Read and listen to messages
preached from the pulpit of First Baptist Church

Read and listen to messages
preached from the pulpit of
First Baptist Church

Read and listen to messages
preached from the pulpit of
First Baptist Church

Noah | Building in a Broken World | Hebrews 11:7

We live in a world that often feels upside down. Truth is questioned, righteousness is mocked, and sin is celebrated openly. It is easy to assume that living faithfully for God requires ideal conditions, a strong culture, or widespread spiritual revival. Yet Scripture reminds us that faith has never depended on favorable surroundings. Faith shines brightest when the world grows darkest.

Hebrews 11 introduces us to Noah, not as a perfect man, but as a man who walked by faith. Before there was an ark, before there was a flood, there was a man who believed what God said and ordered his life around it. Hebrews 11:7 says, “By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.” Noah’s story teaches us how to live faithfully in a broken world.

1. The Corruption That Surrounded Noah

To understand Noah’s faith, we must first understand the world in which he lived. Genesis 6:5 gives God’s own assessment of humanity at that time:
“And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.”

This was not a culture that merely drifted from God. It was a society saturated in violence, perversion, and rebellion. Sin was normal. God was ignored. Yet in the middle of that darkness, the Bible gives a powerful contrast: “But Noah found grace in the eyes of the LORD” (Genesis 6:8). One man stood out, not because he was flawless, but because his heart was directed toward God.

The danger for believers is not simply that culture grows darker. The greater danger is that we slowly adjust to that darkness. Noah did not excuse himself by saying everyone else was doing it. He did not blend in to avoid attention. He chose to live differently, and that difference began with a heart that was loyal to God.

2. The Character That Distinguished Noah

Scripture tells us that Noah was a just man and that he walked with God. That phrase is simple but powerful. Noah did not merely talk about God or acknowledge God occasionally. He walked with God day by day.

God is still looking for men and women who are completely His. Not just on Sunday, but on Monday, Tuesday, and every day of the week. Faith is not an event. It is a walk. Just as physical health requires daily steps, spiritual strength requires daily fellowship with God through His Word and prayer.

Noah lived righteously in a fractured culture. He did not wait for society to improve before he obeyed God. He simply walked with God where he was. That same call rests on us today. We cannot blame our environment, our upbringing, or the people around us. God is still seeking individuals who will walk with Him.

3. The Conviction That Revealed Noah’s Faith

Hebrews 11:7 shows us that Noah’s faith was not merely internal. It produced action. God warned him of things not yet seen, and Noah moved with reverence and obedience. His faith was revealed in three clear ways.

Faith heeds God’s unseen warnings.
Noah had never seen rain like the flood God described. There was no visible evidence, only God’s Word. Yet that was enough. The Word of God still gives us unseen warnings today about sin, bitterness, pride, and the love of money. Faith does not wait for visible consequences. Faith believes God’s warnings and acts on them.

Faith obeys despite unpopular surroundings.
Noah built an ark in a dry world. We can only imagine the mockery and laughter he endured. Yet he kept building. Faith often calls us to stand alone, to forgive when others hold grudges, to prioritize worship over convenience, and to follow God when it is not popular. Faith chooses obedience even when the world does not understand.

Faith does all God says.
Genesis 6:22 gives a remarkable testimony: “Thus did Noah; according to all that God commanded him, so did he.” Partial obedience would have cost Noah everything. An ark built halfway would not have saved his family. In the same way, we cannot choose which parts of God’s Word to follow. True faith responds with full obedience, trusting that God’s commands are always right.

Noah built an ark in a dry world because he believed God. Every board he cut, every nail he drove, every step of preparation declared the same truth: I believe God. Long before the storm came, Noah had already settled in his heart that God’s Word was enough.

Reflection Question

Is there an area of your life where you are adjusting to the culture instead of walking by faith? What step of obedience is God calling you to take today, even if it feels difficult or unpopular?

Noah | Building in a Broken World | Hebrews 11:7

We live in a world that often feels upside down. Truth is questioned, righteousness is mocked, and sin is celebrated openly. It is easy to assume that living faithfully for God requires ideal conditions, a strong culture, or widespread spiritual revival. Yet Scripture reminds us that faith has never depended on favorable surroundings. Faith shines brightest when the world grows darkest.

Hebrews 11 introduces us to Noah, not as a perfect man, but as a man who walked by faith. Before there was an ark, before there was a flood, there was a man who believed what God said and ordered his life around it. Hebrews 11:7 says, “By faith Noah, being warned of God of things not seen as yet, moved with fear, prepared an ark to the saving of his house; by the which he condemned the world, and became heir of the righteousness which is by faith.” Noah’s story teaches us how to live faithfully in a broken world.

1. The Corruption That Surrounded Noah

To understand Noah’s faith, we must first understand the world in which he lived. Genesis 6:5 gives God’s own assessment of humanity at that time:
“And God saw that the wickedness of man was great in the earth, and that every imagination of the thoughts of his heart was only evil continually.”

This was not a culture that merely drifted from God. It was a society saturated in violence, perversion, and rebellion. Sin was normal. God was ignored. Yet in the middle of that darkness, the Bible gives a powerful contrast: “But Noah found grace in the eyes of the LORD” (Genesis 6:8). One man stood out, not because he was flawless, but because his heart was directed toward God.

The danger for believers is not simply that culture grows darker. The greater danger is that we slowly adjust to that darkness. Noah did not excuse himself by saying everyone else was doing it. He did not blend in to avoid attention. He chose to live differently, and that difference began with a heart that was loyal to God.

2. The Character That Distinguished Noah

Scripture tells us that Noah was a just man and that he walked with God. That phrase is simple but powerful. Noah did not merely talk about God or acknowledge God occasionally. He walked with God day by day.

God is still looking for men and women who are completely His. Not just on Sunday, but on Monday, Tuesday, and every day of the week. Faith is not an event. It is a walk. Just as physical health requires daily steps, spiritual strength requires daily fellowship with God through His Word and prayer.

Noah lived righteously in a fractured culture. He did not wait for society to improve before he obeyed God. He simply walked with God where he was. That same call rests on us today. We cannot blame our environment, our upbringing, or the people around us. God is still seeking individuals who will walk with Him.

3. The Conviction That Revealed Noah’s Faith

Hebrews 11:7 shows us that Noah’s faith was not merely internal. It produced action. God warned him of things not yet seen, and Noah moved with reverence and obedience. His faith was revealed in three clear ways.

Faith heeds God’s unseen warnings.
Noah had never seen rain like the flood God described. There was no visible evidence, only God’s Word. Yet that was enough. The Word of God still gives us unseen warnings today about sin, bitterness, pride, and the love of money. Faith does not wait for visible consequences. Faith believes God’s warnings and acts on them.

Faith obeys despite unpopular surroundings.
Noah built an ark in a dry world. We can only imagine the mockery and laughter he endured. Yet he kept building. Faith often calls us to stand alone, to forgive when others hold grudges, to prioritize worship over convenience, and to follow God when it is not popular. Faith chooses obedience even when the world does not understand.

Faith does all God says.
Genesis 6:22 gives a remarkable testimony: “Thus did Noah; according to all that God commanded him, so did he.” Partial obedience would have cost Noah everything. An ark built halfway would not have saved his family. In the same way, we cannot choose which parts of God’s Word to follow. True faith responds with full obedience, trusting that God’s commands are always right.

Noah built an ark in a dry world because he believed God. Every board he cut, every nail he drove, every step of preparation declared the same truth: I believe God. Long before the storm came, Noah had already settled in his heart that God’s Word was enough.

Reflection Question

Is there an area of your life where you are adjusting to the culture instead of walking by faith? What step of obedience is God calling you to take today, even if it feels difficult or unpopular?

The Names of God Part Two | John 17

When Jesus prayed in John 17, He said, “And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent” (John 17:3). Eternal life is not only about escaping hell. Eternal life is about knowing God. It is about walking with Him, learning His character, trusting His heart, and growing in a real and personal relationship with Him. That is why the names of God matter so much. They are not just titles to memorize or decorative words to hang on a wall. They are revelations of who God is.

Every name of God opens another window into His character. Through His names, we see His eternity, His care, His awareness, His provision, His holiness, His peace, and His faithfulness. The more we know Him, the more our faith is strengthened. The more clearly we see Him, the more confidently we can trust Him in every burden, confusion, and trial of life.

So when we study the names of God, we are not studying something distant or abstract. We are learning the heart of the God who meets us in real situations. Abraham learned these names in moments of conflict, testing, waiting, and uncertainty. Hagar learned these names in loneliness and affliction. In every case, God revealed Himself in a way that met the need of the moment. And He still does the same for us today.

1. El Olam: The Everlasting God

After God fulfilled His promise to Abraham and Sarah by giving them Isaac, Abraham faced another conflict involving Abimelech and the wells of water in Genesis 21. Those wells were not a small issue. In that setting, water meant life. To lose the wells was to threaten the future of Abraham’s household, his flocks, and the very survival of those under his care. Yet after the conflict was settled, Abraham did not glory in his own wisdom or skill. Scripture says, “And Abraham planted a grove in Beer-sheba, and called there on the name of the Lord, the everlasting God” (Genesis 21:33).

That name, El Olam, means the everlasting God. Abraham had learned that God’s promises are not bound by the immediate pressure of the moment. God had promised a future, a seed, and a covenant that would stretch far beyond Abraham’s lifetime. So when a present conflict seemed to threaten that future, Abraham rested in the truth that God is everlasting. He is eternal, unchanging, and completely faithful across generations. What feels urgent to us has never placed God in panic. What feels uncertain to us has never shaken His throne.

That truth is deeply practical. We live in a world full of things that look permanent but fail. Money runs out. systems collapse. Promises are broken. Human strength fades. But when you build your life on the everlasting God, you are building on something that lasts. This is not wasted faith. This is not spiritual wishful thinking. We are trusting the God who never runs out of power, wisdom, resources, or answers. When life feels rough, trust the God who sees beyond your lifetime and is still working His purpose long after your moment of trouble has passed.

2. El Roi: The God Who Sees Me

In Genesis 16, Sarah and Abraham tried to solve God’s promise in their own way. Instead of waiting on the Lord, they brought Hagar into a painful and sinful situation that created heartache and conflict. Hagar conceived, Sarah became bitter, and Hagar fled into the wilderness under harsh treatment. She was mistreated, rejected, and alone. Yet in that lonely place, the angel of the Lord met her. And after that encounter, the Bible says, “And she called the name of the Lord that spake unto her, Thou God seest me” (Genesis 16:13).

What a comfort that name is. El Roi means the God who sees me. Hagar may have felt invisible to everyone else, but she was not invisible to God. The Lord saw her affliction. He saw the injustice. He saw the tears. He saw the fear. He saw the confusion. And the same God who saw Hagar in the wilderness still sees His people today. There are times when you may feel overlooked, forgotten, misjudged, or deeply wounded. You may feel as though nobody understands what you are carrying. But the God who sees has never once lost sight of you.

This truth works both ways. Yes, God sees our sin, and we ought to live in reverence before Him. But we must also remember that God sees our suffering, our faithfulness, our grief, and our quiet obedience. He sees the burdens nobody else notices. He sees the tears you never explain. He sees the faith that keeps going when others do not understand your path. You are never beyond His gaze. You are never beneath His notice. The God who sees is not cold or distant. He is attentive, compassionate, and near to those who feel forgotten.

3. Jehovah Jireh: The Lord Will Provide

Genesis 22 brings us to one of the greatest tests in Abraham’s life. God told Abraham to take Isaac, the promised son, and offer him upon a mountain that the Lord would show him. Every step of that journey must have been heavy. For three days, Abraham walked in obedience, carrying in his heart the weight of a command he could not fully understand. Then Isaac asked the searching question, “Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?” Abraham answered with one of the great declarations of faith in all the Bible: “My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering” (Genesis 22:7-8).

