Tag: bible
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Overcoming Evil With Good
Living Romans 12 in a Fractured World A Curious Pilgrim Reflection There are passages in Paul’s letter to the Romans that feel almost impossible when we place them beside the realities of modern life. Division. Anger. Political hostility. Religious conflict. Social media outrage. Family wounds. Violence. Loneliness. Fear. And yet Paul writes: “Live in harmony…
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The Word Made Flesh: More Than Words on a Page
Daily Office Readings: Psalm 148 | Exodus 12:1–14 | John 1:1–18 Introduction The Psalmist calls for all humanity to praise the Lord! Exodus 12 celebrates Passover. John describes Jesus as the Logos or the Word. Most Christians consider God’s Word to be the Bible, but I don’t see that, for John 1 tells us the…
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Walking as He Walked — Light Without Labels
4 Scripture Readings: This morning’s reading from I John is both simple and piercing: “Whoever says, ‘I abide in him,’ ought to walk just as he walked.”“Whoever says, ‘I am in the light,’ while hating a brother or sister, is still in the darkness.” John does not give us a complicated theology. He gives us…
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God Comes to Us in Many Different Ways
February 12 — A Life Lesson “Be still, and know that I am God.” — Psalm 46:10 There was a time in my life when I believed God spoke in only one way — through Scripture, through church, through sermons preached from a pulpit. But seventy-six years of living have taught me something different. God…
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Rekindling the Flame When Truth Feels Dim
Daily Office Reflection Psalm 78 • Isaiah 59:1-15a • 2 Timothy 1:1-14 • Mark 9:42-50 There are seasons when faith feels strong in our words but fragile in our daily living. Today’s Daily Office readings speak into that tender place where belief, truth, responsibility, and renewal meet. Together, they remind us that God is not…
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From Fear to Faithfulness
Sin, Assurance, and Covenant Relationship (Hebrews 10 and 1 John) Growing up in the Free Will Baptist Church, I often heard Hebrews 10:26–29 preached with urgency and fear. The message was clear: if you sinned after being saved, you might lose your salvation. The weight of that teaching followed many of us into adulthood—not as…
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When Religion Wounds and Grace Heals
Part Eight: Holiness, Discipline, and the Thirsting Soul A Memory Beneath the Oak Tree Growing up on our Mississippi farm in the 1950s and 60s, mornings came early and quietly. The sun would slowly rise over cotton rows stretching farther than my young eyes could see. There was a massive oak tree near one of…
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When the Mire Became Holy Ground
There are passages of Scripture that do not simply speak to us — they recognize us. Recently, I sat with Psalm 69, Isaiah 56, Galatians 5, and the Transfiguration story in Mark 9. Individually, they speak of struggle, belonging, transformation, and spiritual fruit. Together, they tell a story I have carried much of my life…
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Why Gentle Mysteries Comfort the Faithful Soul
There is a reason some of us return, again and again, to quiet murder mysteries—stories where violence is never celebrated, where the detective listens more than speaks, and where truth is uncovered slowly, respectfully, and at great cost. These stories are not escapism. They are confession. In Midsomer Murders and Miss Marple, we are reminded…