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Wednesday, April 15, 2026

The Living Christ in Dark Places





Reading : Acts 2:22–36

“God has raised this Jesus to life, 

and we are all witnesses of it.”

Acts 2:32


Peter brings us to the heart of the Christian message: Jesus Christ is alive. He stands before the crowd and declares that though Jesus was crucified by human hands, God raised Him from the dead and exalted Him to His right hand. This means that Christ is not only a figure from history or a teacher to admire. He is the living Lord, reigning now with power and mercy. That truth changes everything for today. Because Jesus lives, we do not face the struggles of life alone. Because He reigns, suffering, evil, and death do not have the final word.

The life of Corrie Ten Boom gives moving witness to this living Christ. She knew what it was to say with the psalmist, “You are my hiding place and my shield; I hope in your word” (Psalm 119:114). The Ten Boom family built a hiding place in their home to shelter Jews during the Second World War, but Corrie discovered that her deepest refuge was not a hidden room, but the living God Himself. Even in prison, in grief, and in the darkness of Ravensbrück, Christ remained her hiding place. Alongside her sister Betsie, she prayed, read Scripture, and even learned to thank God in the midst of suffering. Such faith was not denial; it was resurrection faith. It was the steady confidence that the risen Christ was present even in the darkest place.

That same living Christ calls us today to trust Him with all that burdens us. Peter declares that God has made Jesus both Lord and Messiah, and that means our lives are safe in His hands. Corrie’s story reminds us that His protection does not always mean escape from pain, but it always means His presence in the pain. The risen Jesus is still our hiding place, our shield, and our hope. He strengthens us to pray, to endure, to forgive, and to love courageously. To live Christ today is to believe that the One whom God raised from the dead is still at work—in our trials, in our homes, in our witness, and in our hearts.

Prayer:

Lord Jesus, thank You that You are alive, exalted, and reigning today. Be our hiding place and our shield. When life feels uncertain or heavy, uphold us according to Your promise. Fill us with the quiet courage of resurrection faith, so that we may trust You in suffering, obey You in daily life, and reflect Your love to others. Let our lives bear witness that Christ is living and reigning now. Amen.



Tuesday, April 14, 2026

The Unstoppable Gospel




Reading : Acts 5:17–32

We must obey God rather than human beings! — Acts 5:29

The apostles are arrested, put in jail, and ordered to stop speaking in Jesus’ name. But when they are brought before the council, Peter answers with calm courage: “We must obey God rather than human beings!” The resurrection had changed everything. Jesus was not simply someone they remembered with affection. He was alive, exalted, and reigning. Because Christ was living, their obedience to Him could not be negotiated.

This is where Easter faith becomes deeply practical. The apostles were not rejecting ordinary life, daily work, or public responsibility. They were declaring that God’s claim comes first. C. S. Lewis wrote that when it comes to God’s claim, there is no true middle ground. The risen Christ does not ask for a place alongside our other loyalties. He asks for first place over all of them. Culture, politics, reputation, comfort, and safety may all press their claims upon us, but none of them can sit on the throne that belongs to Jesus alone.

Yet this does not mean Christianity removes us from ordinary life. It means that ordinary life must be offered to God. Work, conversation, service, suffering, worship, and witness are all to be brought under the lordship of Christ. Peter goes on to say that though people killed Jesus, God raised Him from the dead and exalted Him as Prince and Savior. Human power is real, but it is never final. God still rules, still saves, and still calls His people to faithful witness. Eastertide reminds us that the living Christ claims the whole of life. And when all is yielded to Him, even the simplest acts can be filled with holy purpose.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, thank You that Jesus is alive and reigns as Prince and Savior. Teach me to obey You above every lesser claim and to offer every part of my life to Your glory. Fill me with courage, humility, and joy as I follow the living Christ. Amen.


Monday, April 13, 2026

More Than Ordinary Boldness




Reading : Acts 4:1-12

Salvation is found in no one else, 

for there is no other name under heaven 

given to mankind by which we must be saved.