At the last possible moment, as Abraham lifted the knife in obedience, God stopped him and showed him a ram caught in the thicket. Then Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah Jireh, which means the Lord will provide. What a lesson this is for every believer. God’s provision often does not appear early by our reckoning. It often seems delayed. It may even feel painfully late. But when God’s provision comes, it is always exactly on time.

Jehovah Jireh teaches us that God provides at the place of obedience. The ram was not waiting on some other mountain. It was waiting where Abraham was supposed to be. God’s provision met Abraham in the path of surrender. And many times in our lives, provision follows surrender. We want God to show us everything in advance, but often He asks us to obey first and trust that He is already working ahead of us. Before Abraham ever climbed the mountain, God had already prepared the answer. Before you even know what need is coming, your God is already able to provide for it. Trust His timing. His watch is never wrong, even when His delays are hard to understand.

Reflection Question

Which of these truths do you most need today: that God is everlasting, that God sees you, or that God will provide? And how would your fear, your waiting, or your burden change if you truly rested in the God revealed through His names?

Mar 18, 2026

6 min read

Whosoever Will May Come | Isaiah 56

When we think about access, we often think in terms of limits. Some doors are closed. Some invitations are restricted. Some places seem reserved for certain people, while others are left standing outside, wondering if they truly belong. That is how many people view God. They assume His grace is narrow, His welcome is hesitant, and His salvation must be earned by those who are polished, prepared, or already close enough to religion to deserve a place near Him.

But Isaiah 56 opens a very different picture. It reveals the heart of a God who throws the door wide open and says, “Whosoever will may come.” In this chapter, the Lord shows us that salvation is not merely an offer to the religious insider. It is an invitation to the outsider, the broken, the overlooked, and the one who thought there could never be a place for them. The God of heaven is not building barriers to keep sinners away. He is drawing them to Himself through the coming Messiah.

This chapter also reminds us that the God who saves is the God who transforms. His invitation is free, but it is not empty. He calls us to holiness because He is holy. He brings us near, fills us with joy, accepts our worship, and opens His house to all people. Isaiah 56 is a beautiful reminder that the gospel is not “clean up and come.” The gospel is “come and be made clean.” That is the heart of our God, and that should become the heartbeat of His people as well.

1. God’s Invitation Comes with a Call to Holiness

Isaiah 56 begins with a reminder that the God who saves is also the God who is righteous. Verse 1 says, “Thus saith the LORD, Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed.” The invitation of salvation is not a casual invitation to remain unchanged. It is a gracious call to come to God and to begin walking in reverence, purity, and obedience before Him.

This matters because many people want a version of God that is all comfort and no correction. They want love without holiness, mercy without truth, and salvation without surrender. But God’s character will not be reduced to what is convenient for us. He is a God of love, but He is also holy, just, and pure. To know Him rightly, we must receive all that He has revealed about Himself.

There is practical help for us here. When God saves us, He does not leave us as we were. He begins shaping our lives. There are things we now run from and things we now run to. We reject evil and pursue what pleases Him. A right view of God always leads to a changed life. If we truly believe that He is holy, then we will not treat Him lightly. We will not approach Him with a careless spirit. We will desire to live in a way that reflects His character.

2. God Welcomes Those Who Once Thought They Could Never Belong

One of the most powerful truths in Isaiah 56 is that those once excluded are now invited. The chapter speaks of the stranger and the eunuch, people who would have felt distant, limited, and on the outside. Yet God makes it clear that His salvation reaches even them. Verse 5 declares, “Even unto them will I give in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.”

What a glorious picture of salvation. The foreigner who once stood at a distance is welcomed in. The broken person who thinks he is too damaged to be received is given an everlasting name. The one who feels like a dry tree, barren and beyond repair, is met by the grace of God. This is the gospel in clear view. The Lord is showing us that His salvation reaches farther than human pride ever would have allowed.

That truth still matters today. There are people all around us who assume church is not for them. They think their past is too messy, their failures too serious, or their life too broken for God to receive them. But the heart of God says otherwise. He still receives outsiders. He still saves sinners. He still welcomes those who thought the door was shut. We must be careful that our spirit matches the spirit of our God. We should never make people feel that Jesus is only for a select few. The door is wide open through Christ.

3. God Himself Brings Sinners Near

Isaiah 56:7 begins with this wonderful promise: “Even them will I bring to my holy mountain.” That wording is important. God is the one doing the bringing. Man is not climbing his own way up to heaven. Sinners are not earning their access by effort, tradition, or worthiness. God, in His grace, draws people to Himself.

This is one of the sweetest truths in all of salvation. Left to ourselves, we would remain far from God. But the God who is high above us has come down to us and now brings us near. The outsider is not told to figure out his own way in. The broken sinner is not handed a ladder and told to try harder. God says, “I will bring them.” That is grace. That is mercy. That is the character of our God.

This should affect the way we see others. If God is the one who brings people near, then we should never despise those who are still on the journey toward Him. We should not make church feel like a place only for people who already know the rules. We should not become so polished and predictable that we forget how gracious God has been to us. People come searching because they know something is missing. They may not have the right words for it, but they are thirsty. And God still says, “Come.”

4. True Salvation Produces Joy

Isaiah 56:7 continues, “and make them joyful in my house of prayer.” One of the unmistakable marks of true salvation is joy. God does not merely bring sinners into His presence. He brings them in with gladness. He gives them joy in His house. He restores what sin had robbed and fills the redeemed heart with something real, deep, and alive.

Think about what that joy means. It is the joy of the outsider who is no longer outside. It is the joy of the sinner who has been forgiven. It is the joy of the prodigal who has come home. It is the joy of someone who knows the distance between him and God has been bridged by grace. That is not cold religion. That is not an empty ritual. That is the gladness of a soul that has found its way home to God.

Yet many believers know what it is to lose the freshness of that joy. Life becomes routine. Worship becomes mechanical. Church becomes a habit instead of a delight. That is why the cry of Psalm 51 is so needed: “Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation.” We need that prayer because it is possible to remain in the right place while losing the right spirit. We need God to renew our wonder again. We need to be reminded what it means that He saved us, brought us in, and made us His own.

5. God Accepts the Worship of the Redeemed

The verse goes on to say, “their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar.” Under the old covenant, access to God’s altar came with heavy limitations. There were boundaries, requirements, and restrictions. But Isaiah points ahead to the Messiah, the One who would fulfill the law and open the way for sinners to come near. Through Christ, the worship of the redeemed becomes acceptable before God.

That does not mean we bring animal sacrifices today. But it does mean we bring our lives, our praise, our service, and our surrender to Him. Romans 12 calls us to present our bodies a living sacrifice. Hebrews 13 speaks of the sacrifice of praise. First Peter 2 teaches that believers offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. What Isaiah was anticipating, the New Testament makes plain: because of Christ, we may come to God and know that He receives what is offered in faith.

That gives daily significance to our Christian life. Your obedience matters. Your praise matters. Your surrendered life matters. God is not looking for empty motions. He is looking for sincere hearts, grateful lips, and lives yielded to Him. When our view of God is right, our worship will change. We will complain less and praise more. We will not bring Him leftovers. We will offer Him our lives because He has already given us everything in Christ.

6. God’s House Is Open to All People

The chapter closes this section with one of the clearest statements of God’s heart: “for mine house shall be called an house of prayer for all people.” This is not a message for one nation only. It is not grace for one class, one culture, or one kind of person. It is for all people. Later, Jesus Himself would quote this verse when He cleansed the temple, showing that the Father’s house was never meant to be reduced to selfish religion or narrow pride.

This reveals the compassion of God. He is not reluctant to save. He is not stingy with grace. He does not hide salvation behind impossible barriers. He calls sinners to come. Revelation 22 carries the same invitation all the way to the close of Scripture: “And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.” From Isaiah to Revelation, the message is the same. Whosoever will may come.

That truth should shape our church, our witness, and our attitude. We must not take for granted what God has done for us while failing to reflect His heart toward others. The same God who welcomed us wants others to come as well. The same Savior who brought us near is still drawing sinners today. The same grace that saved us is able to save them. Our task is not to narrow the invitation. Our task is to hold the door open and point people to Jesus Christ.

Reflection QuestionIf God’s heart is to bring outsiders near, restore joy, accept surrendered worship, and welcome all who come through Christ, are you reflecting that same heart in the way you view God, worship Him, and receive others?

Mar 15, 2026

9 min read

Sarah | Disbelief Followed by Belief | Hebrews 11:11-12

As we come into a season where our hearts are drawn again to the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we are reminded that the Christian life has always been a life of faith. We are saved by faith in Christ. We walk by faith in Christ. And very often, we are stretched by faith when God gives a promise but does not seem to move as quickly as we expected. Few stories capture that tension more clearly than the story of Sarah. Her life reminds us that even sincere believers can struggle in seasons of delay, and even those who laugh in disbelief can still become examples of genuine faith.

Hebrews 11:11 says, “Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged him faithful who had promised.” That is one of the most beautiful statements in all the Bible. Sarah is not remembered in Hebrews 11 for her laughter, her weakness, or her confusion. She is remembered because she came to a settled conviction about the character of God. She judged Him faithful. That is the heart of faith. Faith is not confidence in ourselves. Faith is not confidence in circumstances. Faith is confidence in the God who makes the promise.

Sarah’s story is deeply practical for us because we know what it is to wait. We know what it is to pray and not see immediate answers. We know what it is to hear truth from God’s Word, believe that it is true, and then walk through long stretches where nothing seems to happen. In those moments, the real issue is not merely patience. The real issue is whether we still believe that God is faithful. Sarah’s life teaches us that disbelief does not have to be the end of the story. By God’s grace, disbelief can be followed by belief.

1. Faith Begins with the Promise of God

The story really begins in Genesis 15, when God came to Abram and gave him a clear promise. Abram had no son, no heir of his own, and no visible reason to think that the future God described could ever become reality. Yet the Lord spoke with certainty and power. He brought Abram out beneath the heavens and said, “Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be” (Genesis 15:5). What an astounding promise. God was not speaking in vague possibilities. He was declaring a certain future.

The Bible tells us that Abram believed in the Lord, and it was counted to him for righteousness. That is what faith does. Faith takes God at His word. Faith does not need every detail explained before it obeys. Faith does not demand full visibility before it trusts. It simply says, “God has spoken, and that settles it.” That is true in salvation, and it is true in every area of the Christian life. If God says that Christ saves, then Christ saves. If God says He will never leave us nor forsake us, then He will never leave us nor forsake us.

The problem is that our hearts often grow cynical. We are willing to believe God in theory, but when His promises collide with our limitations, our timeline, and our sight, we begin to hesitate. Yet the foundation of faith has never been what we can see. The foundation of faith is what God has said. Sarah’s story reminds us that every work of faith begins there, with the sure promise of a faithful God.

2. Faith Is Tested in the Silence of Waiting

After the promise came the waiting. Genesis 16 opens with words that feel heavy after the glory of Genesis 15: “Now Sarai Abram’s wife bare him no children.” God had spoken, yet nothing seemed to be changing. Days passed. Months passed. Years passed. And with every passing year, the promise must have looked more impossible, not less. This is where faith becomes difficult. It is one thing to rejoice when God gives a promise. It is another thing to keep believing when heaven seems silent.

This is where many believers struggle. We are not always troubled by what God says. We are troubled by how long He takes. We can rejoice over a promise on Sunday, and then wrestle by Monday because the circumstances have not moved. Waiting exposes what we really believe about God. It reveals whether our confidence is in His character or in our schedule. It is in the waiting season that the heart begins to ask dangerous questions. Did I misunderstand? Did God forget? Was I wrong to believe at all?

