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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Hearing and Living






Bible Reading: John 5:19–29


Whoever hears my word and 

believes him who sent me has eternal life.

John 5:24


In John 5, Jesus reveals His perfect unity with the Father: “The Son can do nothing by himself; he can do only what he sees his Father doing.” The Father loves the Son, shows Him all things, and gives Him authority to give life and execute judgment. Jesus is not acting apart from God, but revealing God. To honor the Son is to honor the Father who sent Him.

Here we glimpse the mystery of God in Three Persons. The Father sends, the Son gives life, and the Holy Spirit opens our hearts to hear and believe. Jesus promised that the Spirit of truth would guide us into all truth and glorify Him (John 16:13–14). Paul prays that “the eyes of your heart may be enlightened” (Ephesians 1:17–18). Without the Spirit, we remain deaf to Christ’s voice; by the Spirit, spiritually dead hearts hear and live.

The promise is deeply comforting: “Whoever hears my word and believes him who sent me has eternal life.” Eternal life is not only a future hope; it begins now when we hear Christ and trust Him. One day the dead will hear His voice and rise. But even today, spiritually weary and lifeless hearts can hear His voice and live.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father, help us to hear the voice of Your Son and be made alive by Your Spirit. Draw us deeper into Your truth, love, and eternal life. Amen.


Monday, May 25, 2026

God in Three Persons





Bible Reading: Deuteronomy 6:4–25

The one true God calls for the whole heart.

Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.

Deuteronomy 6:4


Deuteronomy 6 begins with the word “Hear.” Before God’s people are called to speak, teach, serve, or obey, they are called to listen. Faith begins with receiving God’s voice. The Shema became Israel’s daily confession, reminding them morning and evening that the Lord alone is God. This passage is not merely about rejecting idols; it declares that the Lord is the only true, eternal, and self-existent God. Because God is one, our love must be whole. We are to love Him with all our heart, soul, and strength—with our understanding, will, affections, personality, and every energy of life.

For Christians, this oneness of God is beautifully revealed in the Trinity. The Father calls us into covenant love. The Son perfectly fulfills the law of love and shows us the Father’s heart. The Holy Spirit writes God’s truth upon our hearts and enables us to love what we could never love rightly on our own.

Moses commands Israel to keep God’s words in their hearts, teach them to their children, speak of them at home and on the road, and mark them on hands, foreheads, and doorposts. Faith is not meant to remain in worship alone; it must enter the home, the journey, the conversation, and the ordinary routines of life.

Moses also warns Israel not to forget God when they enter cities, houses, wells, and vineyards they did not build. Comfort can become dangerous when gratitude fades. Prosperity can quietly lead to God-forgetting worldliness. So the command remains: hear, remember, love, and serve the Lord alone.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father, help us to know You in the three glorious expressions of Your being—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—that we may share in Your one and eternal glory. Teach us to hear Your voice, love You wholly, remember You daily, and serve You faithfully. Amen.


Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Comforter

 


The Spirit Who Dwells With Us

Bible Reading: John 14:8–17, 25–27

The Gift of the Holy Spirit

 And I will ask the Father, and he will give you another Advocate to help you and be with you forever—the Spirit of truth.

John 14:16–17


On the night before the cross, the disciples were troubled and uncertain. Philip said, “Lord, show us the Father,” and Jesus answered, “Anyone who has seen me has seen the Father.” In Jesus, the invisible God is truly revealed. To see the compassion of Jesus is to see the compassion of the Father. To hear the words of Jesus is to hear the heart of God. His mercy toward sinners, His tenderness toward the weak, His holiness, truth, forgiveness, and sacrificial love all reveal the very character of God Himself.

Jesus then promises “another Advocate,” the Holy Spirit. Here we glimpse the mystery of the Trinity: one God in three Persons—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit. The Spirit is not lesser than Christ, nor separate from the life of God, but fully shares in the divine being of the Father and the Son. Yet within the Trinity, the Spirit comes to believers in a uniquely personal and inward way—comforting, strengthening, guiding, and sustaining the church through every season of life. Christ comforts us as Savior, Redeemer, and Mediator; the Spirit comforts us by dwelling within us. He consoles our grief, strengthens our weakness, guides us into truth, and helps us pray when words fail. Through the Holy Spirit, the presence of Christ continues with His people, and the love of the Father is made real in our hearts.

