A Personal Journal of Grace and Discipleship
“I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God,who loved me and gave himself for me.” - Galatians 2:20
From the blog
The Exchanged Life: Finding Freedom and Wholeness Through Spirituotherapy
In a world filled with competing counseling models, it’s not uncommon to find contrasting views on what “biblical” or “Christian” counseling truly means. Searching for answers can feel overwhelming, and the terms alone—“biblical counseling” versus “Christian counseling”—can spark endless debates on how, or whether, secular counseling methodologies fit within a Christian framework.
Christ—The Holy and Trustworthy Gift
Today’s devotional explores the rich meaning behind Acts 13:34-35, where Paul presents the resurrected Christ not just as Savior or the firstborn Son of God, but as the fulfillment of “the holy and faithful things of David.” These aren’t abstract theological terms—they’re deeply relational. The resurrected Jesus is God’s personal gift to us, the holy and trustworthy One, through whom all God’s promises and mercies are poured into our lives. The original Greek makes this even more vivid, describing Jesus as the sum of all the “holy things” and “sure things” God promised.
Galatians 1
Paul doesn’t open Galatians with a gentle word of encouragement, like he often does. Instead, his heart breaks over how quickly these believers have drifted. This isn’t about them getting a few details wrong—it’s about them abandoning the gospel altogether by adding human requirements to what God had already finished. Paul is quick to affirm that his message didn’t originate from man. He wasn’t repeating secondhand ideas from the apostles in Jerusalem. He had received the gospel straight from Jesus Christ Himself.
The Gospel Cannot Be Altered
The Grace and Truth Study Bible reveals the urgency behind Paul's tone in Galatians: the gospel was under threat—not by open rebellion, but by distortion. False teachers, known as Judaizers, were not denying Christ outright, but they were claiming that faith in Christ needed to be supplemented by works of the law—specifically circumcision. Paul would not tolerate such compromise. His love for the Galatians, and his fidelity to the pure gospel entrusted to him by direct revelation from Jesus Christ, compelled him to speak with clarity and force.
From Unbelief to Illumination
Luke 24 moves through a crescendo of evidence and revelation, beginning with an empty tomb, then unfolding into physical appearances of Jesus, and finally culminating in the disciples’ understanding of Scripture as fulfilled in Christ. The women at the tomb come with grief and spices but leave with perplexity and angelic news: “He is not here, but has risen.” Yet, even with the empty tomb and angelic reminder of Jesus’ words, the Eleven remain uncertain—showing us that signs and facts alone do not birth belief.
More Than a Concept—A New Reality
E. Stanley Jones draws a line in the sand with this reflection: either being “in Christ” is a lofty theological idea or it’s a living, breathing reality. If it’s just theology—a philosophy, a system of ethics—we’re left with good views but no transforming power. But if it’s reality, if it’s fact, then it doesn’t merely inform our intellect—it radically reorients our lives.
Another Alternative
Today’s devotional confronts two extremes that the church has often chosen in response to the world: retreat or dominance. One shrinks back from a fear of contamination; the other attempts to overpower the world out of fear of being overwhelmed. But Jesus offers a third way—neither withdrawal nor dominance, but influence through love. He calls us to step into a broken world as He did, not by separating from it or conquering it, but by entering it with the self-giving pattern of His life.
The Joy That Walks Within Me
Today’s entry from Days of Heaven on Earth invites us into the kind of joy that doesn’t wait for good news or good feelings. A.B. Simpson challenges us to rejoice in the Lord always, even when there’s no felt joy or visible reason for celebration. Rejoicing becomes not just a response to circumstances but a declaration of faith—a bold, trusting proclamation that says, “I know who holds me.” It’s not about manufacturing emotional highs but about continually aligning our hearts with the unchanging goodness of God.
Even More on the Resurrection and Sanctification
Paul’s longing in Philippians 3:10 wasn’t about chasing spiritual experiences or acquiring theological head knowledge—it was about knowing Jesus more deeply, more personally, more fully. And the arenas through which that kind of knowing deepens? They aren’t always what we might expect. They include the power of His resurrection (life out of death), the fellowship of His sufferings (walking with Him in hard places), and being conformed to His death (entrusting ourselves entirely to the Father as Christ did on the cross).
The Friend of the Bridegroom
Oswald Chambers brings a timely reminder for anyone who walks closely with others on their spiritual journey: We are not the center of anyone’s story—not even our own. He draws from John the Baptist’s words, “He must become greater; I must become less,” and reminds us of the joyful role of the friend of the bridegroom. Our greatest joy is not in being needed or admired, but in seeing others gripped by Christ, regardless of how painful the process might appear to us.
Pattern of Mercy
Romans 9:23 refers to us as vessels of mercy—not just recipients, but carriers, patterns, living testimonies of the boundless compassion of God. We are not polished trophies of self-made righteousness. We are containers, once cracked and emptied, now filled and repurposed by His mercy alone.