Yet the waiting seasons are often where God does some of His deepest work. Faith is not mainly displayed in easy moments. Faith is displayed when sight resists belief. Faith is displayed when circumstances suggest otherwise. Faith is displayed when the soul is tempted to give up, but instead clings more tightly to the Word of God. Sarah’s waiting was not wasted. God was doing something deeper than merely preparing a child. He was shaping a testimony of faith.

3. Faith Sometimes Struggles with Disbelief

By the time we reach Genesis 17 and 18, the struggle has become painfully clear. Abram is ninety-nine years old. Sarah is far past the age when childbearing would even seem possible. God comes again and repeats the promise, this time specifically naming Sarah as the one through whom the promised son will come. Instead of immediate celebration, there is laughter. Abraham laughs. Sarah laughs. Their laughter is not the laughter of joy. It is the laughter of disbelief. The promise sounds too impossible, too late, too far gone.

Genesis 18:14 asks one of the great questions of Scripture: “Is any thing too hard for the LORD?” That question cuts through every excuse, every fear, every human calculation, and every cynical thought. The issue was never Sarah’s age. The issue was never Abraham’s weakness. The issue was never whether the circumstances looked favorable. The issue was whether God was capable of doing what He had promised. And the answer, of course, is yes. There is nothing too hard for the Lord.

How often are we just like Sarah? We hear that God can restore, revive, save, heal, strengthen, and provide, but inwardly we laugh because our situation feels too complicated. We know the verses, but we quietly file our own burdens into the category of impossible. Yet the God of Sarah is still the God of the impossible. He still works beyond human strength. He still fulfills His word when man has reached the end of himself. Sarah’s temporary disbelief is recorded honestly for us, not to excuse our doubt, but to show us that God is gracious even with faltering saints.

4. Faith Grows When We Settle the Character of God

Hebrews 11 does not focus on Sarah’s laughter. It focuses on her conclusion. “Because she judged him faithful who had promised.” At some point, Sarah’s heart settled. She moved from looking at herself to looking at God. She moved from measuring the promise by human ability to measuring it by divine faithfulness. That is the turning point in every life of faith. The promise becomes steady when the Promiser is seen clearly.

Notice that Hebrews does not say she judged the circumstances favorable. It does not say she judged herself strong enough. It does not even say she judged the timing understandable. It says she judged Him faithful. That is the bedrock of faith. The strength of faith does not come from the believer. It comes from the God in whom the believer rests. Sarah was commended because she came to a settled conviction that God could be trusted.

This is where many of us need help today. We do not merely need better circumstances. We need a stronger view of God. Complaining is often a sign that we are not judging Him faithful. Discontentment often reveals that we are not judging Him faithful. Irritation with God’s timing often shows that we are not judging Him faithful. But when the heart is brought back to this truth, that God is faithful, everything begins to change. We may still be waiting, but we are no longer waiting without hope. We may still be burdened, but we are no longer burdened without confidence.

5. Faith Leaves a Testimony Greater Than Failure

What is so encouraging about Sarah’s story is that her weak moment did not define her forever. Hebrews 11 places her among the examples of faith. That means God’s grace wrote a better ending than her laughter deserved. Her story was not ultimately one of disbelief, but of belief. Her failure was real, but it was not final. She trusted the Lord, and God gave her the promised son. Verse 12 reminds us of the scope of what God did through this one impossible birth. From one who was “as good as dead” came descendants “as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable.”

That is how God works. He delights to put His power on display through weakness so that the glory belongs to Him alone. Sarah could never boast in herself. Abraham could never boast in himself. Their story was designed to make one truth unmistakable: God is faithful. And that is exactly what your life and mine are meant to say as well. When God carries us through waiting, restores us after doubt, and keeps His word in spite of our weakness, the testimony becomes not how strong we were, but how faithful He has always been.

This should encourage every believer who feels ashamed of faltering faith. Perhaps you have laughed at what God said. Perhaps you have doubted in the waiting. Perhaps you have stared at your circumstances and quietly concluded that nothing will ever change. Sarah’s story says that by the grace of God, disbelief can be followed by belief. God can bring a wavering heart to settled confidence. He can take a soul full of questions and anchor it again in His own unchanging character.

Reflection QuestionHave you truly judged God to be faithful, or have you been measuring His promises by your circumstances?

Mar 15, 2026

9 min read

The Names of God Part Two | John 17

When Jesus prayed in John 17, He said, “And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent” (John 17:3). Eternal life is not only about escaping hell. Eternal life is about knowing God. It is about walking with Him, learning His character, trusting His heart, and growing in a real and personal relationship with Him. That is why the names of God matter so much. They are not just titles to memorize or decorative words to hang on a wall. They are revelations of who God is.

Every name of God opens another window into His character. Through His names, we see His eternity, His care, His awareness, His provision, His holiness, His peace, and His faithfulness. The more we know Him, the more our faith is strengthened. The more clearly we see Him, the more confidently we can trust Him in every burden, confusion, and trial of life.

So when we study the names of God, we are not studying something distant or abstract. We are learning the heart of the God who meets us in real situations. Abraham learned these names in moments of conflict, testing, waiting, and uncertainty. Hagar learned these names in loneliness and affliction. In every case, God revealed Himself in a way that met the need of the moment. And He still does the same for us today.

1. El Olam: The Everlasting God

After God fulfilled His promise to Abraham and Sarah by giving them Isaac, Abraham faced another conflict involving Abimelech and the wells of water in Genesis 21. Those wells were not a small issue. In that setting, water meant life. To lose the wells was to threaten the future of Abraham’s household, his flocks, and the very survival of those under his care. Yet after the conflict was settled, Abraham did not glory in his own wisdom or skill. Scripture says, “And Abraham planted a grove in Beer-sheba, and called there on the name of the Lord, the everlasting God” (Genesis 21:33).

That name, El Olam, means the everlasting God. Abraham had learned that God’s promises are not bound by the immediate pressure of the moment. God had promised a future, a seed, and a covenant that would stretch far beyond Abraham’s lifetime. So when a present conflict seemed to threaten that future, Abraham rested in the truth that God is everlasting. He is eternal, unchanging, and completely faithful across generations. What feels urgent to us has never placed God in panic. What feels uncertain to us has never shaken His throne.

That truth is deeply practical. We live in a world full of things that look permanent but fail. Money runs out. systems collapse. Promises are broken. Human strength fades. But when you build your life on the everlasting God, you are building on something that lasts. This is not wasted faith. This is not spiritual wishful thinking. We are trusting the God who never runs out of power, wisdom, resources, or answers. When life feels rough, trust the God who sees beyond your lifetime and is still working His purpose long after your moment of trouble has passed.

2. El Roi: The God Who Sees Me

In Genesis 16, Sarah and Abraham tried to solve God’s promise in their own way. Instead of waiting on the Lord, they brought Hagar into a painful and sinful situation that created heartache and conflict. Hagar conceived, Sarah became bitter, and Hagar fled into the wilderness under harsh treatment. She was mistreated, rejected, and alone. Yet in that lonely place, the angel of the Lord met her. And after that encounter, the Bible says, “And she called the name of the Lord that spake unto her, Thou God seest me” (Genesis 16:13).

What a comfort that name is. El Roi means the God who sees me. Hagar may have felt invisible to everyone else, but she was not invisible to God. The Lord saw her affliction. He saw the injustice. He saw the tears. He saw the fear. He saw the confusion. And the same God who saw Hagar in the wilderness still sees His people today. There are times when you may feel overlooked, forgotten, misjudged, or deeply wounded. You may feel as though nobody understands what you are carrying. But the God who sees has never once lost sight of you.

This truth works both ways. Yes, God sees our sin, and we ought to live in reverence before Him. But we must also remember that God sees our suffering, our faithfulness, our grief, and our quiet obedience. He sees the burdens nobody else notices. He sees the tears you never explain. He sees the faith that keeps going when others do not understand your path. You are never beyond His gaze. You are never beneath His notice. The God who sees is not cold or distant. He is attentive, compassionate, and near to those who feel forgotten.

3. Jehovah Jireh: The Lord Will Provide

Genesis 22 brings us to one of the greatest tests in Abraham’s life. God told Abraham to take Isaac, the promised son, and offer him upon a mountain that the Lord would show him. Every step of that journey must have been heavy. For three days, Abraham walked in obedience, carrying in his heart the weight of a command he could not fully understand. Then Isaac asked the searching question, “Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?” Abraham answered with one of the great declarations of faith in all the Bible: “My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering” (Genesis 22:7-8).

At the last possible moment, as Abraham lifted the knife in obedience, God stopped him and showed him a ram caught in the thicket. Then Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah Jireh, which means the Lord will provide. What a lesson this is for every believer. God’s provision often does not appear early by our reckoning. It often seems delayed. It may even feel painfully late. But when God’s provision comes, it is always exactly on time.

Jehovah Jireh teaches us that God provides at the place of obedience. The ram was not waiting on some other mountain. It was waiting where Abraham was supposed to be. God’s provision met Abraham in the path of surrender. And many times in our lives, provision follows surrender. We want God to show us everything in advance, but often He asks us to obey first and trust that He is already working ahead of us. Before Abraham ever climbed the mountain, God had already prepared the answer. Before you even know what need is coming, your God is already able to provide for it. Trust His timing. His watch is never wrong, even when His delays are hard to understand.

Reflection Question

Which of these truths do you most need today: that God is everlasting, that God sees you, or that God will provide? And how would your fear, your waiting, or your burden change if you truly rested in the God revealed through His names?

Whosoever Will May Come | Isaiah 56

When we think about access, we often think in terms of limits. Some doors are closed. Some invitations are restricted. Some places seem reserved for certain people, while others are left standing outside, wondering if they truly belong. That is how many people view God. They assume His grace is narrow, His welcome is hesitant, and His salvation must be earned by those who are polished, prepared, or already close enough to religion to deserve a place near Him.

But Isaiah 56 opens a very different picture. It reveals the heart of a God who throws the door wide open and says, “Whosoever will may come.” In this chapter, the Lord shows us that salvation is not merely an offer to the religious insider. It is an invitation to the outsider, the broken, the overlooked, and the one who thought there could never be a place for them. The God of heaven is not building barriers to keep sinners away. He is drawing them to Himself through the coming Messiah.

This chapter also reminds us that the God who saves is the God who transforms. His invitation is free, but it is not empty. He calls us to holiness because He is holy. He brings us near, fills us with joy, accepts our worship, and opens His house to all people. Isaiah 56 is a beautiful reminder that the gospel is not “clean up and come.” The gospel is “come and be made clean.” That is the heart of our God, and that should become the heartbeat of His people as well.

1. God’s Invitation Comes with a Call to Holiness

Isaiah 56 begins with a reminder that the God who saves is also the God who is righteous. Verse 1 says, “Thus saith the LORD, Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed.” The invitation of salvation is not a casual invitation to remain unchanged. It is a gracious call to come to God and to begin walking in reverence, purity, and obedience before Him.

This matters because many people want a version of God that is all comfort and no correction. They want love without holiness, mercy without truth, and salvation without surrender. But God’s character will not be reduced to what is convenient for us. He is a God of love, but He is also holy, just, and pure. To know Him rightly, we must receive all that He has revealed about Himself.

There is practical help for us here. When God saves us, He does not leave us as we were. He begins shaping our lives. There are things we now run from and things we now run to. We reject evil and pursue what pleases Him. A right view of God always leads to a changed life. If we truly believe that He is holy, then we will not treat Him lightly. We will not approach Him with a careless spirit. We will desire to live in a way that reflects His character.

2. God Welcomes Those Who Once Thought They Could Never Belong

One of the most powerful truths in Isaiah 56 is that those once excluded are now invited. The chapter speaks of the stranger and the eunuch, people who would have felt distant, limited, and on the outside. Yet God makes it clear that His salvation reaches even them. Verse 5 declares, “Even unto them will I give in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.”

