Week 43

October 20-24
[M] Ezekiel 1-3; John 1
[T] Ezekiel 4-6; Psalm 82; John 2
[W] Ezekiel 7-9; John 3
[T] Ezekiel 10-12; Psalm 83; John 4
[F] Ezekiel 13-15; Psalm 136; John 5

Dwell Plan Day 211-215 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF



Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Ezekiel 1:4–28 | As I looked, behold, a stormy wind came out of the north, and a great cloud, with brightness around it, and fire flashing forth continually… and above the expanse over their heads there was the likeness of a throne, in appearance like sapphire; and seated above the likeness of a throne was a likeness with a human appearance. | Ezekiel was a priest in exile, far from the Temple that had once been the center of God’s presence on earth. He sat by the Kebar Canal in Babylon—defeated, displaced, and likely wondering if God had abandoned His people. But as he looked toward the horizon, a storm gathered: wind, lightning, fire, and four living creatures bearing a chariot of dazzling light. Above them was a throne—shimmering like sapphire—and seated upon it was “a likeness with a human appearance,” radiant with fire and light. In that moment, Ezekiel saw what few had ever seen: the glory of the LORD, the same glory that once filled the Holy of Holies, now appearing in a pagan land.
That vision raises the question: What is God’s throne doing in Babylon? The answer reveals the heart of God’s redemptive purpose. His glory is not confined to walls of stone or a single city; He goes with His people, even into exile. The throne in Babylon declares that God’s reign has not ended. He is still sovereign, still holy, still near. Where His people are scattered, His presence follows. Long before the incarnation, Ezekiel’s vision whispers the truth that would one day be fully seen in Christ: the God who dwells among His people is not bound by place but by covenant love.

Ezekiel 1:28 | Ezekiel’s vision of God, with the angels and all the eyes, is truly a theological statement. This is not an acid trip, or some early ayahuasca induced vision. First, notice Ezekiel’s halting and frustrated language. He’s having real trouble finding the words and analogies for what he’s seeing, which is a part of the point. God simply cannot be apprehended visually or described verbally. He’s too big and too holy and too glorious. The words “like the appearance” happen over and over again. He’s at the limit of language, which is a statement itself about the eternal God and knowing him. Next we have the eyes. This is quite a ghoulish and ghastly image as many have tried to imagine it. The eyes everywhere on everything look otherworldly and spooky. But it’s a theological statement; God sees and knows all. Their plight and suffering as His people is something He always sees. Next is this picture of God on wheels. What’s up with that? Again it creates more and more bizarre images. But again this is theology. God’s people are going into exile, and they’re mobile now, their lives and belongings on carts. Pulled by wheels. So what is God saying? This is a promise of God’s being with His people! But even more than that, it is a hint that God intends to really live with His people. It’s a promise of the coming incarnation of Jesus. These images and pictures are arresting and memorable, and that’s also a bit of the point: it’s the sort of teaching you’ll remember visually!

John 1:51 | Truly, truly I say to you | This is the first time this expression happens in John, and it only happens in John, but it’s repeated over and over and over again. This phrase can sound peculiar to our ears, though many of us are used to hearing it in the Bible. In Hebrew and Aramaic, when you repeat a word twice in a row, it’s an actual grammatical idiom; it has a special meaning. In Isaiah 26:3 it’s translated this way “perfect peace”, even though the original Hebrew just says “peace, peace” with the same word repeated twice “shalom, shalom” means “perfect peace.” This idea of perfection means wholeness and fullness as well. The concept of perfection is meant to be full, mature and whole. So what do all of the many many times of this expression “truly, truly” mean? It must be a claim of perfect truth. That’s what the grammar means in Aramaic. Our translations are “accurate” in their literal translations, but something amazing is being claimed repeatedly by Jesus, and we never pay attention to it. Jesus is claiming to be bringing perfect truth. But of course He is. He is perfect truth Himself.

Tuesday
Ezekiel 4-5 | Ezekiel plays out visual pictures of the verbal judgments that he’s preaching against God’s people. Even though they’re going into exile for their disobedience and idolatry, they keep thinking they’re going to get back to Jerusalem. They think this is all temporary, all of this being on the road and traveling to Babylon. God has told them that it’s going to last, but they aren’t listening. They’re keeping up their old idol worship—it’s like they haven’t learned a thing.
So God calls Ezekiel to a form of theater or visual protest. First he’s got to lay on the ground, on his side, for over a year. And he’s got to eat a rather unpalatable barley cake cooked over excrement, and he’s got to do this right in front of people. Then after that he’s got to make a show of shaving off half of the hair on his head and face, and doing stuff with the hair like cutting it up and setting it on fire to show how God is going to judge His people. Visual, visceral, and confrontational images. Prophets are here to make the comfortable uncomfortable. How should we understand this? First, this reveals something about Ezekiel’s character. God uses our human personalities, and there’s something a bit wild about Ezekiel on all accounts. He does get a little whiny about the cooking with poop thing. Who could blame him? His entire life, and the way he lives it, are a visual parable of God’s intentions in judgment, and that includes his life story and character. But there’s a second thing. When God pulls out the stops like this, and makes the images so penetrating and disturbing, it’s a sign of His grace. It’s His love going the extra mile, taking the time to expose His people, even when they don’t want to see it. Finally there’s a third lesson. Art, and even extreme performance art, can be a prophetic tool for God’s kingdom.

Ezekiel 4 | “And you, son of man, take a brick and lay it before you, and engrave on it a city, even Jerusalem… This shall be a sign to the house of Israel.” | Ezekiel was not a prophet who merely spoke—he performed God’s message so His people could feel its weight. In chapter 4, God commands Ezekiel to stage a prophetic drama: to draw Jerusalem on a brick and lay siege to it, showing the coming destruction; to lie on his side for hundreds of days, bearing the guilt of Israel and Judah; and to eat rationed food cooked over dung fire, symbolizing the famine and despair that would soon come. Every act was a sign meant to pierce through the spiritual indifference of the exiles—God’s living illustration of what sin had done to His people. Yet beneath the strangeness and severity of these signs was mercy: God was still speaking, still warning, still reaching out. Through Ezekiel’s embodied message, we glimpse a God who refuses to stay silent when His people wander. And in Ezekiel’s willingness to bear guilt not his own, we see a faint shadow of the One who would come centuries later—Jesus Christ, who would not only act out God’s message but become it, carrying our sin upon Himself so that judgment might give way to grace.

Wednesday
Ezekiel 7:4 | Again and again—nearly seventy times—God speaks this refrain through Ezekiel: “Then you shall know that I am the LORD.” It echoes like a drumbeat through every vision, oracle, and act of judgment. Israel had forgotten who God was; they had traded His glory for idols, His covenant for compromise. So God’s goal in judgment is not revenge, it’s revelation. He disciplines so that His people might once again know Him, not just as an idea or tradition, but as the living, holy, covenant-keeping LORD. This theme runs through all of Ezekiel: whether in wrath or restoration, through exile or renewal, God’s purpose is—always relational—to bring His people back to Himself. When everything else is stripped away, when the false gods crumble and the city falls, this remains God’s burning desire: that His people would know Him. The same call still reaches us today. Every loss, every shaking, every moment of conviction carries this gracious invitation: to return to the One who says, even in judgment, “Then you shall know that I am the LORD.”

Ezekiel 7:5-10 | The Hebrew of this chapter is, itself, chaotic and violent in its grammar. You get a sense of the rush of words in the English translation, especially with the exclamation marks and the short punchy sentence structure. The grammar is a part of the message, describing a frantic experience of disaster in frantic language. This description of God’s anger is more personal. You don’t get the sense at all of an abstract judge. There is no little sin before this God, because there is no little god to sin against. This is a picture of our sin taken personally, of God no longer suffering long the wandering of His people. This personal judgment makes so clear why it is absolutely necessary to have a personal knowledge of God. It’s all personal to Him—He even comes in person to save us at the cross. The tone, imagery, and passion of God’s judgments are all hints of love, jealousy, and personal offense. And nowhere does this come into clearer view than at the cross.

Ezekiel 8:8 | Many years ago a prominent evangelical teacher said that your integrity is who you are when nobody’s looking. Unfortunately when no one was watching, he also indulged in bad behavior. (We all need to be careful, even if we have understanding!) Our God makes His point over and over again. There are no exceptions, God wants us to own up to our hypocrisy.
In this weird image/vision, Ezekiel is told to dig into a wall of the court of the temple, where there's a little hole. He starts digging and finds a secret room. Inside that secret room are all the leaders of the people of Israel and they’re worshiping secretly. What images are they worshiping? What does Ezekiel see on the walls of this praise center? Vile images and creepy crawlies and all sorts of nasty things that folks liked to worship back then. If this image/vision doesn’t sound like a picture of secret lives on the internet, I don’t know what does. Do you have a secret online life? Run from it and shut it down. It’s evil. Are you secretly a hypocrite, with a private life that no one knows about? Give it up, before it destroys you. 