Acts 4:12


Peter and John are summoned before the rulers because they had openly proclaimed that Jesus had risen from the dead. With striking courage, Peter shows that the resurrection of Jesus is not merely a private conviction, but a public truth to be declared. He says clearly that Jesus, whom they crucified, is the One God raised from the dead. His boldness teaches us two important truths. First, it tells us the truth about the human heart. Jesus came healing, serving, and loving, yet people rejected Him and put Him to death. That shows how deeply sin has wounded the world and each of us. We must be honest about that, or our faith becomes proud and shallow.

But Peter is also bold about God’s grace. Though people rejected Jesus, God raised Him from the dead. Human sin is real, but it does not have the last word. God still rules. God still loves. God still restores. Jesus is “the stone you builders rejected, which has become the cornerstone.” What people threw away, God made the foundation of salvation. The healing of the lame man proves that Jesus is still alive and still at work. He is not only a figure from the past. He is the living Christ.

This passage calls us to the same kind of boldness. We must be humble enough to admit our sin and our need for mercy. But we must also be joyful and brave enough to say that Jesus is alive, and that salvation is found in Him alone. The church is here to tell a broken world that God has acted in Christ to save, heal, and restore. To live in Eastertide is to stand humbly, speak clearly, and trust joyfully that the living Christ still saves.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, thank You that Jesus is alive. Make me humble about my sin and bold about Your grace. Help me to trust Christ, my cornerstone, and to live as a faithful witness to His saving name. Amen.


Sunday, April 12, 2026

In the Name of Jesus





Reading : Acts 3:1-16

Then Peter said, ‘Silver and gold I do not have, 

but what I do have I give you.

 Acts 3:6


Eastertide reminds us that Jesus is alive, not only in memory but in power. In Acts 3, Peter and John meet a man who had never been able to walk. Peter begins with honesty: “Silver and gold I do not have.” He does not pretend to have what he lacks. But he does not stop there. He adds, “What I do have I give you: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth, walk.” Peter offers what he has, and what he has is faith in the risen Jesus.

This is a beautiful picture of Christian living. God does not ask us to give what we do not have. He asks us to offer what He has already placed in our hands. We may not have wealth, influence, or answers for every problem. But we can still offer prayer, kindness, hope, encouragement, compassion, and the name of Jesus. Christian action begins when we stop pretending and start giving ourselves honestly to the needs around us.

When the crowd gathers in amazement, Peter quickly points away from himself. He asks, “Why do you stare at us, as though by our own power or godliness we had made him walk?” Peter knows that the healing did not come from his own strength. It came from the living Christ. Then he boldly says, “You killed the author of life, but God raised him from the dead.” That is the heart of Easter: Jesus was crucified, but He is now risen and glorified.

To live Christ in Eastertide is to trust that Jesus is still at work today. He uses ordinary people who are willing to offer what they have in His name. When our small gifts are surrendered to Him, the risen Lord can do more than we imagine.

Prayer:

Heavenly Father, thank You that Jesus is alive. Teach us to offer You what we have and to trust You to use it for Your glory. Help us to point others to Christ and to live each day in the power of His resurrection. Amen.

 

Saturday, April 11, 2026

Seeing God in Jesus




Reading : John 12:44–50

I know that his command leads to eternal life. 

John 12:50


Jesus speaks with urgency and love. He says that whoever believes in Him believes in the Father who sent Him, and whoever sees Him sees the Father. These words show us who Jesus truly is. He is not only a teacher or prophet. He shows us what God is like. If we want to know the heart, character, and will of God, we must look at Jesus—His words, His actions, and His life. Jesus came as the Light of the world, shining into our darkness so that we do not have to remain lost, confused, or afraid. When we look to Him in faith, our path grows clearer and our hearts steadier.

Jesus also says that His words are not merely His own, but the Father’s, and that the Father’s command leads to eternal life. This means the words of Jesus are not just wise advice. They are words of life. He came the first time not to condemn the world, but to save it and to show people the way to eternal life. Yet Jesus also warns that those who reject Him and refuse His words will one day be judged by the very truth they have refused. His first coming brought mercy; His return will bring judgment. Those who receive Him and walk in His way will enter eternal life, but those who reject Him will face the consequences of that choice.

