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Showing posts from November, 2025

Too close

  Genesis 6:1-4 Listen to today's devotional Genesis 6 has one of those stories that most of us would probably rather skip. "Sons of God" and Nephilim read like a strange ancient myth tangled in God's word we're not ready for. One common interpretation of the "sons of God" says that they were angelic beings who crossed boundaries with women they were never meant to cross. That added to the wickedness God saw in humanity that preludes the story of Noah. And that idea works, in part, because it's distant and dramatic, nothing like our everyday lives. But another perspective says the "sons of God" were sons of the powerful, men in authority taking advantage of women because no one could stop them. Now, that reading isn't as outlandish or otherworldly. And maybe that's why it's harder. It's easy to condemn things we'll never be tempted by. We shake our heads at the extremes of violence, drugs, scandals, and corruption in far...

All peoples, one praise

  Psalm 117 Listen to today's devotional It's easy to see how divided our world can be. People separate themselves into categories, labels, and sides. We draw lines that distinguish ourselves from others in subtle and bold ways. And then we defend those lines with all our strength. So, let's reflect on something God desires for our world. Listen again to the psalmist say, "Praise the Lord, all you nations! Worship him, all you people!" Everyone is included in the call to worship. This short psalm refuses to let us shrivel God down to fit inside our boundaries. We can't read it and assume God’s love is only for people who look like us, think like us, vote like us, worship like us, or agree with us. Instead, it widens the circle until we can’t see the edges anymore. Recently, Pope Leo XIV released an apostolic letter titled "In the Unity of Faith" to commemorate the 1,700th anniversary of the Council of Nicaea. He emphasized that the creed isn't ju...

Deep faith and simple praise

  Psalm 117 Listen to today's devotional It amazes me how other people can reflect theologically on things that I would not have considered on my own. There are endless ideas to explore when it comes to understanding theology, biblical studies, and religious studies. For me, studying these kinds of things is a form of worship of the loving God who gives us insight and wisdom. And I always encourage others to learn how to think through them, too. At the same time, I've also learned we can overcomplicate faith. Or at least, we make it harder than it needs to be. We pile on expectations, rules, church politics, spiritual checklists, and the pressure to "get it right." Of course, those have their place, usually a good place, but they can also distract us. Then two simple verses remind us that the foundations of faith don't have to be complicated. Psalm 117 is just 17 words in Hebrew. Those few words, though, hold what we need to know about God and our relation to God....

Letting hope lead

Revelation 21: 22-27 Listen to today's devotional Don't we all have some picture of what the future looks like? And what fills our vision of the future might be something like longing for a day when life becomes a little easier, relationships become healthier, or things at least become a little less chaotic. You might also imagine a day when you feel more whole and at peace. The book of Revelation is a future vision. Not in a predictive way, laying out a cosmic schedule of events that will take place. Revelation is not a crystal ball view of the future. But it is a vision meant to inspire us and pull us forward to God's future. For all its enigmatic qualities, Revelation shows us a day when light doesn't come from temporary sources. Instead, it shines from God, radiating with goodness. There will be no locked gates or fear of who might come in. There will be no systems of power that dominate or harm people. The revelation of Christ shows us a day when humanity finally l...

Mixed emotions

  1 Peter 1:6-9 Listen to today's devotional Joy and grief really can live in the same house. In 1 Peter 1, the apostle doesn’t pretend we’re above life’s pain. Peter never says, “Rejoice instead of suffering,” or “Rejoice once the suffering ends.” He helps us understand what we probably already know to be true: that joy and sorrow often show up at the same time. Many of us feel pressure to choose between the two. If you’re hurting, you wonder if your faith is weak. If you’re hopeful, you wonder if you’re avoiding reality. But the Bible gives you permission to hold both with honesty. Faith isn’t pretending the pain isn't anything less than it is. Instead, faith teaches us to trust God even while the pain is still present. In the Bible, joy isn’t a mood. It’s a deep confidence in who God is and how God stays with us. God is with you, God is working, and God is not done. And grief is not a spiritual failure. It’s the honest acknowledgment that life hurts and losses matter. You do...

That's enough

  Psalm 46 Listen to today's devotional Many of us are familiar with the words of Psalm 46. It's those hopeful words: "God is our refuge and strength, a very present help in trouble." Notice that the psalmist doesn't say that God will keep trouble away from us. Instead, God will be with us in the middle of it. So, we don't need to deny the reality of our fears or the chaos around us. We simply decide that those things don't get to define us. When everything feels like it's falling apart, it can be easy to suppose that God is far away. Life isn't cooperating with us, and we're sure God isn't either. But Psalm 46 says the opposite. God becomes our hiding place, our sure and steady source of strength. Now, refuge doesn't mean escape. It means that God draws near to us, even before we know how to turn toward God. Many of us know how this psalm opens, and many also know its other great line: "Be still and know that I am God." Today...

