Saturday, May 9, 2026

May 9, 2026

Leviticus 14: 2-7 (NIV)
“These are the regulations for the diseased person at the time of his ceremonial cleansing . . . If the person has been healed of his . . . disease, the priest shall order that two live clean birds and some cedar wood, scarlet yarn and hyssop be brought for the one to be cleansed. Then the priest shall order that one of the birds be killed over fresh water in a clay pot. He is then to take the live bird and dip it, together with the cedar wood, the scarlet yarn and the hyssop, into the blood of the bird that was killed . . . Seven times he shall sprinkle the one to be cleansed of the infectious disease and pronounce him clean. Then he is to release the live bird in the open fields.”

Sometimes the questions are complicated and the answers are simple*
When I was a little girl, my grandmother, who had grown up in the rough world of coal-mining camps in Kentucky and who was somewhat superstitious, came down with a case of shingles. I remember hearing her talk about a “treatment” for her ailment that included the blood of a black rooster. I don’t recall if she tried it or not but the ritual described here for the cleansing of those healed of skin diseases is even more bizarre.

Is there any medical value to the procedure described in this passage? What is the symbolic meaning? Did anyone ever know? Hundreds of years later, these are the same instructions Jesus gave to the man he healed of leprosy (Matthew 8: 4). What if the point was merely to teach us about obedience and trust? God is not obligated to explain anything to us. More often than not the whys are never revealed to us. Perhaps the sometimes mysterious requirements of the Christian life are in place merely to allow us to practice walking by faith.

This elaborate ceremony that was to be performed for cleansing after a person was healed contrasts vividly with the simplicity and symbolism of the washing away of our sins in baptism. While killing a bird over fresh water in a clay pot was just one of the many steps in the cleansing ritual, baptism is a two-step procedure: go down into the water; come up out of the water. How complicated is that?

You know how an attorney says, ‘In a courtroom, never ask a question you do not know the answer to.’ I think it’s a great exercise of faith to ask the question you don’t know the answer to, and rest in the knowledge that you may not have an answer today, tomorrow, or ever in this life.*

Friday, May 8, 2026

May 8, 2026

Exodus 4: 2 (NIV)
Then the Lord said to him, “What is that in your hand?” “A staff," he replied.

Whatever You have called me to do, You will enable me to do it.*

After this bit of dialogue between God and Moses, God proceeds to paint a word picture by turning the rod into a snake and back into a rod; by afflicting Moses with leprosy and then healing him from it; and by telling Moses to pour some Nile River water on the ground and watch it turn to blood. All of this was for the purpose of proving Moses’ credentials as God’s spokesman to the Egyptians.

And then God revealed what he required of Moses. He didn’t ask him to pick up that staff with which he was so comfortable and adept. Moses’ hard-earned shepherding skills were a plus in the job God is calling him to, and his staff comes in handy later, but for now God wants Moses to step out of his comfort zone and become a public speaker. Moses begged him to send someone else, which made God angry, but he relented and agreed to use Moses’ more articulate brother, Aaron, to speak for him. God promised to work with Moses and Aaron, teaching them what to say and do, but Aaron would be the principal mouth-piece. Finally, God told Moses to pick up the staff so that he could perform miraculous signs with it. 

Let’s look at three life-lessons we can harvest from this passage. 

  1. Most of the time, God uses us where he has already gifted us, but when he calls us to be used in ways that exceed our natural capabilities, it requires submission on our part, and it results in glory for the Lord. God used Moses mightily but what more could have been accomplished if Moses had trusted God with his weakness? 
  2. If we refuse the job offer, God will find someone else to fulfill his purpose. 
  3. The tools in our hands can be repurposed when we surrender them to God. A shepherd’s staff can become a magic wand! 
We all need reminders that we become useful to the Kingdom when we give back to God what he has given us.

Some of the most effective Christians I have known are people without dramatic talents and special abilities, or even exciting personalities; yet God has used them in a marvelous way. Why? Because they are becoming more and more like Jesus Christ. They have the kind of character and conduct that God can trust with blessing. They are fruitful because they are faithful; they are effective because they are growing in their Christian experience.*

Thursday, May 7, 2026

May 7, 2026

Ezekiel 33: 11 (NIV)
“Say to them, ‘As surely as I live, declares the Sovereign Lord, I take no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but rather that they turn from their ways and live. Turn! Turn from your evil ways! Why will you die, O house of Israel?’”

He chose to be with sinners because he wanted them to have hope.*

Don’t we love it when the bad guy gets what’s coming to him? It’s only a movie but we cheer when the villain bites the dust, don’t we? In real life, it seems that the good guys are always the losers and that doesn’t seem right, does it?

God told Ezekiel to inform the Israelites that he did not find pleasure in the death of the wicked. Their death ends their chances to repent. John tells us in chapter 3, verse 17, that God sent his Son to save the world, not to condemn it. As unnatural as it might seem, we should be cheering for the bad guys to get what we got – not what we deserve but what Jesus freely gives us.

So it’s only a movie and we know the difference between fantasy and reality but let’s not become desensitized to the horror of dying without the hope of heaven. Pray for those bad guys in your life. Share the gospel with those villains. Let’s face it: without the cross, we’re all bad guys.

He came “to seek and to save the lost” – not to “search out and destroy” them*

Wednesday, May 6, 2026

May 6, 2026

I Peter 4: 13 (NIV)
But rejoice that you participate in the sufferings of Christ, so that you may be overjoyed when his glory is revealed.