So this passage calls us to respond now. We are invited to trust Christ fully, walk in His light, and receive His words with gladness. What we do with Jesus has eternal consequences. For those who belong to Him, this is not a message of fear, but of hope. He is the Light who leads us, the Savior who keeps us, and the Lord who gives life.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You for showing us the Father and for coming as the Light of the world. Help us trust Your words, walk in Your light, and choose Your way with faith and gladness. Amen.

 

Friday, April 10, 2026

The Lord of Healing and Life





Reading : Luke 8:40–56

“Don’t be afraid; just believe, and she will be healed.” — Luke 8:50


Jesus meets two desperate people: Jairus, whose little daughter is dying, and a woman who has suffered for twelve years. Both are helpless. Both come to Jesus in need. And both discover that He has power to give life. Jairus falls at His feet in public grief. The woman reaches for Him in quiet faith. One is known and respected; the other has lived in weakness and sorrow. Yet Jesus receives them both. He is not too busy for the desperate or too distant for the broken. His power is joined to tenderness. He stops for the suffering woman, calls her “Daughter,” and sends her away in peace. Then He goes on to Jairus’s house and speaks life where death seems to have won.

This is why the crowds were amazed. In Jesus they were not simply seeing a teacher or healer, but someone far greater. C. S. Lewis reminds us that throughout history people longed for rescue, and many ancient stories carried faint echoes of a god who dies and brings life. But in Jesus the longing became reality. Among the Jews, who believed in the one holy God, there appeared One who spoke and acted with God’s own authority. Lewis says this was the most shocking claim ever spoken: that this man was not merely sent by God, but was God among us. That is why Jesus can do what no one else can do. He does not merely comfort the grieving or advise the weak. He forgives, restores, heals, and raises the dead.

So this passage invites us to trust Him with our hidden pain and our greatest fears. The woman’s suffering, Jairus’s sorrow, and the child’s death all meet the compassion and authority of Jesus. He still speaks peace to the ashamed, hope to the fearful, and life to what seems lost. Do not be afraid. Bring your need to Him. He is still the Lord who has power to give life.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You that You are full of compassion and power. Teach us to trust You with our hidden pain and deepest fears. Speak peace where we are troubled, healing where we are broken, and life where we feel empty or hopeless. Amen.


Thursday, April 9, 2026

Life Through the Cross





Reading : Matthew 16:21–28

For whoever wants to save their life will lose it, 

but whoever loses their life for me will find it.

Matthew 16:25

In Matthew 16:21–28, Jesus begins to tell His disciples that it was necessary for Him to go to Jerusalem, suffer, die, and rise again. This was not an accident, but God’s saving plan. Jesus is the Messiah, yet not the kind of Messiah people expected. Many wanted power, victory, and visible glory. But Jesus came first as the suffering Savior. He went to the cross because our deepest need was not advice or example, but forgiveness, rescue, and new life. Only by giving His life could He give life to us.

Peter struggles with this. When Jesus speaks about suffering, Peter says, “Never, Lord!” His words sound loving and loyal. He does not want Jesus to suffer. But Jesus answers strongly because Peter is thinking in merely human ways, not in God’s way. What seems natural and kind can still pull us away from God’s purpose. C. S. Lewis wrote, “When natural things look most divine, the demoniac is just round the corner.” Peter wanted glory without the cross. We often want the same. We want comfort without surrender, blessing without sacrifice, and victory without obedience.

Today is Thursday, April 9, the day on which Dietrich Bonhoeffer was executed in 1945. Bonhoeffer, pastor and theologian, stood boldly against Hitler and the evil of his day. Arrested and imprisoned, he continued to teach and bear witness to Christ. At Flossenbürg concentration camp, he was condemned to death and executed at the age of 39, just weeks before the war ended. His reported final words were: “This is the end — for me the beginning of life.” Bonhoeffer understood what Jesus meant. He lived and died in the light of the resurrection. The road of the cross is not the end. In Christ, surrender leads to life, and death opens into glory.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, thank You for giving Your life so that I may live. Teach me to trust Your way, take up my cross, and follow You with courage, hope, and resurrection faith. Amen.


The Living Christ in Dark Places

Reading : Acts 2:22–36 “God has raised this Jesus to life,  and we are all witnesses of it.” Acts 2:32 Peter brings us to the heart of t...