Job 13:13-19 Listen to today’s devotional Job cannot pretend, and there's nothing for Job to remain calm about. So, there's no composure in his voice, only desperation. He wants an audience with God. Here's the wisdom in that desire. He doesn't want to talk with God because he's got things figured out. No, the opposite is true. He doesn't know what's going on because his understanding of the world cannot explain what is happening to him. If he could just stand before God, he thinks, and say out loud what's in his heart, everything would change. He's convinced this is what he needs, even if it costs him everything. We're supposed to hear Job's desperation. At the same time, it's a bold kind of faith. Not the kind that avoids hard questions. Job believes God can handle his anguish. So, he brings it. Thankfully, what Job longed for, we are told we already have. We don't risk life and death like he felt he had to. The book of Hebrews te...
1 Samuel 16:11-13 Listen to today’s devotional It's a meaningful question to ask a congregation after communion: "Has everyone been served?" Our first inclination might be to assume that, yes, everyone has been served. After all, we've seen everyone walk down and receive the bread and cup. The music has stopped, and the pastor has put everything back into place. It seems complete. But the question reaches further than the sanctuary. It stretches beyond those of us seated in the pews and into the lives of people we haven't noticed, the people we haven't named or invited to the table yet. When Samuel came to anoint a new king in 1 Samuel 16, Jesse presented his sons one by one. They were strong and capable. Obvious choices for a new king. And yet, something was missing. "Are all your sons here?" Samuel asked. That sense of incompleteness stirred the question for him. Of course, there was still one more. David. The one left in the field. The one forgo...