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Monday, March 23, 2026

Blessed in the Struggle




Place of Wrestling and Grace

Reading : Genesis 32:22-32

“I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared.” 

Genesis 32:30


Jacob is here at Jabbok at a crucial turning point in his life. He is being brought back to the very place of his deepest fear and guilt. Years earlier, Jacob had deceived his father Isaac and stolen the blessing meant for Esau, his brother (Genesis 27). Because of that betrayal, Esau wanted to kill him, and Jacob fled into exile. On that long journey away from home, God met him at Bethel and promised to be with him, to keep him, and to bring him back again (Genesis 28:10–15). Now, after many years in Haran, after serving Laban, marrying, raising a family, and gaining flocks and servants, Jacob is returning to the land of promise in obedience to God’s command (Genesis 31:3). But returning means facing Esau. The past he tried to outrun must now be faced. That is why Jacob is here—alone, afraid, and utterly vulnerable. He has sent his family and possessions across the river, but he cannot send away his conscience, his memories, or his need for God.

That is why this place becomes Peniel, the place of wrestling and grace. Jacob has spent much of his life struggling—with his brother, with his father, with Laban, and even through cunning and self-reliance with God’s promises. But now the real struggle is uncovered: Jacob must stop relying on his own cleverness and cling only to God. The mysterious wrestling through the night is not merely a strange incident; it is a revelation of Jacob’s soul. He comes before God with fear, weakness, and the painful knowledge that he is far from the person God created him to be. Yet God does not cast him away. Instead, God wounds him, humbles him, and blesses him. Jacob receives a new name, Israel, because he has striven with God and men and has endured. The limp he carries afterward becomes the sign that true strength comes through surrender. So too in Lent, we come before God with all our weakness, seeking His strength. We commit everything we do to the Lord; we trust Him, and He helps us. He is able to bring light out of our darkness and make what is crooked in us shine with His redeeming grace. As the adapted words of Psalm 37:5–6 say: “I commit everything I do to the LORD. I trust him, and he helps me. He will make my innocence radiate like the dawn, and the justice of my cause will shine like the noonday sun.”

This story also points us beyond Jacob to our own unfinished journey with God. We too live between promise and fulfillment. We see now only dimly, as Paul says, “through a glass, darkly” (1 Corinthians 13:12, KJV). We know Christ, but not yet in fullness. We walk in faith, yet often with a limp. But one day we shall see Jesus face-to-face. “When Christ appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is” (1 John 3:2). That hope fills Lent with glorious anticipation. We wait for the day when struggle will give way to sight, when grace will complete what grace began, and when the One who meets us in the night will welcome us into everlasting light. Until then, we also pray for others who have lost their way—those who once followed the Lord wholeheartedly but now seem to wander in the wilderness. Lord Jesus, rescue them. May they find You, or rather, be found by You, and may they discover the way once more. And may God give us vision too, so that we do not stumble, but walk a straight path in His glorious light, until the dawn breaks and we behold Him face-to-face.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, 

We come to You with our weakness, fear, and need. Thank You for meeting us with mercy, as You met Jacob. Teach us to trust You, guide us in Your light, and rescue those who have lost their way. Keep us faithful until the day we see You face-to-face. 

In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Sunday, March 22, 2026

Lord Our Builder






Unless the Lord Builds the House

Reading : Psalm 127

“Unless the Lord builds the house, 

the builders labor in vain.” 

 Psalm 127:1

Lent is a season in which God gently teaches us to loosen our grip. We work, plan, worry, strive, and carry burdens as though everything depends on us. Yet Psalm 127 calls us back to a deeper truth: life is not secured by human effort alone, but by the gracious hand of God. The psalm does not put down work, but it does expose anxious toil. We may build houses, guard cities, rise early, and stay up late, but unless the Lord is at work, our efforts cannot bear lasting fruit. Lent invites us to lay down the illusion of control and to trust the God who truly builds, watches, provides, and blesses.

This psalm is full of promise. God promises that He is not absent from the ordinary structures of our lives—our homes, our work, our families, our future. He is the Builder. He is the Watchman. He is the Giver of sleep. He is the One who grants heritage, fruitfulness, and blessing. What God promises is true: He will sustain what is surrendered to Him. He does not ask us to carry life alone. He asks us to trust Him with what matters most. That means His promises are not just beautiful ideas to admire; they are truths to believe and gifts to claim as our own. We may say, with humility and faith, “Lord, build my life. Guard my home. Provide what I need. Teach me to rest in You.” Faith claims God’s promise not by demanding our own way, but by leaning fully on His faithfulness.

