 

Psalm 140:9-11
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In my tradition, when someone is baptized, they’re asked: “Do you accept the freedom and power God gives you to resist evil, injustice, and oppression in whatever forms they present themselves?” In my years of pastoral ministry, I’ve never heard anyone answer “no.” I’ve also never met anyone who said they doubt those things are real.

But I do wonder if we keep some of those words up on a high shelf. As mere lofty ideals, that freedom and power stay there out of our normal use and away from our everyday convictions. We believe in justice in theory, but we don’t always know what to do with it when evil hides behind systems, status or even religion.

As a kid, TV shaped my images of good and evil. God looked like a white-bearded man in the sky. The devil wore red, had horns and carried a pitchfork. But real evil is sneakier than that. It doesn’t always come with a costume. It shows up quietly, clothed in lies, inequality, pride and power grabs. It breaks peace. It divides community. And worst of all, it often wins.

Evil, injustice and oppression can even veil as right as they lie, cheat and hurt people. As peace makers, what's more frustrating and discouraging than watching evil prosper?


I might summarize the prayer of Psalm 140 like this: “God, don’t let them get away with this!” The psalmist isn’t polite. He's honest in his desire for God to return the misfortune of those who have done evil and violence to him. And he teaches us something. We don’t fight evil alone. We trust that God sees, hears and remembers.


So, when you feel discouraged by what evil gets away with, pray. Pray like the psalmist. Is there other tangible work to do in the fight against injustice and evil? Of course. Some call that good trouble. But our willingness to pray in earnest and honesty shapes how we respond. Praying like the psalmist reminds me that when the wicked seems to win, God isn't done yet.

Stay blessed...john

When you're under attack

July 02, 2025 0

 

Psalm 140:4-8
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Some days, it feels like everything is coming at you.

How many unkind words can you really take all at once? How many times does a simple misunderstanding spiral into something overblown? When have you felt the weight of someone else’s agenda pressing in on you? Even if it’s not full-on spiritual warfare, you can can feel like you’re under attack. From people, from life's pressures and even from past wounds that haven’t fully healed.

Psalm 140 gives us a way to pray in those moments.

First, start with who God is. “You are my God,” the psalmist says (v.6). That’s not just theology. That's a relationship. A life lived in communion with the Lord. When you feel cornered or overwhelmed, that reminder grounds you. It tells you my God is near. My God is listening. My God is mine.

Then the psalm offers a vivid image. Your God that loves you and is with you, is your shield. Sometimes we just need God to cover us. Our heads are where thoughts can linger, fears can grow and plans may form. When the day feels like a battle, ask God to guard not just your body, but your mind and your motives.



Finally, there's a prayer for justice: “Do not grant the wicked their desires” (v.8). That’s not spiteful. That’s faithful. You’re saying, “God, don’t let evil win. Not in them, and not in me either.” It’s a prayer for protection and a faithful perspective.

When we’re under attack, it’s easy to slip into bitterness or blame. Psalm 140 helps us stay grounded in trust. The psalm reminds us we're covered by God’s care and keeps us hopeful for what is right.

So, if today feels like a battle, say this: “You are my God. Shield me. Let your justice win.” That’s a prayer worth praying every time.

Stay blessed...john

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