Romans 8:14-17 Listen to today’s devotional My kids should thank me. I’m not leaving them anything after I’m gone for them to fight about as an inheritance. All I’m leaving are the memories of a great dad 🙂 Of course, most of us probably think of inheritance as stuff we can divide up and argue over. But the apostle Paul describes inheritance as something more meaningful than possessions. We are children of God, and how awesome is that, but we are also heirs with Christ, especially as we suffer alongside him. To understand Paul’s thought, think of inheritance as more than a heavenly reward waiting beyond the clouds. So much of faith gets pushed into the sweet by and by that we miss the shape of life with God today. This inheritance is about belonging. It is about identity, participation, and even responsibility right now. Because an heir carries a family name, a family story, and often even a family resemblance. You can see it in the way people speak. They carry themselves a cert...
Acts 2:1-4 Listen to today’s devotional Not that they asked me, but I recently recommended that my theology school's mascot should be the Already/Not Yetis. It's a funny reminder of the in-between that we live in. In Acts 2, the disciples were living in an in-between moment. They had already seen the empty tomb and watched as Jesus appeared in the room they had locked out of fear. And they had also received a promise from Jesus: “You will receive power when the Holy Spirit has come upon you.” So, they waited. But I don't imagine they waited in despair. They were waiting in expectation. The disciples were about to understand that not even resurrection was the end of the story. The risen Christ had changed everything, but Pentecost was about to change them. Whereas resurrection gave them hope, what happened at Pentecost emboldened them. All Christians should be familiar with the idea of living between the promise of God and its fulfillment--what we call the already, not yet...