• May 29 | A Heart That Turns Back to God
    May 29 2026

    Today’s readings from 2 Chronicles 7–9 and John 11:1–29 invite us to reflect on the posture of repentance and on what it means to continually turn our hearts back toward God. Both passages reveal that spiritual formation often happens through moments of humility, awareness, and renewed dependence on God’s presence rather than through outward performance alone.


    In 2 Chronicles, Solomon dedicates the Temple and the glory of the Lord fills it with overwhelming power and beauty. Yet even in this sacred moment, God speaks about future drifting and gives His people a path back through humility, prayer, seeking His face, and turning from their ways. The passage reminds us that repentance is not merely about failure, but about continually returning our hearts toward God’s presence and leadership.


    In John 11, Mary and Martha face confusion and grief as Lazarus becomes sick and dies before Jesus arrives. Their sorrow reveals the tension between faith and disappointment, yet Jesus continues to draw them toward trust even amid unanswered questions and pain they cannot yet understand. His presence becomes the place where honest faith and deeper dependence are formed.


    Together, these passages invite us to notice where our hearts may be drifting and to remember that God continually welcomes those willing to turn back to Him. They remind us that repentance is not simply a moment of regret, but an ongoing posture of returning our attention, trust, and affection toward the Lord over time.

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • May 28 | Recognizing God in What You’ve Built
    May 28 2026

    Today’s reading from 2 Chronicles 4–6 and John 10:24–42 invites us to notice how easily people can stand near God's work and still miss God's presence. Both passages remind us that spiritual formation includes learning to recognize God’s hand over time, not only in dramatic moments, but also in what has been built, sustained, and fulfilled.


    In 2 Chronicles, Solomon dedicates the Temple and refuses to make the moment only about human achievement. The Temple is beautiful, costly, and significant, but Solomon anchors the entire moment in God’s faithfulness, covenant promise, and presence among His people.


    In John 10, Jesus is questioned by people who want clarity but are unwilling to recognize what His works already reveal. His words and actions point to the Father, yet their assumptions keep them from seeing what is right in front of them.


    Together, these passages invite us to reflect on where we may need to slow down and recognize God’s presence in what has been built around us and within us. They call us to consider how gratitude, humility, and awareness are formed as we learn to see God’s hand in every faithful step.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • May 27 | The Power of Your Story
    May 27 2026

    Today’s reading from 2 Chronicles 1–3 and John 9:24–41 invites us to reflect on how God forms people through wisdom, worship, and personal testimony over time. Both passages highlight the importance of responding honestly to what God reveals and allowing His work to shape not only our understanding, but also our witness.


    In 2 Chronicles, Solomon begins his reign by seeking wisdom from God and preparing to build the Temple, establishing rhythms centered around God’s presence and leadership among His people. These chapters remind us that formation often begins with humility, dependence, and a recognition that wisdom is something received from God rather than manufactured through human effort.


    In John 9, the man who was born blind stands before religious leaders who keep demanding explanations for what happened to him. Yet instead of offering polished arguments, he simply bears witness to the transformation he personally experienced. His testimony becomes a powerful reminder that changed lives often speak more clearly than perfect answers.


    Together, these passages invite us to consider how God continues shaping our lives through both His presence and our lived experiences with Him. They remind us not to overlook the value of our testimony, and to notice how even ordinary moments of honesty, correction, and growth can become part of the story God is writing in us over time.

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • May 26 | Hold It With Open Hands
    May 26 2026

    Today’s reading from 1 Chronicles 28–29 and John 9:24–41 invites us to reflect on the posture of the heart before God and how formation happens over time as we learn to hold our lives with open hands. Both passages call attention to what we value, what we recognize, and how we respond when God reveals something deeper than what appears on the surface.


    In 1 Chronicles, David prepares to build the temple with a generous and willing heart. He gives from his own treasure, invites the leaders to give freely, and then reminds the people that everything they offer has already come from God. The rhythm of giving becomes an act of worship, obedience, and identity.


    In John 9, the man born blind responds with honesty and growing awareness while the religious leaders resist what is right in front of them. His testimony reveals a heart growing more open to the work of Jesus, while their refusal shows how spiritual blindness can persist even when the evidence is clear.


    Together, these passages invite us to notice what our hands and hearts are holding. They ask us to reflect on whether we are living as owners or stewards, whether we are open to God’s work, and whether our lives are slowly being formed by gratitude, trust, and surrender.

