Acts 5:17-21 Listen to today’s devotional Among several things my hometown is known for, Galveston, Texas, is also the birthplace of Juneteenth. On June 19, 1865, the news finally arrived that enslaved people in Texas were free. Now, freedom had been declared more than two years before, but many had not yet heard the announcement. When I moved away from the city, I was surprised to learn it wasn't a big deal in the other places I lived. Most people hadn't even heard of the holiday. I couldn't help but remember that while reading Acts 5 today. The passage shows us the power of God that comes through announcements. The apostles had been arrested for preaching about Jesus. The religious authorities thought they could silence the gospel by locking its messengers in prison. But during the night, an angel opened the doors and set them free. Then came a surprising command: "Go, stand, and tell." God did not open the prison doors just so the apostles could admire their ...
Psalm 69:7-10 Listen to today’s devotional I always laughed at the old Snickers commercials. Someone would be cranky, irrational, or completely unlike themselves until they took a bite of a candy bar. Then their slogan would appear: "You're not you when you're hungry." If the sermon's ever kept you too long from lunch, you know there's truth in those funny ads. Hunger has a way of revealing what's going on within us. When our stomachs are empty, our patience gets shorter and our tempers get quicker. Those little inconveniences that never bothered us before start to get to us more. Maybe that's one reason fasting has long been a spiritual practice. In Psalm 69, David says he humbled himself through fasting. That means he did not see fasting as a way to impress God or earn God's favor. He wasn't even trying to get God to do something for him. Humbling your soul has a way of creating space for God to reveal what is in your heart. When we fast, we ...