Ezekiel 8:16 |Ezekiel’s vision in chapter 8 reveals just how far God’s people had fallen. The very place that was meant to be the center of worship—the Temple, the dwelling of YHWH’s glory—had become a stage for idolatry. The prophet is shown one abomination after another, but it reaches its terrible climax here: the leaders of Israel, standing in the inner court itself, turning their backs on the Lord’s presence to bow down to the rising sun. It’s hard to imagine a greater betrayal. They were using the house of God to worship created things, treating the blazing holiness of His presence as something common, replaceable. The vision exposes sin not just as breaking rules but as breaking relationship—turning our backs on the God who made us to face something that can never save. Yet even here, God speaks. He shows Ezekiel these horrors not to condemn in silence but to call His people to repentance. The grace in the vision is this: God still cares enough to reveal what is wrong. He will not allow His people to live comfortably in idolatry. He exposes sin so that hearts might turn again toward His mercy, back to the light of His glory.

John 3:27 | This is one of the most crucial verses in all the Scripture, and once you see it you can’t unsee it. John sees that even being able to receive a gift is a gift itself. Somehow this makes me want to chase God for everything, for every insight and all truth. To ask Him to make me able to get His gifts, for Him to give me the bandwidth for all of His blessing! This truth sets me free as a pastor. I can’t control or force anyone to see truth. That’s God’s business, and I need to trust Him for it. This truth sets me free as an evangelist. I’m not converting anyone and never have. I don’t have to manipulate or have just the right answer. No, it’s God who saves and calls and enlightens. This truth sets me free as a dad, a husband, and a leader. I’m free to fail. I don’t have to know everything. I don’t have to always be right. I don’t have to have the perfect plan. I can cry out to my God to give the things I need, or my people need, or my family needs. This verse and this truth is a great invitation to wholly and fully throw all of your cares and concerns on Him. 

John 3:30 | Our world is shaped by the air of existentialism, the idea that meaning is something we must create for ourselves. From the time we’re young, we’re told to “find your truth,” “be your best self,” and “write your own story.” The self becomes the center of the universe, and fulfillment comes through self-expression, self-definition, and self-assertion. The problem is, the more we make life about ourselves, the smaller and more anxious our world becomes. When I am the source of meaning, everything depends on my success, my feelings, my approval, my image. We end up exhausted from trying to be enough, from constantly curating an identity that keeps slipping through our fingers. Existentialism promises freedom, but it quietly enslaves us to our own fragile selves.
John the Baptist shows us another way. Standing at the height of his popularity, with crowds flocking to him, he points away from himself to Jesus and says, “He must increase, but I must decrease.” This is not self-hatred—it’s liberation. True life doesn’t come from enlarging the self but from losing it in something greater. John found joy not in being the center but in making much of Christ. The gospel offers what existentialism never can: meaning that doesn’t depend on you. When Christ increases in your life, you finally find freedom from the exhausting project of self-construction. The less you make of yourself, the more peace you’ll know; because your identity no longer rests on your performance, but on His unchanging love.

Thursday
Ezekiel 10 | This is one of the low points of the Old Testament. Ezekiel has a vision, after all of this judgment, the exiles on their journey away from home, having lost everything, and the vision is terrifying. Some folks were still hoping to get back home, that this exile was just a quick detour. But this image is devastating. This story parallels when God’s glory fills the temple the first time, when Solomon dedicates it. But now it’s gone, it’s gotten up and left the building. God is no longer in Jerusalem, the city of His people and His servant David. Did everything fail? Did all the promises come to nothing? The glory of the Lord has departed from His dwelling place. It’s a moment of finality and horror. But you need to look closely, because now God’s on his Big Wheels. That child’s toy is not demeaning to God, He’s intentionally pointing out His big, weird, angel-on-fire, bug eyed, multi-faced wheels. Remember, all of those details are theological statements, with claims about the person and work and majesty of a holy, eternal, and omniscient Being. And yes, He’s leaving His house, but you have to pay attention: He’s leaving His house because they’re all leaving their houses! He just isn’t letting them go anywhere where He won’t go with them. Yes it’s scary that He’s leaving the temple. But they should have paid attention; He always intended to leave that temple! That’s who Jesus is, He is God leaving the temple to come and live with slobs like us. Praise Him.

Ezekiel 11:23  | This is one of the most heartbreaking moments in Scripture. The vision Ezekiel saw in chapter 1—the radiant throne of God’s glory above the wheels and living creatures—now moves. The same presence that once descended on the Temple in glory at Solomon’s dedication now departs from it in sorrow. God’s throne lifts up and leaves the city, pausing on the Mount of Olives, as if looking back one last time before withdrawing. The message is clear: the people have driven Him out. Their idolatry, corruption, and hard hearts have made the holy city unfit for His dwelling. What began as the wonder of chapter 1—the glory of God coming to Babylon—now takes on a sobering meaning: if His glory is appearing there, it’s because it has left here.
And yet, even this departure is grace. God is not abandoning His people forever; He is going into exile with them. The same chariot-throne that appeared by the Kebar Canal now shows us that His presence is mobile—He is not confined to temples of stone. In leaving Jerusalem, God goes to be with His scattered people so that one day He might bring them home again. The glory that departs in Ezekiel 11 will one day return in the person of Christ, who would stand on that very same Mount of Olives, look upon Jerusalem, and weep for it. Ezekiel’s vision reminds us that God’s holiness is never indifferent to sin, but His mercy is never absent from His people. Even when the glory departs, grace is already on the move.

Friday
Ezekiel 13–14 | Because they have misled my people, saying, ‘Peace,’ when there is no peace… | In these chapters, God exposes both the false prophets who spoke lies in His name and the people who eagerly listened to them. It’s a sobering reminder that deception requires not just a false teacher but a willing audience. The prophets offered comforting words that dulled conviction, and the people gladly received them because it was easier than repentance. But God holds both accountable.
The same warning still applies today. We live in an age saturated with voices—podcasts, books, influencers, media, teachers—and not all of them lead us toward truth. It’s not enough to blame the messengers; we must guard our own hearts. What we choose to listen to forms us, shapes our loves, and directs our worship. God calls His people to discernment—to turn from empty promises and return to the Word that truly gives life. False prophets thrive where God’s people stop testing what they hear. Don’t give them an audience. Listen for the voice of the Shepherd instead.

John 5:1–17 | The pool of Bethesda was surrounded by belief in its healing powers, but the text itself never confirms that the water truly healed anyone. Verse 4 (missing in the earliest manuscripts) reflects a popular superstition—that an angel stirred the water and the first to enter would be cured. Jesus doesn’t affirm this belief; instead, He bypasses the pool entirely and heals the man by His own word. The point of the story isn’t the power of the water but the authority of Christ—the true source of healing who makes all lesser hopes unnecessary.

John 5:19 | Jesus loves to talk about His Dad. It’s actually quite odd. Great leaders and thinkers of history never do this. I can’t remember anything from history even like it. Jesus talks about, grounds Himself in, and constantly defines Himself through His relationship with His Father. He owns it, owns it in such a way that folks are disturbed by it and want to kill him for it. It’s odd and off putting and seems like the wrong emphasis. Aren’t these religious persons supposed to give us rules and morals, things to do? No. Jesus keeps talking about His relationship with His Dad like it’s the most important knowledge you will ever need to know. Like it’s the point itself, of all that He’s doing, of why He’s going to the cross. Like this relationship is the point of His whole life. Do folks hear about God from you like that? Does God drop out of your conversation this way? There’s something here, in the very way that Christ carries Himself, that invites us into carrying ourselves, in Him, in the same way.

Week 42

October 13-17
[M] Lamentations 1-5; Ps 137; 1 Pet 4
[T] Obadiah 1; Jer 40-42; Ps 147; 1 Pet 5
[W] Jeremiah 43, 44, 46; 2 Peter 1
[T] Jer 47, 48, 49; Ps 80; 2 Peter 2
[F] Jer 50-51; 2 Peter 3

Dwell Plan Day 206-210 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Lamentations 3:22–23 | The book of Lamentations is a poetic funeral dirge for Jerusalem, written in the aftermath of Babylon’s destruction of the city in 586 BC. Most scholars attribute it to Jeremiah, the “weeping prophet,” who witnessed the devastation firsthand. The Temple burned, the people exiled, and the streets once filled with worship now silent with grief. But Lamentations is not chaos on a page. It’s meticulously structured: five poems, each forming an acrostic in Hebrew (except the last, which deliberately breaks the pattern). This discipline amid anguish is itself theological. The poet’s grief is real, but it’s ordered before God, a reminder that sorrow doesn’t have to be formless to be honest.
What’s even more profound is that the book is shaped like a chiasm—a literary mirror. The outer chapters echo each other (1 and 5, 2 and 4), with the center (chapter 3) serving as the hinge point, the heart of the lament. And right at that heart are these verses: “The steadfast love of the Lord never ceases; his mercies never come to an end.” This is not a sentimental moment; it’s a defiant confession. Jeremiah doesn’t say this when life is good but when everything is rubble. The structure itself preaches: grief surrounds hope, but hope holds the center. In God’s design, mercy is not the afterthought of suffering; it is the midpoint through which suffering is interpreted.
In a modern world that reads from left to right, always chasing progress and resolution, Lamentations reminds us that biblical faith often circles back to the center—to God’s unchanging character. The chiasm is not just poetic symmetry; it’s a worldview. Everything—pain, loss, exile—folds inward toward the faithful God who governs history. Jeremiah teaches us to trust not in the line of our story but in the center of God’s. His sovereignty doesn’t erase grief, but it anchors it. When the city falls, the poet still sings: morning mercies are certain, even in the dark.

