Monday, February 16, 2026

Built by Mercy





Reading: 1 Peter 2:1–10

Once you had not received mercy, 

but now you have received mercy.

1 Peter 2:10


Peter gently reminds us that the Christian life does not begin with what we build for God, but with what God lovingly builds for us. We are “living stones” being placed into a spiritual house (1 Peter 2:5). We did not find our way into belonging; mercy carried us there. Many of us know the quiet ache of feeling unworthy, scattered, or unseen — yet the Lord gathers us and gives us a home among His people. The church exists because God chose not to treat us as our sins deserved (Psalm 103:10). Centuries ago, a hardened sea captain named John Newton discovered this in a violent storm when he cried, “Lord, have mercy.” The storm did not end immediately, but a deeper rescue had begun. Grace received him in a moment, yet reshaped him over years.

Mercy does more than forgive — it restores identity. “You are a chosen people, a royal priesthood” (1 Peter 2:9–10). Newton would later leave the slave trade, become a pastor, and spend his remaining years helping oppose the suffering he once caused. Near the end of his life he said, “I remember two things: that I am a great sinner, and that Christ is a great Savior.” He never outgrew his need for mercy; instead, it became the ground beneath his feet (Ephesians 2:4–5). When he wrote, “I once was lost, but now am found; was blind, but now I see,” he was simply describing what mercy feels like — not instant perfection, but patient redemption. In the same way, God forms us slowly, replacing our shame with gratitude and our hardness with gentleness.

So the Christian life begins each day with remembrance: once we had not received mercy — now we have. From that assurance we learn how to treat one another: “Be merciful, just as your Father is merciful” (Luke 6:36). We do not force compassion out of ourselves; we receive it and pass it on. The more we rest in the mercy that holds us, the more naturally our words soften, our judgments quiet, and our love widens. Like living stones shaped by careful hands, we are being built together into a house where others may also discover mercy.


Prayer

Heavenly Father, You have welcomed us when we did not deserve a place. Teach us to rest in Your mercy and let gratitude grow in our hearts. Make us gentle and merciful toward others, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Sunday, February 15, 2026

Choosing Life Through Obedience






Reading: Deuteronomy 30:15–20

Now choose life, so that you and your children may live 

and that you may love the Lord your God, 

listen to his voice, and hold fast to him.

Deuteronomy 30:19–20


Moses places before God’s people a clear crossroads: “I have set before you life and prosperity, death and destruction” (v.15). This great choice is not a single emotional decision but a daily direction of the heart. To choose life is to walk with God, listen to His voice, and hold fast to Him. The way is narrow because it asks us to release our own way in order to receive His. Each ordinary moment — a word spoken, a reaction formed, a decision made — quietly shapes whether we move toward life or away from it.

God defines life relationally: “Love the Lord your God, walk in obedience to him, and keep his commands” (v.16). Obedience is not mere restriction but alignment with the Source of life itself, echoed later by Jesus: “If you love me, keep my commands” (John 14:15). The witness of faithful believers across history reminds us that faithfulness is better than safety and Christ is more precious than life. The week’s lessons — humility, trust, and hope — converge here, where belief becomes obedience and devotion becomes visible.

Choosing life today may look like truth instead of convenience, forgiveness instead of resentment, or blessing instead of silence. By obedience we offer our lives back to the One who first loved us, trusting His promise: “you will live and increase, and the Lord your God will bless you” (v.16). We discover that we are not merely following commands but entering relationship, for “the Lord is your life” (v.20). In choosing Him again today, we choose the life that truly endures.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We choose life by choosing You today. Teach us to love You, listen to Your voice, and walk faithfully in all we do. Keep our hearts steadfast in obedience and hope.

Amen.


Saturday, February 14, 2026

Choosing Hope in Christ’s Return




Reading: 1 Thessalonians 4:1–18

And so we will be with the Lord forever. 

Therefore encourage one another with these words.

 1 Thessalonians 4:17–18

In the final stretch of our weekly journey, Paul lifts our gaze from the dusty roads of daily life to the horizon of eternity. He urges believers to “live in order to please God” (v.1), reminding us that our present choices prepare us for an everlasting kingdom. Holiness is no longer religious duty but relational readiness — we are learning how to live with the One we will soon meet. As C.S. Lewis wrote, “Aim at Heaven and you will get earth ‘thrown in’: aim at earth and you will get neither.” Choosing life today means anchoring our souls in the promise of Christ’s return and letting that future hope shape our present obedience.

History gives us a picture of such hope. On this day in the year 269 AD, a priest named Valentine was martyred in Rome for preaching Christ to Emperor Claudius and secretly marrying persecuted Christians. Tradition says he cut small hearts from parchment to remind them of God’s love, and another account tells how he healed the blindness of his jailer’s daughter and signed a final note, “Your Valentine.” Ironically, the great symbol of romantic love was himself single and celibate. Yet his courage reveals a deeper love — he lived not for earthly fulfillment but for eternal belonging. He believed Christ was truly coming again, and that hope steadied him even in suffering.

