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Friday, May 22, 2026

Grace of Generosity





 

Bible Reading: 2 Corinthians 8:1–15


The Spirit Who Opens Our Hearts and Hands


 For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,

 that though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.

 2 Corinthians 8:9


Paul points to the Macedonian churches as an example of grace-filled generosity. Though they were experiencing severe trial and deep poverty, their joy overflowed in rich generosity. Their giving was not forced, reluctant, or merely practical; it was the work of grace in their hearts. This is life in the Spirit. The Holy Spirit teaches us that everything we have is a gift from God, entrusted to us for love and service.

Like the rich man with his barns in Luke 12, we can lose something of our souls when possessions become our security. Giving is God’s way of counteracting this. It acknowledges that everything is gift: “the ground to use, the muscles to work, a brain to think, and a community to live and be employed in.” Sunshine, rain, strength, health, and fruitfulness all come from God. Our offering becomes a way of honoring Him and giving thanks. Christian generosity is not measured only by the amount given, but by the heart from which it flows.

At the center of this passage stands Jesus Himself: “Though he was rich, yet for your sake he became poor.” The generosity of the Christian begins at the cross. Christ entered our poverty, bore our need, and gave us the riches of grace, forgiveness, and eternal life. Because Christ gave Himself freely for us, we give ourselves freely to Him. As we journey toward Pentecost, we ask the Spirit to make us generous people—joyful in giving, attentive to need, and shaped by the self-giving love of Christ.

Prayer:
 Heavenly Father,
open our hearts and hands. Teach us to give ourselves first to You, and then to others in love. Free us from fear and selfishness, and make us joyful, generous witnesses of Your grace. Amen.



Thursday, May 21, 2026

Comforted to Comfort




Reading: 2 Corinthians 1:3–11


The Spirit Who Comforts, Strengthens, and Unites


The God of all comfort… comforts us in all our troubles, 

so that we can comfort those in any trouble.

2 Corinthians 1:3–4

Paul begins with praise to “the Father of compassion and the God of all comfort.” Christian comfort is more than soothing sympathy. It is courage-giving strength. God does not always remove the burden at once, but He gives grace beneath the burden, enabling us to endure what life brings. The Holy Spirit, the Comforter, comes alongside us with power, courage, and hope. Paul had been under pressure “far beyond” his ability to endure, so much so that he despaired of life itself. Yet this suffering drove him back to God. Affliction often shatters self-reliance and teaches us to depend God. Where suffering abounds, God’s grace and consolation abound still more.

But God’s comfort is never meant to stop with us. Paul says we are comforted so that we may comfort others. Our wounds, when touched by grace, can become channels of mercy. Barclay tells of a grieving mother whose sorrow gave her “soft eyes” for others in pain. The Spirit transforms private suffering into shared compassion. Paul’s letters are filled with thanksgiving, prayer, fellowship, and concern for unity. Even in weakness, Paul asks for the prayers of others. The Spirit comforts us not only inwardly, but through the Body of Christ—through believers who pray, encourage, support, and bear one another’s burdens.

As we journey toward Pentecost, we ask for the Spirit’s comfort—not simply so that we may feel better, but so that we may become braver, humbler, more dependent on God, and more compassionate toward others. This promise of comfort flows through the whole story of Scripture. Through Isaiah, God says, “Comfort, comfort my people” (Isaiah 40:1). The God who comforted Israel in exile is the same Father of compassion whom Paul praises in 2 Corinthians. His comfort restores hope, gives courage, and forms His people into messengers of mercy. The Spirit who strengthens us in our troubles also makes us instruments of comfort in a suffering world.

Prayer:
Heavenly Father,
meet us in our troubles by Your Holy Spirit. Give us courage in suffering, deepen our dependence on You, and make us channels of Your comfort to others. Unite us in prayer, love, and fellowship, through Jesus Christ our Lord. Amen.


