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Day 139: The Cycle of Recycled Revenge (2 Samuel 19-21)
In 2 Samuel 19–21, the kingdom feels trapped in what Coldplay called “a cycle of recycled revenge.” But Jesus, the Son of David, offers a better way: reconciliation instead of retaliation, peace instead of score-settling.
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Day 137: My Father is Peace (2 Samuel 18:33)
But even in the wailing, Scripture whispers a deeper truth: the Father of Peace has not abandoned us.
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Day 135: When Doing Nothing Costs You Everything
Sometimes the greatest danger in leadership is not making the wrong decision. It’s refusing to make one at all.
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Day 127: Gimme Six Steps (2 Samuel 6)
Why did David stop after six steps when bringing the ark to Jerusalem? Fear? Reverence? Or something else entirely?
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Day 124: Wazzup With Uzzah? (1 Chronicles 13-16)
When we forget the holiness of God, we start to believe our instincts are safer than His commands. That’s a deadly mistake.
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Day 123: My Favorite Hebrew Word (Psalm 107:43)
The Bible has a word for a love that doesn’t quit because it’s been promised—a covenant love God swore by Himself, and will never break.
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Day 121: Men of Isaachar (1 Chronicles 12:32)
Issachar only brought 200 men—but they “understood the times” and knew what Israel should do. Scripture never criticizes their small number, because discernment made the difference. A few who see clearly can stand beside thousands who don’t.
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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 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 330: What to Make of Mars Hill? (Acts 17:18-34)
Paul’s sermon on Mars Hill is often celebrated as a master class in cultural engagement. Yet the results in Athens were modest, and Paul’s own later reflections suggest he learned something there about the limits of brilliance and the surpassing power of Christ crucified. Acts 17 reminds us that contextualization matters—but only Jesus saves.
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Day 328: How to Read Galatians
Galatians isn’t a polite theological essay—it’s a pastoral emergency. Paul writes with fire in his pen because the churches he planted are trading grace for performance. This guide will help you read Galatians the way it was meant to be read: urgent, focused, and anchored in the freedom Christ has won for us.
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Day 327: A Gentile, a Slave, and a Woman Walk into a Church… (Acts 16)
Paul grew up praying a Jewish blessing thanking God he’s not a Gentile, slave, or woman—then the Spirit sends him to Philippi to meet exactly those three. God has a sense of humor.