Psalm 137:1 | This psalm gives voice to the ache Jeremiah foresaw. The people who once ignored his warnings now find themselves exiles in Babylon, sitting by foreign rivers, haunted by memories of their ruined city. Jeremiah had told them that this exile was not abandonment but discipline; that God had plans even in Babylon (Jeremiah 29:10–14). Psalm 137 captures the human side of that truth: faith feels fragile when songs of worship are demanded in a strange land. Yet beneath the sorrow runs the same conviction Jeremiah proclaimed—the covenant Lord has not ceased to be their God. The rivers of Babylon are not the end of the story, but the place where lament becomes longing, and longing becomes hope, as God begins to re-form His people’s hearts for home.

1 Peter 4:1 | Ceased from sin? This is a confusing phrase. THe ESV Study Bible has a helpful note:
Concerning the phrase, “whoever has suffered in the flesh has ceased from sin,” three different interpretations have been suggested: (1) Some suggest that this could refer to the suffering of Christ (“the one who has suffered”)—who, though he was not himself a sinner, took sin upon himself and then triumphed over it forever through his suffering and death. This interpretation seems unlikely, however, because “whoever” seems too broad and imprecise to be a clear reference to Christ. (2) Others have suggested that this is a reference to the believer being dead to the power of sin, as a result of having died with Christ (similar to Paul’s concept in Rom. 6:1–11). (3) More likely, Peter’s point is that when believers are willing to suffer, the nerve center of sin is severed in their lives. Although believers will never be totally free from sin in this life (cf. James 3:2; 1 John 1:8), when believers endure suffering for the sake of Christ they show that their purpose in life is not to live for their own pleasures but according to the will of God and for his glory.

1 Peter 4:6 | Preached to those who are dead? That's another confusing phrase (when we read it in English). What's going on here? Again, the ESV Study Bible has a helpful note:
Although some maintain that Peter offers a second chance after death for those who rejected Christ, this view is untenable since it contradicts both the clear teaching of Scripture throughout the rest of the Bible (e.g., Luke 16:26; Heb. 9:27; see note on 1 Pet. 3:19) and the immediate context, concerning the importance of perseverance of believers (4:1–6) and the coming judgment of “the living and the dead” (v. 5). Given the immediate context, “those who are dead” refers to Christians to whom “the gospel was preached” when they were alive but who have since died. This fits with the meaning of “dead” in v. 5. Even though believers will experience physical death (i.e., they are judged in the flesh the way people are), believers who have died live in the spirit the way God does (that is, they live in heaven now, and they will live as well at the resurrection when Christ returns).

Tuesday
Obadiah 1:15 | The book of Obadiah is the shortest in the Old Testament, but it delivers a heavy amount of God's judgement and justice. It’s not addressed to Israel or Judah, but to Edom—the descendants of Esau, Jacob’s brother—who stood by and even gloated as Jerusalem fell to Babylon. God’s word through Obadiah is a judgment oracle against those who delighted in His people’s pain. But what’s striking is that this message of wrath is not primarily for Edom’s ears; it’s for Judah’s. God’s people, humiliated and displaced, needed to know that their suffering had not escaped His notice. Even when they were powerless, the Lord remained sovereign, and His justice was not delayed, but is certain.
Like Revelation, Obadiah lifts the eyes of the faithful to the horizon of God’s final victory. The message is not “you will escape suffering,” but “your God still reigns.” The nations rage, empires rise and fall, but none can outrun the justice or mercy of the Lord. For exiles wondering if God had forgotten them, Obadiah was a whisper of comfort wrapped in thunder: The kingdom shall be the Lord’s (v. 21). That promise—of a world made right, of evil finally reversed—is the same hope that sustains believers today. God’s sovereignty is not just a doctrine; it’s the solid ground beneath our waiting.

1 Peter 5:1 | You can finally see what an effect Christ’s teaching on leadership had on Peter. It’s what Christ modeled Himself in becoming a human: humility! For God to choose to become a man, in order to rescue humanity, He had to humbly give up power, glory, knowledge, etc.  In the gospels, the disciples don’t really understand this, and they stumble around trying to build org charts, fighting about who’s going to be in charge. We see Peter jostling for control, standing out, quick to speak and lead. But the difference here in this letter, in this verse! He’s an apostle, by all accounts the lead apostle, and how does he approach and encourage and come alongside these elders he’s writing to? As a “fellow elder.” He understands Jesus’ kingdom now. Can you imagine the thrill and excitement of those first elders in their first reading? “Peter thinks of himself like one of us?!” There’s no posturing or need to claim the authority that Jesus had given him. No, instead he leads by example, finally applying what he had heard all those years ago from Jesus “Even the Son of Man did not come to be served, but to serve and give His life as a ransom for many.” In the stiff hierarchy of old systems, authority and submission are a big deal. It’s how you navigate your obligations, and it’s usually seen as the glue that holds a culture together. Christ breaks all that glue in His kingdom, and He invites us to do the same. 

Wednesday
2 Peter 1:21 | Peter’s words remind us that Scripture is not the product of human invention but divine inspiration. The prophets did not wake up with good ideas about God—they were “carried along by the Holy Spirit.” This image of wind filling a ship’s sails, reveals both human participation and divine authorship. God used real people with real voices, yet what they spoke was His Word. From a Reformed perspective, this is the foundation of our confidence: Scripture is God-breathed (2 Timothy 3:16). It carries the authority, clarity, and sufficiency of the God who cannot lie. In an age of competing opinions and shifting moral ground, we do not stand on speculation, but revelation.
Peter’s next chapter shows why this truth matters. False teachers had begun twisting Scripture, blending God’s Word with human greed and desire. That pattern hasn’t changed. The danger of our time is not usually the outright denial of the Bible, but its quiet distortion, when the voice of culture or preference begins to speak louder than the voice of God. The authority of Scripture is not an abstract doctrine; it’s the only safeguard against deception. When we anchor our faith, our teaching, and our lives to the Word inspired by the Spirit, we are moored to truth that does not drift.
That’s why our Bible reading plan in 2025 is more than a discipline—it’s an act of resistance. In a world flooded with noise, we are training our ears to hear the Shepherd’s voice. Each chapter read is an act of worship, declaring that God still speaks and that His Word still rules His people. As we move through Scripture together—Genesis to Revelation—we’re not just reading ancient pages; we’re being carried along by the same Spirit who inspired them, growing as a people shaped by truth and sustained by grace.

Thursday
Psalm 80:3 | Three times in Psalm 80, this prayer rises like a refrain: “Let your face shine, that we may be saved.” It’s the heart-cry of a people who know that salvation is not merely escape from judgment, it is restoration to fellowship. To see God’s face is to experience His favor, His presence, His delight. Throughout Scripture, the shining face of God symbolizes life itself: the blessing of Numbers 6, the intimacy lost in Eden, the glory Moses glimpsed only in part. When the psalmist pleads for God’s face to shine again, he’s longing not just for relief from suffering but for communion with the living God. This is what sin has fractured: not just our moral standing, but our relationship, our nearness to the One whose presence is our home.
The gospel answers that longing in full. In Christ, the face of God no longer turns away but shines upon us with steadfast love. Salvation, then, is not a ticket out of hell—it’s the invitation into His presence forever. The joy of eternity will not be in golden streets or endless leisure, but in union with Christ, the One in whose face we see the glory of God (2 Corinthians 4:6). And there, in that light, every redeemed heart will finally be satisfied, not alone, but in perfect fellowship with the multitude of God’s people, beholding Him together, and finding that the sight of His face is the fullness of joy.

2 Peter 2:17 | Peter paints false teachers as “springs without water,” a haunting image of promise without substance. They appear to offer refreshment, but when the thirsty soul draws near, there’s nothing there. Their words may sound spiritual, but they lack the living water of Christ and the truth of His Word. In Jeremiah’s day, the people forsook “the fountain of living waters” for cracked cisterns that could hold none (Jeremiah 2:13), and the same tragedy repeats whenever teaching detaches from Scripture. Real life, real nourishment, comes only from the gospel that flows from God’s Word. That’s why the church must be vigilant, not chasing the shimmer of an empty oasis, but continually drinking from the deep unchanging truth of Christ.

Friday
Jeremiah 51 | This is a sweeping vision of Babylon’s downfall, a city once proud now crumbling under the weight of divine justice. What seemed invincible is shown to be fragile in the hands of the Sovereign Lord. The prophet describes its fall in poetic detail: walls broken, idols shattered, rivers dried. This is not random vengeance but the deliberate act of a God who rules history. Babylon had lifted itself up in arrogance, boasting in its strength, but now it becomes a warning to every empire that exalts itself against heaven. God’s justice is not hasty, but it is sure. The kingdom of man always collapses under the illusion of its own permanence.
Through a biblical-theological lens, Jeremiah 51 becomes a shadow of Revelation 18, the fall of the final Babylon, the symbol of every worldly power opposed to Christ. From ancient Mesopotamia to modern empires, the pattern repeats: humanity builds towers, and God brings them down. Yet for the people of God, this is not a message of fear but of hope. The destruction of Babylon means the rise of Zion. What a glorious day it will be when the kingdoms of this world become the kingdom of our Lord and of His Christ, and He shall reign forever. The pride of Babylon will give way to the peace of the New Jerusalem, where the Lamb reigns and His glory fills the earth.