Christ wanted them to understand that His leaving was not abandonment, but preparation for something greater. Through His death, resurrection, and ascension, the Holy Spirit would come in fullness and dwell continually within believers. Therefore Jesus says, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give you.” Pentecost is the fulfillment of this promise: the Father sends the Spirit in the name of the Son, and the troubled hearts of God’s people receive peace, courage, and communion with the living God.

Prayer:
 Come, Holy Spirit, Comforter and Spirit of truth. Fill our troubled hearts with the peace of Christ, draw us deeper into the love of the Father, and help us live each day in communion with the living God. Amen.


Saturday, May 23, 2026

Greatest Gift Is Love





Bible Reading: 1 Corinthians 13:1–13

Theme: The Spirit Who Forms Christlike Love


And now these three remain: faith, hope and love. 

But the greatest of these is love.

1 Corinthians 13:13

Paul places love at the center of life in the Spirit. Spiritual gifts, eloquent speech, deep knowledge, bold faith, generous sacrifice, and even heroic service mean nothing if they are not filled with love. The Corinthians were rich in gifts, but they were poor in love. Paul reminds them that the true evidence of the Spirit is not noise, display, or achievement, but the character of Christ formed in ordinary relationships.

Eugene Peterson helpfully describes different kinds of love. The first three—affection, friendship, and romance—are human loves. They are good gifts, but they can become possessive, selfish, or fragile when separated from God. The fourth love is divine love, the New Testament word agapÄ“. This is the uniquely Christian love Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 13. AgapÄ“ is unconditional love—self-giving, sacrificial, steadfast love that seeks the good of others regardless of cost or response. It is the love God shows toward us in Christ.

Paul describes agapē not merely by defining it, but by showing how it acts. Love is patient and kind. It does not envy, boast, or keep records of wrongs. It rejoices in truth, bears burdens, trusts, hopes, and perseveres. This is the Spirit-shaped life of Jesus within us. Let us ask the Holy Spirit to pour this unconditional agapē love into our hearts, so that every gift, word, and act of service may reveal the love of Christ to the world.

Prayer:

Come upon me, Spirit of the living God, fill us with the agapē love of Christ. Melt all hardness of heart, and teach us to love with patience, kindness, humility, and forgiveness. Use us for Your purposes wherever You send us, so our lives may reveal Jesus. Amen.


Friday, May 22, 2026

Grace of Generosity





 

Bible Reading: 2 Corinthians 8:1–15


The Spirit Who Opens Our Hearts and Hands


 For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,

 that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.

 2 Corinthians 8:9


Paul points to the Macedonian churches as an example of grace-filled generosity. Though they were experiencing severe trial and deep poverty, their joy overflowed in rich generosity. Their giving was not forced, reluctant, or merely practical; it was the work of grace in their hearts. This is life in the Spirit. The Holy Spirit teaches us that everything we have is a gift from God, entrusted to us for love and service.

Like the rich man with his barns in Luke 12, we can lose something of our souls when possessions become our security. Giving is God’s way of counteracting this. It acknowledges that everything is gift: “the ground to use, the muscles to work, a brain to think, and a community to live and be employed in.” Sunshine, rain, strength, health, and fruitfulness all come from God. Our offering becomes a way of honoring Him and giving thanks. Christian generosity is not measured only by the amount given, but by the heart from which it flows.

At the center of this passage stands Jesus Himself: “Though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.” The generosity of the Christian begins at the cross. Christ entered our poverty, bore our need, and gave us the riches of grace, forgiveness, and eternal life. Because Christ gave Himself freely for us, we give ourselves freely to Him. As we journey toward Pentecost, we ask the Spirit to make us generous people—joyful in giving, attentive to need, and shaped by the self-giving love of Christ.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father,
open our hearts and hands. Teach us to give ourselves first to You, and then to others in love. Free us from fear and selfishness, and make us joyful, generous witnesses of Your grace. Amen.