Psalm 127 also reminds us that children, legacy, and every good gift are from the Lord. So much of what matters most cannot be manufactured. Love cannot be forced. Faith cannot be engineered. True fruit is received from God’s hand. In Lent we remember that grace always comes before achievement. We are not saved by  anxious striving, nor kept by our own strength. We are held by the Lord who keeps covenant with His people. Because His promises are true, we can entrust our labor, our family, our disappointments, and our hopes to Him. We can claim His promise personally: what I place in God’s hands is safer there than in my own. And even when the walls seem unfinished and the future uncertain, the Lord is still building.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Forgive us for our anxious striving and for living as though everything depends on us. Teach us to trust Your promises, to rest in Your care, and to believe that You are building, guarding, and providing for us. Help us to place our homes, our work, our families, and our future into Your hands. Grant us peace, faith, and quiet confidence in Your unfailing love.

In Jesus’ name, Amen.


Saturday, March 21, 2026

New Heaven and Earth





 The Promise of a New Heaven and Earth

Reading : 2 Peter 3:5–13


“But in keeping with His promise we are looking forward to a new heaven and a new earth, where righteousness dwells.” (2 Peter 3:13)

Peter reminds us that God’s promises often unfold on a different timetable than our own. Some in his day doubted, asking why Christ had not yet returned. But Peter gently corrects them: “With the Lord a day is like a thousand years, and a thousand years are like a day” (2 Peter 3:8). What appears as delay is not neglect—it is mercy. God is patient, “not wanting anyone to perish, but everyone to come to repentance” (2 Peter 3:9). During Lent, we are invited to see time differently—not as something slipping away, but as a gift of grace. Every day becomes an opportunity to return to God, to trust His promises, and to live in the light of His coming kingdom.

At the heart of this passage is a powerful promise: God is making all things new. The present world, with all its brokenness, is not the final word. Peter declares that “the day of the Lord will come” (2 Peter 3:10), and with it, renewal and restoration. This promise calls us to a life of holy expectation. Eugene Peterson often wrote that Christian hope is not wishful thinking but a confident anticipation rooted in God’s Word. To believe God’s promises is to live differently now—to pursue holiness, to let go of what is temporary, and to hold fast to what is eternal. Lent becomes a season where we realign our lives with this future reality, asking, “If God is making all things new, how should I live today?”

Peter’s closing words draw us into that response: “What kind of people ought you to be? You ought to live holy and godly lives… as you look forward to the day of God” (2 Peter 3:11–12). To claim God’s promises as our own is not passive—it is transformative. We live in the present shaped by the future God has promised. Alexander Maclaren wrote, “The certainty of the future should purify the present.” This is the call of Lent. We trust that God will fulfill His promise of a new heaven and earth, and we begin to live even now as citizens of that coming kingdom—marked by righteousness, hope, and faith. The God who has promised is faithful, and what He has spoken, He will surely bring to pass.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We thank You for Your great promises and for Your patience with us. Help us to trust Your timing and to believe that what You have spoken will surely come to pass. Teach us to live in the light of Your coming kingdom, turning away from what is temporary and holding fast to what is eternal. Strengthen our hearts during this Lenten season, that we may walk in holiness, hope, and faith, claiming Your promises as our own.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Friday, March 20, 2026

God’s “Yes” in Christ






Reading : 2 Corinthians 1:12–22


For no matter how many promises God has made, 

they are ‘Yes’ in Christ.

2 Corinthians 1:20

Paul writes to the Corinthians with deep honesty, explaining his changed travel plans and defending the integrity of his ministry. Yet beneath this personal explanation lies a profound truth: God is not like us—uncertain, inconsistent, or wavering. Paul insists that just as his message about Christ was not “Yes and No,” so God’s promises are not uncertain. Instead, they are firmly established in Christ: “Yes.” During Lent, we are invited to reflect on this unshakable foundation. Our faith does not rest on shifting circumstances or human reliability, but on the steady, faithful character of God. What God has spoken, He will fulfill.