What a glorious picture of salvation. The foreigner who once stood at a distance is welcomed in. The broken person who thinks he is too damaged to be received is given an everlasting name. The one who feels like a dry tree, barren and beyond repair, is met by the grace of God. This is the gospel in clear view. The Lord is showing us that His salvation reaches farther than human pride ever would have allowed.

That truth still matters today. There are people all around us who assume church is not for them. They think their past is too messy, their failures too serious, or their life too broken for God to receive them. But the heart of God says otherwise. He still receives outsiders. He still saves sinners. He still welcomes those who thought the door was shut. We must be careful that our spirit matches the spirit of our God. We should never make people feel that Jesus is only for a select few. The door is wide open through Christ.

3. God Himself Brings Sinners Near

Isaiah 56:7 begins with this wonderful promise: “Even them will I bring to my holy mountain.” That wording is important. God is the one doing the bringing. Man is not climbing his own way up to heaven. Sinners are not earning their access by effort, tradition, or worthiness. God, in His grace, draws people to Himself.

This is one of the sweetest truths in all of salvation. Left to ourselves, we would remain far from God. But the God who is high above us has come down to us and now brings us near. The outsider is not told to figure out his own way in. The broken sinner is not handed a ladder and told to try harder. God says, “I will bring them.” That is grace. That is mercy. That is the character of our God.

This should affect the way we see others. If God is the one who brings people near, then we should never despise those who are still on the journey toward Him. We should not make church feel like a place only for people who already know the rules. We should not become so polished and predictable that we forget how gracious God has been to us. People come searching because they know something is missing. They may not have the right words for it, but they are thirsty. And God still says, “Come.”

4. True Salvation Produces Joy

Isaiah 56:7 continues, “and make them joyful in my house of prayer.” One of the unmistakable marks of true salvation is joy. God does not merely bring sinners into His presence. He brings them in with gladness. He gives them joy in His house. He restores what sin had robbed and fills the redeemed heart with something real, deep, and alive.

Think about what that joy means. It is the joy of the outsider who is no longer outside. It is the joy of the sinner who has been forgiven. It is the joy of the prodigal who has come home. It is the joy of someone who knows the distance between him and God has been bridged by grace. That is not cold religion. That is not an empty ritual. That is the gladness of a soul that has found its way home to God.

Yet many believers know what it is to lose the freshness of that joy. Life becomes routine. Worship becomes mechanical. Church becomes a habit instead of a delight. That is why the cry of Psalm 51 is so needed: “Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation.” We need that prayer because it is possible to remain in the right place while losing the right spirit. We need God to renew our wonder again. We need to be reminded what it means that He saved us, brought us in, and made us His own.

5. God Accepts the Worship of the Redeemed

The verse goes on to say, “their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar.” Under the old covenant, access to God’s altar came with heavy limitations. There were boundaries, requirements, and restrictions. But Isaiah points ahead to the Messiah, the One who would fulfill the law and open the way for sinners to come near. Through Christ, the worship of the redeemed becomes acceptable before God.

That does not mean we bring animal sacrifices today. But it does mean we bring our lives, our praise, our service, and our surrender to Him. Romans 12 calls us to present our bodies a living sacrifice. Hebrews 13 speaks of the sacrifice of praise. First Peter 2 teaches that believers offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. What Isaiah was anticipating, the New Testament makes plain: because of Christ, we may come to God and know that He receives what is offered in faith.

That gives daily significance to our Christian life. Your obedience matters. Your praise matters. Your surrendered life matters. God is not looking for empty motions. He is looking for sincere hearts, grateful lips, and lives yielded to Him. When our view of God is right, our worship will change. We will complain less and praise more. We will not bring Him leftovers. We will offer Him our lives because He has already given us everything in Christ.

6. God’s House Is Open to All People

The chapter closes this section with one of the clearest statements of God’s heart: “for mine house shall be called an house of prayer for all people.” This is not a message for one nation only. It is not grace for one class, one culture, or one kind of person. It is for all people. Later, Jesus Himself would quote this verse when He cleansed the temple, showing that the Father’s house was never meant to be reduced to selfish religion or narrow pride.

This reveals the compassion of God. He is not reluctant to save. He is not stingy with grace. He does not hide salvation behind impossible barriers. He calls sinners to come. Revelation 22 carries the same invitation all the way to the close of Scripture: “And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.” From Isaiah to Revelation, the message is the same. Whosoever will may come.

That truth should shape our church, our witness, and our attitude. We must not take for granted what God has done for us while failing to reflect His heart toward others. The same God who welcomed us wants others to come as well. The same Savior who brought us near is still drawing sinners today. The same grace that saved us is able to save them. Our task is not to narrow the invitation. Our task is to hold the door open and point people to Jesus Christ.

Reflection QuestionIf God’s heart is to bring outsiders near, restore joy, accept surrendered worship, and welcome all who come through Christ, are you reflecting that same heart in the way you view God, worship Him, and receive others?

Sarah | Disbelief Followed by Belief | Hebrews 11:11-12

As we come into a season where our hearts are drawn again to the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we are reminded that the Christian life has always been a life of faith. We are saved by faith in Christ. We walk by faith in Christ. And very often, we are stretched by faith when God gives a promise but does not seem to move as quickly as we expected. Few stories capture that tension more clearly than the story of Sarah. Her life reminds us that even sincere believers can struggle in seasons of delay, and even those who laugh in disbelief can still become examples of genuine faith.

Hebrews 11:11 says, “Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged him faithful who had promised.” That is one of the most beautiful statements in all the Bible. Sarah is not remembered in Hebrews 11 for her laughter, her weakness, or her confusion. She is remembered because she came to a settled conviction about the character of God. She judged Him faithful. That is the heart of faith. Faith is not confidence in ourselves. Faith is not confidence in circumstances. Faith is confidence in the God who makes the promise.

Sarah’s story is deeply practical for us because we know what it is to wait. We know what it is to pray and not see immediate answers. We know what it is to hear truth from God’s Word, believe that it is true, and then walk through long stretches where nothing seems to happen. In those moments, the real issue is not merely patience. The real issue is whether we still believe that God is faithful. Sarah’s life teaches us that disbelief does not have to be the end of the story. By God’s grace, disbelief can be followed by belief.

1. Faith Begins with the Promise of God

The story really begins in Genesis 15, when God came to Abram and gave him a clear promise. Abram had no son, no heir of his own, and no visible reason to think that the future God described could ever become reality. Yet the Lord spoke with certainty and power. He brought Abram out beneath the heavens and said, “Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be” (Genesis 15:5). What an astounding promise. God was not speaking in vague possibilities. He was declaring a certain future.

The Bible tells us that Abram believed in the Lord, and it was counted to him for righteousness. That is what faith does. Faith takes God at His word. Faith does not need every detail explained before it obeys. Faith does not demand full visibility before it trusts. It simply says, “God has spoken, and that settles it.” That is true in salvation, and it is true in every area of the Christian life. If God says that Christ saves, then Christ saves. If God says He will never leave us nor forsake us, then He will never leave us nor forsake us.

The problem is that our hearts often grow cynical. We are willing to believe God in theory, but when His promises collide with our limitations, our timeline, and our sight, we begin to hesitate. Yet the foundation of faith has never been what we can see. The foundation of faith is what God has said. Sarah’s story reminds us that every work of faith begins there, with the sure promise of a faithful God.

2. Faith Is Tested in the Silence of Waiting

After the promise came the waiting. Genesis 16 opens with words that feel heavy after the glory of Genesis 15: “Now Sarai Abram’s wife bare him no children.” God had spoken, yet nothing seemed to be changing. Days passed. Months passed. Years passed. And with every passing year, the promise must have looked more impossible, not less. This is where faith becomes difficult. It is one thing to rejoice when God gives a promise. It is another thing to keep believing when heaven seems silent.

This is where many believers struggle. We are not always troubled by what God says. We are troubled by how long He takes. We can rejoice over a promise on Sunday, and then wrestle by Monday because the circumstances have not moved. Waiting exposes what we really believe about God. It reveals whether our confidence is in His character or in our schedule. It is in the waiting season that the heart begins to ask dangerous questions. Did I misunderstand? Did God forget? Was I wrong to believe at all?

Yet the waiting seasons are often where God does some of His deepest work. Faith is not mainly displayed in easy moments. Faith is displayed when sight resists belief. Faith is displayed when circumstances suggest otherwise. Faith is displayed when the soul is tempted to give up, but instead clings more tightly to the Word of God. Sarah’s waiting was not wasted. God was doing something deeper than merely preparing a child. He was shaping a testimony of faith.

3. Faith Sometimes Struggles with Disbelief

By the time we reach Genesis 17 and 18, the struggle has become painfully clear. Abram is ninety-nine years old. Sarah is far past the age when childbearing would even seem possible. God comes again and repeats the promise, this time specifically naming Sarah as the one through whom the promised son will come. Instead of immediate celebration, there is laughter. Abraham laughs. Sarah laughs. Their laughter is not the laughter of joy. It is the laughter of disbelief. The promise sounds too impossible, too late, too far gone.

Genesis 18:14 asks one of the great questions of Scripture: “Is any thing too hard for the LORD?” That question cuts through every excuse, every fear, every human calculation, and every cynical thought. The issue was never Sarah’s age. The issue was never Abraham’s weakness. The issue was never whether the circumstances looked favorable. The issue was whether God was capable of doing what He had promised. And the answer, of course, is yes. There is nothing too hard for the Lord.

How often are we just like Sarah? We hear that God can restore, revive, save, heal, strengthen, and provide, but inwardly we laugh because our situation feels too complicated. We know the verses, but we quietly file our own burdens into the category of impossible. Yet the God of Sarah is still the God of the impossible. He still works beyond human strength. He still fulfills His word when man has reached the end of himself. Sarah’s temporary disbelief is recorded honestly for us, not to excuse our doubt, but to show us that God is gracious even with faltering saints.

4. Faith Grows When We Settle the Character of God

Hebrews 11 does not focus on Sarah’s laughter. It focuses on her conclusion. “Because she judged him faithful who had promised.” At some point, Sarah’s heart settled. She moved from looking at herself to looking at God. She moved from measuring the promise by human ability to measuring it by divine faithfulness. That is the turning point in every life of faith. The promise becomes steady when the Promiser is seen clearly.

Notice that Hebrews does not say she judged the circumstances favorable. It does not say she judged herself strong enough. It does not even say she judged the timing understandable. It says she judged Him faithful. That is the bedrock of faith. The strength of faith does not come from the believer. It comes from the God in whom the believer rests. Sarah was commended because she came to a settled conviction that God could be trusted.

This is where many of us need help today. We do not merely need better circumstances. We need a stronger view of God. Complaining is often a sign that we are not judging Him faithful. Discontentment often reveals that we are not judging Him faithful. Irritation with God’s timing often shows that we are not judging Him faithful. But when the heart is brought back to this truth, that God is faithful, everything begins to change. We may still be waiting, but we are no longer waiting without hope. We may still be burdened, but we are no longer burdened without confidence.

5. Faith Leaves a Testimony Greater Than Failure

What is so encouraging about Sarah’s story is that her weak moment did not define her forever. Hebrews 11 places her among the examples of faith. That means God’s grace wrote a better ending than her laughter deserved. Her story was not ultimately one of disbelief, but of belief. Her failure was real, but it was not final. She trusted the Lord, and God gave her the promised son. Verse 12 reminds us of the scope of what God did through this one impossible birth. From one who was “as good as dead” came descendants “as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable.”

That is how God works. He delights to put His power on display through weakness so that the glory belongs to Him alone. Sarah could never boast in herself. Abraham could never boast in himself. Their story was designed to make one truth unmistakable: God is faithful. And that is exactly what your life and mine are meant to say as well. When God carries us through waiting, restores us after doubt, and keeps His word in spite of our weakness, the testimony becomes not how strong we were, but how faithful He has always been.