Paul offers the same comfort: “We do not grieve like the rest of mankind, who have no hope” (v.13), for “the Lord himself will come down from heaven” (v.16). Every tear, sacrifice, and quiet obedience is seen by the returning King. This hope becomes an anchor when life feels uncertain and a motivation for holiness when the path feels narrow. To live faithfully until He comes is to live attentively — not only watching our steps but watching the sky. As the week closes and we move toward worship, we remember: the best part of the journey is still ahead. Before his death in Ecuador in 1956, missionary Jim Elliot wrote in his journal that the exchange of the temporary for the eternal is not sacrifice but wisdom: “He is no fool who gives what he cannot keep to gain that which he cannot lose.”

Prayer

Lord Jesus,

Please keep our hearts hopeful and ready. Teach us to live faithfully and love courageously until You come. Let the promise of forever shape how we live today.

Amen.


Friday, February 13, 2026

Choosing Trust Over Worry




 

Choosing Trust Over Worry


Reading: Luke 12:22–32


“Do not be afraid, little flock, 

for your Father has been pleased to give you the kingdom.” 

Luke 12:32

Jesus addresses one of the greatest obstacles on the narrow path — the quiet tyranny of anxiety. He tells us, “Do not worry about your life” (v.22), and then points to ravens that neither sow nor store yet are fed, and lilies clothed more beautifully than kings (vv.24–28). Creation itself becomes a sermon: God is not distant but attentive. Worry lives as though everything depends on us; faith rests in the Father who already knows our needs. Choosing life means choosing peace over anxiety because we trust the One who sustains us — “how much more valuable you are than birds!” (v.24).

To choose trust over worry requires a shift of focus. Anxiety tries to control a future we cannot see, but Jesus says, “Seek his kingdom, and these things will be given to you as well” (v.31). When fear governs our decisions, we begin living like spiritual orphans. Yet the gospel declares adoption: the Father delights in caring for His children. Peace comes not from certainty about circumstances but from confidence in His character — “Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to your life?” (v.25).

A family once spent a long night in a hospital waiting room while a loved one was in surgery. Every possible outcome ran through their minds. Nearby, an elderly woman quietly read her Bible and hummed hymns. When asked how she remained calm, she gently replied, “I’ve learned something — worrying never changed the doctor’s skill or God’s plan. So I pray, and then I rest.The situation remained uncertain, but peace slowly filled the room. Her trust illustrated Jesus’ words (v.25). Every surrendered fear becomes an act of worship, and every moment of trust declares we belong to a Father who gladly gives us the kingdom.

Prayer

Heavenly Father,

We place our fears and our “what-ifs” before You today. Please forgive us for living as though we were alone. Teach us to trust Your faithful care and seek Your kingdom first. Quiet our anxious hearts and fill us with Your peace.

Amen.


Thursday, February 12, 2026

Walking the New Way




 Choosing a New Way of Living 

Reading: Ephesians 4:1–8

“I urge you to live a life worthy 

of the calling you have received.” 

Ephesians 4:1

In Ephesians 4, Paul turns from the great truths of salvation to the everyday habits of life. Faith must move beyond belief into behavior — shaping speech, reactions, and relationships. The Christian walk is not casual; it is formation. As A.W. Tozer reminds us, “The Christian life is not a playground but a schoolroom.” God is patiently teaching us to live as His people, so that “we may grow up in every way into him who is the head, into Christ” (Ephesians 4:15). Each ordinary moment becomes a classroom where grace trains our character and the Spirit reshapes our instincts.

Paul describes the marks of this new life: “Be completely humble and gentle; be patient, bearing with one another in love” (v.2). Community inevitably brings friction, yet these tensions become opportunities for Christlike love. Thomas à Kempis wisely observed, “Try to bear patiently with the defects of others, for you also have many faults which others must endure.” Scripture echoes this: “Bear with each other and forgive one another… Forgive as the Lord forgave you” (Colossians 3:13). Instead of insisting on our rights, we choose gentleness; instead of quick judgment, patient mercy. In doing so, our daily conduct begins to resemble the Savior rather than the crowd.

Finally, Paul calls us to protect unity: “Make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit through the bond of peace” (Ephesians 4:3), remembering there is “one body and one Spirit… one Lord, one faith, one baptism” (vv.4–5). Unity does not require identical opinions but shared love. John Wesley captured this spirit: “Though we cannot think alike, may we not love alike?” Grace makes this possible, for “to each one of us grace has been given as Christ apportioned it” (v.7). Choosing a worthy walk means letting the old self fade and allowing Christ’s life to appear through ours — so that in our attitudes and relationships, others glimpse Him.