This passage calls us not only to admire God’s promises but to trust them personally. Lent becomes a season of realignment—where we turn from doubt and lean into faith. When life feels uncertain, when plans change, when outcomes are unclear, we are reminded that God’s promises remain unchanged. Eugene Peterson often emphasized that the Christian life is lived in response to God’s sure Word, not our fluctuating feelings. To claim God’s promises as our own is to say, “Lord, even when I do not understand, I trust that Your ‘Yes’ stands firm in my life.” This kind of faith grows quietly, strengthened through prayer, reflection, and surrender.

Paul goes even further—he reminds us that God has “set His seal of ownership on us, and put His Spirit in our hearts as a deposit, guaranteeing what is to come” (2 Corinthians 1:22). This is one of the most beautiful promises of all: not only has God spoken, but He has given us His Spirit as assurance that His promises will be completed. Alexander Maclaren wrote, “The pledge of the future is the presence of God in the present.” In Lent, we walk toward the cross and resurrection with this confidence. The God who has begun His work in us will bring it to completion. Therefore, we can believe His promises, rest in His faithfulness, and claim His Word as our own with humble confidence.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We thank You that all Your promises are “Yes” in Jesus Christ. Teach us to trust You more deeply, especially when life feels uncertain. Help us to believe Your Word, to rest in Your faithfulness, and to claim Your promises as our own. Thank You for giving us Your Spirit as a guarantee of what is to come. Strengthen our hearts during this Lenten season, that we may walk in faith, hope, and confidence in You.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Thursday, March 19, 2026

Steadfast Under Trial






Trusting the God Who Gives


Reading on James 1:1–15


If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, 

who gives generously to all without finding fault…

James 1:5

James opens his letter with a surprising call: “Consider it pure joy… whenever you face trials of many kinds” (James 1:2). At first, this seems difficult—how can hardship be a place of joy? Yet James points us to a deeper promise: God is at work in our trials, forming perseverance and maturity within us (James 1:3–4). This is one of God’s quiet but powerful promises—that nothing we face is wasted. During Lent, we are invited to see our struggles not as interruptions, but as places where God is shaping us. As Eugene Peterson often expressed, growth in faith happens over time, through steady trust in God’s work even when it is unseen. God has promised to complete what He begins in us.

At the center of this passage is another beautiful promise: God gives. When we lack wisdom, direction, or clarity, we are told to ask—and to ask in faith. This is not a reluctant giving, but a generous one: “who gives generously to all without finding fault.” What a comforting truth for Lent. We come not as perfect believers, but as needy ones. And God does not rebuke our weakness; He meets it with grace. Yet James also gently reminds us to trust wholeheartedly—to believe that God’s promises are true, not doubting His goodness. To claim God’s promises is to come with open hands and a steady heart, saying, “Lord, You have promised to give, and I will trust You to provide what I need.”

Finally, James speaks honestly about temptation and the pull of our own desires (James 1:13–15). Here we see another important truth: while trials are used by God to strengthen us, temptation does not come from Him. God’s promises always lead toward life, never toward destruction. This distinction matters deeply. Lent is a season of reflection and repentance—a time to turn away from what leads us away from God and to hold fast to His promises instead. As Alexander Maclaren wrote, “God’s gifts are always pure, and His purposes are always good.” When we trust this, we can walk with confidence, knowing that the God who allows us to be tested is also the God who sustains us, strengthens us, and leads us into life.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We thank You that You are a generous God who gives wisdom, strength, and grace to all who ask. Teach us to trust You in the midst of trials and to believe that You are at work in every circumstance. Help us to hold firmly to Your promises and to claim them as our own. Guard our hearts from doubt and temptation, and lead us in the path of life. Strengthen our faith during this Lenten season, that we may grow in perseverance and maturity, trusting always in Your goodness.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Wednesday, March 18, 2026

Fully Persuaded




Trusting the God of Promise


Reading: Romans 4:16–25


Being fully persuaded that God had power 

to do what He had promised.

Romans 4:21


In Romans 4, Paul reflects on Abraham’s faith—a faith not rooted in circumstances, but in the character of God. God had promised Abraham descendants as numerous as the stars, yet everything Abraham could see seemed to contradict that promise. Still, Scripture tells us that “Abraham did not waver through unbelief… but was strengthened in his faith and gave glory to God” (Romans 4:20). This is the heart of Lent: learning to trust God not because life is clear, but because God is faithful. As Eugene Peterson paraphrases it, Abraham decided to live not on what he saw, but on what God said. God’s promises are true—not because we feel them, but because He is trustworthy.

