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Monday, May 18, 2026

Clothed with Christ





Reading: Ephesians 4:17–32

Put on the new self, created to be like God 

in true righteousness and holiness.

Ephesians 4:24


As we journey toward Pentecost, Paul reminds us that life in the Spirit is a whole-life transformation. The Christian life is not divided into separate compartments—spiritual, emotional, moral, relational, or practical. The Holy Spirit seeks to renew the entire person: our thoughts, words, desires, actions, relationships, and daily habits. Christianity is not merely about attending worship or holding correct beliefs; it is about becoming a new creation in Christ.

Paul describes this transformation as “putting off” the old self and “putting on” the new self. C.S. Lewis writes in Mere Christianity that “putting on Christ” is not simply one Christian duty among many—it is “the whole of Christianity.” Christ does not wish to remain at the edges of our lives. He desires to shape our entire being until His character is reflected in us. The Spirit forms in us a wholeness where mind, heart, will, and conduct increasingly come into harmony under the Lordship of Jesus Christ.

This is why Paul speaks so practically about truthfulness, anger, honesty, speech, kindness, and forgiveness. A Spirit-filled life touches ordinary conversations, workplace integrity, family relationships, emotional responses, and private thoughts. The Spirit’s work is not only seen in moments of worship, but in daily acts of grace. The Holy Spirit patiently shapes us into integrated disciples—thinking clearly, loving deeply, speaking graciously, and living faithfully. This is the beauty of the Christian life: not perfection overnight, but a steady transformation into the likeness of Christ.

Prayer:
Lord, renew my whole life. Help me put off the old self and put on Christ in thought, word, attitude, and action. Bring harmony to my mind, heart, and will, so that every part of my life may reflect the beauty and character of Jesus. Amen.


Sunday, May 17, 2026

Mercy Before Merit





Reading: Titus 3:1–11


Saved by Mercy, Called to Goodness


He saved us, not because of 
righteous things we had done, 
but because of His mercy.

Titus 3:5


Paul reminds Titus that Christians are called to live with humility, gentleness, and peace. We are to be good citizens, respectful in speech, and ready to do what is good. This is not because we are naturally better than others, but because we remember what we once were—foolish, disobedient, deceived, and ruled by wrong desires. Remembering our own need for grace keeps us from pride and harsh judgment.

The heart of this passage is the mercy of God. Paul says we are not saved by our good works, religious efforts, or moral achievements, but by God’s kindness and love. He washed us, renewed us by the Holy Spirit, justified us by grace, and made us heirs of eternal life. Salvation begins not with our goodness, but with God’s compassion. God does not begin loving us after we improve ourselves; He loved us “while we were still sinners” (Romans 5:8). His love originates not in our goodness, but in His character.

Yet grace never leaves us unchanged. Those who have received mercy are called to devote themselves to doing what is good. Good works do not save us, but they show that God’s saving mercy is alive in us. Paul also warns against foolish arguments, divisive controversies, and quarrels that bear no spiritual fruit. A mercy-shaped life should become a peace-making life.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father, thank You for saving us by Your mercy and not by our own righteousness. Renew us by Your Holy Spirit. Make us humble, gentle, peaceable, and eager to do what is good. Keep us from foolish quarrels, and help our lives reflect the kindness and love of Jesus Christ. Amen.


Saturday, May 16, 2026

Indwelling Christ





Reading: Ephesians 3:14–21


Rooted and Established in Love 

I pray that you, being rooted and established in love, may have power… to grasp how wide and long and high and deep is the love of Christ. Ephesians 3:17–18

Paul’s prayer begins on his knees before the Father. He does not merely ask that believers know more about God, but that they be strengthened inwardly by the Holy Spirit. Staying close to God begins in the inner life. We need more than outward discipline or religious routine; we need Christ dwelling in our hearts through faith, shaping our desires, thoughts, and affections from within.

Paul prays that believers may be “rooted and established in love.” Like a tree with deep roots or a building with a firm foundation, the Christian life becomes steady when it is grounded in the love of Christ. His love is wider than our failures, longer than our wandering, higher than our hopes, and deeper than our pain. Staying close to God means returning again and again to this love until it becomes the soil in which our lives grow.

Yet Paul admits that Christ’s love “surpasses knowledge.” We can never fully measure it, but we can keep experiencing it more deeply. God is able to do “immeasurably more than all we ask or imagine,” not by distant power, but by His power at work within us. To stay close to God is to live open to His fullness, trusting that He is still forming Christ in us.

Prayer: Heavenly Father, strengthen us by Your Spirit. Let Christ dwell deeply in our hearts. Root us in Your love, fill us with Your fullness, and keep us close to You through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Friday, May 15, 2026

Christ Within




Reading: Colossians 1:15–29


 Christ in You, the Hope of Glory


 Christ in you, the hope of glory. Colossians 1:27


Paul lifts our eyes to the greatness of Jesus Christ. He is “the image of the invisible God,” the One through whom all things were created and in whom all things hold together. Staying close to God begins by seeing Christ clearly. He is not merely a teacher, helper, or example; He is Lord over creation, Head of the church, and the One in whom all the fullness of God dwells.

Paul also reminds the Colossians that the gospel is not a hidden secret for a spiritual elite. The false teachers suggested that fullness with God required special knowledge available only to a few. But Paul proclaims the whole message openly: the mystery once hidden has now been revealed in Christ. That mystery is wonderfully simple and deeply personal—“Christ in you, the hope of glory.” God’s plan is not that we climb upward through secret spiritual steps, but that Christ comes to dwell within all who believe.

