Monday, April 6, 2026

From Parroting to Understanding

 From Parroting to Understanding

It’s easy to repeat something that sounds right.

Especially when it comes from someone we respect.

Maybe a teacher, a preacher, or just a good friend. They say something confidently, it makes sense in the moment, and before long we find ourselves saying the same thing to someone else.

No bad intent. No deception.

Just… passing it along.

I’ve done it too.

Recently, I started thinking about the word “Easter.” I had always heard that it came from a pagan source and that its meaning was deeply rooted in something unbiblical. I repeated that idea without really digging into it myself.

But when I slowed down and looked closer, I realized something important:

The connection isn’t as clear or as proven as it’s often presented.

That doesn’t mean people are trying to mislead. Most of the time, they’re doing the exact same thing I was doing—repeating something they were taught by someone they trust.

And that’s where the real issue shows up.

Not in the word itself.

But in the way we sometimes handle truth.

The Bible actually warns us about getting caught up in things that sound important but don’t build anything solid. Paul repeatedly steered people away from arguments that only produced confusion and pulled attention away from what really matters.

And this is one of those areas where that wisdom applies.

It’s possible to spend so much time chasing the origins of words, traditions, and names that we lose sight of the message those things are supposed to point to.

At some point, we have to ask:

Am I repeating something… or do I actually understand it?

That question doesn’t lead to pride—it leads to humility.

Because the truth is, we’ve all “parroted” something at one time or another.

But growth begins when we’re willing to pause, re-examine, and line things up with what is actually true—not just what is commonly said.

This doesn’t mean we become skeptical of everything or critical of everyone.

It means we become more careful.

More grounded.

More focused on what really matters.

Words can have histories. Traditions can have layers. But not everything tied to a questionable origin carries the meaning people assume it does.

And not everything worth knowing is found in a quick explanation.

So instead of reacting, repeating, or arguing, we take a better path:

We learn.

We test.

We grow.

And in doing so, we move from simply repeating things we’ve heard…

to actually understanding what is true.

By the way about the word Easter used in Acts 12: 1-5 most likely likely comes from an old term like Eostre (a spring-related name in early English/Germanic usage). But here’s the key:

👉 That connection is historically debated and not clearly proven the way it’s often presented.

Meanwhile:

  • The New Testament word is Pascha (Passover)
  • Most languages still use a form of that (Pascha, Pascua, etc.)

So what happened?

  • English took a different linguistic path
  • Not necessarily a theological one

Saturday, April 4, 2026

The Mercy Hidden Inside the Law

There’s a common thought that the Mosaic Law was harsh, rigid—even heartless.

At first glance, it can look that way. Commands, judgments, consequences—it feels strict. But that surface reading misses something deeper. It misses the heart behind it.

Because the Law was never meant to be cold.

It was meant to be careful.

God wasn’t building a system of control. He was establishing a society where justice and mercy could live together without one destroying the other.

One of the clearest examples of this is the cities of refuge.

If a man accidentally caused someone’s death, he could flee to one of these cities. There, he would be protected from immediate retaliation. He wouldn’t be handed over to anger or revenge. Instead, he would receive a fair hearing. His intent would be examined. Truth would matter.

That’s not a heartless law.

That’s a law slowing things down so that justice is not hijacked by emotion.

Without something like this, the strong would dominate the weak. Revenge would replace righteousness. And decisions would be made in the heat of the moment instead of in the light of truth.

God built protection into the system.

Not just for the innocent—but for the process of justice itself.

This helps us understand something important: the problem was never the Law. The problem was how people handled it.

Some turned it into a checklist. Others used it as a weapon. Still others twisted it to serve their own interests. But that misuse doesn’t reveal a flaw in the Law—it reveals a flaw in the human heart.

The Law always carried weightier matters within it: justice, mercy, and faithfulness.

That’s why later, when Jesus confronted the religious leaders, He didn’t discard the Law. He exposed how they had lost its center. They were careful with the smallest details, but careless with the things that mattered most.

In doing so, they made the Law feel heavy and burdensome—when it was actually designed to protect, guide, and reflect the character of God.

The same tension shows up in places we might not expect.

Think about an old western lawman. He enforces the law, stands by it, and believes in it. But there are moments when he sees someone trying to use the law for selfish gain or injustice. In those moments, he doesn’t abandon the law—he upholds what the law was meant to accomplish in the first place.

That’s the difference.