This should encourage every believer who feels ashamed of faltering faith. Perhaps you have laughed at what God said. Perhaps you have doubted in the waiting. Perhaps you have stared at your circumstances and quietly concluded that nothing will ever change. Sarah’s story says that by the grace of God, disbelief can be followed by belief. God can bring a wavering heart to settled confidence. He can take a soul full of questions and anchor it again in His own unchanging character.

Reflection QuestionHave you truly judged God to be faithful, or have you been measuring His promises by your circumstances?

Rightly Divide? | 2 Timothy 2:15

When Paul told Timothy, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God,” he was not giving that charge only to preachers, scholars, or men in ministry. He was calling every believer to a life of careful, humble, faithful handling of the Word of God. We live in a day when Bible language is everywhere, religious content spreads instantly, and strong opinions are often mistaken for sound doctrine. But God has not asked us to be impressed by confidence. He has asked us to be faithful to the truth. The issue is not whether something sounds passionate, forceful, or even spiritual. The issue is whether it is rightly divided according to the Word of God.

That is why 2 Timothy 2:15 matters so deeply: “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” Scripture reminds us that we do not live for the approval of men, but for the approval of God. Others may watch us, learn from us, and be influenced by us, but the final measure of faithfulness is not what people think. It is what God says. And because His Word is inspired, preserved, and illuminated by the Holy Spirit, we must treat it with reverence and accuracy. To mishandle Scripture is not a small matter. It leads real people into real harm.

When the Bible is interpreted loosely, twisted carelessly, or forced to say what God never intended, the result is never harmless. It may produce noise, emotion, and reaction, but it does not produce truth. God did not give us His Word so we could use it to baptize our opinions, justify our preferences, or build our personalities. He gave it so that we might know Him, follow Him, and be shaped by what He actually said. That is why we must learn not just to read the Bible, but to read it correctly.

1. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Deviation

One of the first dangers of mishandling Scripture is that it moves us off the right path. Paul described this very problem in Galatians 2 when Peter, under pressure from others, began to pull away from the clear truth of the gospel. Paul wrote, “But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of the gospel…” (Galatians 2:14). Peter did not deny the gospel outright, but he drifted from it in practice. That is how deviation often begins. It is not always loud or immediate. Sometimes it is subtle, relational, and gradual.

That is why correct interpretation matters so much. The moment we stop asking, “What does God mean?” and start asking only, “What can I make this say?” we are already in dangerous territory. Scripture is not clay in our hands. We are clay in God’s hands. Our task is not to twist the Bible toward our preferences, but to submit ourselves to its truth. A person may sound bold, animated, and convincing, but if he is not handling the text rightly, he is leading people off course.

This matters in practical ways for all of us. A believer who does not know the Bible for himself can easily be pulled along by tone, personality, humor, or forcefulness. But the Christian who studies carefully begins to recognize when something does not fit the context, the character of God, or the larger truth of Scripture. Rightly dividing the Word keeps us from drifting into teaching that may sound strong but is spiritually crooked.

2. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Division

When truth is mishandled, unity begins to fracture. Paul told the church in Corinth, “For first of all, when ye come together in the church, I hear that there be divisions among you; and I partly believe it. For there must be also heresies among you…” (1 Corinthians 11:18-19). Those divisions did not appear out of nowhere. They grew where truth had been distorted, weakened, or incompletely understood. False ideas do not stay private for long. They eventually form parties, factions, and camps.

That was happening in Corinth as believers attached themselves to personalities and formed identities around partial understandings rather than the whole truth of God. A church can be gifted and active and still be deeply divided if it is not anchored in sound doctrine. Where Scripture is handled carelessly, people begin building around preferences, loyalties, and personal emphases. The result is not strength but splintering.

This is still one of the great needs of the church today. True unity is not produced by avoiding hard truths. It is produced by submitting to God’s truth. When believers interpret Scripture accurately, they may still have minor differences in preference or personality, but they will land in the same general place because they are yielding to the same Book. Rightly dividing the Word protects the church from becoming a crowd of competing opinions and helps it remain a body formed by truth.

3. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Deception

Paul warned the Colossians about those who would come with appealing words and persuasive ideas that were empty of truth. He wrote, “And this I say, lest any man should beguile you with enticing words” (Colossians 2:4). That warning is as urgent now as ever. Not everything that sounds spiritual is biblical. Not everything that sounds deep is true. Some statements are memorable but misleading. Some voices are polished but hollow. Some religious content is full of confidence and nearly empty of Christ.

Paul goes on to say, “Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ” (Colossians 2:8). To be spoiled in that sense is to be carried away like plunder after a battle. What a picture. A Christian who does not know the truth can be captured by error, not because he hates God, but because he is unprepared to recognize counterfeit teaching when it comes dressed in spiritual language.

We see this every day. Attractive sayings spread quickly because they sound comforting, dramatic, or wise. But many of them do not come from Scripture at all. They may reflect human wisdom, sentimental thinking, or cultural ideas rather than biblical truth. That is why believers must be rooted in the Word. The more clearly we know what God has said, the less likely we are to be seduced by what merely sounds religious. Accurate interpretation guards the heart from being tricked by eloquence without truth.

4. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Destruction

Peter acknowledged that some parts of Scripture are difficult. He wrote of Paul’s writings, “In which are some things hard to be understood…” (2 Peter 3:16). That should encourage us. There are passages in the Bible that require patience, humility, prayer, and careful study. We should not be embarrassed to admit that. But Peter does not stop there. He warns that the unlearned and unstable “wrest” the Scriptures “unto their own destruction.” That means they twist, distort, and force the text out of its proper place.

The danger is not that a sincere believer studies and admits he needs help. The danger is when a person approaches the Bible carelessly, self-confidently, and determined to make it fit his own ideas. When that happens, the result is not growth. It is damage. Twisted Scripture does not nourish the soul. It corrodes it. It does not steady a church. It confuses and harms it. God never intended His Word to be used as a platform for man’s pride, imagination, or agenda.

This is why “what this verse means to me” is never the first question. The first question must always be, “What did God mean when He gave it?” Once we know what God meant, then we can apply it rightly to our lives. But when meaning is separated from authorial intent, destruction follows. Rightly dividing the Word is not a technical exercise for a classroom alone. It is a spiritual necessity for every Christian who wants to know God, avoid error, and walk safely in truth.

One of the great blessings of accurate Bible study is that it brings believers to solid, stable convictions. Christians from very different backgrounds, personalities, and experiences can find themselves arriving at the same biblical conclusions because truth is not created by us. It is revealed by God. When people truly study the same Bible with humility and care, they may differ in minor preferences, but they will find themselves standing in the same field of truth. That is one of the quiet beauties of sound doctrine. It does not produce chaos. It produces clarity.

And when you know the Word rightly, you become ready for error when it appears. Something in your heart begins to recognize, “That does not line up with Scripture. That does not fit the context. That does not sound like the God revealed in this Book.” That kind of discernment does not come from cynicism or from pride. It comes from knowing the truth well enough to recognize a counterfeit. God has called us to more than religious reaction. He has called us to rightly divide the Word of truth.

Reflection QuestionAre you personally studying God’s Word carefully enough that you can recognize error, resist deception, and walk uprightly according to the truth of the gospel?

The Names of God Part Two | John 17

When Jesus prayed in John 17, He said, “And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent” (John 17:3). Eternal life is not only about escaping hell. Eternal life is about knowing God. It is about walking with Him, learning His character, trusting His heart, and growing in a real and personal relationship with Him. That is why the names of God matter so much. They are not just titles to memorize or decorative words to hang on a wall. They are revelations of who God is.

Every name of God opens another window into His character. Through His names, we see His eternity, His care, His awareness, His provision, His holiness, His peace, and His faithfulness. The more we know Him, the more our faith is strengthened. The more clearly we see Him, the more confidently we can trust Him in every burden, confusion, and trial of life.

So when we study the names of God, we are not studying something distant or abstract. We are learning the heart of the God who meets us in real situations. Abraham learned these names in moments of conflict, testing, waiting, and uncertainty. Hagar learned these names in loneliness and affliction. In every case, God revealed Himself in a way that met the need of the moment. And He still does the same for us today.

1. El Olam: The Everlasting God

After God fulfilled His promise to Abraham and Sarah by giving them Isaac, Abraham faced another conflict involving Abimelech and the wells of water in Genesis 21. Those wells were not a small issue. In that setting, water meant life. To lose the wells was to threaten the future of Abraham’s household, his flocks, and the very survival of those under his care. Yet after the conflict was settled, Abraham did not glory in his own wisdom or skill. Scripture says, “And Abraham planted a grove in Beer-sheba, and called there on the name of the Lord, the everlasting God” (Genesis 21:33).

That name, El Olam, means the everlasting God. Abraham had learned that God’s promises are not bound by the immediate pressure of the moment. God had promised a future, a seed, and a covenant that would stretch far beyond Abraham’s lifetime. So when a present conflict seemed to threaten that future, Abraham rested in the truth that God is everlasting. He is eternal, unchanging, and completely faithful across generations. What feels urgent to us has never placed God in panic. What feels uncertain to us has never shaken His throne.

That truth is deeply practical. We live in a world full of things that look permanent but fail. Money runs out. systems collapse. Promises are broken. Human strength fades. But when you build your life on the everlasting God, you are building on something that lasts. This is not wasted faith. This is not spiritual wishful thinking. We are trusting the God who never runs out of power, wisdom, resources, or answers. When life feels rough, trust the God who sees beyond your lifetime and is still working His purpose long after your moment of trouble has passed.

2. El Roi: The God Who Sees Me

In Genesis 16, Sarah and Abraham tried to solve God’s promise in their own way. Instead of waiting on the Lord, they brought Hagar into a painful and sinful situation that created heartache and conflict. Hagar conceived, Sarah became bitter, and Hagar fled into the wilderness under harsh treatment. She was mistreated, rejected, and alone. Yet in that lonely place, the angel of the Lord met her. And after that encounter, the Bible says, “And she called the name of the Lord that spake unto her, Thou God seest me” (Genesis 16:13).

What a comfort that name is. El Roi means the God who sees me. Hagar may have felt invisible to everyone else, but she was not invisible to God. The Lord saw her affliction. He saw the injustice. He saw the tears. He saw the fear. He saw the confusion. And the same God who saw Hagar in the wilderness still sees His people today. There are times when you may feel overlooked, forgotten, misjudged, or deeply wounded. You may feel as though nobody understands what you are carrying. But the God who sees has never once lost sight of you.

This truth works both ways. Yes, God sees our sin, and we ought to live in reverence before Him. But we must also remember that God sees our suffering, our faithfulness, our grief, and our quiet obedience. He sees the burdens nobody else notices. He sees the tears you never explain. He sees the faith that keeps going when others do not understand your path. You are never beyond His gaze. You are never beneath His notice. The God who sees is not cold or distant. He is attentive, compassionate, and near to those who feel forgotten.

3. Jehovah Jireh: The Lord Will Provide

Genesis 22 brings us to one of the greatest tests in Abraham’s life. God told Abraham to take Isaac, the promised son, and offer him upon a mountain that the Lord would show him. Every step of that journey must have been heavy. For three days, Abraham walked in obedience, carrying in his heart the weight of a command he could not fully understand. Then Isaac asked the searching question, “Behold the fire and the wood: but where is the lamb for a burnt offering?” Abraham answered with one of the great declarations of faith in all the Bible: “My son, God will provide himself a lamb for a burnt offering” (Genesis 22:7-8).