2 Peter 3:11-13 | Imagine sitting down at a five-star restaurant and spending fifteen hundred dollars on a peanut butter and jelly sandwich. You’d think, that’s crazy—why pour that much into something so ordinary, so fleeting? Yet that’s exactly what we do when we pour our hopes, energy, and identity into the things of this world. Peter reminds us that everything around us—our possessions, reputations, comforts—will one day dissolve. It’s not that these things are evil, but that they’re temporary. Investing your life in them is like paying a fortune for something that won’t last past lunch. The wise person looks at the menu of this life and chooses differently, storing up treasure where moth and rust can’t touch it.
Christ calls us to live with eternity in view. One day, sooner than we realize, we’ll stand before Him, and everything we once thought was valuable will be seen for what it really was—temporary scaffolding around an eternal soul. Peter’s question presses home: What sort of people ought we to be? When we grasp the shortness of this life, holiness becomes not a burden but common sense, and generosity becomes joy. The person who lives with heaven in view will never regret what they gave away for Christ, but the one who lived for peanut-butter sandwich pleasures in a perishing world surely will. The call of 2 Peter 3 is simple: live today for the world that will last forever.

Week 41

October 6-10
[M] Jeremiah 27, 28, 29, 24; James 4
[T] Jer 37, 21, 34; Psalm 79; James 5
[W] Jer 30-33; 1 Peter 1
[T] Jer 38, 39, 52; 1 Peter 2
[F] 2 King 24-25; 2 Chr 36; Ps 126; 1 Pet 3

Dwell Plan Day 201-205 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Jeremiah 28:15 | In Jeremiah’s day, the people were desperate for good news. Hananiah gave them exactly what they wanted: a message of peace, quick deliverance, and an end to their troubles. But that message of encouragement wasn’t from God. Jeremiah, on the other hand, carried the heavy word of the Lord—a word that cut against the grain of their desires. Faithful prophets, then and now, are not called to echo cultural optimism or consumer preferences, but to deliver God’s truth, even when it stings. The history of Israel shows that false prophecy thrives when people crave comfort more than truth, but it always leads to disappointment and judgment.
This is a sobering reminder for the church today. In a culture that constantly encourages us to “shop around” for voices that affirm our desires, true shepherds of God’s people are called to give us what our souls actually need—the Word of God—even when it challenges us. That’s why Chris and I need your prayers. Pray that we would have courage like Jeremiah to resist the pressure of popularity and faithfully proclaim Scripture. Pray that we would not be swayed by fear of man but strengthened by the fear of the Lord. And pray that God would give you ears ready to receive His Word, even when it confronts the flesh, knowing that His truth always leads to life.

Jeremiah 29:7 | When Jeremiah wrote to the exiles in Babylon, he shocked them by telling them not to resist or withdraw, but to settle in, plant gardens, raise families, and even pray for the very city that had conquered them. This was a radical call to live as God’s people in a foreign land—not by assimilation, but by faithful presence.
That theme runs through the whole Bible: Israel in exile, Jesus calling His disciples “not of the world” yet “sent into the world” (John 17:14–18), and Paul describing the church as “ambassadors for Christ” (2 Cor. 5:20), embassies of God’s kingdom planted in foreign soil. For the early church scattered across the Roman Empire, their gatherings were like outposts of heaven, living under Christ’s reign in the midst of a pagan world. And so it is with us in San Francisco: our churches are not fortresses to hide in, nor mirrors of the city’s idols, but embassies of Christ’s kingdom—seeking the good of our neighborhoods, praying for their peace, and showing with our lives that the true King has come.

Jeremiah 29:11 | This verse is often stitched onto pillows, printed on coffee mugs or wall art as if it were a simple promise that life will go smoothly. But the real context is far more sobering. God had just used the Babylonian army to lay waste to Jerusalem—His own city—because of His people’s rebellion, idolatry, and injustice. Families were torn apart, homes destroyed, and survivors carried off into exile. In that chaos, you can imagine the questions echoing in the hearts of the exiles: Has God abandoned us? Is He finished with His people? And it is into that devastation that Jeremiah brings this word: not of quick rescue but of God’s long-term sovereign plan. Even through judgment, destruction, and exile, God was weaving together a future and a hope for His covenant people.
The apostle Paul makes the same point centuries later in Romans 9, reminding us that God is sovereign over vessels of wrath and mercy alike, using even rebellion and disaster to magnify His glory and fulfill His promises. Paul’s point is not to make light of suffering but to lift our eyes above it. When the people of Judah saw Babylon’s armies marching through their gates, they couldn’t imagine how God could still be at work. Yet the Lord says, “I know the plans I have for you.” His people’s sin didn’t derail His purposes, and Babylon’s cruelty didn’t dethrone Him. In His sovereignty, He rules over even the darkest events of history.
The cross is the ultimate example. For the disciples, the crucifixion must have felt like the end of all their hopes: their Teacher betrayed, arrested, mocked, beaten, and executed. Surely in that moment, they were asking, “God, what are You doing?” And yet Peter would later declare in Acts 2 that Jesus was “delivered up according to the definite plan and foreknowledge of God,” and that the very act of wicked men nailing Him to the cross was part of God’s design for salvation. That means we can trust Him, even when life feels like Babylon, when we can’t see the purpose and when our world seems broken beyond repair. God is always sovereign, always working for His glory and our ultimate good. What looks like tragedy may, in His hands, be the pathway to redemption.

James 4:10 | In an age when you get compliments on your narcissism, this truth seems absurd. God’s grace flows downhill; it’s like water in that way. Tracing a water leak in your house can be quite a headache. Finding a small leaky pipe or drain can be almost impossible. But if you want to find out where the water goes, that’s much easier. It always finds the lowest point. That’s what liquids do, running wherever gravity sends them. It’s a natural and inescapable process, and it’s what God’s mercy does too. It also finds the lowest point and fills that place. And as inevitable and necessary as that process is in God’s work to make us holy, we fight it and resist it and fear it. We don’t want to be humbled. To us it only looks and feels like our humiliation, so we run from it. Who wouldn’t?
But at what cost? The context here says everything. It’s our pride that keeps us fighting and hurting and destroying one another. It’s our pride that makes plans as if God doesn’t exist. It’s our pride that drives our prayers to seek our own passions. And God is opposed to all of this. Are you working in opposition to God? Are any of us? Cry out for this work: make me submit to You, my God! Draw me in and take me over, and do what I cannot even really begin to do: make me humble in You. That’s not a prayer you can spend on your passions. Praise Him; He gives such prayers!

Tuesday
Jeremiah 37:2-3 | What an odd and common mix these two verses are in what they describe. Verse 2 is very plain: no one listens to what Jeremiah says. But Jeremiah says more directly: that it isn’t personal—no one is actually listening to God. In this little verse is much of the experience of many prophets, pastors, evangelists, and parents: no one is listening to you. You’re just being ignored. But then comes the next part. In verse 3, King Zedekiah stops ignoring Jeremiah and what does he do next? He asks Jeremiah to pray for him! And so you come to the next common experience of prophets, pastors, etc., when folks are scared and needy they suddenly want your undivided attention to their problems. This little passage, and the saga of Jeremiah’s suffering as God’s prophet, are still the same sorts of stories in God’s kingdom today. Our stories. May our Father rescue us from the blindness that doesn’t seek or listen to Him!

James 5:1 | When most Americans read a verse like this, we instinctively imagine someone else—the ultra-wealthy billionaires with private jets and endless luxury. But James wasn’t writing only to the super-rich. Compared to the majority of people who have lived throughout history, and even most of the world today, we are the wealthy. We have homes with running water, food in refrigerators, clothes in closets, and technology in our pockets that kings and emperors could never have dreamed of. The temptation of our hearts is to always compare, so that God’s warnings to the rich feel like they don’t apply to us. But the truth is, these verses do apply to us.
James warns that wealth has a way of deceiving us into false security and of lulling us into forgetting God. That’s why we need to let passages like this search our hearts instead of sidestepping them. The Spirit is reminding us not to put our hope in riches that will one day rot but in Christ who never fades. These words are not meant to crush us but to wake us up, so that our wealth becomes a tool for blessing others rather than a trap for our souls. The call is to hold our money with open hands—using it for generosity, for mission, for the good of our neighbors—because everything we have has been entrusted to us by the Lord. In that way, the warning becomes an invitation: to live free from greed, anchored in Christ, and rich in the things that truly last.

Wednesday
Jeremiah 30:1–3 | God’s promise to “restore the fortunes” of His people was not just about returning from Babylon—it pointed forward to the far greater restoration in Christ. The exiles longed for home and peace, but their deepest need was for a Savior who could restore their broken relationship with God. In Jesus, the true Israelite, the promises of Jeremiah 30 reach their fulfillment: He brings us back not merely to a strip of land but into the kingdom of God itself, not just to rebuild ruined cities but to raise the dead and make all things new. When we read these words as Christians, we see that the ultimate “restoration of fortunes” is found in the cross and resurrection, where our sin was dealt with and eternal life secured.

Jeremiah 31:31–34 | Behold, the days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant with the house of Israel and the house of Judah… For I will forgive their iniquity, and I will remember their sin no more. | Here God promises something entirely new: a covenant grounded not in our weakness but in His grace. His people, burdened by sin and exile, are given hope that one day He would do what they could not: forgive their sins completely and write His law on their hearts. This is fulfilled in Jesus Christ, whose death and resurrection secure for us an unbreakable relationship with God. The new covenant is not about what we bring to God, but about what He has done for us—mercy freely given, hearts transformed, and sins remembered no more. This is the hope of grace: that we are God’s people forever because of Christ.