Righteousness isn’t just about following rules. It’s about refusing to let what is right be used in the wrong way.

The Law was never meant to crush people.

It was meant to guard life, establish truth, and make room for mercy.

And when we begin to see it that way, something changes.

We stop reading it as a list of restrictions and start seeing it as a reflection of God’s character.

Careful.

Just.

Merciful.

And always aligned with truth.

Thursday, April 2, 2026

“Ye Are Gods?” — A Quiet Rebuke Hidden in Plain Sight

There are moments in Scripture where Jesus says something that seems confusing at first—but when you slow down, it becomes incredibly precise.

One of those moments is when He responds to the Pharisees by quoting:

“Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?”

At first glance, it almost sounds like Jesus is elevating men. But that’s not what’s happening at all.

To understand His words, we have to go back to the Psalm He is quoting.


The Context They Couldn’t Ignore

Psalm 82 speaks to leaders—judges—men who were given authority to represent God among the people.

They are called “gods” not because they are divine, but because they were entrusted with responsibility.

But the Psalm doesn’t stop there. It quickly turns into a rebuke:

Defend the poor and fatherless.
Do justice to the afflicted and needy.
Deliver the poor and needy.

These leaders had authority—but they failed to use it rightly.

They judged unjustly.
They neglected the weak.
They misrepresented God.

And the Psalm ends with a sobering reminder:

“Ye shall die like men.”


What Jesus Was Really Doing

When Jesus quotes this Psalm, He is doing more than defending Himself against a charge of blasphemy.

Yes, He makes a logical point:

If Scripture can use the term “gods” for earthly judges, why is it blasphemy for Him to say He is the Son of God?

But beneath that argument is something deeper.

A reminder.

A mirror.

A quiet exposure.

Because the very Psalm He quotes is about leaders who failed the very people they were supposed to serve.


The Unspoken Contrast

At that moment, the contrast could not have been clearer.

Jesus was:

  • healing the blind
  • restoring the broken
  • lifting the outcast

The leaders were:

  • criticizing
  • burdening
  • protecting their position

The Psalm they knew so well was describing them.

And Jesus didn’t need to say it out loud.


A Precise and Powerful Approach

This is what makes the moment so striking.

Jesus doesn’t argue loudly.
He doesn’t accuse directly.

He simply quotes Scripture.

And lets their own knowledge do the work.

It’s not a harsh blow—it’s a precise one.


A Thought to Carry Forward

It’s easy to read that passage and focus on the wording.

But the weight of it is this:

Those who are given truth and responsibility are also accountable for how they live it.

The leaders knew the Psalm.

The question was—would they see themselves in it?


A Simple Way to Say It

“He used their own Scripture—not just to answer them, but to show them where they stood.”


Scripture has a way of doing that even now.

Not just informing us—but quietly asking:

Do we recognize ourselves in what we read?

For the word of God is quick, and powerful, and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.

Sunday, March 22, 2026

Then and Now — What Changes, What Doesn’t

In Book of Job 29, Job looks back on his earlier years:

  • respected at the gate
  • listened to by others
  • helping those in need
  • a man people looked up to

Then in chapter 30, everything changes.

  • mocked instead of honored
  • weak instead of strong
  • forgotten instead of respected

It’s one of the most personal moments in Scripture.


We’ve all known someone like that

I had a friend when I was young—Mel.

He was one of those people who could command a room even as a teenager. There was something about him—confidence, presence. He went on to become a pastor, built a church from the ground up, and stayed there his whole life.

What a friend.

The last I heard, he had dementia. If he’s still alive, he’d be around 77 now.


From strength to weakness

That kind of change is hard to process.

One season:

  • strong
  • clear-minded
  • influential

Another season:

  • fading
  • uncertain
  • dependent

It feels like two different people—but it’s not.


Job felt that same contrast

In chapter 29, Job remembers who he was.

In chapter 30, he’s living in who he has become.

And somewhere in between is the quiet question:

“Am I still the same person?”


What doesn’t change

Life changes:

  • strength fades
  • memory weakens
  • positions are lost

But those things were never the deepest part of a person.

Job didn’t stop being Job when he lost everything.

And the people we’ve known don’t stop being who they are when time and age take their toll.


A simple truth

“What we were in our strongest years isn’t the whole story—and what we become in our weakest years isn’t either.”


Final thought

Job’s story doesn’t end in chapter 30.

And neither do ours.

There is something deeper than:

  • strength
  • position
  • even memory

And that’s where God meets us—
not just in who we were,
or who we seem to be now,
but in who we truly are before Him.