Thursday, May 21, 2026

Comforted to Comfort




Reading: 2 Corinthians 1:3–11


The Spirit Who Comforts, Strengthens, and Unites


The God of all comfort… comforts us in all our troubles, 

so that we can comfort those in any trouble.

2 Corinthians 1:3–4

Paul begins with praise to “the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort.” Christian comfort is more than soothing sympathy. It is courage-giving strength. God does not always remove the burden at once, but He gives grace beneath the burden, enabling us to endure what life brings. The Holy Spirit, the Comforter, comes alongside us with power, courage, and hope. Paul had been under pressure “far beyond” his ability to endure, so much so that he despaired of life itself. Yet this suffering drove him back to God. Affliction often shatters self-reliance and teaches us to depend God. Where suffering abounds, God’s grace and consolation abound still more.

But God’s comfort is never meant to stop with us. Paul says we are comforted so that we may comfort others. Our wounds, when touched by grace, can become channels of mercy. Barclay tells of a grieving mother whose sorrow gave her “soft eyes” for others in pain. The Spirit transforms private suffering into shared compassion. Paul’s letters are filled with thanksgiving, prayer, fellowship, and concern for unity. Even in weakness, Paul asks for the prayers of others. The Spirit comforts us not only inwardly, but through the Body of Christ—through believers who pray, encourage, support, and bear one another’s burdens.

As we journey toward Pentecost, we ask for the Spirit’s comfort—not simply so that we may feel better, but so that we may become braver, humbler, more dependent on God, and more compassionate toward others. This promise of comfort flows through the whole story of Scripture. Through Isaiah, God says, “Comfort, comfort my people” (Isaiah 40:1). The God who comforted Israel in exile is the same Father of compassion whom Paul praises in 2 Corinthians. His comfort restores hope, gives courage, and forms His people into messengers of mercy. The Spirit who strengthens us in our troubles also makes us instruments of comfort in a suffering world.

Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
meet us in our troubles by Your Holy Spirit. Give us courage in suffering, deepen our dependence on You, and make us channels of Your comfort to others. Unite us in prayer, love, and fellowship, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Seeing God Clearly




I Will Not Hide My Face Again


Reading: Ezekiel 39:21–29


The Spirit Who Restores and Remains


I will no longer hide my face from them, 

for I will pour out my Spirit on the people of Israel,

declares the Sovereign Lord.

 Ezekiel 39:29


Ezekiel speaks to a people who had known defeat, exile, shame, and distance from God. Their suffering revealed the seriousness of sin and the sorrow of living apart from the Lord. Yet the passage does not end in judgment, but in mercy. God promises to restore His people, gather them from the nations, and reveal His holiness through their renewal.

At the heart of this promise is the tender word: “I will no longer hide my face from them.” In Scripture, God’s face represents His favor, presence, and blessing. To live before His face is to live in His light. C.S. Lewis reminds us that the instrument through which we see God is our whole self. When our lives are clouded by pride, bitterness, selfishness, or division, our vision of God becomes blurred, “like the Moon seen through a dirty telescope.” The Spirit cleanses the lens of the soul, removes shame, heals distance, purifies the heart, and restores us to communion with God.

Lewis also reminds us that we are not meant to see God alone. God reveals Himself through a redeemed community—people united in love, helping one another, and showing Him to one another. Like players in one band or members of one body, the Spirit forms us into a people through whom God’s glory can be seen. As we journey toward Pentecost, we pray not only for personal renewal, but for shared renewal: that the Spirit would cleanse our hearts, unite us in love, and make our lives clear windows through which Christ may be seen.

Prayer:
 Lord, cleanse the lens of our hearts. Restore us to the joy of God’s presence, heal our shame and distance, and unite us as the Body of Christ. Help us live in the light of the Father’s face, so that through our shared life the world may see Jesus. Amen.


Hearing and Living

Bible Reading: John 5:19–29 Whoever hears my word and  believes him who sent me has eternal life. John 5:24 In John 5, Jesus reveal...