Jeremiah 33:6–8; 11; 14; 22; 26 | In this passage God piles up promise after promise, repeating “I will” again and again: I will bring healing, I will restore, I will cleanse, I will multiply, I will not reject. The emphasis is unmistakable—the hope of God’s people rests not on what they do for Him, but on what He does for them. This is the heartbeat of the gospel: salvation is God’s work from beginning to end. Just as Israel’s future depended on His initiative, so our hope depends entirely on His grace in Christ. The cross and resurrection are the ultimate “I will” of God—His declaration that He Himself will heal, forgive, and redeem His people forever.

1 Peter 1:12 | It was revealed to them that they were serving not themselves but you, in the things that have now been announced to you… things into which angels long to look. | Peter reminds us that even the angels—those who dwell in the presence of God, who see His glory unveiled—long to peer into the mystery of the gospel. That means the salvation we so often take for granted is something so glorious that heavenly beings are eager to marvel at it. But our sin has dulled our vision. We get used to grace, numb to mercy, distracted by lesser things. Instead of treasuring the gospel as the greatest reality in the universe, we skim past it as though it were ordinary so that we can go home and look at our phones. The angels see what we too easily miss: that the good news of Christ crucified and risen is the most breathtaking display of God’s wisdom, love, and power the world has ever known.
When we lose that perspective, we settle for cheap substitutes. Imagine a kid given the choice of  a lollipop or a hundred dollar bill. You know the kid would choose the immediate sweet distraction over lasting treasure. Without gospel perspective, we live small lives, consumed by ourselves and blind to the riches of God’s grace. But when the Spirit lifts our eyes to see the gospel as the angels see it, we realize we have something far better than fleeting pleasures: we have Christ Himself, forgiveness of sins, and an inheritance that never fades. That is worth more than all the lollipops in the world.

Thursday
Jeremiah 38 | The back and forth between King Zedekiah and Jeremiah is sad. Time and time again (three times in our story) Jeremiah preaches God’s grace to Zedekiah. All Zedekiah has to do is trust God’s words. God has Jeremiah keep repeating to him: “don’t look at the power of Egypt or the awesome mighty empire of Babylon and be intimidated by them. God is greater and He’s already decided on His judgment. Submit and you’ll be fine. Don’t be so scared.” And Zedekiah just doesn’t listen. He’s pushed around by others, he swears secretly out of fear, he’s terrified of torture and suffering, and he’s determind to be practical. And all of that is a death sentence. He doesn’t seem to really be concerned about Jeremiah being beaten, imprisoned, and thrown into a pit. He doesn’t even do anything about those horrible sufferings until someone else brings it up. He’s weak and he’s faithless, and God still keeps sending him words and promises from Jeremiah. What a picture of tender mercy and what a horror of hardness of heart. Here is God’s judgment at its worst, with a man both unable to receive grace freely offered and unable to turn from his slavery to fear. May God protect us from such a complete condemnation. 

Friday
2 Kings 25:27–30 | The book of Kings ends in a surprising way: Jehoiachin, the captive king of Judah, is lifted from prison and given a seat at the table of Babylon’s king. After pages of judgment, destruction, and exile, this small detail shines like a flicker of hope. It’s not just a random kindness—it’s a reminder that God had not abandoned His covenant. Even in exile, the line of David was preserved, because God had promised in 2 Samuel 7 that a son of David would reign forever. This strange ending whispers that the story isn’t over—that God’s mercy still has the final word. And centuries later, through this same line, Jesus the Messiah was born, proving that even when everything looks lost, God is still faithful to His promises.

Psalm 126:6 | This verse captures the paradox of the Christian life: sorrow in the sowing, joy in the reaping. It reminds us that the tears we shed in the work of faith are never wasted, because God Himself ensures the harvest. Ultimately, this points us to Christ, the true Sower, who went out weeping to the cross, bearing the seed of His own life. His death looked like loss, but it produced a harvest of salvation beyond measure. In Him, our labors and our tears are gathered up into God’s redemptive plan, so that even the hardest seasons will one day end in joy. The gospel promises that our sowing in weakness will be crowned with His resurrection power, and we too will come home rejoicing, our arms full of His gracious harvest.

1 Peter 3:19-20 | Have you ever heard of the “harrowing of hell”? As early as the second century, we see this teaching, and sometimes you’ll see it omitted from the Apostle’s Creed in modern churches, or changed to read “He descended to the dead” or something like that. The claim is made that this is what this verse actually teaches. Jesus went, after He died on the cross and before He rose on Easter Sunday, down on a little road trip to hell itself. What He was up to down there depends on the church tradition you come from. But is that what this verse actually means?
Remember the Emmaus road and what the two disciples learned from Jesus after the resurrection: the Old Testament is chock full of Jesus. How so? It doesn’t use the name Jesus. The Old Testament is full of Him in this way: the work and kingdom of Jesus are described and predicted in stories, rules, poems, and rituals. That’s what the Old Testament is, a preparation and prelude to the work and person of Jesus. Peter is saying here that Noah’s ark was a picture of the cross of Jesus. In the same way those folks were rescued from death by being safe inside the big boat God had prepared, we also are rescued from death by faith in the person and work of Jesus. Faith in Jesus puts us inside of Jesus, sheltering us from the anger and judgment of God. In this way, the flood and the ark were mini sermons about Jesus and the cross. Those mini sermons were heard by the folks in the ark, in one sense. They were living out a sermon about God’s rescue of sinners. They’re experiencing Jesus’ going to “proclaim to the spirits in prison”. They’re watching the previews, the redemption trailers of the upcoming salvation show that Jesus is starring in. Peter is eager for us to see and track how God is unfolding this message of His redemption through Jesus and then on through us.

Week 40

September 29-October 3
[M] Jeremiah 11-13; 2 Corinthians 12
[T] Jer 14-16; Psalm 76; 2 Cor 13
[W] Jer 17-20; James 1
[T] Jer 22, 23, 26; Psalm 77; James 2
[F] Jer 25, 35, 36, 45; Ps 133; James 3

Dwell Plan Day 196-200 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Jeremiah 11:14 | This is a hard verse to read. God tells Jeremiah not to pray for the people because judgment is already set. It jars us—how can the God who invites prayer ever forbid it? Yet this difficulty presses us to see both God’s holiness and His faithfulness to His covenant. Judah had broken their vows again and again, despising the God who loved them, and justice had to come. But here’s the wonder of the gospel: in Christ, God has fulfilled the covenant we broke. The judgment we deserve fell on Him at the cross, so that now the Father never says “don’t pray” to His people. Instead, He delights to hear us, because Jesus intercedes for us perfectly and eternally. Even in the hardest passages, God is showing us that His faithfulness is so great, He Himself would provide the way of covenant-keeping through His Son.

Jeremiah 12:1 | Righteous are you, O LORD | After a whole chapter of judgment in Jeremiah 11, our instinct is to recoil. The warnings feel harsh, the finality unnerving. Our modern ears are quick to ask: “Isn’t this too much?” But Jeremiah does something surprising. He doesn’t accuse God of being unfair, he confesses God’s righteousness. Even while struggling, Jeremiah anchors himself in the truth that God is just, even when His judgments are hard to accept. Where we are tempted to put God on trial, Jeremiah bows before His holiness.
That posture points us to the cross. The judgment Jeremiah spoke of finds its fullest expression when Jesus bears the wrath we deserve. God’s righteousness is not compromised there; it is displayed with terrible clarity. But at the same time, His love is revealed in its deepest depth: the Judge Himself takes the judgment on our behalf. What once felt like “too much” becomes the very place we see how far God was willing to go to save His people. Judgment and mercy meet in Christ, and only there can we confess with Jeremiah: “You are righteous, O LORD.”

2 Corinthians 12:7 | So what was Paul’s thorn? What is he talking about? He uses this metaphor because it’s actually a biblical one. From the very beginning, when God cursed the ground because of us, He promised us thorns. Plants that hurt you and wound you are intentional in this world. They aren’t a bug, they are a feature of God’s creation used in response to human sinfulness. The image is used a number of times to describe all the folks that were left over in the promised land after the Israelites were supposed to take it. They didn’t follow God’s instructions on His judgment, and instead enslaved the local peoples. This led them into idolatry. Those left over people became thorns to the people of God. We all get that image about people—some folks are pretty thorny! God describes His intentions: to use these thorns to chasten and discipline His people. Paul has those thoughts in his mind when he uses this to describe his own condition, and then never tells us explicitly what his thorny “condition” is. Lots of interpreters and theologians have debated what Paul’s metaphor meant to him. What was it specifically referring to? But that’s probably a fairly useless line of investigation. We’d just be guessing.
But using the biblical metaphor is a clue for us: Paul is intentionally staying vague about his specific thorn. Why? Two reasons seem important. First, it isn’t really about Paul and what his particular thorn was. Details about our suffering and our sins are not the point—it isn’t about us! Paul wisely keeps the focus off of himself, something he’s teaching us to do by example. And secondly, it’s God’s purposes that we need to know, trust, and understand. Paul is experiencing something he knows that God has always done with His people. God uses difficult circumstances and events and people in our lives as tools for our benefit. We can get frustrated and ask God to remove those circumstances, events, or people, and we often find He doesn’t take them away. In our frustration we don’t understand what He’s doing. Paul is letting us in on the love and intention that drives our God, so that all the weakness exposed only exposes more and more of His power. 

