Friday, February 27, 2026

God’s Handiwork:


Created for Good





Reading : Ephesians 2:1-10


“For we are God’s handiwork, 

created in Christ Jesus to do good works, 

which God prepared in advance for us to do.” 

Ephesians 2:10

As we continue this Lenten reflection, we begin by remembering where Paul begins: apart from Christ, we were “dead in our transgressions.” No amount of moral effort or religious discipline could raise us to life. Grace had to come to us. “It is by grace you have been saved” (Ephesians 2:8). Salvation is not something we assemble through good behavior; it is something God accomplishes through mercy. As Charles Spurgeon said, “Salvation is all of the grace of God.” And as Titus 3:5 reminds us, “He saved us, not because of righteous things we had done, but because of His mercy.” Lent gently humbles us here — we are rescued before we are reformed.

But Paul does not stop at rescue. He moves from grace to purpose. We are not only forgiven; we are fashioned. “We are God’s handiwork.” The word suggests artistry — we are His poem, His crafted work, shaped by loving intention. C.S. Lewis wisely noted, “God will make us good because He loves us.” Grace is not merely pardon; it is transformation. We are created in Christ Jesus for something — “to do good works.” These works are not the root of our salvation but its fruit, not a ladder to climb but a path prepared. As Martin Luther put it, we are not saved by good works, but saved so that good works might become our way of life.

On this Lenten Saturday, between reflection and renewal, we are invited to live from this identity. We do not strive to prove ourselves; we walk in what has already been prepared for us. The good we do flows from the life we have received. Every act of kindness, every quiet obedience, every hidden prayer becomes participation in the work God has already set before us. We are His handiwork — saved by grace, shaped for goodness, and sent into the world to reflect His mercy.


A Lenten Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Thank You for making us alive through Your mercy. Shape us as Your handiwork and lead us into the good works You have prepared. May our lives reflect the grace we have received.

Amen.


Thursday, February 26, 2026

Love That Gives Itself Away





Reading - Hebrews 13:1–16 

“Do not forget to do good and to share with others, 

for with such sacrifices God is pleased.” 

Hebrews 13:16

Hebrews concludes with a tender appeal : “Keep on loving one another as brothers and sisters.” After contemplating the glory of Christ’s sacrifice, the writer turns to everyday faithfulness — hospitality, remembering prisoners, honoring relationships, contentment. Paul echoes this same rhythm: “Be devoted to one another in love… Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality” (Romans 12:10–13). Lent brings belief down to ground level. Good people are not withdrawn from the world; they are devoted within it.

The call continues: “Let us not become weary in doing good… let us do good to all people” (Galatians 6:9–10). Doing good can grow tiring. Compassion costs time. Generosity stretches comfort. Following Christ “outside the camp” (Hebrews 13:13) may invite misunderstanding. Yet this is precisely where discipleship matures. William Barclay reminds us, “Christianity was never meant to be a withdrawn life; it was meant to be lived in the midst of men.” Love is not preserved in isolation but proven in engagement. Lent trains us to stay present, to persist in kindness, to continue loving even when unnoticed.

The writer concludes by linking worship and action: “Through Jesus… let us continually offer to God a sacrifice of praise… and do not forget to do good.” Barclay beautifully captures it: “The Christian’s sacrifice is not something he gives up; it is something he gives out.” On this Lenten Friday, we remember the One who gave Himself away completely. Our praise becomes credible when it becomes generous. Our worship becomes fragrant when it becomes practical. And in these quiet acts of devotion and hospitality, God is pleased.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Teach us to love one another with steady devotion. Strengthen us when we grow weary in doing good. May our worship overflow into generosity and faithful action, for Your glory and the good of others.

Amen.


Faithful in the Waiting





Reading : Luke 19:11–27


“Well done, my good servant… 

because you have been trustworthy 

in a very small matter…” 

Luke 19:17

As Jesus approaches Jerusalem, the crowd expects immediate glory. Instead, He tells a parable about waiting. A nobleman departs, entrusting his servants with resources until his return. The kingdom, Jesus suggests, advances not through spectacle but through stewardship. Each servant receives the same mina; the difference lies not in what they are given, but in what they do with it. William Barclay observes, “The tragedy of the servant was not that he did wrong, but that he did nothing.” Fear buried opportunity. Lent gently confronts us here. Are we investing what Christ has entrusted to us, or quietly hiding it?