At the last possible moment, as Abraham lifted the knife in obedience, God stopped him and showed him a ram caught in the thicket. Then Abraham called the name of that place Jehovah Jireh, which means the Lord will provide. What a lesson this is for every believer. God’s provision often does not appear early by our reckoning. It often seems delayed. It may even feel painfully late. But when God’s provision comes, it is always exactly on time.

Jehovah Jireh teaches us that God provides at the place of obedience. The ram was not waiting on some other mountain. It was waiting where Abraham was supposed to be. God’s provision met Abraham in the path of surrender. And many times in our lives, provision follows surrender. We want God to show us everything in advance, but often He asks us to obey first and trust that He is already working ahead of us. Before Abraham ever climbed the mountain, God had already prepared the answer. Before you even know what need is coming, your God is already able to provide for it. Trust His timing. His watch is never wrong, even when His delays are hard to understand.

Reflection Question

Which of these truths do you most need today: that God is everlasting, that God sees you, or that God will provide? And how would your fear, your waiting, or your burden change if you truly rested in the God revealed through His names?

Whosoever Will May Come | Isaiah 56

When we think about access, we often think in terms of limits. Some doors are closed. Some invitations are restricted. Some places seem reserved for certain people, while others are left standing outside, wondering if they truly belong. That is how many people view God. They assume His grace is narrow, His welcome is hesitant, and His salvation must be earned by those who are polished, prepared, or already close enough to religion to deserve a place near Him.

But Isaiah 56 opens a very different picture. It reveals the heart of a God who throws the door wide open and says, “Whosoever will may come.” In this chapter, the Lord shows us that salvation is not merely an offer to the religious insider. It is an invitation to the outsider, the broken, the overlooked, and the one who thought there could never be a place for them. The God of heaven is not building barriers to keep sinners away. He is drawing them to Himself through the coming Messiah.

This chapter also reminds us that the God who saves is the God who transforms. His invitation is free, but it is not empty. He calls us to holiness because He is holy. He brings us near, fills us with joy, accepts our worship, and opens His house to all people. Isaiah 56 is a beautiful reminder that the gospel is not “clean up and come.” The gospel is “come and be made clean.” That is the heart of our God, and that should become the heartbeat of His people as well.

1. God’s Invitation Comes with a Call to Holiness

Isaiah 56 begins with a reminder that the God who saves is also the God who is righteous. Verse 1 says, “Thus saith the LORD, Keep ye judgment, and do justice: for my salvation is near to come, and my righteousness to be revealed.” The invitation of salvation is not a casual invitation to remain unchanged. It is a gracious call to come to God and to begin walking in reverence, purity, and obedience before Him.

This matters because many people want a version of God that is all comfort and no correction. They want love without holiness, mercy without truth, and salvation without surrender. But God’s character will not be reduced to what is convenient for us. He is a God of love, but He is also holy, just, and pure. To know Him rightly, we must receive all that He has revealed about Himself.

There is practical help for us here. When God saves us, He does not leave us as we were. He begins shaping our lives. There are things we now run from and things we now run to. We reject evil and pursue what pleases Him. A right view of God always leads to a changed life. If we truly believe that He is holy, then we will not treat Him lightly. We will not approach Him with a careless spirit. We will desire to live in a way that reflects His character.

2. God Welcomes Those Who Once Thought They Could Never Belong

One of the most powerful truths in Isaiah 56 is that those once excluded are now invited. The chapter speaks of the stranger and the eunuch, people who would have felt distant, limited, and on the outside. Yet God makes it clear that His salvation reaches even them. Verse 5 declares, “Even unto them will I give in mine house and within my walls a place and a name better than of sons and of daughters: I will give them an everlasting name, that shall not be cut off.”

What a glorious picture of salvation. The foreigner who once stood at a distance is welcomed in. The broken person who thinks he is too damaged to be received is given an everlasting name. The one who feels like a dry tree, barren and beyond repair, is met by the grace of God. This is the gospel in clear view. The Lord is showing us that His salvation reaches farther than human pride ever would have allowed.

That truth still matters today. There are people all around us who assume church is not for them. They think their past is too messy, their failures too serious, or their life too broken for God to receive them. But the heart of God says otherwise. He still receives outsiders. He still saves sinners. He still welcomes those who thought the door was shut. We must be careful that our spirit matches the spirit of our God. We should never make people feel that Jesus is only for a select few. The door is wide open through Christ.

3. God Himself Brings Sinners Near

Isaiah 56:7 begins with this wonderful promise: “Even them will I bring to my holy mountain.” That wording is important. God is the one doing the bringing. Man is not climbing his own way up to heaven. Sinners are not earning their access by effort, tradition, or worthiness. God, in His grace, draws people to Himself.

This is one of the sweetest truths in all of salvation. Left to ourselves, we would remain far from God. But the God who is high above us has come down to us and now brings us near. The outsider is not told to figure out his own way in. The broken sinner is not handed a ladder and told to try harder. God says, “I will bring them.” That is grace. That is mercy. That is the character of our God.

This should affect the way we see others. If God is the one who brings people near, then we should never despise those who are still on the journey toward Him. We should not make church feel like a place only for people who already know the rules. We should not become so polished and predictable that we forget how gracious God has been to us. People come searching because they know something is missing. They may not have the right words for it, but they are thirsty. And God still says, “Come.”

4. True Salvation Produces Joy

Isaiah 56:7 continues, “and make them joyful in my house of prayer.” One of the unmistakable marks of true salvation is joy. God does not merely bring sinners into His presence. He brings them in with gladness. He gives them joy in His house. He restores what sin had robbed and fills the redeemed heart with something real, deep, and alive.

Think about what that joy means. It is the joy of the outsider who is no longer outside. It is the joy of the sinner who has been forgiven. It is the joy of the prodigal who has come home. It is the joy of someone who knows the distance between him and God has been bridged by grace. That is not cold religion. That is not an empty ritual. That is the gladness of a soul that has found its way home to God.

Yet many believers know what it is to lose the freshness of that joy. Life becomes routine. Worship becomes mechanical. Church becomes a habit instead of a delight. That is why the cry of Psalm 51 is so needed: “Restore unto me the joy of thy salvation.” We need that prayer because it is possible to remain in the right place while losing the right spirit. We need God to renew our wonder again. We need to be reminded what it means that He saved us, brought us in, and made us His own.

5. God Accepts the Worship of the Redeemed

The verse goes on to say, “their burnt offerings and their sacrifices shall be accepted upon mine altar.” Under the old covenant, access to God’s altar came with heavy limitations. There were boundaries, requirements, and restrictions. But Isaiah points ahead to the Messiah, the One who would fulfill the law and open the way for sinners to come near. Through Christ, the worship of the redeemed becomes acceptable before God.

That does not mean we bring animal sacrifices today. But it does mean we bring our lives, our praise, our service, and our surrender to Him. Romans 12 calls us to present our bodies a living sacrifice. Hebrews 13 speaks of the sacrifice of praise. First Peter 2 teaches that believers offer up spiritual sacrifices acceptable to God by Jesus Christ. What Isaiah was anticipating, the New Testament makes plain: because of Christ, we may come to God and know that He receives what is offered in faith.

That gives daily significance to our Christian life. Your obedience matters. Your praise matters. Your surrendered life matters. God is not looking for empty motions. He is looking for sincere hearts, grateful lips, and lives yielded to Him. When our view of God is right, our worship will change. We will complain less and praise more. We will not bring Him leftovers. We will offer Him our lives because He has already given us everything in Christ.

6. God’s House Is Open to All People

The chapter closes this section with one of the clearest statements of God’s heart: “for mine house shall be called an house of prayer for all people.” This is not a message for one nation only. It is not grace for one class, one culture, or one kind of person. It is for all people. Later, Jesus Himself would quote this verse when He cleansed the temple, showing that the Father’s house was never meant to be reduced to selfish religion or narrow pride.

This reveals the compassion of God. He is not reluctant to save. He is not stingy with grace. He does not hide salvation behind impossible barriers. He calls sinners to come. Revelation 22 carries the same invitation all the way to the close of Scripture: “And the Spirit and the bride say, Come. And let him that heareth say, Come. And let him that is athirst come. And whosoever will, let him take the water of life freely.” From Isaiah to Revelation, the message is the same. Whosoever will may come.

That truth should shape our church, our witness, and our attitude. We must not take for granted what God has done for us while failing to reflect His heart toward others. The same God who welcomed us wants others to come as well. The same Savior who brought us near is still drawing sinners today. The same grace that saved us is able to save them. Our task is not to narrow the invitation. Our task is to hold the door open and point people to Jesus Christ.

Reflection QuestionIf God’s heart is to bring outsiders near, restore joy, accept surrendered worship, and welcome all who come through Christ, are you reflecting that same heart in the way you view God, worship Him, and receive others?

Sarah | Disbelief Followed by Belief | Hebrews 11:11-12

As we come into a season where our hearts are drawn again to the death, burial, and resurrection of Jesus Christ, we are reminded that the Christian life has always been a life of faith. We are saved by faith in Christ. We walk by faith in Christ. And very often, we are stretched by faith when God gives a promise but does not seem to move as quickly as we expected. Few stories capture that tension more clearly than the story of Sarah. Her life reminds us that even sincere believers can struggle in seasons of delay, and even those who laugh in disbelief can still become examples of genuine faith.

Hebrews 11:11 says, “Through faith also Sara herself received strength to conceive seed, and was delivered of a child when she was past age, because she judged him faithful who had promised.” That is one of the most beautiful statements in all the Bible. Sarah is not remembered in Hebrews 11 for her laughter, her weakness, or her confusion. She is remembered because she came to a settled conviction about the character of God. She judged Him faithful. That is the heart of faith. Faith is not confidence in ourselves. Faith is not confidence in circumstances. Faith is confidence in the God who makes the promise.

Sarah’s story is deeply practical for us because we know what it is to wait. We know what it is to pray and not see immediate answers. We know what it is to hear truth from God’s Word, believe that it is true, and then walk through long stretches where nothing seems to happen. In those moments, the real issue is not merely patience. The real issue is whether we still believe that God is faithful. Sarah’s life teaches us that disbelief does not have to be the end of the story. By God’s grace, disbelief can be followed by belief.

1. Faith Begins with the Promise of God

The story really begins in Genesis 15, when God came to Abram and gave him a clear promise. Abram had no son, no heir of his own, and no visible reason to think that the future God described could ever become reality. Yet the Lord spoke with certainty and power. He brought Abram out beneath the heavens and said, “Look now toward heaven, and tell the stars, if thou be able to number them: and he said unto him, So shall thy seed be” (Genesis 15:5). What an astounding promise. God was not speaking in vague possibilities. He was declaring a certain future.

The Bible tells us that Abram believed in the Lord, and it was counted to him for righteousness. That is what faith does. Faith takes God at His word. Faith does not need every detail explained before it obeys. Faith does not demand full visibility before it trusts. It simply says, “God has spoken, and that settles it.” That is true in salvation, and it is true in every area of the Christian life. If God says that Christ saves, then Christ saves. If God says He will never leave us nor forsake us, then He will never leave us nor forsake us.

The problem is that our hearts often grow cynical. We are willing to believe God in theory, but when His promises collide with our limitations, our timeline, and our sight, we begin to hesitate. Yet the foundation of faith has never been what we can see. The foundation of faith is what God has said. Sarah’s story reminds us that every work of faith begins there, with the sure promise of a faithful God.

2. Faith Is Tested in the Silence of Waiting

After the promise came the waiting. Genesis 16 opens with words that feel heavy after the glory of Genesis 15: “Now Sarai Abram’s wife bare him no children.” God had spoken, yet nothing seemed to be changing. Days passed. Months passed. Years passed. And with every passing year, the promise must have looked more impossible, not less. This is where faith becomes difficult. It is one thing to rejoice when God gives a promise. It is another thing to keep believing when heaven seems silent.

