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The Paradox of Receptivity and the Cost of Truth
Childlike Faith and Divine Impossibility: A Reflection on 2 Thessalonians 2:1-12 and Luke 18:15-17, 26-30 These passages reveal a single urgent reality: the Kingdom requires childlike receptivity to truth, yet such receptivity demands everything you think you possess—and that surrender is humanly impossible without divine intervention. What You Must Feel and Face Start with the…
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Vigilance Within Ordinary Life
Between Ordinary Life and Cosmic Revelation: A Reflection on 2 Thessalonians 1:10-2:2 and Luke 17:26-37 The Early Expectation and What It Meant The Thessalonians were shaken because they believed the day of the Lord has come. This wasn’t abstract anxiety—they expected the imminent, visible return of Christ and the restoration of all creation. Paul addresses…
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The Kingdom Is Present
Already and Not Yet: A Reflection on 2 Thessalonians 1:1-10 and Luke 17:20-25 The Pharisees ask Christ when the kingdom will arrive—as if it’s a future event they’ll observe from the outside. Christ’s answer cuts through their framework entirely: The kingdom of God is within you. Not coming later. Not “out there” somewhere. Within. But…
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The Fool Who Built Alone
On Divine Architecture and Human Folly: A Reflection on Ephesians 2:14-22 & Luke 12:16-21 The Lord tells of a rich man whose land produced abundantly. He reasoned within himself: “What shall I do, since I have no room to store my crops?” His solution was expansion—tear down the existing barns, build larger ones, store everything,…
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No Looking Back
On Undivided Devotion and the Cost of Following: A Reflection on 2 Corinthians 11:1-6 & Luke 9:57-62 Paul writes to the Corinthians with what he calls “godly jealousy.” He has betrothed them to Christ as a pure virgin to her husband, and now fears they are being seduced away—not through obvious rebellion but through subtle…
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God Finishes What He Starts
On Divine Faithfulness and Human Responsibility: A Reflection on 1 Thessalonians 5:9-13, 24-28 and Luke 16:15-18, 17:1-4 The Lord confronts the Pharisees directly in Luke: “You justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. What is highly esteemed among men is an abomination in the sight of God.” This is the problem Paul addresses…
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When Heaven Dwells on Earth
A Reflection On Today’s Scripture readings: Exodus, 3 Kings, and Ezekiel Three times in Israel’s history, the same pattern manifests. Moses completes the Tabernacle in the wilderness. Solomon finishes the Temple in Jerusalem. Ezekiel sees the restored sanctuary in vision. In each instance, divine glory descends as cloud and fire, filling the sacred space so…
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Act Like It Matters
On Shrewdness and Sobriety: A reflection on 1 Thessalonians 5:1-8 & Luke 16:1-9 The Lord tells a parable in Luke 16 of a steward facing dismissal for incompetence. Recognizing his predicament—too weak for manual labor, too proud to beg—he acts with audacity. He summons his master’s debtors and reduces their obligations, cooking the books on…
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Have We Been Found?
A reflection on 1 Thessalonians 4:1-12 & Luke 15:1-10 Here’s the truth these passages tell together: You you cannot live as being found while pretending you were never lost. The Lord shares table fellowship with tax collectors and sinners in Luke 15. The religious leaders respond with horror: “This man welcomes sinners and eats with…
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Counting the Cost
On Total Devotion and Abounding Love: A Reflection on 1 Thessalonians 3:9-13 & Luke 14:25-3 These passages speak the same truth from opposite directions: Paul reveals love’s overflow as the fruit of costly discipleship; the Lord reveals costly discipleship as the pathway to love’s fullness. The Lord turns to the crowds following Him and speaks…