Scripture sharpens the call: “Whoever can be trusted with very little can also be trusted with much” (Luke 16:10). Faithfulness in small things prepares us for greater responsibility. Matthew Henry reminds us, “God keeps an account of what we receive from Him, and of what we do for Him.” Lent is not merely about avoiding sin; it is about active obedience. Time, gifts, compassion, influence — all are minas placed in our hands. The question is not how much we have, but whether we are faithful. As Paul writes, “It is required that those who have been given a trust must prove faithful” (1 Corinthians 4:2).

Donald Coggan wisely said, “We are not spectators in God’s kingdom; we are participants.” The Christian life is lived in the in-between — between promise and fulfillment, cross and crown. Good people are not dramatic achievers; they are steady stewards. In this Lenten season, Christ calls us to quiet courage, to invest love instead of burying it, to act in trust rather than retreat in fear. Every unseen act of obedience, every hidden kindness, every faithful prayer becomes seed in the soil of God’s coming kingdom. When the King returns, He will not measure our prominence but our faithfulness — and even the smallest mina, entrusted back to Him in love, will shine with eternal significance.



Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Teach us to be faithful with what You have placed in our hands. Deliver us from fear and awaken us to courageous obedience.

May God bless us,that in us may be found love and humility, obedience and thanksgiving, discipline, gentleness and peace.

May our lives bear fruit that honors You, now and when the King returns.

Amen.


Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Root Before Fruit

 ​​

The Fruit That Grows from a Guarded Heart





Wellspring Within


Matthew 12:22–37 — A Lenten Reflection


“Make a tree good and its fruit will be good… 

For the mouth speaks what the heart is full of.” 

Matthew 12:33–34

When Jesus heals the blind and mute man, He restores both sight and speech. Yet the response of the religious leaders reveals something darker: suspicion instead of joy. Jesus answers with a searching truth — a tree is known by its fruit. Words, tone, and reactions expose what lies within. Lent invites us beneath the surface of behavior to examine the condition of the heart. As Proverbs reminds us, “Above all else, guard your heart, for everything you do flows from it” (Proverbs 4:23). The fruit of our lives flows from this hidden source.

The desert fathers spoke of eight troubling thoughts that disturb the inner life: gluttony, lust, greed, anger, dejection, apathy, vainglory, and pride. These are not merely outward sins; they are inward distortions. Left unattended, they shape our speech and actions. But Scripture does not leave us diagnosing the problem without offering hope. Paul describes another kind of fruit — “the fruit of the Spirit is love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control” (Galatians 5:22–23). Notice the contrast. Where anger dominates, the Spirit grows gentleness. Where greed rules, generosity and goodness flourish. Where pride rises, humility and faithfulness take root. The fruit of the Spirit stands as the quiet opposite of the eight disordered thoughts.

This is why Lent is not about suppressing bad fruit but about inviting a new root. We pray with David, “Create in me a clean heart, O God, and renew a right spirit within me” (Psalm 51:10). Renewal is God’s work. As we abide in Christ, the Spirit cultivates what we cannot manufacture. Good people are not those who simply manage their behavior; they are those who allow God to transform their hearts. When the root is healed, the fruit changes. And as the Spirit’s fruit ripens in us, our words and actions begin to reflect the life of Christ Himself.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Guard our hearts and cleanse what is disordered within us. Create in us clean hearts and fill us with Your Holy Spirit. May love, joy, peace, and gentleness grow in us, so that our lives bear good fruit for Your glory.

Amen.



Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Justice, Mercy, and Humility







He has shown you, O mortal, what is good. 

And what does the Lord require of you? 

To act justly and to love mercy 

and to walk humbly with your God.

Micah 6:8

Micah’s words cut through religious excess and return us to simplicity. The people ask whether God wants extravagant offerings — thousands of rams, rivers of oil. But God answers with clarity: He desires character, not spectacle. Long before Micah, the Lord had already said through Hosea, “For I desire mercy, not sacrifice” (Hosea 6:6). The issue is not activity but alignment. Good people are not defined by dramatic religious gestures but by hearts shaped by God’s compassion. Justice in action. Mercy in disposition. Humility in posture.

The New Testament deepens this call. Paul urges believers, “Clothe yourselves with compassion, kindness, humility…” (Colossians 3:12). Goodness is something we consciously put on each day, like garments chosen with intention. Yet these virtues are not self-generated. They grow from union with Christ. Philippians 2:5–8 gives us the ultimate pattern: “In your relationships with one another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus.” Though He was in very nature God, He emptied Himself, taking the form of a servant and humbling Himself to the point of death. Justice without humility becomes harsh. Mercy without humility becomes sentimental. But Christ shows us strength wrapped in gentleness — authority expressed through surrender.

