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Sunday, May 31, 2026

God Above All & Within






Bible Reading: John 3:3–17


For God so loved the world 
that He gave His one and only Son.

John 3:16

In John 3, Jesus tells Nicodemus that no one can see the kingdom of God unless they are “born again” or “born from above.” Nicodemus was religious, learned, and respected, yet Jesus points him beyond knowledge and status to the deep need of every human heart. New life cannot be achieved by effort or inherited by tradition. It is the work of God.

Here we see the beautiful movement of the Trinity. The Father so loves the world that He gives His Son. The Son is lifted up, like the bronze serpent in the wilderness, so that all who believe in Him may have eternal life. The Spirit gives birth to new life within us, moving like the wind—unseen, mysterious, and powerful. Salvation is not simply forgiveness from a distance; it is God coming near to remake us from within.

This passage moves from God’s transcendence to God’s nearness. The holy God who dwells above all creation does not remain far away from our darkness. He gives His Son, pours out His Spirit, and invites us into His kingdom. The Trinity is not only a doctrine to be explained, but a divine love to be received. To know God in the three glorious expressions of His being—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—is to be drawn into new birth, new hope, and eternal life. The Father welcomes us, the Son rescues us, and the Spirit renews us.

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. Amen.



Saturday, May 30, 2026

God Moves Closer







Bible Reading: John 16:1–11

 Unless I go away, the Advocate will not come to you; 

but if I go, I will send him to you.

 John 16:7

In John 16, Jesus prepares His disciples for sorrow, opposition, and confusion. Yet He does not speak of His departure as abandonment. As Eugene Peterson observes, Jesus repeatedly tells them two things: He is leaving, and the Holy Spirit is coming. The Son returns to the Father, but the disciples will not be left alone.

Jesus weaves the Father and the Holy Spirit naturally into His conversation. He is going to the Father through the cross, resurrection, and ascension. Then the Spirit—the Advocate, the Friend, the Spirit of Truth—will come to dwell in them. God’s presence changes form but increases in nearness. Through the Holy Spirit, the Triune God moves from walking with the disciples to living within them.

The Spirit’s ministry is centered on Christ. He convicts the world concerning sin, righteousness, and judgment. He exposes unbelief, reveals the righteousness of Jesus, and announces that the ruler of this world has been defeated. Everything Jesus said and did is now to be continued through His people by the power of the Spirit.

To know God in Three Persons is to know we are never abandoned. We are loved by the Father, redeemed by the Son, and sustained by the Holy Spirit. Jesus’ absence becomes the Spirit’s presence, and His life continues in us.

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. Amen.








Friday, May 29, 2026

From Darkness to Light




Today’s Reading: Colossians 1:1–14

God has rescued us from the dominion of darkness

 and brought us into the kingdom of the Son He loves.

 Colossians 1:13

Paul begins with thanksgiving for the Colossians’ faith in Christ, love for God’s people, and hope stored up in heaven. The gospel had not come to them as mere information, but as living truth. It was “bearing fruit and growing” among them. This is the quiet work of the Holy Spirit, making God’s grace real in the heart and producing faith, hope, love, endurance, and gratitude.

Paul then prays that they may be filled with the knowledge of God’s will through spiritual wisdom and understanding. Christian maturity is not simply knowing more, but walking more faithfully. It means living a life worthy of the Lord, bearing fruit in good works, growing in the knowledge of God, and being strengthened with His power.

Here we see the gracious work of the Trinity. The Father qualifies us to share in the inheritance of His people in the kingdom of light. The Son, whom the Father loves, redeems us and forgives our sins. The Holy Spirit causes the gospel to grow and bear fruit within us. He labors to make us more like Christ. We have not merely been improved; we have been rescued—brought from darkness into light, from bondage into freedom, from guilt into forgiveness.

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. Amen.


Thursday, May 28, 2026

Chosen, Redeemed, Sealed







Bible Reading: Ephesians 1:1–14

 In him we have redemption through his blood,

 the forgiveness of sins, in accordance 

with the riches of God’s grace.

Ephesians 1:7

Ephesians 1 is a hymn of praise for God’s grace. Paul reminds us that salvation does not begin with our effort, goodness, or achievement. We cannot earn God’s favor by religious, intellectual, or moral striving. Salvation comes only through God’s mercy and love. The Father chose us in Christ and showered His kindness upon us so that we might live “to the praise of his glorious grace.”

God’s eternal plan, once hidden, has now been revealed in Jesus Christ. Through His death and resurrection, Christ brings forgiveness, redemption, and reconciliation. God’s purpose is to unite all things under Christ—Jew and Gentile, heaven and earth, every scattered and broken part of creation. When life feels chaotic, we can rest in this truth: Jesus is Lord, and God’s saving purpose cannot be defeated.

Paul then tells us that believers are sealed with the promised Holy Spirit. The Spirit is God’s guarantee that we belong to Him, like a deposit securing our future inheritance. His presence within us confirms that we are God’s children, transforms us now, and gives us a foretaste of the glory to come. The Father planned our salvation, the Son accomplished it, and the Holy Spirit secures it. This is the beautiful work of the Trinity—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—drawing us into the one and eternal glory of God.

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. Amen.


Wednesday, May 27, 2026

Many Gifts, One Body





Bible Reading: 1 Corinthians 12:1–13

There are different kinds of gifts, 

but the same Spirit distributes them.

 1 Corinthians 12:4

In 1 Corinthians 12, Paul teaches that the Christian life is not lived in isolation. The Holy Spirit gives different gifts to believers, not for personal glory, but “for the common good.” Some are called to teach, others to serve, encourage, lead, heal, or show mercy. Yet every gift matters because every believer belongs to the body of Christ. As Peter writes, “Use whatever gift you have received to serve others” (1 Peter 4:10).

This passage also gives us a beautiful glimpse of the Trinity. Paul speaks of “the same Spirit,” “the same Lord,” and “the same God” working through all things. Likewise, Ephesians 4:4–6 declares: “There is one body and one Spirit… one Lord… one God and Father of all.” Father, Son, and Holy Spirit work together in perfect unity. The Father calls and sustains the church, the Son is the Lord whom we serve, and the Holy Spirit empowers believers with gifts for ministry and love.

The Trinity itself becomes the model for the church. Father, Son, and Holy Spirit live in perfect unity, mutual giving, and shared glory. In the same way, the church is called to live not for self-exaltation, but for loving service, where each member contributes to the flourishing of all. The Spirit unites people who would otherwise remain divided and forms them into one body in Christ. To know God in the three glorious expressions of His being—Father, Son, and Holy Spirit—is to be drawn into His life of unity, love, and service.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father, unite us by Your Spirit and teach us to serve Christ faithfully with the gifts You have given us. May our lives build up Your church and reflect Your love to the world. Amen.


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.


God Above All & Within

Bible Reading: John 3:3–17 For God so loved the world  that He gave His one and only Son. John 3:16 In John 3, Jesus tells Nicodemus th...