Tuesday
Psalm 76:10 | What do you do with verses in the Bible like this? The poet seems absolutely and clearly convinced of one thing above all others: that whatever happens in this world happens because God allows it. Period. End of all discussion.
God does not create or choose any evil. He cannot. He has defined Himself for us as absolute good, and the Bible is very clear on this teaching. But this brings up some serious questions. When you double down on this idea of God, it begins to create a crisis. There’s a mental dissonance, a kind of “thinking static” that builds up in us. We see lots of evil in this world. Lots and lots of violence and horror. The nightly news has image after image of wars around the world. So how does this sync up the teaching of God’s goodness? What is God’s connection with all of this violence? There are two responses to this.
First, this isn’t abstract to God. This poet doesn’t have the info we do: we know how Jesus, the Son of God as fully man, personally suffered intense human violence. And this violence that He suffered is what saves us. He suffered for us, for what we deserved. And so these words were fulfilled in Him, and violence has brought glory to God. Second, God is judge of the world and His judgment is that each and every sin deserves death. Any offense, however small and seemingly insignificant, is a capital offense against God. And so all violence serves His justice in this world, revealing to all humankind that all have sinned and fallen short of the glory of God. And we can be absolutely and clearly convinced of this: God will get His justice out of our anger, despite the evil violence of man.

2 Corinthians 13:4 | The Christian faith holds together a strange and beautiful tension: weakness and power. On one hand, Paul says Jesus was “crucified in weakness.” The Creator of the universe—by whom all things were made and in whom all things hold together—allowed Himself to be bound, mocked, pierced, and killed. There is no greater display of vulnerability. Yet at the same time, this weakness was not failure but the chosen path of redemption. Through His cross, He disarmed the powers and authorities, exposing their impotence. What looked like weakness to the world was in fact the wisdom and strength of God.
This pattern becomes the shape of the Christian life. We too are “weak in Him,” and our frailty is not a liability but a channel for divine power. Just as Jesus, the all-powerful Creator, willingly embraced weakness at the cross, His people embrace dependence, humility, and suffering, not as defeat, but as the place where God’s strength is made perfect. The resurrection assures us that weakness never has the last word: the same power that raised Jesus from the dead is at work in us. This is the paradox of our faith: our weakness becomes the stage on which God’s power is displayed, and the cross of the Creator remains the ultimate proof.

Wednesday
Jeremiah 17:5–8 | Jeremiah paints a clear contrast between two ways to live: trusting in the flesh leads to dryness and death, while trusting in the Lord leads to life and fruitfulness. On the surface, the choice seems obvious, but the very next verse reminds us that “the heart is deceitful above all things.” Left to ourselves, we will always drift toward the curse rather than the blessing. Our problem is not just wrong choices but a broken heart that cannot love God rightly. This is why we need divine intervention—God must give us a new heart. In Christ, that is exactly what He has done, sealing us with His Spirit and rooting us in living water. Because of Jesus, we are no longer shrubs in the desert, but trees planted by streams of grace, bearing fruit that lasts.

Jeremiah 20:7 | This may be one of the most difficult verses in the Scripture. The translation is toned down, which is pretty ironic. The verb for “You are stronger than I and You have prevailed” is used to describe rape in Hebrew. That’s some of the harshest language towards God in our Bibles.  It would be hard to overstate how desperate and hurt and confused Jeremiah is in this whole chapter. He even curses his own birthday. How much hatred of life and desolation of any joy can a believer in God experience? There’s no script for this kind of pain and horror in his heart. This is the sort of suffering where you keep saying to yourself: there’s no way I can survive this kind of pain. And then you do survive, and it’s all still there. More than any other person in scripture, Jeremiah seems to touch the raw sorrows and grief of Jesus, especially in Gethsemane. But that makes these sorts of verses so much more important for us. In the moment of horror, when death and pain seem so large that they will destroy us, we can know that our God meets us there and listens to our thrashing hearts. We know the One who is greater than the greatest terrors of our hearts. Praise Him. 

James 1:27 | James reminds us that real faith is never abstract but always embodied in love and holiness. This ties directly to the message of the prophets, who condemned Israel for honoring God with their lips while their hearts were far from Him. They kept the sacrifices and festivals, but their lives were marked by injustice, oppression, and idolatry. God’s judgment fell on them because outward religion without inward devotion is a sham. James picks up this same theme, showing that genuine faith expresses itself in care for the vulnerable and a life distinct from the world’s corruption. The gospel frees us from dead religion by giving us new hearts that beat with God’s compassion. Jesus Himself fulfilled this perfectly, drawing near to the broken while remaining perfectly holy. Now, united to Him, we are called to reflect His love in action and His purity in conduct as the fruit of a living faith.

Thursday
Jeremiah 23:23-32 | Lying prophets stink. Be on the lookout—Peter, Paul, and all of these OT prophets agree: false prophets are a problem in this world. Lots of folks like to claim that they “speak for God” but it’s all to get control, money, and attention. The way to get all of that is to say the things people like to hear! Are these false prophets aware that they’re false? We don’t know. Self deception is pretty easy to do, so perhaps that’s part of it. But the caution never lets up. A part of the price we must pay for having the words and wisdom of our God is dependence on the Holy Spirit and vigilance with God’s words. Both the human heart and evil forces in the universe will corrupt the prophetic voice, so we must remember that a true prophet will call us to test them against God’s words. 

James 2:18–19, 24 | But someone will say, “You have faith and I have works.” Show me your faith apart from your works, and I will show you my faith by my works. You believe that God is one; you do well. Even the demons believe—and shudder! … You see that a person is justified by works and not by faith alone. | The tension between James and Paul has long been noticed. Paul insists, “For we hold that one is justified by faith apart from works of the law” (Romans 3:28), while James says, “a person is justified by works and not by faith alone” (James 2:24). Martin Luther himself struggled with this, even calling James “an epistle of straw” because it seemed to undercut the heart of the gospel he rediscovered. But in truth, James and Paul are not enemies, they are allies looking at the same truth from different vantage points. Paul is addressing how a sinner is brought into right standing with God: by faith alone, resting on the finished work of Christ. James is describing how that true faith shows itself on the other side of conversion: in a transformed life of obedience and love. Both affirm that salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.
This is why the Reformers helpfully summarized the tension with the famous saying: “We are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves is never alone.” Paul demolishes any idea that we can earn God’s favor by our deeds, insisting that “by works of the law no human being will be justified in His sight” (Romans 3:20). But James confronts the lazy distortion of Paul’s teaching that might say, “I have faith, so it doesn’t matter how I live.” Against this, James thunders that even demons “believe”; they know the truth but do not love or obey God. Real faith is always living and active, producing fruit in keeping with repentance. In that sense, James is not contradicting Paul; he is protecting Paul’s gospel from being twisted into cheap grace.
The cross of Christ holds these truths together. Jesus did the work we could not do, fulfilling the law and bearing the penalty of our sins, so that we are declared righteous by faith in Him alone. But the same Spirit who unites us to Christ also makes us new, giving us a faith that breathes, acts, and loves. Works are not the root of salvation, but they are the inevitable fruit. Paul himself echoes this when he says, “For we are his workmanship, created in Christ Jesus for good works, which God prepared beforehand, that we should walk in them” (Ephesians 2:10). Far from being at odds, James and Paul join hands to show us the whole gospel: faith that saves us and faith that transforms us, all by the grace of God in Christ.

Friday
Jeremiah 25:15 | The cup image is all over the Bible. Often it’s a cup of blessing, a cup so full it’s spilling and overflowing. But other times it isn’t blessing, it is punishment and judgment. One of the cough syrups my mother used was so awful that I remember pinching my nose when I had to drink it. I hated the taste so much. Afterwards I’d be spitting in the sink and drinking cup after cup of water to get rid of the nasty aftertaste. It’s one of those universal human experiences: having to drink something we don’t really want to. It happens to all of us. The prophets use this cup image to imagine having to endure something very very unpleasant, like the ferocious and eternal judgment of a holy God. Christ asks His Father if this cup can pass Him by in the garden at Gethsemane. He’s referring to this cup that Jeremiah is describing here. The cup then becomes an amazing picture of the cross, where Jesus is swallowing up death, sin, and judgment in His sacrifice of Himself. He drinks this cup all the way down and empties it. There’s none left for us to even taste. Our cup is the cup of salvation, offered to us in communion every week and received by faith at His table. The nations are still waiting at the bar for their cup, and the bartender is serving them up a tall glass just for them, and He’s going to make sure they drink it.  