This is where many believers struggle. We are not always troubled by what God says. We are troubled by how long He takes. We can rejoice over a promise on Sunday, and then wrestle by Monday because the circumstances have not moved. Waiting exposes what we really believe about God. It reveals whether our confidence is in His character or in our schedule. It is in the waiting season that the heart begins to ask dangerous questions. Did I misunderstand? Did God forget? Was I wrong to believe at all?

Yet the waiting seasons are often where God does some of His deepest work. Faith is not mainly displayed in easy moments. Faith is displayed when sight resists belief. Faith is displayed when circumstances suggest otherwise. Faith is displayed when the soul is tempted to give up, but instead clings more tightly to the Word of God. Sarah’s waiting was not wasted. God was doing something deeper than merely preparing a child. He was shaping a testimony of faith.

3. Faith Sometimes Struggles with Disbelief

By the time we reach Genesis 17 and 18, the struggle has become painfully clear. Abram is ninety-nine years old. Sarah is far past the age when childbearing would even seem possible. God comes again and repeats the promise, this time specifically naming Sarah as the one through whom the promised son will come. Instead of immediate celebration, there is laughter. Abraham laughs. Sarah laughs. Their laughter is not the laughter of joy. It is the laughter of disbelief. The promise sounds too impossible, too late, too far gone.

Genesis 18:14 asks one of the great questions of Scripture: “Is any thing too hard for the LORD?” That question cuts through every excuse, every fear, every human calculation, and every cynical thought. The issue was never Sarah’s age. The issue was never Abraham’s weakness. The issue was never whether the circumstances looked favorable. The issue was whether God was capable of doing what He had promised. And the answer, of course, is yes. There is nothing too hard for the Lord.

How often are we just like Sarah? We hear that God can restore, revive, save, heal, strengthen, and provide, but inwardly we laugh because our situation feels too complicated. We know the verses, but we quietly file our own burdens into the category of impossible. Yet the God of Sarah is still the God of the impossible. He still works beyond human strength. He still fulfills His word when man has reached the end of himself. Sarah’s temporary disbelief is recorded honestly for us, not to excuse our doubt, but to show us that God is gracious even with faltering saints.

4. Faith Grows When We Settle the Character of God

Hebrews 11 does not focus on Sarah’s laughter. It focuses on her conclusion. “Because she judged him faithful who had promised.” At some point, Sarah’s heart settled. She moved from looking at herself to looking at God. She moved from measuring the promise by human ability to measuring it by divine faithfulness. That is the turning point in every life of faith. The promise becomes steady when the Promiser is seen clearly.

Notice that Hebrews does not say she judged the circumstances favorable. It does not say she judged herself strong enough. It does not even say she judged the timing understandable. It says she judged Him faithful. That is the bedrock of faith. The strength of faith does not come from the believer. It comes from the God in whom the believer rests. Sarah was commended because she came to a settled conviction that God could be trusted.

This is where many of us need help today. We do not merely need better circumstances. We need a stronger view of God. Complaining is often a sign that we are not judging Him faithful. Discontentment often reveals that we are not judging Him faithful. Irritation with God’s timing often shows that we are not judging Him faithful. But when the heart is brought back to this truth, that God is faithful, everything begins to change. We may still be waiting, but we are no longer waiting without hope. We may still be burdened, but we are no longer burdened without confidence.

5. Faith Leaves a Testimony Greater Than Failure

What is so encouraging about Sarah’s story is that her weak moment did not define her forever. Hebrews 11 places her among the examples of faith. That means God’s grace wrote a better ending than her laughter deserved. Her story was not ultimately one of disbelief, but of belief. Her failure was real, but it was not final. She trusted the Lord, and God gave her the promised son. Verse 12 reminds us of the scope of what God did through this one impossible birth. From one who was “as good as dead” came descendants “as the stars of the sky in multitude, and as the sand which is by the sea shore innumerable.”

That is how God works. He delights to put His power on display through weakness so that the glory belongs to Him alone. Sarah could never boast in herself. Abraham could never boast in himself. Their story was designed to make one truth unmistakable: God is faithful. And that is exactly what your life and mine are meant to say as well. When God carries us through waiting, restores us after doubt, and keeps His word in spite of our weakness, the testimony becomes not how strong we were, but how faithful He has always been.

This should encourage every believer who feels ashamed of faltering faith. Perhaps you have laughed at what God said. Perhaps you have doubted in the waiting. Perhaps you have stared at your circumstances and quietly concluded that nothing will ever change. Sarah’s story says that by the grace of God, disbelief can be followed by belief. God can bring a wavering heart to settled confidence. He can take a soul full of questions and anchor it again in His own unchanging character.

Reflection QuestionHave you truly judged God to be faithful, or have you been measuring His promises by your circumstances?

Rightly Divide? | 2 Timothy 2:15

When Paul told Timothy, “Study to shew thyself approved unto God,” he was not giving that charge only to preachers, scholars, or men in ministry. He was calling every believer to a life of careful, humble, faithful handling of the Word of God. We live in a day when Bible language is everywhere, religious content spreads instantly, and strong opinions are often mistaken for sound doctrine. But God has not asked us to be impressed by confidence. He has asked us to be faithful to the truth. The issue is not whether something sounds passionate, forceful, or even spiritual. The issue is whether it is rightly divided according to the Word of God.

That is why 2 Timothy 2:15 matters so deeply: “Study to shew thyself approved unto God, a workman that needeth not to be ashamed, rightly dividing the word of truth.” Scripture reminds us that we do not live for the approval of men, but for the approval of God. Others may watch us, learn from us, and be influenced by us, but the final measure of faithfulness is not what people think. It is what God says. And because His Word is inspired, preserved, and illuminated by the Holy Spirit, we must treat it with reverence and accuracy. To mishandle Scripture is not a small matter. It leads real people into real harm.

When the Bible is interpreted loosely, twisted carelessly, or forced to say what God never intended, the result is never harmless. It may produce noise, emotion, and reaction, but it does not produce truth. God did not give us His Word so we could use it to baptize our opinions, justify our preferences, or build our personalities. He gave it so that we might know Him, follow Him, and be shaped by what He actually said. That is why we must learn not just to read the Bible, but to read it correctly.

1. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Deviation

One of the first dangers of mishandling Scripture is that it moves us off the right path. Paul described this very problem in Galatians 2 when Peter, under pressure from others, began to pull away from the clear truth of the gospel. Paul wrote, “But when I saw that they walked not uprightly according to the truth of the gospel…” (Galatians 2:14). Peter did not deny the gospel outright, but he drifted from it in practice. That is how deviation often begins. It is not always loud or immediate. Sometimes it is subtle, relational, and gradual.

That is why correct interpretation matters so much. The moment we stop asking, “What does God mean?” and start asking only, “What can I make this say?” we are already in dangerous territory. Scripture is not clay in our hands. We are clay in God’s hands. Our task is not to twist the Bible toward our preferences, but to submit ourselves to its truth. A person may sound bold, animated, and convincing, but if he is not handling the text rightly, he is leading people off course.

This matters in practical ways for all of us. A believer who does not know the Bible for himself can easily be pulled along by tone, personality, humor, or forcefulness. But the Christian who studies carefully begins to recognize when something does not fit the context, the character of God, or the larger truth of Scripture. Rightly dividing the Word keeps us from drifting into teaching that may sound strong but is spiritually crooked.

2. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Division

When truth is mishandled, unity begins to fracture. Paul told the church in Corinth, “For first of all, when ye come together in the church, I hear that there be divisions among you; and I partly believe it. For there must be also heresies among you…” (1 Corinthians 11:18-19). Those divisions did not appear out of nowhere. They grew where truth had been distorted, weakened, or incompletely understood. False ideas do not stay private for long. They eventually form parties, factions, and camps.

That was happening in Corinth as believers attached themselves to personalities and formed identities around partial understandings rather than the whole truth of God. A church can be gifted and active and still be deeply divided if it is not anchored in sound doctrine. Where Scripture is handled carelessly, people begin building around preferences, loyalties, and personal emphases. The result is not strength but splintering.

This is still one of the great needs of the church today. True unity is not produced by avoiding hard truths. It is produced by submitting to God’s truth. When believers interpret Scripture accurately, they may still have minor differences in preference or personality, but they will land in the same general place because they are yielding to the same Book. Rightly dividing the Word protects the church from becoming a crowd of competing opinions and helps it remain a body formed by truth.

3. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Deception

Paul warned the Colossians about those who would come with appealing words and persuasive ideas that were empty of truth. He wrote, “And this I say, lest any man should beguile you with enticing words” (Colossians 2:4). That warning is as urgent now as ever. Not everything that sounds spiritual is biblical. Not everything that sounds deep is true. Some statements are memorable but misleading. Some voices are polished but hollow. Some religious content is full of confidence and nearly empty of Christ.

Paul goes on to say, “Beware lest any man spoil you through philosophy and vain deceit, after the tradition of men, after the rudiments of the world, and not after Christ” (Colossians 2:8). To be spoiled in that sense is to be carried away like plunder after a battle. What a picture. A Christian who does not know the truth can be captured by error, not because he hates God, but because he is unprepared to recognize counterfeit teaching when it comes dressed in spiritual language.

We see this every day. Attractive sayings spread quickly because they sound comforting, dramatic, or wise. But many of them do not come from Scripture at all. They may reflect human wisdom, sentimental thinking, or cultural ideas rather than biblical truth. That is why believers must be rooted in the Word. The more clearly we know what God has said, the less likely we are to be seduced by what merely sounds religious. Accurate interpretation guards the heart from being tricked by eloquence without truth.

4. Without the Accuracy of Scripture, We Are Susceptible to Destruction

Peter acknowledged that some parts of Scripture are difficult. He wrote of Paul’s writings, “In which are some things hard to be understood…” (2 Peter 3:16). That should encourage us. There are passages in the Bible that require patience, humility, prayer, and careful study. We should not be embarrassed to admit that. But Peter does not stop there. He warns that the unlearned and unstable “wrest” the Scriptures “unto their own destruction.” That means they twist, distort, and force the text out of its proper place.

The danger is not that a sincere believer studies and admits he needs help. The danger is when a person approaches the Bible carelessly, self-confidently, and determined to make it fit his own ideas. When that happens, the result is not growth. It is damage. Twisted Scripture does not nourish the soul. It corrodes it. It does not steady a church. It confuses and harms it. God never intended His Word to be used as a platform for man’s pride, imagination, or agenda.

This is why “what this verse means to me” is never the first question. The first question must always be, “What did God mean when He gave it?” Once we know what God meant, then we can apply it rightly to our lives. But when meaning is separated from authorial intent, destruction follows. Rightly dividing the Word is not a technical exercise for a classroom alone. It is a spiritual necessity for every Christian who wants to know God, avoid error, and walk safely in truth.

One of the great blessings of accurate Bible study is that it brings believers to solid, stable convictions. Christians from very different backgrounds, personalities, and experiences can find themselves arriving at the same biblical conclusions because truth is not created by us. It is revealed by God. When people truly study the same Bible with humility and care, they may differ in minor preferences, but they will find themselves standing in the same field of truth. That is one of the quiet beauties of sound doctrine. It does not produce chaos. It produces clarity.

And when you know the Word rightly, you become ready for error when it appears. Something in your heart begins to recognize, “That does not line up with Scripture. That does not fit the context. That does not sound like the God revealed in this Book.” That kind of discernment does not come from cynicism or from pride. It comes from knowing the truth well enough to recognize a counterfeit. God has called us to more than religious reaction. He has called us to rightly divide the Word of truth.

Reflection QuestionAre you personally studying God’s Word carefully enough that you can recognize error, resist deception, and walk uprightly according to the truth of the gospel?