Through Christ’s blood shed on the cross, we are reconciled to God and brought near. C. S. Lewis reminds us that even our suffering, when offered to God in love, is not wasted but may be joined to Christ’s suffering for the blessing of others. Staying close to God means trusting Christ in our suffering, continuing in faith, and living in the wonder that He dwells within us by His Spirit.

Prayer: Lord Jesus, help us see Your glory, trust Your cross, and rejoice that You dwell within us. Keep us close to You in faith, hope, and love. Amen.


Thursday, May 14, 2026

Mirror God’s Word







 

Listening and Doing the Word


Do not merely listen to the word, 

and so deceive yourselves.

 Do what it says.” — James 1:22


James reminds us that staying close to God begins with a listening heart. We are to be “quick to listen, slow to speak and slow to become angry” (James 1:19). Much anger grows out of wounded pride—wanting our opinions heard, our preferences respected, or our feelings protected. James calls us to a different spirit: humility, patience, and careful listening. A listening heart creates room not only for others, but also for God’s voice.

James urges us to “humbly accept the word planted in you” (James 1:21). God’s Word is not merely information to study; it is truth meant to transform us. William Barclay reminds us that what we hear in the holy place must be lived in the marketplace. Bible reading, worship, and teaching are only the beginning; the real test is whether God’s Word shapes our speech, attitudes, decisions, and relationships.

Scripture is like a mirror, showing us who we truly are and who we are meant to become. If we hear the Word but do nothing, we are like someone who sees what needs attention and walks away unchanged. The freedom God gives is not freedom to do whatever we please, but freedom from sin’s control so we may joyfully obey Him. Staying close to God means becoming people whose words, actions, and attitudes increasingly reflect the character of Christ.

Prayer: Lord, make us quick to listen, slow to speak, and slow to anger. Plant Your Word deeply in us, and help us not only to hear it but to live it. Shape our speech, attitudes, and actions so that we may stay close to You and reflect Christ each day. Amen.


Wednesday, May 13, 2026

The Heart of the Law






Reading: Mark 12:28–34


Loving God and Loving Others

Love the Lord your God with all your heart 

and with all your soul and with all your mind 

and with all your strength.” 

Mark 12:30

When the teacher of the law asked Jesus which commandment was the greatest, he was raising a question long debated among Jewish teachers. By Jesus’ time, Jewish tradition had identified more than 600 according to one count. Some tried to distinguish between greater and lesser laws, while others warned that every command was equally binding. Jesus answered by bringing everything to the heart of the matter: love God and love your neighbor. Staying close to God begins with this whole-life love—a love that shapes our worship, choices, relationships, words, and daily conduct.

Jesus first quoted the Shema: “Hear, O Israel: The Lord our God, the Lord is one.” Every devout Jew knew this as the great confession of faith. But Jesus joined it with the command to love one’s neighbor. Jesus gave this old command new meaning by removing narrow boundaries. Love for God cannot be separated from love for people. The true proof that we love God is seen in mercy, forgiveness, compassion, and care for those around us.

The teacher understood that such love is “more important than all burnt offerings and sacrifices.” Ritual can never replace a heart surrendered to God. It is possible to be near the truth and still need to take the final step of full commitment to Jesus. So when Jesus said, “You are not far from the kingdom of God,” it was both encouragement and invitation. Staying close to God means not merely admiring His commands, but giving ourselves fully to Christ in love, trust, and obedience.

Prayer: Lord, teach us to love You with all our heart, soul, mind, and strength. Let our love for You overflow in love for others. Keep us from empty religion and draw us into full surrender to Jesus our King. Amen.


Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Life Built on Christ




Reading: Matthew 7:21–28

Everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a wise man who built his house on the rock.

Matthew 7:24

Jesus ends the Sermon on the Mount with a searching call to true discipleship. It is possible to say, “Lord, Lord,” and even do impressive religious works, yet still not live in a real relationship with Him. Jesus is more concerned with our walk than our talk. Michael Card reminds us that Jesus’ first hearers were under pressure to follow the broad road of the majority, but Christ called them to the narrow way—a life marked by trust, obedience, and genuine fruit.

Jesus then gives the picture of two builders. Both hear His words, both build houses, and both face storms. The difference is not that one knew more than the other, but that one obeyed while the other ignored what he heard. Eugene Peterson reflects that Jesus calls us not merely to admire His words, but to “make something” of them—to build a life, one act of obedience at a time. Like poets shaping words into beauty, disciples shape daily life through forgiveness, service, humility, truth, and love.

Staying close to God means listening to Jesus, trusting His authority, and allowing His words to shape our choices, relationships, speech, and character. The foolish builder hears but does not obey; the wise builder hears and puts Christ’s words into practice. Many lives collapse not because people deliberately choose destruction, but because they never stop to consider what foundation they are building on. The storms will come, but a life built on Jesus will stand, because He Himself is the Rock beneath us.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, help us not only to hear Your words, but to live them. Keep us close to You, rooted in true relationship, and built securely on Your word. Amen.


Clothed with Christ

Reading: Ephesians 4:17–32 Put on the new self, created to be like God  in true righteousness and holiness. Ephesians 4:24 As we journe...