Seeing again

  Matthew 23:37-39 Listen to today's devotional Since we know the story well, you can imagine some of the feelings Jesus had when he said, “You will not see me again, until you say, ‘Blessed is the one who comes in the name of the Lord.’” Of course, Jesus is talking about physical vision. The people would see him parade into town on a donkey. At the same time, Luke demonstrates that the people in Jerusalem could not see what was right in front of them. They saw a teacher but not truth. They saw miracles but missed God's kingdom. And they missed God's presence because of their desire for power. Their misunderstanding gives us pause enough to ask, What do we see? As we consider how a passage like this speaks to our hearts, we realize there is also a vision of the heart. A recognition of God’s presence in a way that transforms how we live. As such, when Jesus speaks of seeing again, maybe we can take that as an invitation to a different kind of awareness. One that begins with ...

Vision in the valley

  Ezekiel 40:1-4 Listen to today's devotional In Ezekiel 40, God gives the prophet a vision of the future after twenty-five long years in exile. For more than two decades, the people of Israel had been living with the memory of what they lost. Their homeland was gone. Their temple was destroyed. Their identity and even their sense of God's nearness were taken away from them. If anyone felt like their hope as God's beloved was permanently broken, it was them. But this was precisely when God spoke a new word of hope. Their story wasn’t over. They just couldn’t see the next chapter yet. Sometimes we struggle with our long seasons of waiting, silence, or struggle. We seem them as proof that God has stopped working or that we have failed so badly that God is done with us. We assume the best pages have already been written, and, thus, that we have lost our purpose. But Ezekiel reminds us that God’s plans are not limited by our circumstances or our feelings. The Lord did not wait ...

Our new governor

Isaiah 60:17-22 Listen to today's devotional Let's rethink peace. For many of us, peace is something to achieve. In that sense, it's like an award you get for pulling through your hard situations or putting up with more than you thought you could. To be sure, you can have peace in those moments. But let's think of peace not as something we arrive at but something that guides us. Isaiah 60:17 offers a hopeful promise: “I will make peace your governor." At first, that may seem more poetic, but it is actually really practical. Remember Israel's history. God's people had long been shaped by instability. They had been led by foreign kings and ruled by fear. God promised their exile would not last forever, and told of a future where God's people would no longer be governed by threats or scarcity. Instead, they would be led by peace and well-being. Imagine if peace sat at the head of your decision-making table. What would change? Many of us are led by somethin...

Faith in the making

  2 Thessalonians 1:3-7 Listen to today's devotional One of the joys of serving as a pastor is getting to see the small, steady ways God is at work in people's lives. The apostle Paul begins 2 Thessalonians with gratitude for the church. It's not that things were perfect among the congregation. But he could see their faith growing. And when faith grows, even just a little, it is a reason to give thanks to God. I know we often think of spiritual growth as big, impactful, or dramatic moments. But I see faith growing in the simple choices people make. Things like deciding to participate in worship on a regular basis. Showing up to serve even when things are hectic. Praying again or for the first time. When someone forgives when it would feel easier to hold a grudge. These aren't the kinds of things people automatically notice. But they matter deeply because they are signs of God shaping and reshaping our lives from the inside out. As a pastor, I often get to see these thin...

Better together

  John 13:34-35 Listen to today's devotional What is accomplished by God’s power is often accomplished through God’s people. God’s love doesn’t just stay inside us. It moves through us toward others. John Wesley once said that love for our neighbor is the proof that we’ve “passed from death to life.” In other words, real faith always shows up in real relationships. Holiness is not just about having kind feelings or private devotion. It grows as we live together in love. Wesley called this _social holiness_. That is the idea that we become more like Jesus not in isolation, but in community. We learn patience, forgiveness, compassion, and service when we walk with one another. For Wesley, this wasn’t theory. Early Methodists visited prisons, cared for the poor, and taught children. Their love for God naturally overflowed into action. But their acts of mercy weren’t separate from their spiritual growth. They were part of it. As they served, prayed, confessed, and encouraged one anothe...

Pursuit of perfection

  1 Thessalonians 5:23-28 Listen to today's devotional John Wesley once said that holiness is “the end of all ordinances of God.” In other words, everything God gives us, prayer, Scripture, worship, community, is meant to draw us toward one goal: love made complete within us. Holiness begins in God’s heart and finds its fulfillment when God's love transforms ours. Wesley’s idea of Christian perfection wasn’t about being sinless. It was about being made whole in love. It’s the renewal of our hearts in God’s image, where Christ’s Spirit so fills us that love becomes our motive, our joy, and our way of life. Holiness is not something we achieve through our own efforts. It is the gracious work of God within us. Wesley once asked, “Who would oppose loving God in such a way?” His question reminds us that holiness isn’t a burden. It's an invitation that shows us that God desires to renew our hearts so completely that we live in a steady flow of love for God and for others. Now, th...

Let grace lead

  Luke 9:23-27 Listen to today's devotional John Wesley once asked a tough question: “Why has Christianity done so little good in the world?” For a man whose ministry sparked renewal across the world, that seems strange. But Wesley wasn’t questioning the church’s accomplishments. Instead, he was diagnosing its heart. He saw a church that had forgotten what it means to follow Christ in self-denial and daily discipleship. Wesley believed the church had lost sight of Jesus’ words: “If anyone would come after me, let him deny himself, take up his cross daily, and follow me.” When we forget this calling, discipleship becomes optional, and leadership becomes more about managing than forming souls. Wesley traced this failure to a deeper issue. It was the church’s neglect of grace. For Wesley, grace is not only God’s pardon. Grace is God’s power within us. Grace awakens us, forgives us, and transforms us. He described this power of God in at least three ways: Prevenient grace (God drawing ...