James 3:1 | This verse is tattooed on my (Jon's) right arm—it was actually my first tattoo. I put it there because I never want to forget the weight of what it means to stand before God’s people and open His Word. Preaching isn’t just about giving talks, or sharing ideas, or even motivating people. It’s about speaking on behalf of the living God, declaring His truth, and pointing people to Jesus. That’s terrifying when you think about it. James reminds me that I will be held to account for every word I say, and that humbles me deeply. It keeps me from ever thinking that this calling is about me or my own wisdom.
At the same time, this verse doesn’t crush me, it drives me back to grace. I know I’m weak, I know I stumble, I know I don’t have it all together. But the God who calls is also the God who equips, and His Word is powerful even when His messenger is not. That tattoo is a daily reminder to come to the pulpit with fear and trembling, but also with confidence in the gospel. My words won’t change hearts, but God’s Word will. And that’s why I keep preaching—because even though the calling is heavy, His grace is greater still.

Week 39

September 22-26
[M] Habakkuk 1-3; 2 Corinthians 7
[T] Zephaniah 1-3; Psalm 74; 2 Cor 8
[W] Jeremiah 1-4; Psalm 130; 2 Cor 9
[T] Jer 5-7; Psalm 75; 2 Cor 10
[F] Jer 8-10; 2 Cor 11

Dwell Plan Day 191-195 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Habakkuk | Habakkuk is a rare glimpse into the back-and-forth between a prophet and God. It begins with the prophet crying out in frustration: “How long, O Lord?” He looks around at the violence and injustice of his day and cannot understand why God seems silent. And in a very real sense, the whole book is God patiently listening to one of His kids complain. That’s good news for us: our Father really does listen when we pour out our hearts to Him. But the harder truth is that He doesn’t always answer the way we want. God tells Habakkuk that He will bring judgment through the Babylonians, which is not at all the solution Habakkuk had in mind. Yet even in that unwelcome answer, God is showing His justice and His faithfulness.
The book moves in three steps. First, Habakkuk voices his complaint about injustice. Second, God answers with His plan, declaring that “the righteous shall live by faith.” Third, Habakkuk responds in chapter 3 with one of the most beautiful prayers of trust in all of Scripture: though everything around him may collapse, yet he will rejoice in the God of his salvation.
That is where his complaining leads—not to despair but to faith. And that’s the invitation of this little book: when God’s answers don’t fit our expectations, we can still cling to Him with confidence, because He is always good and always listening.

Habakkuk 1:3, 13 | In these two verses, the prophet asks God why He is idle, why He isn’t taking action and responding to wickedness. The tone and words are stunning. But this isn’t an accusation from unbelief. This is someone asking these tough questions because the Holy Spirit is asking these questions. We’re confronted with a living faith here, an intense intimacy with God that won’t shy away from the difficult questions and at the same time is absolutely sure that God will answer. He’s so sure that God will answer he actually schedules his waiting for God’s response in 2:1. And God does. This aggressive “wrestling” with God’s justice gets even more startling in this little book. The prophet commits himself utterly to God at the end and to the joy of God’s salvation. In 3:16-19 he poetically recounts the extent of his resolve to worship and trust God. Even if his own heart is rotten with fear, even if every data point in his life is negative, without harvest or success, he will still worship God. The accusations that began in chapter 1 are coming from a sold out heart. And in the end, in the final verse, the prophet can navigate the hard geography of his life and God’s judgments, because God makes him surefooted like a mountain deer. Praise Him.

2 Corinthians 7:3 | Just how committed are we to each other? Is it like this? Statements like these from Paul about his affection and love for the churches that he planted reveal a work of God’s Spirit in him. It’s a passion and connection that we should pray for, that we should seek God to build in us, and that we should strive to live in. It reveals the true depths of what God is building in His church and what is possible in our intimacy and friendship together in Him.

Tuesday
Zephaniah 1-3 | This little prophetic book is best to read in one sitting, so you can trace the path of the book from beginning to end. That path starts in judgment and horror, and then ends in glory and promise. This combination of mercy and judgment is all over the prophets, but in Zephaniah we get the extremes compacted into three short chapters.
It begins with a vision of total judgment, personal and complete: “I will sweep away everything from the face of the earth.” The prophet begins with the final judgment of God. It’s absolute and terrible, including us and all of nature itself. The judgment on Jerusalem in verse 4 is just one part of the larger scene, as the following verses become a tour of suffering and punishment for sin. The list of their crimes is blistering in its attack, matched only by a description of desolation and destruction for every nation around them too. But then it changes at the end. As bitter and horrible as the descriptions of God’s anger have been so far, we’re suddenly confronted with God’s joyful singing over those He saves. It breaks out with a prophecy of new worship and obedience created by God. The darkness turns to exuberance and the dread becomes delight. This journey through Zephaniah captures the Biblical tension in our salvation, inviting us again and again to consider the goodness and severity of God.

Zephaniah | In the book of Zephaniah, God announces a sweeping day of judgment that will fall on all nations, including His own people, justice that is fierce and unavoidable. Yet woven into those warnings are tender promises: God will gather the humble, purify their lips, and rejoice over them with singing. The tension between God’s holy justice and His steadfast love pulses through the book, unresolved within its own pages. But at the cross of Christ that tension is finally satisfied—where justice against sin is carried out fully and love for sinners is poured out completely, securing salvation for all who trust in Him.

2 Corinthians 8:9 | Paul motivates the Corinthians to give not by guilt or pressure but by pointing them to the gospel itself. His appeal is rooted in love, not law. Generosity flows naturally when we grasp the sheer wonder of what Christ has done—He emptied Himself, taking on poverty, weakness, and even death, to make us rich in mercy and eternal life. Paul is showing that true giving isn’t about meeting a quota or avoiding shame, but about hearts so captivated by Jesus’ sacrifice that we can’t help but give freely and joyfully.

Wednesday
Jeremiah 2:4 | “The worth and excellency of a soul is to be measured by the object of its love. He who loveth mean and sordid things doth thereby become base and vile, but a noble and well-placed affection doth advance and improve the spirit into a conformity with the perfections which it loves.” Henry Scougal, The Life of God in the Soul of Man.
It’s worth reading this wonderful little old book. His whole argument is that what you love and focus on is what makes you who you are. If you go after worthlessness, you will become worthless yourself. If you chase after God, you will become more and more like Him.

Psalm 130:4 | This verse shows that even the forgiveness we receive is ultimately about God’s glory. The psalmist reminds us that the end goal of mercy is not simply our relief, but reverence for God. That ties directly to what we saw a few weeks ago in my (Jon) sermon on Isaiah 37: salvation and deliverance are not mainly about us, but about God’s name being exalted. When God forgives, He is putting His glory on display—His holiness is upheld and His grace is magnified. The cross makes this crystal clear: Jesus bore our guilt so that we could be forgiven, and that forgiveness moves us to awe, worship, and lives oriented toward the glory of God.

Jeremiah 2:13 | In the ancient world, a cistern was a man-made pit lined with plaster to store rainwater. Unlike a fresh flowing spring, a cistern was stagnant at best. And if it developed even the smallest crack, the water would slowly seep out, leaving nothing but mud. That’s what idols are like. We turn to them hoping they’ll hold the weight of our hope—success, romance, money, approval—but they cannot satisfy, and they always leak. They promise fullness, but they leave us dry.
Tim Keller, in Counterfeit Gods, captures this truth: “When you lose the ultimate source of your meaning or hope, the thing you have put your trust in, it drives you to despair. The cisterns always crack.” The gospel confronts our cracked cisterns by inviting us back to the fountain of living waters—Christ Himself. Only He can give what our idols never deliver: joy that doesn’t run out, love that doesn’t fade, and hope that doesn’t crumble. The choice Jeremiah put before Israel is still before us today: cling to broken cisterns or come to the living God who alone can satisfy our thirsty souls.

Thursday
Jeremiah 5:12, 6:14 | In Jeremiah’s day, false prophets comforted the people with a picture of God that was only half true. They promised safety and blessing while denying His judgment. God calls this out as a lie He hates, because it misrepresents His character and leaves people unprepared for the reality of their sin. The same danger exists today whenever God is reduced to “only love” in a sentimental sense, as if He would never confront evil or hold anyone accountable. That’s not the God of the Bible. His love is holy love—a love that is strong enough to deal with sin, and just enough to bring judgment. The cross proves both: judgment fell on Jesus so that forgiveness could be real, and His glory would shine in both justice and mercy. Any teaching that strips God of His holiness or His justice is the same “peace, peace” Jeremiah condemned—and it robs people of the true hope found only in Christ.

Jeremiah 7 | Jeremiah stood at the temple gates and shattered Judah’s false security. The people thought the building guaranteed their safety: “This is the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord, the temple of the Lord” (Jer. 7:4). But God reminded them of Shiloh—once His dwelling place, now in ruins. If His people lived in injustice and idolatry, the temple would not protect them. Worship without repentance is empty.
Centuries later, Jesus echoed Jeremiah’s words when He drove money changers from the temple: “Has this house… become a den of robbers?” (Jer. 7:11; Matt. 21:13). Like Jeremiah, He exposed religion used as cover for sin. But Jesus went further: He offered Himself fulfillment of the temple system. In His body, God’s presence would dwell forever, and through His death and resurrection, He would provide the cleansing the old sacrifices never could.
The warning of Jeremiah 7 still stands. It’s possible to be around the things of God while far from Him in heart. But the good news is that Christ is our temple, our place of forgiveness, and our secure dwelling with God. Don’t trust in outward religion, but rest in the Savior who was torn down and raised up so you might be safe in Him forever.

