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Friday, March 6, 2026

God Sends but Hearts Resist

 

Readings 030626 

God sends each of us into the world with a purpose—
to love,
to serve,
to build,
to protect,
to forgive.
But Scripture shows that the moment God sends, something rises to resist.

Joseph is sent by his father,
and jealousy meets him on the road.
The servants are sent into the vineyard,
and violence meets them at the gate.
The Father sends His Son,
and the world rejects Him on Calvary.

Yet the sending is never the problem.
The heart that receives is the struggle.

Joseph’s brothers cannot bear the grace given to another.
The tenants cannot accept that the vineyard is not theirs.
And we, too, hold back from the mission placed in our hands—
slowed by fear,
by comparison,
by the weight of the world.

Still, God keeps sending.
He sends Joseph to save his family.
He sends the Son to redeem the world.
And He sends us—
into our marriages,
our families,
our workplaces,
our communities—
to bear the fruit only we can bear.

The stone rejected becomes the cornerstone.
The brother betrayed becomes a source of life.
The Son killed becomes our salvation.

And God can take every rejection,
every wound,
every dry cistern,
and turn it into grace—
if we let Him send us again.

Notice where God may be sending you—

quietly, steadily—

into a place you’ve been hesitant to go.

Prayer

Lord, 

When You send me, 

make my heart ready.
Let jealousy fall, and fear lose its grip.
Steady my steps 

when resistance rises.
Give me courage 

to walk the road You place before me.
Shape my life to bear the fruit only I can bear.

And send me again, Lord—

where Your love is waiting to be found.

Amen


Thursday, March 5, 2026

The Only Strength That Lasts

Readings 030526 

When I was young, I wanted to be a great athlete.
A football player.
Coaches pushed us hard,
and we pushed ourselves harder,
hungry for something more.

Some guys went further than the rest—

 


steroids, hormones, drugs—
anything to get stronger, faster, bigger.
They followed the loudest voices,
the heroes they admired,
the expectations they thought they had to meet.

And the truth is—
the world hasn’t changed much.
We still chase false prophets:
influencers, celebrities, politicians—
anyone who promises power, success, belonging.
We still look for strength in the flesh.
We still trust the wrong voices.

But Jeremiah warns us:
trust in human strength,
and you become a barren bush in the desert—
no fruit, no life,
just dry ground and empty promises.

Trust in the Lord,
and you become a tree planted by water—
roots deep, leaves green,
steady in heat,
fruitful even in drought.

Jesus shows us the same truth
in the rich man and Lazarus.
One trusted comfort and status.
The other had nothing but God.
And in the end,
the one who looked strong was empty,
and the one who looked weak was carried by angels.

The human heart is twisted,
easily deceived.
Only God can probe it.
Only God can heal it.

So the question becomes simple:
Where am I still chasing strength in the flesh?
Whose voice am I following?

Because God is still planting trees beside living water.
He is still calling us out of the desert
and into a trust that bears real fruit—
fruit that lasts.

And He is still
the only One
worth following.

Prayer

Lord, 

Turn my heart from voices 

that promise strength 

but leave me empty.
Plant me by Your water, 

where my roots rest in You.
Keep me steady in the heat, 

away from false prophets.
Help me hear Your voice 

above all others.
Lift my eyes from self‑reliance to Your mercy.
Teach me to trust only You.
Amen.