Thursday, March 19, 2026

From the Inside Out — How God Tears Down Strongholds

 When we read about strongholds in Second Epistle to the Corinthians 10:4–5, it’s easy to picture something massive—like a fortress that needs to be torn down.

And that’s true.

But how does God actually do it?


Through reading His word.

Not always from the outside

When we think of tearing something down, we imagine force:

  • breaking walls

  • knocking down gates

  • overpowering defenses

But many times, the greatest victories don’t happen that way.

They happen from within.

When Cyrus the Great conquered Babylon, it wasn’t just brute strength—it involved entering where the city was vulnerable.

History and even familiar stories remind us of the same idea:

  • a city can stand strong on the outside

  • but once something gets inside, everything changes


God works the same way

God doesn’t always start by changing everything around us.

He starts within us through the study of Scripture 2 Timothy 2:15.

In Epistle to the Hebrews 4:12, we’re told: "For the Word of God is living and powerful and sharper than any twoedged sword, piercing even to the dividing asunder of soul and spirit, and of the joints and marrow, and is a discerner of the thoughts and intents of the heart.)

  • not just actions

  • not just behavior

👉 the heart


Then the thinking begins to change

Once the heart is touched, something else begins to happen.

In Epistle to the Romans 12:2:

 And be not conformed to this world, but be ye transformed by the renewing of your mind, that ye may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God.

So the work moves:

Heart → Mind → Life


Why this matters for strongholds

Strongholds feel like walls:

  • long-held beliefs

  • settled conclusions

  • ways of thinking we’ve trusted for years

Trying to tear them down from the outside often doesn’t work.

But when God’s Word gets inside:

  • it exposes what isn’t right

  • it challenges what we’ve assumed. We know what happens when we assume right? 

  • it begins to reshape how we think

And over time…

the walls don’t need to be forced down—
they lose their strength and fall.


A simple truth

“God doesn’t always break strongholds from the outside—He enters the heart through His Word, and they fall from within.”


Final thought

We often want quick change—visible, outward, immediate.

But God is patient and precise.

He starts where it matters most.

And when He changes the inside,
the outside will follow. 2 Timothy 2:15

Monday, March 16, 2026

Why Nazareth Reveals the Jesus Christ Character

 

When we think of the Messiah, we often imagine grandeur: a royal palace, the center of power, a life of prominence. But Jesus’ life began differently. He was born in Bethlehem, but grew up in Nazareth—a small, obscure village in Galilee. People at the time even mocked the idea: “Can anything good come out of Nazareth?” (John 1:46).

Why would God choose a humble, overlooked town for the Savior of the world? The answer may lie in character.

Christ’s Character: The Lesson in Humility

Paul writes in Colossians 3:12:

“Put on therefore, as the elect of God, holy and beloved, bowels of mercies, kindness, humbleness of mind, meekness, longsuffering.”

Jesus embodied these qualities fully. Philippians 2:7–8 adds:

“He made Himself of no reputation, and took upon Him the form of a servant, and was made in the likeness of men. And being found in fashion as a man, He humbled Himself, and became obedient unto death.”

A humble upbringing in Nazareth likely shaped Him to live these truths. It was a place of quiet life—family, work, and community—where extraordinary character could develop without the distractions of power or prestige.

Nazareth in Historical Context

Nazareth was small, seemingly insignificant, but it sat near the Roman city of Sepphoris, which was being rebuilt during Jesus’ youth. He could see both ordinary village life and the structure of worldly power—a striking contrast that would echo in His teachings.

Prophetic Significance

Being called a “Nazarene” also fulfilled prophecy in a subtle way. The Hebrew word “netzer” means branch, a title associated with the Messiah (Isaiah 11:1). Nazareth itself symbolized humility and growth hidden from the eyes of the world, yet divinely appointed for God’s plan.

Modern Reflection

God often works through humility rather than prominence. Just as Nazareth shaped the character of Christ, He may be shaping yours in ways the world overlooks. Perhaps it’s in quiet obedience, small acts of service, or patient endurance—places unseen but preparing for extraordinary purpose.

Reflection question: Where is God shaping your character quietly, in ways the world might overlook?

Praise to the Lord, the Almighty (Nockels, Hymn

 

From Parroting to Understanding

  From Parroting to Understanding It’s easy to repeat something that sounds right. Especially when it comes from someone we respect. Maybe a...