Tagged: daily bread

“FREE INDEED”

“What do you mean by saying, ‘You will be free’?” –John 8:33 This is what Jesus means by saying: “You will be free.” When you accept Jesus as your Lord and Savior on His terms: You are free to “rejoice with inexpressible joy” (1 Pt 1:8), which “no one can take from you” (Jn 16:22). You are free to enter into the throne room of God, drawing near to Him (Heb 12:22-24) with confidence and awe. You are free from the fear of death (Heb 2:15). No threat can manipulate you to renounce God (Dn 3:16-18). You are free from...

THE FATHER’S MOUTHPIECE

“I say only what the Father has taught Me.” –John 8:28 Jesus only said what the Father taught Him (Jn 8:28). Jesus spent a lot of time being taught by His Father. He arose early to listen to His Father (Mk 1:35), stayed up very late to be with Him (Lk 6:12), and spent forty days in the desert to hear His Father’s plans for His public ministry (Mt 4:1ff). Jesus only told us what He heard from His Father (Jn 8:26). In fact, Jesus mentioned that the Father “has commanded Me what to say and how to speak” (Jn...

OH, SUSANNA!

” ‘I am completely trapped,’ Susanna groaned…’Yet it is better for me to fall into your power without guilt than to sin before the Lord.’ ” –Daniel 13:22, 23 We need many more Susannas in our culture of death. These Susannas will refuse to compromise with the sinful ways of the world, the flesh, and the devil. They will “live by the Spirit” (Gal 5:25) and defeat the temptations of the devil through the Spirit working within them (Gal 5:17). These Susannas will have an indefatigable hope, which will never leave them disappointed (Rm 5:5). They will trust in the...

THE VICTIM-VICTOR

“They were posing this question to trap Him, so that they could have something to accuse Him of.” –John 8:6 Jesus saved an adulteress from being executed (Jn 8:1ff). He made sure that justice was not done. In doing this, He did nothing for the victims of the adulteress’ sin-crime. Jesus seems to have disregarded the broken hearts of the spouse or spouses cheated on, the disturbed and confused families traumatized by the adultery, and the moral climate of that society further warped by sin. Jesus’ mercy to the adulteress seems unjust to, and even merciless to, her victims. However,...

IN THE NICK OF TIME?

“One of their own number, Nicodemus (the man who had come to Him), spoke up to say, ‘Since when does our law condemn any man without first hearing him and knowing the facts?’ ” –John 7:50-51 In John’s Gospel, Nicodemus is introduced as “a member of the Jewish Sanhedrin” who came to Jesus at night (Jn 3:1-2). Later, Nicodemus is referred to more briefly and discreetly as “the man who had come to [Jesus]” (Jn 7:50). After Jesus’ death, Nicodemus came to bury Jesus and is again referred to as “the man who had first come to Jesus at night”...