    Show More Show Less
    20 mins
  • May 25 | God Remembers Faithfulness
    May 25 2026

    Today’s reading from 1 Chronicles 25–27 and John 9:1–23 invites us to reflect on the importance of remembering, and how God values faithfulness in ways we often overlook. Both passages remind us that spiritual formation happens over time through steady obedience, honest testimony, and lives shaped by awareness of God’s work.


    In 1 Chronicles, we read long lists of names, musicians, gatekeepers, officials, commanders, and servants whose responsibilities helped sustain the worship and life of Israel. While these chapters can seem repetitive at first, they reveal something important about the heart of God. The people who served faithfully, even in ordinary or unseen roles, were remembered and recorded because their lives mattered in the unfolding work of God’s kingdom.


    In John 9, the man born blind continually returns to the simple truth that Jesus changed his life. While others debate, question, and criticize, he refuses to lose sight of what Christ has done for him. His testimony becomes an act of remembrance rooted in gratitude and personal transformation.


    Together, these passages invite us to remember both God's faithfulness and the quiet faithfulness of people who continue to serve Him over time. They remind us that God sees what others overlook, and that lives shaped by steady obedience and gratitude carry lasting significance in His kingdom.

    Show More Show Less
    24 mins
  • May 24 | Preparing for the Future
    May 24 2026

    Today’s reading from 1 Chronicles 22–24 and John 8:28–59 invites us to reflect on what is being formed through the patterns, priorities, and rhythms we consistently pass down over time. Both passages point toward the importance of building lives centered on God rather than allowing other influences to quietly shape what we value most.


    In 1 Chronicles, David prepares Solomon and the leaders of Israel for the future work of building the Temple. Even though David will not personally complete the project, he invests deeply into preparing the next generation to seek the Lord faithfully and to continue the work with wisdom, obedience, and reverence. The passage highlights how spiritual formation often happens long before visible results appear.


    In John 8, Jesus confronts people who claim a spiritual identity through Abraham while resisting the truth that stands directly in front of them. He exposes the difference between inherited religion and genuine surrender to God’s voice. The conversation reveals how deeply the heart can be shaped by either truth or resistance over time.


    Together, these passages invite us to consider what our lives are consistently preparing us and others to pursue. They encourage us to notice the rhythms, priorities, and patterns that quietly shape faith over time, and to reflect on whether God truly remains at the center of what we are building for the future.

    Show More Show Less
    23 mins
  • May 23 | Terms and Conditions: Grace That Changes Us
    May 23 2026

    Today’s readings from 1 Chronicles 19–21 and John 8:1–27 invite us to reflect on the relationship among grace, repentance, and the kind of inner formation God desires over time. Both passages reveal how easily people can drift through pride, failure, or self-protection, while also showing God’s continued invitation toward humility and restoration.


    In 1 Chronicles, David faces the consequences of decisions shaped by fear, pride, and misplaced confidence. The passages reveal the importance of dependence on God rather than control, numbers, or human strength, and they remind us that spiritual formation often happens through honest awareness of our need for God’s mercy and guidance.


    In John 8, Jesus responds to a woman caught in adultery with remarkable grace and restraint. He refuses to condemn her publicly, yet He also calls her toward a transformed life with the words, “Leave your sin behind.” His response holds together both mercy and truth, showing that forgiveness is not permission to remain unchanged, but an invitation into a different direction.


    Together, these passages invite us to slow down and notice how God’s grace meets us honestly. They encourage us to reflect on where repentance, humility, forgiveness, and transformation may still be unfolding quietly within us as we continue learning to walk with Jesus.

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins
  • May 22 | Put God at the Center of Your Praise
    May 22 2026

    Today’s reading from 1 Chronicles 16–18 and John 7:28–53 invites us to notice how God forms His people through presence, praise, and response. Both passages remind us that faith is shaped over time as we learn to recognize where God belongs in our lives and how we respond when He speaks.


    In 1 Chronicles 16, the Ark of God is placed in the tent David prepared, and the people are led into thanksgiving and praise. The moment reminds us that praise is not just a reaction to blessing, but a rhythm that helps keep God’s presence in its rightful place at the center of life.


    In John 7, people respond to Jesus with confusion, resistance, curiosity, and division. Some recognize that His words carry divine authority, while others remain trapped by assumptions and surface-level judgments. Their responses show how easily people can stand near truth and still struggle to receive it.


    Together, these passages invite us to reflect on what is shaping our awareness each day. They call us to consider whether praise is helping us remember God’s goodness, His presence, and His rightful place at the center of our hearts.

    Show More Show Less
    22 mins