Abraham’s faith was deeply personal—he didn’t just admire God’s promise; he embraced it as his own. He became “fully persuaded” that God was able to do what He had promised. This is where Lent gently challenges us. Do we believe God’s promises only in theory, or do we claim them in our own lives? When we face uncertainty, delay, or weakness, we are invited to hold onto God’s Word and say, “Lord, this promise is for me.” As Paul declares, “The words ‘it was credited to him’ were written not for him alone, but also for us” (Romans 4:23–24). What God promised Abraham—and fulfilled—becomes a living testimony that we, too, can trust Him fully.

Ultimately, this passage points us to Christ. The greatest promise of all—our salvation—has already been fulfilled through Jesus, “who was delivered over to death for our sins and was raised to life for our justification” (Romans 4:25). If God has been faithful in this, we can be confident in every other promise He has made. Alexander Maclaren wrote, “Faith looks away from self to the power and truth of God.” During Lent, we are invited to that kind of faith—a steady, quiet confidence that God will do what He has said. We claim His promises not with presumption, but with humble assurance, knowing that the God who promised is faithful.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We thank You that You are a God who keeps every promise. Teach us to trust You as Abraham did—to believe even when we cannot see, and to hold onto Your Word with confidence. Help us to become fully persuaded that what You have promised, You are able to accomplish. Strengthen our faith during this Lenten season, and help us to claim Your promises as our own, resting in the finished work of Jesus Christ.

Amen.


Tuesday, March 17, 2026

God’s Faithfulness




The Faithful God of Every Promise


Reading : Nehemiah 9:6-25


You have done what you promised,

 for you are always true to your word.

Nehemiah 9:8 


Nehemiah 9 is a sweeping prayer of remembrance. The people recount how God chose Abraham, led Israel out of Egypt, parted the sea, guided them by cloud and fire, and provided bread from heaven and water from the rock. At the heart of it all stands this unshakable truth: “You have kept Your promise because You are righteous.” God’s faithfulness is not occasional—it is rooted in His very character. Walter Brueggemann reminds us that Israel’s identity is formed by remembering what God has done. Lent invites us into that same remembrance. When we look back, we begin to see that our lives, too, are marked by quiet fulfillments of God’s word—moments of provision, guidance, and grace that testify: God keeps His promises.

Yet this passage is not only about what God has done—it is an invitation to trust what He will do. The same God who gave His people “kingdoms and nations,” who sustained them in the wilderness so that “they lacked nothing” (Nehemiah 9:21–22), is the God who calls us to trust Him today. Eugene Peterson describes faith as a daily, steady trust in God’s Word even when life feels uncertain. To believe God’s promises is to hold them close—not as distant truths, but as personal assurances. Scripture echoes this confidence: “The Lord is faithful to all His promises and loving toward all He has made” (Psalm 145:13). Lent becomes a season where we shift our gaze from what is visible to what is eternal—learning to say, “Lord, Your promises are true, and I will trust them as my own.”

But Nehemiah’s prayer also reveals something deeper: God’s faithfulness continues even when His people falter. Despite their wandering, God remained merciful, patient, and steadfast. Alexander Maclaren writes, “God’s promises are not exhausted by our failures.” This is the hope of Lent. We come not as those who have perfectly believed, but as those learning to trust again. The God who sustained Israel now meets us in Christ—the ultimate fulfillment of every promise. As Paul declares, “For no matter how many promises God has made, they are ‘Yes’ in Christ” (2 Corinthians 1:20). Therefore, we can claim His promises—not with presumption, but with humble confidence—knowing that the God who has been faithful will remain faithful to the end.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We thank You that You are the God who keeps every promise. You have been faithful through every generation, and You are faithful to us today. Teach us to trust Your Word more deeply and to believe Your promises even when we cannot yet see their fulfillment. Help us to claim Your promises as our own—not with doubt, but with quiet confidence in Your righteousness and love. Strengthen our hearts during this Lenten journey, that we may walk by faith and not by sight.

Through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Blessed in the Struggle

Place of Wrestling and Grace Reading : Genesis 32:22-32 “I saw God face to face, and yet my life was spared.”  Genesis 32:30 Jacob is ...