Acts 20:7-12 Listen to today’s devotional How many times have you fallen asleep in church? Younger me would've taken that personally or wondered why someone wasn't more committed to Jesus. Now, I've learned there are many reasons people nod off. Maybe it's been a long week. Maybe their medication is kicking in. Maybe the sermon and music aren't helping either. But what if it was just a late night? In the early days of the church, most people weren't wealthy. There was no middle class, just regular people working long hours to get by. It's not hard to imagine that by the time they gathered to hear Paul in Acts 20, they were already exhausted. Add a long message, a crowded room, and all those candles, and suddenly you wonder how it was that only one person dozed off. This short story is fun to tell. But it also highlights something deeper about the life of the church. There was time for long, meaningful conversations about faith. Not just surface-level stuff...
Revelation 11:15-18 Listen to today’s devotional How many of us grew up not being allowed to leave the table until we finished our vegetables? We scrapped the rule altogether at our house because I appreciated that someone suggested it was an unnecessary power play. The whole interaction was less about better nutrition and more about control. And that tracks. Parents raise their voices and lose their cool. Kids dig in their heels. The table becomes more of a standoff than a sit-down. And everyone leaves frustrated because there's nothing like dinner-time rage. Now, that got me thinking about something deeper. Rage has a way of showing up when our control starts slipping away. Of course, not just at the dinner table. For a few weeks, I've been reflecting on the question in Psalm 2: Why do the nations rage? It's an ancient question that feels way too current. History is full of it, and history is rhyming again. When we see it, we can diagnose the surface problems as greed, ...