Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Yearning for God

How lovely is your dwelling place, Lord Almighty! My soul yearns, even faints, for the courts of the Lord; my heart and my flesh cry out for the living God.
Psalm 84:1–2


Have you ever been so in love with someone that just being near them is a thrill? Suddenly, the places and things connected to that person become precious to you. The house they live in or the scent of their perfume or even the clothes they wear may become precious to you simply because they belong to them. That is how the author of Psalm 84 feels about the Lord. 

Psalm 84 begins with praise for the dwelling place of God. The psalmist says that God’s dwelling place, the temple that Solomon built, is lovely. In fact, his soul yearns and even faints to enter the courts of God’s house. His heart and his flesh cry out for the living God.

Don’t miss that. The psalmist’s desire isn’t to go to church… it’s to go to the place where God is. Yes, Solomon’s temple was glorious, but what the psalmist longs for isn’t pretty buildings or beautiful ceremonies… it’s God Himself. He longs to enter into God’s presence.

During this time in the Old Testament, God’s presence was especially concentrated and located within the temple, in Jerusalem. That was the place God’s people went to meet with God, to enter His presence. And this psalmist is so in love with the Lord that he longs to enter God’s presence in that special place.

Do you? Are you this eager not to come to church and see your friends but to enter into God’s presence… to sing His praise… to bow at His feet in worship? Do you long to get up early and have a personal time of worship with Him?

You see, as modern Christians we have a privilege that this psalmist did not have. He had to travel to Jerusalem to be where God’s presence was specially focused. But we carry God with us everywhere we go. Christians have the Holy Spirit living inside us. We don’t have to go anywhere to meet with Him. All we have to do is quiet ourselves and the noise around us and seek Him. 

But do you desire Him enough to do that? Is God this precious to you? Are you this in love with Him? Do you derive this much joy from His presence? 

For most of us the sad answer is... no. Ask the Lord right now to help you love Him more. Commit, right now, to think more about how precious He is and not to take the privilege of His presence for granted. Stir your love for Him by setting aside a regular time to spend alone with Him. And don’t just read your Bible during that time, but spend a portion of it simply loving and worshiping your God. 

Wednesday, February 18, 2026

Do You Have a Reservation?

Then I saw a great white throne and him who was seated on it. The earth and the heavens fled from his presence, and there was no place for them. And I saw the dead, great and small, standing before the throne, and books were opened. Another book was opened, which is the book of life. The dead were judged according to what they had done as recorded in the books. The sea gave up the dead that were in it, and death and Hades gave up the dead that were in them, and each person was judged according to what they had done. Then death and Hades were thrown into the lake of fire. The lake of fire is the second death. Anyone whose name was not found written in the book of life was thrown into the lake of fire.
Revelation 20:11–15


One day you will stand before God and be judged for what you have done in life. But nothing you say or do is as important as this one detail that fixes your eternal destiny. That detail is whether your name is written in the Lamb's Book of Life or not. 

Scripture tells us that those whose name is not written in the Book of Life, those who never placed their faith in Jesus, will be cast into the Lake of Fire. But all who have believed in Jesus have their names written in this book, and on Judgement Day they will be declared innocent on account of His atoning death and will ushered into eternal life. 

Revelation chapters 21 and 22 tell us that this world will pass away. And God will make a new heaven and a new earth. And the Heavenly City, Jerusalem, will come down from heaven to this new earth. And that is where Jesus’ throne will be. Believers won’t spend eternity in some spiritual place, sitting on clouds and playing harps. No! Our great hope is a physical resurrection and eternal life lived on this new heaven and new earth. Our great hope is dwelling with the Lord in paradise… in a place with no mourning, no crying, no pain, no poverty and no death. There we will have an eternity to spend with Jesus, reigning over God’s creation for His glory.

The question I have for you is this: Are you sure you will be there? Do you believe in Jesus? Have you accepted Him as Lord of your life? Are you certain that your name is written in the Lamb’s Book of Life? If not, then confess your sins; put your faith in Jesus' atoning death and resurrection for the forgiveness of your sins; and make Him Lord of your life today.

