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Between the Promise and the Return
Between the Promise and the Return “It is not for you to know times or seasons…” (Acts 1:7) “Men of Galilee, why do you stand looking into heaven?” (Acts 1:11) The disciples stood there staring into the sky, watching Jesus disappear. I imagine they were overwhelmed, hopeful, confused, maybe even a little stunned. And Jesus had already told them something we still struggle to accept: the timing belongs to the Father. We want to know when. When will God move? When will things turn? When will redemption feel closer than disappointment? But heaven’s calendar is not ours to manage. And then the angels gently redirect them: Why are you just standing there? In other words, don’t let hope become passivity. Yes, he is coming back. That is certain. But until then, we are called to pray, to witness, to love, to serve. We look up in hope. Then we step forward in obedience. We don’t control the seasons. We live faithfully within them.
When the Spirit Knows What We Need
This morning, Christy and I are walking through some disappointment. Plans didn’t unfold the way we hoped. Expectations met reality. And in moments like that, it’s easy to lower your head and let discouragement set the tone for the day. That’s why Luke 21:28 felt especially personal this morning in my reading: “Now when these things begin to take place, straighten up and raise your heads, because your redemption is drawing near.” Jesus spoke those words in unsettling times. Instead of telling His followers to panic or withdraw, He spoke about posture. “Straighten up.” “Raise your heads.” When things feel unstable or simply disappointing, our instinct is to hunch over in discouragement. But Jesus calls us to stand differently, to live with expectancy instead of anxiety. Redemption is not just something we look back on at the cross. It is something we look forward to in fullness. There is a day coming when everything fractured will be made whole. So today, we lift our heads not because everything is resolved, but because our Redeemer is near.
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When the Kingdom Is Bigger Than Our Circle
When the Kingdom Is Bigger Than Our Circle In Luke 9:49–50, the disciples tried to stop someone from ministering in Jesus’ name because “he does not follow with us.” Not because he denied Jesus. Not because he opposed the gospel. But because he wasn’t part of their circle. Jesus said, “Do not stop him, for the one who is not against you is for you.” That challenges me. In the church, we will not agree on every secondary issue, including who serves, how they serve, and what that service looks like. We will wrestle with Scripture. We will land on different topics and address difficult ones. But disagreement does not automatically equal opposition to Christ. Sometimes we are more protective of our camp than attentive to the kingdom. As a pastor, I want to help heal, not inflame. I want to hold convictions with humility and remember that Jesus is at work beyond my circle. The kingdom is bigger than our labels. Lord, guard our hearts from pride and insecurity. Keep us faithful to your word and anchored in truth. Where we are right, keep us humble. Where we are wrong, correct us gently. Teach us to recognize your work even when it looks different from what we expect. Protect your church from unnecessary division, and make us people who build up rather than tear down. Give us courage to stand firm and grace to love well. Amen.
Forgiveness Is Our Duty, Not Our Mood
Forgiveness Is Our Duty, Not Our Mood I’ve struggled with the connection between Luke 17:10 and forgiveness. “So you also, when you have done all that you were commanded, say, ‘We are unworthy servants; we have only done what was our duty.’” Jesus had just commanded repeated forgiveness. Then he reminds his disciples that servants simply do their duty. That’s striking. Servants of a king obey regardless of how they feel. They don’t check their emotions before they respond. They act because they belong to the King. Forgiveness works the same way. We don’t forgive when it feels right. We forgive because it is right. We forgive because it is obedience. Feelings may follow later. But obedience comes first.
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Thinking Beyond the Temporary
I join several men from around the country every day on an online Bible study. We are currently working through the Gospel of Luke. This morning I’ve been wrestling with Luke 16:9: “Make friends for yourselves by means of unrighteous wealth, so that when it fails they may receive you into the eternal dwellings.” There is something unsettling about the parable in which this verse is found. Jesus points to a worldly manager who was strategic about his future, even if his motives were flawed. He understood something simple: prepare now for what’s coming. The world is often more strategic about temporary security than believers are about eternal impact. We plan for retirement. We build savings. We insure our homes. We diversify portfolios. We think ahead. But how intentional are we about eternity? How strategic are we about using our resources, influence, time, and opportunities to impact souls? Money will fail. Markets will shift. Positions will disappear. Systems will crumble. But people endure forever. Jesus is not telling us to be dishonest. He is telling us to be wise. If the world can plan aggressively for what won’t last, shouldn’t we plan even more intentionally for what will? Maybe the question isn’t how much we give. Maybe it’s this: Are we as serious about eternal impact as we are about temporary security? That’s been sitting heavy on me. What are your thoughts?
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