Wednesday, May 20, 2026

Seeing God Clearly




I Will Not Hide My Face Again


Reading: Ezekiel 39:21–29


The Spirit Who Restores and Remains


I will no longer hide my face from them, 

for I will pour out my Spirit on the people of Israel,

declares the Sovereign Lord.

 Ezekiel 39:29


Ezekiel speaks to a people who had known defeat, exile, shame, and distance from God. Their suffering revealed the seriousness of sin and the sorrow of living apart from the Lord. Yet the passage does not end in judgment, but in mercy. God promises to restore His people, gather them from the nations, and reveal His holiness through their renewal.

At the heart of this promise is the tender word: “I will no longer hide my face from them.” In Scripture, God’s face represents His favor, presence, and blessing. To live before His face is to live in His light. C.S. Lewis reminds us that the instrument through which we see God is our whole self. When our lives are clouded by pride, bitterness, selfishness, or division, our vision of God becomes blurred, “like the Moon seen through a dirty telescope.” The Spirit cleanses the lens of the soul, removes shame, heals distance, purifies the heart, and restores us to communion with God.

Lewis also reminds us that we are not meant to see God alone. God reveals Himself through a redeemed community—people united in love, helping one another, and showing Him to one another. Like players in one band or members of one body, the Spirit forms us into a people through whom God’s glory can be seen. As we journey toward Pentecost, we pray not only for personal renewal, but for shared renewal: that the Spirit would cleanse our hearts, unite us in love, and make our lives clear windows through which Christ may be seen.

Prayer:
 Lord, cleanse the lens of our hearts. Restore us to the joy of God’s presence, heal our shame and distance, and unite us as the Body of Christ. Help us live in the light of the Father’s face, so that through our shared life the world may see Jesus. Amen.


Tuesday, May 19, 2026

Fullness of God


The Spirit Who Gives Life and Strength




 Filled with the Fullness of God

Reading: Psalm 104; Ephesians 3:14–21

I pray that out of his glorious riches he may strengthen you 

with power through his Spirit in your inner being.

Ephesians 3:16

Psalm 104 is a great hymn of creation. It celebrates the God who clothes Himself with light, stretches out the heavens, waters the earth, feeds every creature, and renews the face of the ground. Everything lives because God gives breath. The psalmist says, “When you send your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the ground” (Psalm 104:30). The Spirit is not distant or abstract. He is the life-giving presence of God, sustaining creation and renewing what has grown weary.

Hildegard of Bingen beautifully expressed this truth: “God is within all things and beyond all things.” God is beyond creation in majesty, yet present within creation by His sustaining life. He is not trapped within the world, but neither is He absent from it. Hildegard also described humanity as being “showered with the gentle raindrops of the Holy Spirit.” The Spirit comes not only as wind and fire, but also as gentle rain upon the soul—refreshing dry hearts, nourishing weary lives, and bringing renewal where there has been barrenness.

In Ephesians 3, Paul turns from creation to the inner life of the believer. He kneels in prayer and asks that we may be strengthened “through his Spirit” in our inner being. The same Spirit who renews the earth also renews the human heart. Eugene Peterson reminds us that prayer is attentiveness to God—not merely knowing about Him, but becoming personally responsive to His presence. Prayer joins what we know of God to a living relationship with God. Paul’s prayer rises higher still: that Christ may dwell in our hearts through faith, and that we may be rooted and established in love. The Spirit deepens our roots in God’s love until we begin to grasp how wide, long, high, and deep the love of Christ truly is. The Spirit renews creation, strengthens the soul, and fills the believer with the love and presence of Christ. God is beyond us in glory, around us in creation, and within us by His Spirit.

Prayer:
 Lord, shower our lives with Your gentle renewing grace. Strengthen us in our inner being, make Christ at home in our hearts, and root us deeply in His love. Renew our hearts as You renew the earth, and fill us with the fullness of God, for the glory of Jesus. Amen.



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.


Grace of Generosity

  Bible Reading: 2 Corinthians 8:1–15 The Spirit Who Opens Our Hearts and Hands  For you know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ,  that...