Psalm 112:1-9 Listen to today's devotional Passages like Psalm 112 confuse me. Not because they're hard to understand, but because they seem to describe a reality that doesn’t always match what we experience. For example, the psalm says those who fear the Lord will have “wealth and riches,” that “it is well” with them, that they will never be shaken or afraid. And yet, I’ve known faithful people who never had much money and other believers who experienced seasons that were anything but well. So, maybe the issue isn’t the psalm but how we’re reading it. Perhaps we need to rethink what “wealth,” “riches,” blessing, and stability mean. Our definitions might be shaped more by culture than by Scripture. It's also possible the psalmist had something deeper in mind than comfort or financial success. But what if Psalm 112 isn’t making guarantees about outcomes at all? Like much of wisdom literature, it’s not a contract God signs with us. It’s a picture of a path God invites us to...
I got on the social media trend this week and asked ChatGPT to create an image of me based on everything it knew about me. My Eagles affiliation didn't come through! Maybe ChatGPT roots for another NFC East team? Now, I've written hundreds of sermons, over 1,500 daily devotionals, and thousands more text messages. If I had created my own picture, I don't know I would have made justice an important part of it. In this picture, it appears twice. There's the "Justice and Jesus" nameplate that might become a new t-shirt and the scales of justice in the background. That got me wondering about what we pay attention to in other people. How do we view others and how much is what we see different from what they see? And vice versa. And then an old high school friend gave me the idea to make these. Stay blessed...john