Perfect Love
Everyone knows today’s passage from weddings, but Paul wasn't writing poetry for brides and grooms – he was giving a reality check to a dysfunctional church. The Corinthians were proud of their spiritual gifts but lacking in spiritual maturity. In response, Paul held up Jesus as the perfect example of love, showing them what Christian community should actually look like.
Unlikely People
If you want to see Jesus' heart for strategic mission, look no further than Paul's visit to Philippi. In Acts 16, we see Jesus revealed as the Master Strategist who uses unlikely people and impossible circumstances to advance His kingdom.
Barrier Breaker
Sometimes the hardest person to convince about God's love is a long-time believer. In Acts 10, we see Jesus revealed as the ultimate Barrier Breaker through an unlikely friendship between a Jewish fisherman and a Roman centurion.
Extend Ourselves
The life of faith is not meant to be a solitary journey. We were made to follow Jesus together, as an intimate, interdependent community. We need brothers and sisters in faith who encourage us, hold us accountable, and refine us with their wisdom. What’s more, we are called to be a mentor, friend, cheerleader, and teacher to others in the family of faith—even when we feel insufficient or incapable of doing so.
Promise Keeper
Imagine waiting in a locked room, uncertain about your future, when suddenly the sound of rushing wind fills the air and tongues of fire appear above your head. This wasn't just a dramatic special effect – this was Jesus keeping His promise to send the Holy Spirit, and it changed everything.
Death Defeated
On the cross, the worst thing that could ever happen, happened: God, the Creator and Sustainer of all things, died. The One Who holds all things together ran out of breath. His heart stopped beating. He remained buried for three long, hopeless days. Yet, out of this unprecedented tragedy, God gave humanity the greatest gift He could ever give: the opportunity to live in perfect relationship with Him for all eternity.
Final Words
Golgotha - "the place of the skull" - was designed to be a place of shame and terror. Crucifixion wasn't just about execution; it was about humiliation, a public display of what happened to those who challenged Rome's authority. Yet even here, suspended between two criminals with crowds mocking below, Jesus's character shone through the darkness.
Which is Easier?
The house was packed beyond capacity. Word had spread that Jesus was teaching, and people crammed into every available space, spilling out the doorways and windows. But four friends had a problem - their paralyzed friend needed to get to Jesus, and there was no way through the crowd. So they did what desperate love does: they got creative.
Blessed Are…
When Jesus sat down on that hillside and began to teach, he turned everything upside down. His words challenged every assumption about success, happiness, and what it means to live a blessed life. The Beatitudes aren't just nice spiritual thoughts - they're a complete revolution of values that still shake up our world today.
Entering Our Mess
The Creator of the universe, who spoke galaxies into existence, chose to enter our world as a helpless baby. Not in a palace with royal fanfare, but in a stable surrounded by the smell of animals and the chaos of an overcrowded town. This wasn't Plan B - this was always God's heart.
Enter That Rest
As we close this journey through rest and Sabbath, we turn our eyes toward the horizon of eternity. The writer of Hebrews reminds us that all our earthly experiences of rest—however sweet and restorative—are but foretastes of something far greater. There is a rest that transcends weekly rhythms, a rest that surpasses temporary relief, a rest that will never end.
Be Still
In a world that never stops, the idea of being still can feel almost revolutionary. Our phones buzz with notifications, our calendars overflow with commitments, our minds race with endless to-do lists. We've become so accustomed to constant motion that stillness feels uncomfortable, even guilty. But right here in the middle of Scripture, God gives us a different invitation: Be still.
Find Rest
There's something tender about today’s invitation. It's different from a command or a demand. An invitation assumes choice, extends welcome, and creates space for relationship. And here, in one of the most beloved passages in Scripture, Jesus offers us the most beautiful invitation of all.
He Rested
There's something profoundly beautiful about rhythm. Your heart beats in rhythm. The seasons change in rhythm. The tides ebb and flow in rhythm. And right here at the beginning of Scripture, we discover that God built rhythm into the very foundation of existence—a rhythm of work and rest, of creating and celebrating, of doing and being.
Made for Man
Take a moment to breathe deeply, friend. Right now, wherever you are, you have permission to pause. The world will not stop spinning if you step away from the endless cycle of doing, achieving, and producing. Today, we're going to explore one of the most radical concepts in our achievement-obsessed culture: the gift of enough.
Sabbath Rest: A Story Woven Through Scripture
Welcome to this Sabbath Sunday, friend. As you settle into this day of rest, take a deep breath. Notice the quiet. Feel the permission to simply be rather than do. Today, we're not gathering in our usual ways, but we're still together in spirit, practicing one of the most countercultural acts of faith: choosing rest.
Standing in the Gap
Daniel was now an old man, probably in his eighties, still serving faithfully in a foreign land. While reading the prophet Jeremiah, he discovered that God had promised to restore Israel after seventy years of captivity. Suddenly, Daniel realized that the time was almost up – God was about to move, and Daniel wanted to be part of it.
The Lions Den
Daniel was now in his eighties, a seasoned statesman who had served multiple kings with distinction. His integrity and wisdom had made him so valuable that King Darius planned to set him over the entire kingdom. But success has a way of making enemies, and Daniel's promotion stirred up jealousy among the other officials.
Even If He Doesn’t
In an attempt to unify his people together with the foreign captives who’d recently come under his rule, King Nebuchadnezzar made a shrewd political decision. He demanded that everyone in Babylon—regardless of their past religious or national identity—bow before a golden statue whenever his musical ensemble began to play. Nebuchadnezzar knew that dictating who the people worshiped meant he’d control their hearts and affections.
Declaring
Imagine getting a death sentence because you couldn't interpret someone else's dream – a dream they refused to even tell you! That's exactly where Daniel found himself when King Nebuchadnezzar had his mysterious dream. The king demanded that his wise men not only interpret the dream but also tell him what he dreamed in the first place. When they couldn't, he ordered the execution of all the wise men in Babylon, including Daniel.