Not Sinning Because of God's Life Within Us
Today’s eManna devotional reminds us of the holiness of the life we now possess in Christ. After salvation, we are not merely forgiven—we are made new and given a new life that is incapable of sin. Just as Jesus told the woman caught in adultery to “go and sin no more,” His command reflects not an impossible standard, but a life-altering truth: God's own life has been placed within us, and that life does not sin. It’s not that we try harder to avoid sin, but that we now have the Holy One living in us, whose very nature is incompatible with sin.
The Hand of the Lord Upon Him
Ezra 7 introduces us to Ezra the man—an extraordinary figure who embodies both priestly lineage and God-empowered leadership. Although he had not been part of the original return to Jerusalem decades earlier, Ezra was raised in Babylon and emerged as a faithful student and teacher of the Law. The passage takes us on his four-month, perilous journey to Jerusalem under the reign of Artaxerxes I, where he arrives not merely as a religious reformer, but as a man commissioned by God and sanctioned by the Persian king to restore justice, spiritual order, and understanding of God’s Word among the people.
When Pride Falls and Peace Rises: The End of Self-Exaltation in Light of God’s Glory
Ezekiel 28 paints a vivid portrait of pride’s deception and downfall, initially aimed at the king of Tyre but layered with symbolic depth that also reveals Satan’s original rebellion. The king had exalted himself in his heart, believing that his wisdom, success, and beauty made him godlike. Yet God exposes the lie: the king is no god. His wealth and skill only magnified his pride, not his true value. Through rhetorical questions, poetic lament, and divine accusation, the Lord peels back the facade of earthly splendor to show that arrogance leads to devastation.
The Silence of Suffering
The sorrowful tone of Job 30 stands in sharp contrast to the honor and intimacy with God Job described in the previous chapter. Here, the music shifts into a mournful key as Job pours out his anguish. He has been cast down in the eyes of the very people he once helped—young men mock him, the lowest of the low despise him, and suffering has undone his dignity. This chapter unveils the world turned upside down: the wicked sit in power while the righteous suffer unjustly. Job’s situation echoes the pattern we see throughout Scripture—God's faithful servants are often misunderstood, mistreated, and rejected.
Approved in Christ
In the closing verses of Romans, Paul shares greetings to several believers, but behind each greeting lies a glimpse into what he values most—our life and identity in Christ. He notes that Andronicus and Junias were in Christ before him, and that fact alone seems to mark them as precious in his heart. Paul isn't caught up in comparing achievements or gifts; the supreme mark of value is simply being “in Christ.” He reflects on his past, lamenting the wasted years spent outside of Christ, and holds up those who were in Christ before him as truly blessed.
The Great Motive
Paul’s words in Philippians 3:12 reveal the burning desire that fueled his life: to lay hold of all that Christ had in mind when He first laid hold of Paul. This wasn’t a statement of dissatisfaction with Christ but of a heart awakened to deeper fellowship and purpose. Paul had tasted the richness of knowing Christ and longed to experience more of Him—not only the power of resurrection but also the fellowship found in suffering. His great motive was not to attain perfection but to allow Christ to fully express His purpose through him.
Not Raised, But Resurrected
Scripture: “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away. Behold, the new has come!”— 2 Corinthians 5:17 BSB
A.B. Simpson draws a sharp but often overlooked distinction between what it means to be “raised” versus “resurrected.” His point isn’t just about semantics—it’s about the very foundation of the Gospel. Human philosophies and self-improvement ideologies want to elevate the old self, polishing the flesh and lifting it to a higher moral level. But the Gospel doesn’t decorate the tomb—it empties it.
More on the Resurrection and Sanctification
Paul wasn’t driven by a desire to achieve personal excellence—he had already laid down his accolades and background in exchange for something of infinitely greater value: knowing Jesus Christ. For him, everything else was expendable when compared to the excellence of knowing his Lord. This “knowing” wasn’t merely intellectual; it was a life of ever-deepening intimacy, a relational union with Christ that was experienced through both resurrection life and suffering.
🌿 The Struggle with Worldliness
Chambers reminds us that the real war against worldliness doesn’t begin until we are born of the Spirit. Before that, we simply live from the flesh without conflict. But when the Spirit of God indwells us, a battle emerges—not one we are asked to win by effort, but one we are called to surrender in. Paul said the answer is to walk by the Spirit, and in doing so, the desires of the flesh will not be fulfilled. Chambers confronts the notion that worldliness is merely about external behavior; rather, it is often seen in jealousy, defensiveness, irritability, and the instinct to justify ourselves when confronted by truth.
🕊️ The Didache – Chapter 16: Watchfulness; The Coming of the Lord
The final chapter of The Didache is a powerful call to spiritual watchfulness. Believers are urged to remain ready—keeping their lamps lit and their hearts girded—because the exact hour of the Lord’s return is unknown. This chapter anticipates increasing deception, false prophets, and a growing coldness of love in the last days. But it also holds promise: those who endure in faith will be saved. Signs will precede Christ’s coming—cosmic signs, the sound of the trumpet, and the resurrection of the saints. Above all, the chapter echoes Jesus’ own teachings: remain alert, live in readiness, and set your hope on His return.