Prayer

Heavenly Father,

Teach us to act kindly, walk humbly and love patiently. Help us bear with one another and guard the unity of Your Spirit. May our lives together reflect the calling we have received in Christ. Amen.


Wednesday, February 11, 2026

Choosing the Narrow Way





Reading: Matthew 7:1–14

“Enter through the narrow gate. For wide is the gate and broad is the road that leads to destruction, and many enter through it. But small is the gate and narrow the road that leads to life, and only a few find it.” 

 Matthew 7:13–14


In the closing words of the Sermon on the Mount, Jesus places before us a defining choice: two gates, two roads, and two ultimate destinations. The wide road is easy, crowded, and socially reinforced, requiring little reflection and even less resistance as it drifts toward destruction. The narrow road, however, demands intentionality. As Jesus teaches in Matthew 7, this path is marked by a refusal to judge others (vv. 1–5), a persistence in seeking God through prayer (vv. 7–11), and a commitment to the Golden Rule (v. 12). It is not narrow because God is stingy with grace, but because the virtues of love, truth, and humility always require a narrow focus and a total surrender of the self.

Choosing life often means choosing against the current of modern culture. It is the difficult trade of discipline over indulgence, forgiveness over resentment, and obedience over the hollow sound of human applause. Jesus does not describe the narrow way as glamorous; He describes it as life-giving. While the crowd moves quickly and comfortably, the disciple walks attentively, understanding that following Christ requires intentional choices that prioritize God's kingdom over personal convenience. As Psalm 1 reminds us, the blessed person does not “walk in step with the wicked” but delights in the law of the Lord.

Ultimately, the narrow way is not about achieving perfection, but about maintaining the right direction. It invites us to pause at the crossroads of our daily routines and ask: "Am I following Christ’s way, or the crowd’s way?" By choosing the "small gate," we are stripping away the heavy baggage of pride and self-interest to fit through the only entrance that leads to vibrant, eternal life. Though the path may be traveled by few, it is the only road that ends in the presence of the Father. Our task is to ask daily: Whose voice am I following?


Prayer

Heavenly Father, guide our steps on Your narrow path today. Give us the discernment to see the traps of the broad road and the courage to follow You faithfully, even when we feel we are walking alone. Strengthen our hearts to choose Your will over our own comfort. Amen.


Tuesday, February 10, 2026

Choosing Integrity and Contentment





Life Is Not Measured by Possessions


Reading: 1 Timothy 6:3–19


“But godliness with contentment is great gain. 

For we brought nothing into the world, 

and we can take nothing out of it.” 

1 Timothy 6:6–7


In the high-pressure environments of classrooms, campuses, workplaces, and professional circles, we are constantly surrounded by the message that life is measured by achievement and accumulation. For students, this may look like the pursuit of perfect grades, popularity, or the latest technology. For adults, it often becomes the chase for promotions, recognition, and bigger homes. Yet the Apostle Paul offers a clear and gentle correction: “We brought nothing into the world, and we can take nothing out of it” (v. 7). When our security becomes tied to what we own or achieve, we slowly exchange peace for pressure and gratitude for restlessness, becoming trapped in a cycle of “more” that never truly satisfies.

Choosing integrity means shifting our focus from the hustle to the heart. Paul warns that the love of money leads to “many foolish and harmful desires” (v. 9), not because wealth is evil, but because misplaced trust is. Riches promise what only God can give—identity, security, and lasting peace. Instead, Paul points us toward a better way: “Godliness with contentment is great gain” (v. 6). True wealth is found in character shaped by Christ, in lives that are “rich in good deeds, generous and willing to share” (v. 18). Whether we are facing academic pressure, social expectations, or professional competition, the call remains the same: choose gratitude over comparison, generosity over hoarding, and faith over fear.

Ultimately, choosing life means trusting God more than we trust our portfolios, résumés, or status. Paul invites us to “take hold of the life that is truly life” (v. 19)—a life marked by open hands and peaceful hearts. Contentment means working faithfully without letting success define us. As Jesus reminds us, our Father knows what we need (Matthew 6:32–33). When we loosen our grip on possessions and place our confidence in Him, anxiety gives way to freedom. We discover that in Christ, we already possess everything that truly matters.

Prayer

Heavenly Father, free our hearts from greed and fear, and teach us to trust Your faithful provision in every season of life. Whether we are in a classroom or a boardroom, help us to live simply, give generously, and walk in quiet confidence in You. May our lives reflect true riches—faith, love, integrity, and good works—for the glory of Jesus Christ. Amen.


Built by Mercy

Reading: 1 Peter 2:1–10 Once you had not received mercy,  but now you have received mercy. 1 Peter 2:10 Peter gently reminds us that ...