Holy leadership

  Colossians 3:14-16 Listen to today's devotional My pastoral journey began more than twenty years ago. In those early years, I was fortunate to have been blessed with mentors who taught me how to plan, budget, lead, and resolve conflicts. Their lessons were practical and helped me understand how to guide people and build ministries with care and purpose. As the years went on, another question began to stir in me: What is all this leadership really for? That question has changed how I see ministry. Leadership in the church is not just about managing programs or growing churches. It is about shaping lives. It is about helping people learn how to follow Jesus in real, everyday ways. Many models of church leadership seem to assume that discipleship will happen naturally as people participate in church activities. But I’ve learned that discipleship must be intentional. If we’re not careful, we end up focusing more on keeping the church running than on helping the church become holy. Wh...

Show the way

  Acts 24:22-23 Listen to today's devotional In Acts 24, Felix listened to Paul's defense. The text tells us that the governor "was rather well informed about the Way." We know his wife was Jewish. So, she could have let Felix in on the information she had heard about this growing movement. As a political leader, he may have already been aware of the events that had been taking place. He may have investigated for himself what all the fuss was about. It seems like something he knew about the Way impacted what he was willing to do for Paul. I'd be curious to find out what he knew. I'm always somewhat curious to sense what people know about our faith. Sometimes, people who are not Christian may know more about the Christian faith than those who are. In our modern world, a simple web search can teach us far more about anything than Felix could ever think possible. But I want to reflect on what we show the world about Christianity. Today's passage reminds us of...

The echo of faith

  Psalm 145:1-5 Listen to today's devotional Some people say, “The next generation just isn’t listening.” Let's assume that's right. Well, what if they're not listening because we’ve stopped talking about God? Oh, we talk about God stuff. Church. Church programs. Church budges. Church attendance. We talk much about what's wrong with the world and all that used to be right. There's room for that, by the way. But when was the last time we told our children what God has done for us? When was the last time we shared how God brought us through, not in some general sense, but in if-it-hadn't-been-for-God detail? Listen to the psalmist's loud praise. He says, "I will lift you up high, my God, the true king. I will bless your name forever and always.” Not, “I’ll keep a low profile and hope that's enough for someone to notice.” That's not bold enough for the psalmist. He refuses to let silence erase the story of God’s goodness. The reality is that ou...

Seek good

  Amos 5:12-24 Listen to today's devotional To reject our faith's call for social justice is to ignore some of the Bible's most uncompromising words. Take the prophet Amos, for example. Amos was a shepherd and farmer chosen by God to speak up for true faithfulness. The prophet spoke to the prosperous northern kingdom. At this point, Israel looked well on the outside. They were religious, wealthy, and stable. Underneath their veneer of holiness, however, lay a foundation of systemic injustice. The poor were oppressed, the courts were corrupt, and the powerful people lived in comfort at others' expense. Today's reading is like a courtroom speech. The Lord lists the "many" crimes and "numerous" sins of the people. You didn't have to be God to see them all in action. They weren't secret, hidden things. They were normalized parts of society. And if injustice lies underneath our success and prosperity, God is not impressed because we have faile...

Keep kicking

  Matthew 13:31–32 Listen to today's devotional This past Sunday was a busy one. I wasn't home for much of the day. Even in the evening, I had some things that I needed to get done. Before that, though, I took a little time to watch a bit of NFL football. Usually, I don't listen to the commentators, but I'm glad I had the volume up this time. A statistic that one commentator shared caught my attention. In the last five years, the player who has scored the most points might surprise you. It's not a highly-rated quarterback or wide receiver. It's not a powerful running back. I would've guessed it'd be one of those guys, since they score touchdowns every week to win games. But the highest scorer in the league is a kicker, someone who kicks field goals and extra points. That got me thinking about how the little things matter. Praying every day may not seem like much to you. Your Bible reading sometimes feels like it doesn't add up to much. Even the thing...

Judge better

  1 Corinthians 5:9-13 Listen to today's devotional We have to judge people better. That sounds strange because most of us have heard that Jesus said we shouldn't judge. We take that to mean we shouldn't judge anyone at all. But that's a hard sell. Plus, that's not what Jesus meant. At another time, he would say to judge people correctly. Then there's the apostle Paul. He made the case to the Corinthians that we shouldn't judge people outside the church. That is, how can you judge someone who does not share your faith by your standards of faith? It's not our job to Christian police the world. If the Corinthians thought Paul meant they shouldn't associate with any sinners at all, they'd have to leave the world entirely. Instead, what Paul was teaching them was that they should look within the church. Our calling is to live as people who take God's grace seriously. Especially as a congregation, we are to be honest about our struggles and look t...