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...
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 ...