Jonah | The Prophet that Said No (Part Two)

When we come to Jonah 1, we are not merely reading about a prophet on a ship in the middle of a storm. We are looking into the heart of a man whose outward actions revealed an inward attitude toward God. Jonah’s problem did not begin when he boarded the boat to Tarshish. It began when God spoke clearly, and Jonah said no in his heart. That is always where disobedience starts. Long before the feet run, the heart resists. Long before the actions become visible, the attitude has already shifted away from the Lord.

That is why this chapter is so searching. Jonah is not a pagan sailor. He is not a man who has never heard the voice of God. He is a prophet. He knows the Lord. He knows the truth. He knows what God has said. Yet he still rises up, not to obey, but to flee. That should sober every one of us, because it reminds us that it is possible to sit in church, know Scripture, speak the right language, and still be running from God on the inside. Jonah 1 is a warning, but it is also a mercy. It shows us that even when God’s children run, God does not stop pursuing them.

1. We Cannot Escape God

One of the clearest truths in this chapter is that we cannot escape God. Jonah’s entire plan was built on the false assumption that distance could remove him from the presence of the Lord. He thought that if he could get far enough from Nineveh, he could get away from the God who sent him. But God is not bound by geography. He is not limited to one city, one country, one church service, or one moment of conviction. The psalmist asked, “Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence?” (Psalm 139:7). Jonah discovered what we all must learn: there is no boat, no city, no distraction, and no hiding place that can put us beyond the reach of God.

So many people still try to do what Jonah did. They think that if they can just get away from church, away from preaching, away from Christian friends, away from the Bible, away from places where conviction is strong, then somehow they will have escaped God. But distance does not remove His presence. You can change your location without changing your condition. You can leave the service and still carry the voice of God in your conscience. You can fill your schedule with noise and still not silence the Spirit of God. The sooner we stop trying to run, the sooner we can find peace in simply obeying the Lord.

2. Disobedience Always Affects Others

A second lesson from this passage is that disobedience always affects others. Jonah likely imagined he was making a private choice. He boarded that ship alone. He paid his fare alone. He went down into the sides of the ship alone. But his sin did not stay with him. The sailors were terrified. The cargo was thrown overboard. The whole crew was put in danger. That is how sin works. It never remains neatly contained. It always spills over into the lives of others.

We are often tempted to believe the lie that our choices only affect us. But Jonah 1 destroys that idea. A father’s disobedience affects a home. A mother’s spirit affects a family. A young person’s rebellion affects siblings, parents, and friends. A believer’s coldness affects a church. One person can bring fear, confusion, and weight into a whole group simply by refusing to obey God. Sin is never as private as it pretends to be. It creates collateral damage wherever it goes. We ought to remember that before we drill holes in the boat and then convince ourselves that it is only our seat getting wet.

3. God Lovingly Pursues His Children

A third truth in this account is that God lovingly pursues His children. Jonah deserved to be left alone in his rebellion, but the Lord would not let him go. Verse 4 says, “But the LORD sent out a great wind into the sea.” The storm did not come by accident. It was not random bad luck. It was the loving hand of God moving in discipline. This was not hatred. This was mercy. God loved Jonah too much to let him keep running undisturbed.

That truth should encourage us. When God interrupts our plans, exposes our sin, or brings us to a place where we cannot keep ignoring Him, that is not proof that He has stopped loving us. It is often proof that He has not. The Lord knows exactly what to send to get our attention. Not too little, so that we ignore it. Not too much, so that we are destroyed. He is a perfect Father. He pursues with wisdom, patience, and purpose. Jonah knew exactly what the storm meant, and many times we do too. God has a way of making it plain when He is dealing with our hearts.

The sailors in this story become a rebuke to Jonah. These men, who did not know Jehovah as Jonah did, showed more fear and reverence than the prophet himself. Jonah claimed, “I am an Hebrew; and I fear the LORD, the God of heaven, which hath made the sea and the dry land” (Jonah 1:9). Yet his life in that moment contradicted his words. The sailors, on the other hand, recognized the hand of God in the storm and responded with seriousness. It is a shameful thing when unbelievers show more earnestness toward their false religion than believers show toward the true God. Jonah’s spiritual condition had grown so cold that pagan men appeared more reverent than a prophet.

4. God Is Merciful Even in Our Failures

Finally, Jonah 1 teaches us that God is merciful even in our failures. Verse 17 says, “Now the LORD had prepared a great fish to swallow up Jonah.” That fish was not merely judgment. It was mercy. Jonah should have drowned in the sea. Instead, God prepared a way to preserve him. The same God Jonah had resisted was already arranging the very thing that would rescue him.

This is one of the sweetest truths in the chapter. God often prepares grace before we even know we need it. Jonah failed badly. He said no to a clear command. He fled the presence of God. He endangered others. He remained stubborn even after the storm came. Yet the Lord still showed mercy. The fish was proof that Jonah’s rebellion had not exhausted God’s compassion. And that is good news for all of us, because many of our troubles are not accidents that happened to us. They are messes we made ourselves. Still, even there, the mercy of God can meet us.

How often do we think that if we created the problem, we must fix it alone. We imagine that God helps with sorrows we did not choose, but stands back from the ones we caused. Jonah 1 shows the opposite. God is merciful even in failures. He does not excuse sin, but He does not abandon His children in it either. He pursues, corrects, and restores. He is far better to us than we deserve. Even when we are fools, He remains gracious.

Jonah ran from God’s command, from God’s presence, and from God’s will. But he could not outrun the Lord. His choices affected everyone around him. God pursued him through the storm. And even in the depths of failure, mercy was waiting. That is the message of Jonah 1, and it is still the message we need today. Stop running. Stop pretending partial obedience counts as full obedience. Stop believing your sin only affects you. Stop resisting the loving correction of God. The safest place in all the world is not far from Him, but yielded to Him.

Reflection Question:What area of your life are you still saying no to God in, and what would it look like to stop running and fully obey Him today?

Jonah | The Prophet that Said No (Part One)

There are moments in life when God speaks with unmistakable clarity. Not vague impressions, not uncertain feelings, but clear direction. That is exactly what we find in Jonah 1. God comes to Jonah, a prophet who knows Him, and gives him a direct command: “Arise, go to Nineveh… and cry against it; for their wickedness is come up before me” (Jonah 1:2). There is no confusion. There is no question about what God wants. The command is simple, direct, and urgent.

Yet what makes this passage so powerful is not just the clarity of God’s voice, but the stubbornness of Jonah’s response. Jonah knew God. He had walked with Him. He had heard His voice before. But when God called him to do something uncomfortable, something undesirable, something that went against his own will, Jonah said no. Instead of running toward God, he ran from Him. And in Jonah’s story, we do not just see a prophet long ago. We see ourselves. We see how easily we can hear God’s voice and still choose our own way.

  1. A Clear Command from God

God’s instructions to Jonah were not hidden or complicated. They were clear, direct, and specific. God told Jonah where to go, what to do, and why it mattered. In the same way, God’s Word gives us clear instruction today. The call to salvation is clear. The call to holiness is clear. The command to forgive, to reconcile, to walk in obedience is not confusing.

“Now the word of the LORD came unto Jonah… saying, Arise, go to Nineveh” (Jonah 1:1–2).

God does not leave us guessing about what He desires. Many times, we are not struggling with knowing God’s will. We are struggling with doing it. The issue is not a lack of clarity. It is a lack of surrender.

Yet God’s commands are often uncomfortable. Nineveh was not a place Jonah wanted to go. It was dangerous, wicked, and deeply personal. Sometimes God calls us to forgive someone who hurt us deeply. Sometimes He calls us to confess sin we would rather hide. Sometimes, He calls us to step into situations we would rather avoid. Obedience is not always easy, but it is always right.

And when God speaks, His commands require an immediate response. Delayed obedience is still disobedience. God does not call us to negotiate. He calls us to trust and obey.

  1. Counterfeit Compliance

At first glance, it looks like Jonah obeys. The Bible says he arose, just as God commanded. But instead of going to Nineveh, he goes in the exact opposite direction. Jonah moves, but not toward God.

“But Jonah rose up to flee unto Tarshish from the presence of the LORD” (Jonah 1:3).

This is what we might call counterfeit compliance. Jonah looks like he is doing something, but he is not doing what God told him to do. And how often do we do the same? We stay busy. We remain religious. We keep up appearances. Yet underneath it all, we are going the wrong direction.

Jonah went down to Joppa. He went down into the ship. Later, he would go down into the sea. This downward movement is not just physical. It is spiritual. When we run from God, we do not stay where we are. We drift downward. Disobedience always takes us farther than we intended to go and lower than we ever planned.

One of the most dangerous places to be is pretending to follow God while actually resisting Him. We convince ourselves that everything is fine. We tell ourselves we are still walking with Him. But deep down, we know the truth. We are going the opposite way.

  1. A Careless Cost

Jonah’s decision to run from God was not free. It came at a cost. The Bible says, “So he paid the fare thereof” (Jonah 1:3). He literally paid money to run from God. And that is always how sin works. It promises freedom, but it always costs more than we expect.

It cost Jonah personally. He lost his peace. While a violent storm raged around him, he was asleep, completely disconnected from reality. That is what happens when we run from God. Our hearts grow dull. Things that once convicted us no longer move us.

But Jonah’s sin did not just affect him. It affected everyone around him. The entire ship was put in danger because of one man’s disobedience. The sailors feared for their lives. The storm threatened to destroy everything.

Sin is never isolated. It always spills over into the lives of others. A private decision becomes a public consequence. A hidden sin creates visible damage. We may think our choices only affect us, but they never do. They impact our families, our friendships, and even our church.

  1. Compassionate Correction

One of the most powerful truths in this passage is how God responds to Jonah’s rebellion. The Bible says, “But the LORD sent out a great wind into the sea” (Jonah 1:4). Jonah runs, but God pursues.

God could have judged Jonah instantly. He could have ended the story right there. But instead, He sends a storm. Not to destroy Jonah, but to redirect him.

This is a compassionate correction. God loves us too much to let us succeed in rebellion.

“Or despisest thou the riches of his goodness… not knowing that the goodness of God leadeth thee to repentance?” (Romans 2:4).

The storm was not random. It was measured. No one died. No one was lost. It was just enough to wake Jonah up. Just enough to bring him face to face with his disobedience. Just enough to remind him that he could not run from God.

Sometimes the storms in our lives are not punishment. They are mercy. They are God calling us back. They are His way of saying, “You are not going to keep going this direction.”

Even when Jonah was thrown into the sea, God had already prepared a great fish. Even in discipline, there was provision. Even in correction, there was grace.

God does not correct us because He is angry. He corrects us because He loves us. He sees where our path leads, and He intervenes before it is too late.

Reflection QuestionWhere in your life is God speaking clearly, yet you are tempted to say no? Are you moving toward Him in obedience, or are you running in the opposite direction?

About Pastor JD Howell

Pastor J.D. Howell is a faithful and passionate servant of God whose heart beats for preaching the truth of God’s Word and shepherding God’s people with love and integrity.

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© 2026

First Baptist Church of Bridgeport | All Rights Reserved

About Pastor JD Howell

Pastor J.D. Howell is a faithful and passionate servant of God whose heart beats for preaching the truth of God’s Word and shepherding God’s people with love and integrity.

Newsletter

Subscribe now to get timely updates and in-depth insights designed to keep you in touch with First Baptist Church.

You're in! Thank you.

© 2026

First Baptist Church of Bridgeport | All Rights Reserved

About Pastor JD Howell

Pastor J.D. Howell is a faithful and passionate servant of God whose heart beats for preaching the truth of God’s Word and shepherding God’s people with love and integrity.

Newsletter

Subscribe now to get timely updates and in-depth insights designed to keep you in touch with First Baptist Church.

You're in! Thank you.

© 2026

First Baptist Church of Bridgeport | All Rights Reserved