My faith is founded on a sufferer.*

Remember when Jesus “began to explain to his disciples that he must go to Jerusalem and suffer many things” (Matthew 16: 21)? Remember what Peter said? “Never, Lord! This shall never happen to you!” Could this possibly be the same Peter who tells us now to rejoice in the sufferings of Christ?

What happened to change Peter’s outlook? 

Have you ever taken a bite of something you were sure you wouldn’t like – only to find out you did? When my daughter-in-law tried a new dessert recipe, I was certain I wouldn’t like it but I tried it because I didn’t want to hurt her feelings.  Since then, I have asked her never to prepare that dish again when I am around because I couldn’t stop eating it. No willpower whatsoever!

I think something similar happened to Peter. The “sufferings of Christ” sounded like something distasteful – even dreadful – until he tried it. Like Peter, if you participate in Christ’s suffering, you will discover that there is joy to be experienced when his glory is revealed.

So go ahead. Take a little taste. Step out in faith and rejoice in how delicious it is to suffer with Christ.

The way in which suffering is faced, namely as something to be rejoiced in, determines whether Christians will rejoice at the last day and share in the glory of Christ.*

Tuesday, May 5, 2026

May 5, 2026

Luke 2: 28-30 (NIV)
Simeon took him in his arms and praised God, saying: “Sovereign Lord, as you have promised, you now dismiss your servant in peace.”

We’re ready for death, but we don’t mind waiting.*

Simeon is described as a righteous and devout man who had been waiting for the Messiah – or as Luke expresses it, “the consolation of Israel.” The Holy Spirit had revealed to Simeon that he would not die before he had seen the “Lord’s Christ.” Can you not feel his joy when he held the baby Jesus in his arms and realized who he was? Now I can die in peace.

What things are you waiting for before you can die in peace? Do you need to reconcile with a family member? Is there a loved one who needs to return to the Lord? Do you hope to live long enough to see your grandchildren grow up? Or are you hoping to find a spouse or the perfect career before you go?

There are plenty of things on this earth to keep us interested in living longer, but the truth is, once we have met the Savior, we can die in peace at any time. The longer we live for him and the better we get to know him, the less our longings center on the temporal and the more we long for the eternal. Every day, I look forward to heaven just a little more. Every day, I feel more sorrow for those who don’t have that hope.

But we can’t die in peace just because we are tired of living. We still have work to do. We still have those family members to reconcile with; the loved one to lead to the Lord; those grandchildren who will need our faithful example to follow. Prepare to die in peace only after you have fulfilled the Lord’s purpose for your life.

We don’t get to wait to offer our lives until we have our act together.*

Monday, May 4, 2026

May 4, 2026

Matthew 22: 37 (NIV)
Jesus replied, “Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.”

The test of our love for Christ isn’t the intensity of our feelings, but the consistency of our obedience.*

For all our talk of feeling things in our hearts, the actual organ is just a muscle that pumps blood. All those feelings that we think of as originating in our hearts actually come from our minds – our brains – the same as our thoughts. Loving God with our minds involves choosing to love him. It is a deliberate decision. Intentional. On purpose. I believe that loving him with our souls requires us to cross over into surrender, submission, loss of self. 

Jesus knew everything that I just mentioned about the heart: it is just an organ - but we associate it with feelings. And I think Jesus did, too.

We humans put a lot of emphasis on feelings - and not always in a good way!

  • Emotions tend to have more influence over our decisions than our minds. 
  • Negative feelings can lead us into sinful behavior. 
  • Looking to recapture a good feeling can be just as powerful in motivating us to impropriety. 
  • We allow our feelings to come between us and the Lord. 

Anything that separates us from God becomes idolatry. If we are to love the Lord with our hearts, we must allow him to master our feelings. We can love him with our minds and our souls even when we don’t feel like it, but we haven’t fulfilled his command until he is Lord of the bad feelings - anger, lust, resentment – and Lord of what makes us happy. 

Sounds a little overwhelming, doesn’t it? Someone has described this as the number one command for how we should spend our breaths,* so take a deep breath and start loving God with your heart. And soul. And mind.

Every carnal lust in a man's heart is an idol; and whatsoever engrosses the affections, or has more of them than God himself has, or is preferred to him.*

Sunday, May 3, 2026

May 3, 2026

Matthew 9: 28-30 (NIV)
He asked them, “Do you believe that I am able to do this?” “Yes, Lord,” they replied. Then he touched their eyes and said, “According to your faith will it be done to you”; and their sight was restored.

God has a fixed time and an ordained purpose, and He who controls the limits of our lives also determines the time of our deliverance.*

Faith. We walk by it. We are saved by it. Without it, it is impossible to please God. I have faith – I believe that my faith is very strong, in fact – but I still have questions about faith. If I had been one of these blind men and Jesus asked me if I believed he was able to heal me, I would have confidently said, “Yes, I do.” But Jesus would have known that there was more to my answer than that. I would have had faith in his ability to heal me but not so much in whether he would actually do it. Is that wrong? Is that a sign that my faith is weak?

Follow Jesus’ ministry and you will see that he “restored sight to many blind people but not to every blind person he encountered. He healed many lepers but not every leper in Israel. He did his Father’s will.”* That pretty much sums up my philosophy on faith. My faith is not made stronger by believing that Jesus can heal, but by trusting that his failure to heal is his Father’s will and that it serves his purpose; and that his failure to heal does not mean that he has left the building. In Hebrews 13: 5, we are reminded of God’s promise to the Israelites, “Never will I leave you; never will I forsake you.” I believe that we can claim that promise, too.

Perhaps your desire to receive what you want is stronger than your desire for the will of God to be fulfilled.*