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The Idol of Certainty

  Isaiah 41:21-24 Click here to listen to today’s devotional Often, we are drawn to anyone or anything that promises to tell us what comes next. Just think of election season. Candidates promise they know what needs to happen next, and that they'll be the ones to make it happen. Besides that, we check forecasts, scroll through headlines, follow experts, and replay conversations in our minds, hoping someone can calm our fears surrounding the question: What's going to happen ? That's the tension behind God's challenge in Isaiah 41 when God speaks to the idols that people trusted. The Lord says, "Tell us what is to happen," and "declare to us the things to come." Of course, it's a challenge they cannot answer. Their promises are empty because they cannot see or shape what's next. They are nothing. And yet, not much has changed. Our idols may not be carved from wood or stone, but they still make oversized promises. You probably recognize them, ev...
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The Big Reveal

  Matthew 13:10-17 Click here to listen to today’s devotional Maybe it's because my last name is Fletcher, but growing up, I always had a soft spot for Jessica Fletcher from Murder, She Wrote . She managed to solve every mystery in one episode. That's probably why, whenever I read the word mystery , even in the Bible, my mind wants to think, "Something to figure out." Like a puzzle waiting to be solved. But that's not what Jesus means. The Greek word mystÄ“rion refers to something that was once hidden but has now been revealed. The mystery isn't that God is keeping secrets from us. The mystery is that God is pulling back the curtain. For generations, God's people longed to know how God would set the world right. The prophets spoke of a coming kingdom. The people hoped and prayed for it. And there were times that they saw glimpses, but never the whole picture. Then Jesus came. The mystery, then, wasn't a code to crack, but a person to follow. And maybe ...

Telling My Trouble

  Psalm 142 Click here to listen to today’s devotional People often ask how they should pray. Jesus told his disciples, "When you pray, say..." and then he gave them actual words to repeat. Likewise, many of us are looking for the "right" words to fill in what's in our hearts. The worry is that without the proper language, prayers aren't spiritual enough. Well, I think there are many, many more ways to pray faithfully than there might be wrong ways to pray. Psalm 142 reminds us that prayer doesn't have to be impressive. Sometimes, prayer is simply telling God your trouble. Tell God what's weighing on you. Explain what happened today. Name your disappointment and admit what you're fearful of. Talk about the frustrations. Say out loud what you're hoping for and what you're afraid might never happen. And just know that God doesn't need the information; God knows. But actually learning to tell God everything is an expression of your relat...

More and More

  1 Thessalonians 4:1-8 Click here to listen to today’s devotional The apostle Paul wanted the Thessalonian Christians to learn to please God "more and more." To appreciate what Paul might have had in mind, it's important to recall when he first preached in Thessalonica. The people there accused the believers of turning the world upside down because they said, "There is another king named Jesus" (Acts 17). Caesar was the other king. Living under a king like Caesar, "more" usually meant giving more. More taxes, more allegiance, more of yourself to an empire that always demanded something else. King Jesus is different. Paul's urging the church to please God "more and more" wasn't a call to appease a God who is never satisfied. No, he understood that the more we follow Jesus, the more we become the people God created us to be. We become more human, recognizing more and more the image of God within us. This growth is what we know as holin...

Strong Enough

  Romans 15:1-6 Click here to listen to today’s devotional One of the marks of spiritual maturity isn't that nothing bothers you anymore. You just learn to decide what is worth being bothered about. Personally, I took the "pick your battles" advice to heart and have found less interest in fewer and fewer battles. I see this kind of spiritual maturity as a gift of the Spirit. The apostle Paul says it this way, "We who are strong ought to put up with the failings of the weak, and not to please ourselves" (Romans 15:1). That raises an uncomfortable question to wrestle with. Am I spiritually strong enough to let other people inconvenience me? Sometimes, I think our "standing for truth" is really just defending our preferences. Have you noticed the uproar that can happen when people get frustrated because someone is late, sings differently than they like, asks too many questions, or just doesn't see things the same way? Paul points us to a strength that...

Enough to Follow

  Psalm 119:105-112 Click here to listen to today’s devotional Many of us go to God’s Word for answers. We want God to show us the whole picture so we can know what is coming next, how everything will work out, and what decisions we should make. Now, I will never discourage you from seeking the Bible's wisdom. But I might suggest you not see the Bible as a spotlight. Psalm 119:105 gives us a different image. The psalm famously says, “Your word is a lamp to my feet and a light to my path.” Consider that a lamp is not a spotlight that illuminates miles down the road. It gives just enough light for the next step. Perhaps God’s Word was never meant to satisfy our desire to know everything. Instead, it was given to shape our willingness to obey what God has already shown us. Think about how often we ask God for more clarity when what we really need is more courage or confidence in what God has already told us. We might want God to show us what's next, but what if God is saying, ...

Pick Up a Towel

  John 13:12-17 Click here to listen to today’s devotional Jesus didn't just wash his disciples' feet. There's too much happening around the story for it to just be a lesson on humility. Before Jesus picked up a towel, John tells us something important that Jesus knew. He knew and understood that God "had given all things into his hands and that he had come from God and was going to God" (John 13:3). Secure in who he was and confident in what God had entrusted to him, Jesus took what had been placed in his hands and used those hands to wash dirty feet. The room must've been full of tension. Judas had begun to feel his betrayal. Peter was about to object. None of the disciples knew or understood what was unfolding. The Lord didn't explain what he was about to do. There was no leadership briefing. He simply stood up from the table, wrapped a towel around himself, poured water into a basin, and knelt before the first disciple. One by one, he washed every pair...