Saturday, April 18, 2026

Road Warriors

Moses did as the Lord commanded him, and the assembly gathered at the entrance to the tent of meeting.

– Leviticus 8:4

Think your daily commute is rough? 

Even if you’ve braved the infamous rush hours in Atlanta, Northern Virginia, New York City, or Los Angeles, count your blessings that you don’t drive in Sao Paulo, Brazil. The average daily commute in that South American metropolis lasts nearly two hours. And on peak periods, such as Friday evenings, traffic jams can stretch 112 miles.

Sao Paulo residents ("Paulistos") cope the best they can as the gridlock consumes their free time. But a sense of helplessness leaves many of these road warriors feeling angry, exhausted, and depressed. This quote from one frazzled commuter says it all:

"I feel useless, like I am a prisoner," complains Andreia de Oliveira, an architect who spends between two and three hours each day going to and from work. "I could be at the gym, studying, at home relaxing. But instead, I am stressed and frustrated."

Maybe you haven’t had to endure that level of bumper-to-bumper traffic. However, it’s likely that at one time or another, you’ve felt like things have spiraled out of control. And perhaps you feel like that today. But believe it or not, God happens to be in control of the situation.

God’s sovereignty over circumstances — and everything else, for that matter — is a fundamental concept every Christ-follower should embrace. But one reason we don't is because we can't see the big picture. We don’t know the life-changing people and situations he’ll introduce to our existence. Likewise, we don’t have his vantage point of knowing what’s around the corner and miles up the road. And obviously, it’s hard for us to see a greater purpose in our lives when we're going through the pain of unemployment, lingering illness, family problems ... and even death. 

It’s amidst such chaos that our Creator delivers this assurance:

"Before I made you in your mother's womb, I chose you,” he proclaims. “Before you were born, I set you apart for a special work. I appointed you as a prophet to the nations."

Have things gone haywire in your life? If not, they will eventually. But don’t lose hope. God cares for each of us and even invites us to be his sons and daughters through a personal relationship with his own Son, Jesus Christ. With this Good News in mind, let’s consider these words of healing and hope from Isaiah 26:3 — a timeless promise of tranquility meant for Christ-followers like you and me:

You will keep in perfect peace those whose minds are steadfast, because they trust in you.


Saturday, April 11, 2026

Dirty Laundry

“And as a penalty they must bring to the priest, that is, to the Lord, their guilt offering, a ram from the flock, one without defect and of the proper value. In this way the priest will make atonement for them before the Lord, and they will be forgiven for any of the things they did that made them guilty.”

– Leviticus 6:6-7

Cleanliness is next to Godliness.

It’s a familiar saying that appears nowhere in the Bible, but many believe it’s the Gospel truth. We start or end most days with a hot shower or bath. We stock our bathrooms with antibacterial soaps. And we buy costly laundry detergents and bleaches promising brilliant whites and vivid colors. It all adds up to a global soap and detergent industry generating combined annual revenues exceeding $280 billion.

Our desire to stay clean seems to be hard-wired into our DNA. But this intense longing covers much more than our face and hands. We also want to be just as clean on the inside. That means a clean heart, a clean conscience, and a clean spirit. And what we want most is a clean start in life.

But in the earliest chapters of the Bible, we read that mankind chose to turn its back on God and do its own thing. We decided to live our lives on our own terms and ignore the One who made us, knows us, and loves us. And by disobeying God, we destroyed our perfect environment and became soiled with a black spot on our souls that the strongest detergent can never remove. 

“Wash away all my iniquity and cleanse me from my sin,” pleaded King David, the one called a man after God’s own heart.

It’s this same plea that we should offer up to God every day. However, access to God is costly, and He’s holy while people are not. The good news is that our Creator long ago responded to our helplessness in a most miraculous way. But it wasn’t by devising some sort of payment plan for all the damage we’ve done to our own lives and to others. The cost was much too high for that.

Instead, God chose to pay the price himself through the death of his only Son, Jesus Christ. So, as predicted centuries earlier in the Old Testament, He came to earth in the form of a helpless infant, grew up, and lived a faultless, sin-free life. Later, He was unjustly executed although He’d done no wrong.

Christ’s crucifixion was grossly unfair. But there was no other way to fully pay the penalty that we alone deserve. He was the perfect sacrifice, who came to earth to make us right with God. For you and me, it means when we put our faith in Jesus as our Savior, God sees us as spotless and blameless like his Son. All we need to do is accept this free — yet incredibly costly — gift of grace.

“I, the LORD, invite you to come and talk it over,” says our Creator through the book of Isaiah. “Your sins are scarlet red, but they will be whiter than snow or wool.”

Now’s the time to wash our dirty laundry ... and come clean with God.


Saturday, April 4, 2026

Elephants and Angels

Then their eyes were opened and they recognized him, and he disappeared from their sight. They asked each other, “Were not our hearts burning within us while he talked with us on the road and opened the Scriptures to us?”

– Luke 24: 31-32

There's an old story about three blindfolded men, who were asked to touch and identify an undisclosed object. And that object happened to be a live African elephant.

The first man touched the elephant's muscular trunk. The second man grasped its boney tale. And the third man — moving his hands across the beast's rugged hide — marveled at the rough texture. Although a 10,000-pound elephant was right in front of them, all three failed to see the big picture.

Many people these days also miss the big picture when it comes to spiritual matters. And that's even true for some long-time Christ-followers. So, to correct this shortsightedness, God has throughout history communicated his message in several ways, including through prophets, Scripture, the Holy Spirit, and of course his Son, Jesus.

God also uses angels to help spread the word. These beings are his special messengers who can appear in broad daylight, remain invisible, or communicate through dreams. The Bible advises us to remain hospitable because we might be entertaining angels without even knowing it.

Angelic messages are much more than words of conversation. Instead, they’re words that change eternity. It's in Luke’s gospel that we read about the angel Gabriel, who told an obscure girl named Mary that she’d soon give birth to the Savior of mankind. In a dream, an angel informed Joseph (Mary's fiancĂ©) that the Holy Spirit had caused her pregnancy. Likewise, angels announced the Good News of Jesus' birth to shepherds, who’d seen a brilliant star in the sky marking the Christ-child’s location in Bethlehem.

It's through these revelations and confirmations that God has opened eyes and healed spiritual blindness — and not just in a tiny village somewhere in the Middle East 2,000 years ago. His big picture message continues to appear today … and unfold to the entire world. 

It's the reality that's right before our eyes. But first, we must be willing to see it. So, here’s the BIG question for you and me: Are we spiritually aware of how Jesus is revealing Himself in both small ways and large? 

That’s the elephant in the room.