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Day 083: Obedience is Painful, Disobedience is Deadly (Joshua 5:8-9)
What we try to keep from God, God will expose. But what we entrust to Him, He will protect.
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Day 114: The Sweet Redemption of the Sons of Korah (Psalm 84)
The sons of Korah came from a legacy of privilege, pressure, and rebellion—but their story didn’t end in judgment. Generations later, they were still serving in God’s house, not with resentment, but with joy. Psalm 84 shows us the beauty of a heart that has learned to trade comparison for contentment and pride for praise.
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Day 110: Up to Jerusalem (Psalm 121, 123-125, 128-130)
The Psalms of Ascent trace a journey—through distress, trust, and triumph—and remind us that whether we are climbing toward God or waiting for Him to come to us, there is a song for every step.
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Day 094: The Nazirite and the Nazarene (Judges 13-15)
Samson and Jesus could not be more different. And yet, in one surprising sense, Samson still points us to Christ: a promised son, announced before birth, who would begin to save God’s people.
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Day 089: Making Sense of the Cycles in Judges (Judges 1-2)
The book of Judges is thrilling, violent, tragic, and painfully repetitive. But Judges is not just Israel’s sin. It is God’s mercy.
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Day 087: Joshua and Yeshua (Joshua 19-21)
How the Old Testament Joshua foreshadows Jesus.
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Day 085: Caleb’s Different Spirit (Joshua 14:11-12)
At eighty-five, Caleb does not ask for comfort. He asks for a mountain full of giants. His bold faith reminds us how much the church still needs older saints with a different spirit, ready to trust God for one more battle.
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Day 084: Sovereign Through Our Mistakes (Joshua 10:42)
Joshua made a costly mistake—and God still used it to accomplish His purposes. What if your worst regret isn’t the end of the story, but part of what God is redeeming?
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Day 079: Does God Really Delight in the Destruction of His People? (Deuteronomy 28:45-47)
When Scripture stretches our theology, it may also be revealing something deeper about both God’s justice and our own stubborn hearts.