If you declare with your mouth, “Jesus is Lord,” and believe in your heart that God raised him from the dead, you will be saved.
Romans 10:9

Wednesday, February 11, 2026

All the Promises of God

For no matter how many promises God has made, they are “Yes” in Christ. And so through him the “Amen” is spoken by us to the glory of God.
2 Corinthians 1:20


Jesus fulfills all the promises of God... but He does so in a way that no one expected. What God’s people seem to have expected was a human Messiah who would establish an earthly kingdom. They expected Him to be a great warrior who would defeat Rome and return Israel to power. And they, no doubt, thought he would establish a great dynasty and that His descendants would reign after him in a never-ending succession. That’s what God’s people seem to have expected... but that’s not what they got. That’s not what Jesus was.

Jesus was born in a stable. He was laid in a manger. His birth was attended by shepherds. And He was almost killed by Rome before He even reached adolescence. His family fled to Egypt for a time. Then when Jesus did return, He didn't live in Jerusalem or even Bethlehem where David was raised. No, He lived in the small and insignificant town of Nazareth. Jesus wasn’t noble or highly educated; He was a carpenter’s son. And for 30 years, as best we can tell, that’s all Jesus was… was a carpenter from Nazareth. For 30 years of Jesus’ life, the biblical story didn’t really move forward in any significant way.

Then, when Jesus did start His ministry in earnest, He didn’t raise an army, or ascend the throne. He became a homeless, itinerant preacher. And when He began calling disciples, they weren’t the kinds of disciples God’s people expected. Jesus didn’t call any of the Pharisees or religious leaders to be His disciples. No, He called fisherman and a political zealot and a tax collector… common folks to be His disciples. And the message that He preached was often spoken in parables and riddles. And He seemed to reserve His harshest judgment not for tax collectors or prostitutes but for the religious leaders. Indeed, Jesus was said to be a friend of sinners!

But He did have special power, didn't He? Jesus performed many mighty miracles. He healed the sick and gave sight to the blind. He made the lame walk and raised the dead! But even this was mostly met with disapproval from the religious leaders because Jesus often healed on the Sabbath day which was unexpected.

Jesus lived and ministered in this way for about three and a half years. He wasn’t the Messiah God’s people had expected. He was a king... but not in an earthly sense. He came to establish a spiritual kingdom not a physical one. He never sat on a throne on earth. Nor did He defeat Israel’s enemies. In fact, He never fought at all. Instead, He willingly suffered!

And that was perhaps the most surprising development of all. After about three and a half years, the religious leaders conspired to kill Jesus. They arrested Him and put Him on trial and begged the Romans to crucify Him. None of this was what God’s people were expecting… and yet, it is what God had promised! 

Understand that Jesus did all of this for you. He was the surprising answer to all our problems, to all our needs, and to all the promises of God. The entire biblical story leads up to Him. And if you don’t know Him, if your life isn’t fully and completely centered around Him… then you are missing the point of the story.

Fix your eyes on Jesus. It’s all about Him! And without Him, you will never be what you ought to be.

Wednesday, February 4, 2026

Have You Wearied the Lord?

You have wearied the Lord with your words. “How have we wearied him?” you ask. By saying, “All who do evil are good in the eyes of the Lord, and he is pleased with them” or “Where is the God of justice?”
Malachi 2:17


Have you ever been wearied by someone’s words? Maybe you have a friend or a spouse who is a talker and it just wears you out? In these verses, Malachi tells God's people that God feels that way about them! Only, it wasn’t that they were talking too much. It was what they were saying that wearied the Lord. 

God's people were attacking the very character of God! They said “God is pleased with those who do evil.” They asked “Where is the God of justice?" They wanted God to make the wicked pay. They wanted Him to punish their enemies and bless them.

Can you relate? Do you ever feel like the wicked are prospering? Does it seem to you that God either doesn’t care or doesn’t see what the wicked are doing? If so, then maybe you too have questioned God’s justice.

Judah would soon learn the error of their ways. They would soon learn that wickedness wasn’t just a problem out there… among the pagan nations. It was also a serious problem within their own hearts. But they couldn’t see it because they had grown blind to their own sin. That’s how Judah ended up calling for judgment, when it desperately needed mercy.

There are lessons we can learn here. First, never attack God’s character or question His justice. Who are you to sit in judgment of the Almighty God?! Your perspective is far too limited to evaluate His justice. You barely see your own sin, you have no right to tell Him how to judge the sins of others.

And second, before you cry out for God’s judgment to fall on the wicked, you better make sure you aren’t counted among them. Often, you and I would be better off begging God for mercy and a changed heart, than calling for judgment.