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Day 036: Exodus 21 and the Value of Life Before Birth
Does Exodus 21 treat the unborn child as something less than a full life? A careful reading of this ancient case law—read as law, not as a slogan—shows how Scripture weighs harm, responsibility, and justice when violence endangers life before birth.
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Day 039: How Exodus 29 Foreshadows Communion
The priests were not just preparing a sacrifice; they were preparing a meal. They were commanded to eat the very flesh through which atonement had been made for them—a stunning foreshadowing of the Lord’s Supper.
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Day 038: When “Close Enough” Isn’t Good Enough (Exodus 25-27)
Grace covers our failures, but it never excuses careless preparation. When God’s people prepared a place for His presence in the wilderness, they brought their very best—because they knew He was worth it.
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Day 031: What if They Won’t Listen? (Exodus 4:1)
Through the Bible: Exodus 4-6
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Day 029: A Grievous Mourning by the… Egyptians? (Genesis 50:7-11)
When Jacob’s sons returned to Canaan to bury their father, the people of the land assumed they were Egyptians. In less than a generation, God’s people had become indistinguishable from the culture around them—a quiet warning about how easily freedom can forget its true home.
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Day 027: Silver in the Sack (Genesis 43:23)
Through the Bible: Genesis 43-45
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Day 022: The Speckled Flock Before the Throne (Genesis 31:10-12)
Jacob’s flock was never uniform—striped and spotted, mottled and mismatched. And neither is the flock God is gathering for Himself. From scheming patriarchs to saints and sinners, from every tribe and tongue and nation, God is forming one people by one voice. What we glimpse imperfectly now, we will one day see clearly before the…
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Day 021: The Despised and Rejected Bride (Genesis 29)
Leah never wanted to be the patron saint of the unloved. She was despised not because she was cruel or faithless, but because she was not someone else.
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Day 019: Why the Oldest Saints Get the Toughest Tests (Gen. 22:1)
Genesis 22 reminds us that God’s hardest tests do not come at the beginning of faith, but after a lifetime of quiet obedience. Abraham’s willingness to offer Isaac was not a reckless act, but the fruit of decades of trust in God. The Lord does not test His people to make them fail, but to…
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Day 018: Seeing the God Who Sees You (Genesis 16-18)
Hagar—an Egyptian slave, an outcast, a single mother—does something no one else in Scripture dares to do: she names God. She calls Him El-Roi, the God who sees her. And in that naming, we discover a God who not only sees the unseen, but who welcomes being known by them.
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Day 017: Guys, We Need to Talk About Genesis 17:23
Are you willing to trust God with the deepest, most vulnerable part of you?
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Day 016: Abram the Crosser-Over
The first time Abram is called “the Hebrew,” the Bible isn’t naming his ethnicity so much as his story. He is the crosser-over—the man who passed out of death and into promise. And in Genesis 15, we discover that the God who calls us to cross is also the God who crosses for us.
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Day 015: Great Physician or Bad Doctor? (Job 42:3)
When pain comes—unexpected, sharp, and unwelcome—it’s easy to question God’s goodness. Like a child accusing a doctor after a painful shot, we sometimes mistake suffering for betrayal. At the end of Job, God doesn’t explain the pain away; he reorients us to trust the One who holds the needle—and bears the scars.
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Day 014: Why Does Job Mention Greek Constellations? (Job 38:31-32)
When God speaks to Job out of the whirlwind, He suddenly points to the stars—naming the Pleiades, Orion, and the Mazzaroth. Those familiar names open a window into how God’s unchanging Word is faithfully translated so each generation can understand it.