To walk humbly with God is to walk in the footsteps of Jesus. It is steady, relational obedience rather than public performance. Good actions flow naturally when our hearts are anchored in mercy and modeled on Christ’s humility. The world often rewards visibility and power, but the kingdom honors faithfulness and love. When we trust Him, stay near Him, and reflect His character, our lives quietly become instruments of His goodness.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

You have shown us what is good. Clothe us with compassion and shape us in the humility of Christ. Let our actions reflect Your mercy and our walk remain close to You.

Amen.


Monday, February 23, 2026

Quiet Work of Prayer




Returning, Rebuilding, and Restoration 


Reading : Hosea 14:1-9


“Trust in the Lord and do good; 

dwell in the land and enjoy safe pasture.” 

Psalm 37:3

Physical things fall apart. Institutions decay. Even good intentions weaken over time. The Second Law of Thermodynamics reminds us that disorder increases; entropy pulls creation toward unraveling. Lent tells us something deeper: hearts fall apart too. Yet God calls people to be restorers. We build bridges, write music, mend relationships, raise children, and repair what is broken. But as Eugene Peterson writes in Earth and Altar, beyond all visible construction there is a deeper repair: “Prayer remakes undoing.” Good people are not simply activists pushing back chaos; they are worshipers who first return.

Hosea’s final chapter calls Israel home: “Return to the Lord your God… I will heal their waywardness and love them freely” (Hosea 14:1,4). Goodness begins not with effort, but with repentance. Lent teaches us to kneel before we build. When we confess, when we surrender, when we trust, God does not merely patch us up — He reorders us. What was unraveling becomes rewoven. Prayer roots our goodness in grace rather than in frantic self-improvement. Psalm 37 holds the rhythm together: “Trust in the Lord and do good.” Trust comes first; action follows. Communion precedes construction.

This is the quiet strength of the meek. While others fret at the apparent success of evil, the righteous remain anchored. They are not driven by comparison or anxiety but by covenant. They return, they pray, they trust — and then they act. Their good works are not attempts to hold the universe together by their own strength. They are participation in God’s healing work. Prayer remakes undoing — in the soul first, and then in the world. The inheritance promised in Psalm 37:1-11 is not frantic success but settled peace. Good people endure because they remain rooted in the One who restores all things.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

When our hearts begin to unravel, call us back to You. Reform what is coming undone through the quiet work of prayer. Root our goodness in Your mercy, and teach us to trust before we act.

Amen.


Sunday, February 22, 2026

Mercy That Transforms Evil




Reading — Genesis 45:1–15

You meant evil against me, but God meant it for good.

Genesis 50:20

When Joseph finally reveals himself to his brothers, the scene trembles with emotion. These are the men who betrayed him, sold him, and erased him from their lives. Now he stands before them clothed in authority, holding their future in his hands. Revenge would have been understandable. Instead, Joseph weeps — and mercy rewrites the story. He does not deny their wrongdoing; he names it plainly: “You meant evil against me.” But he refuses to let evil define the ending: “God meant it for good.” In Joseph’s words, we hear the echo of Romans 8:28 long before it was written: “In all things God works for the good of those who love Him.” Evil is not minimized — but it is overruled.

Joseph’s forgiveness is not passive resignation; it is active redemption. He feeds the very brothers who once starved him of freedom. He shelters those who cast him away. In doing so, he embodies what Paul would later write: “Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good” (Romans 12:21). Joseph literally overcomes evil with provision. Walter Brueggemann observes that Joseph’s mercy interrupts the predictable spiral of retaliation. Revenge would have perpetuated fear; mercy creates a future. Forgiveness does not pretend the wound never happened — it refuses to let the wound have the last word.

Eugene Peterson often reminds us that Scripture teaches us to “live in the large story of God.” Joseph could have reduced his identity to betrayal and injustice. Instead, he chose to trust the wider narrative of providence. The pit, the prison, the waiting — all became chapters in God’s unfolding redemption. Mercy allowed Joseph to see his life not as a tragedy but as part of a larger saving purpose. And in Christ, we see this pattern fulfilled: the cross was humanity’s evil intention, yet God turned it toward salvation. Lent invites us to release our smaller stories of resentment and step into the larger story of grace.

Mercy transforms evil not by denying it, but by surrendering it to God — who alone can turn harm into hope.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

You are able to bring good out of what was meant for harm.

Teach us to overcome evil with good, and to trust Your larger story when our own chapters feel painful. May Your mercy transform our wounds into witnesses of Your grace. Amen.


God’s Handiwork:

Created for Good Reading : Ephesians 2:1-10 “For we are God’s handiwork,  created in Christ Jesus to do good works,  which God prepared ...