Jeremiah 7:31 | If God knows everything, then how can He say to His people that they had done something that He says had “never entered My mind”? We know it’s a turn of phrase, but it sounds odd coming from God. Here the prophet is talking about sacrificing kids for worship; he uses this “never entered My mind” expression for God again in Jer. 19:5 and Jer. 32:35 about the same horrific worship. The logic of pagan sacrifice was that only something of incredible value can please the deity, and so parents would throw their babies into the fire to please their gods. It was a common practice among those cultures in those days. So when God uses this expression that it never even entered His mind, He’s making a point about how different He has always been from the false religions of the world. But the expression goes further when we’re speaking of God’s character. Since it’s impossible for God not to know something, this expression is actually cashing in on the absurdity of the idea. It’s a way of saying this is antithetical to God, it’s His opposite. It opposes everything that He is and all that He has said and revealed about Himself.

Friday
Jeremiah 8:11 | God’s idea of fake news is to be too quick to speak peace. There is a peace that we can look for, that we can offer each other, that we can use to help others—but it isn’t God’s peace. Peace with sin is not God’s peace. Peace with your own disobedience or with the evil of others is not God’s peace. Peace that comes from accepting all religions and gods as acceptable worship is not God’s peace. Peace that comes from lots of abundance and superficial religious ritual is not God’s peace. God wants the peace that produces repentance and acknowledgement of sin, that seeks Him and His holiness and obeys His voice.

Jeremiah 9:6 | When God condemns His people here, He doesn’t just say that they oppress and deceive, He goes deeper. He shows the root issue: “they refuse to know me.” That’s profound. The opposite of oppression is not simply avoiding cruelty or injustice; it is knowing God. To know Him is to be transformed by His character. Where His people had chosen lies and self-interest, He calls them back to the source of truth and love—Himself. Their social sins are not random; they flow directly out of their refusal to truly know the Lord.
This is what James later echoes when he insists that faith without works is dead. The Sermon on the Mount says the same: those who know God as Father will love enemies, give generously, and live with purity of heart. When your heart is close to Him, your life begins to reflect His compassion, His justice, and His truth. Knowing God is never just head knowledge, it reshapes how you treat those made in His image.
So Jeremiah 9:6 is both a warning and an invitation. It warns us that oppression and deceit always trace back to a heart turned away from God. But it also invites us to know Him deeply, because the more we know Him, the more our lives will mirror His character. In Christ, this is made possible: He is the One who reveals the Father to us, and by His Spirit we are changed from the inside out. True justice mercy and love flow from knowing Him.

Week 38

September 15-19
[M] Isaiah 64-66; 2 Corinthians 2
[T] 2 Kings 21; 2 Chr 33; Ps 71; 2 Cor 3
[W] Nahum 1-3; Psalm 149; 2 Cor 4
[T] 2 Kings 22-23; Psalm 73; 2 Cor 5
[F] 2 Chr 34-35; 2 Cor 6

Dwell Plan Day 186-190 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Isaiah 65:17-25 | Isaiah gives us a breathtaking vision of the new heavens and new earth—a renewed creation where sorrow, pain, and death are gone forever. He describes people living long lives, children never dying young, and God’s people enjoying the fruit of their labor without fear. These images are not meant to be taken with wooden literalism; they are poetic ways of showing us how completely God will undo the curse of sin. The promise is not of some vague disembodied spiritual state, but of a restored and perfected world. In this new creation, work will be satisfying, relationships whole, and worship natural and unbroken. We will eat, celebrate, build, plant, sing, and enjoy life as God always intended it to be—a culture and community made whole under the reign of Christ.
This hope is meant to sustain us as we walk through the hardships of today. Life now is filled with griefs, setbacks, and disappointments, but Isaiah’s vision reminds us that these sorrows will not last. Jesus promises to put everything back together, to make all things new, and to bring His people into a world where joy never ends. When we encounter pain, loss, or frustration in this life, we can lift our eyes to the hope of the life to come. One day, we will dwell with Christ in a renewed creation where everything sad comes untrue, and we will enjoy Him forever in a world made perfect.

Isaiah 66:22-24 | Isaiah seems to move from the sweetest promises to grim macabre judgment without taking a breath. Scenes and descriptions of blessedness and renewal are squashed right next to depictions of violence and horror. This must have made an impression on Jesus too. As Isaiah comes to its conclusion, we’re left with a vision of judgment that describes their “worm” and their “fire” never stopping. It’s an eternal judgment Isaiah describes here, but this language becomes an anchor point for Christ’s teaching. Jesus repeats His warnings about hell and God’s punishments more than any other person in the Bible. The implication is that He really sees and understands what God’s judgment means, and Jesus’ description of God’s judgment is taken right from the last words of this book. Sandwiching blessing and condemnation is jarring to us as readers, but it seems to have a point all of its own. God’s mercy and judgments have always been twins, realities that always exist together. We see them both all through Isaiah, we see them all across the Bible, and we see them most clearly in the cross itself. This is our God, and this is why we’re told to consider this part of God. It creates a knowledge of Him that brings both fear and wonder into our knowing Him. It makes our God greater than our understanding, humbling our minds. It also demands that we figure out where we stand with this God, because from Him are blessedness or damnation, the stakes of how we will live eternally. 

Tuesday
1 Kings 21 | 2 Chronicles 33 | Reading through the long list of kings in Israel and Judah can be discouraging. Again and again, we encounter leaders who abandon God’s ways, abuse their power, and drag the people down with them. Ahab seizing Naboth’s vineyard in 1 Kings 21 and Manasseh’s idolatry in 2 Chronicles 33 are not isolated failures but part of a tragic pattern. Page after page, Scripture confronts us with the reality that no merely human king could ever fulfill God’s calling to lead His people in righteousness. These stories aren’t just depressing—they are purposeful. They are meant to stir in us a deep hunger for a king who will not fail.
The New Testament opens by showing us that this longing has an answer. Matthew begins his Gospel by tracing Jesus’ genealogy back to David, declaring Him the rightful Son of David and true heir to the throne. Unlike the kings before Him, Jesus does not exploit His people, but comes to serve and to save. He rules with justice, compassion, and perfect obedience to His Father. Where the kings of Israel led their people into sin, Jesus bears the sin of His people and brings them into life. All the disappointing reigns of the past were preparing us for this—so that when the true King arrived, we would recognize Him as the One our hearts had been waiting for.

2 Corinthians 3:18 | God is the only thing in this universe that doesn’t change as you study Him and cannot be studied or known without changing you. This is what knowing Jesus does, what a personal relationship with God makes possible. All learning changes us somehow, altering our attitudes or changing how much we know. That’s why we have curriculums, so we can plan it out. But this verse is at a whole different level. This isn’t just information that’s coming in, this is the direct presence of the Spirit. And this doesn’t just change you a little bit, influencing you in a new direction for new possibilities. Not at all. This is transformative—with a reach that far exceeds any human grasp—promising us that we’re being transformed into the image of a God. This is happening by looking at God. But we can’t see God, so what “beholding” is this verse describing? A part of it is worship. Just praising God is a way that we “look” at Him. Another part is reading scripture. As we read His words we find we get to know Him as a person, and this knowing is another way of seeing Him. Another part is community: our relationships in His kingdom are ways that He speaks, and we learn who He is through His people. These are just starting points that grow and develop through prayer, devotional life, and sacrament. The Holy Spirit works in and through all of these places to reveal God, and in that revealing we are also transformed by God’s glory itself. Praise Him!  

Wednesday
Nahum | The book of Jonah shows us something unexpected: God’s mercy poured out on Nineveh, the capital of the brutal Assyrian empire. When Jonah finally preached, the city repented, and God spared them. But that repentance didn’t last. Assyria soon went back to its old ways: violence, arrogance, and cruelty that made them one of the most feared empires in the ancient world. For Israel, living under that shadow must have been exhausting. They had seen God’s mercy, but they were left wondering: Will He ever deal with this evil?
That’s where Nahum comes in. Written about 150 years later, Nahum announces the fall of Nineveh in vivid, poetic detail. The city that once looked unstoppable is shown to be fragile before the judgment of God. We know that in 612 BCE, Nineveh fell to a coalition of Babylonians and Medes. Ancient records say the Tigris River flooded and broke through the city’s defenses, which matches Nahum’s prophecy that “the river gates are opened; the palace melts away” (Nah. 2:6). The empire that had boasted of its strength was undone by the very river it relied on for protection. Nahum’s words weren’t vague threats; they came true in precise, dramatic fashion.
And that’s good news for us, too. It means we don’t have to carry the weight of “fixing” every injustice ourselves. God is patient and merciful, but He’s also just—and He promises to deal with evil in His timing. That frees us to keep walking faithfully with Him, even when the world around us feels unfair or overwhelming. Like Israel, we can trust that the God who sees will act, and one day, in Christ, He will put all things right.

Psalm 149:4 | For the LORD takes pleasure in his people | One idea I (Jon) have struggled with, because of my upbringing, is the character and heart of God. I grew up in a church and youth group setting that was very legalistic and Pharisaical. I learned—mostly through culture, not direct teaching—that God was stern and angry, just waiting for me to mess up.
The thought that God actually delights in me never even crossed my mind. But that’s exactly what this verse (and the rest of scripture) says. God delights in me. He delights in you. He really genuinely likes you. His heart toward you isn’t constant anger, even when you fail. His heart is tender and loving. He’s the prodigal’s Father, running to meet you with open arms. He’s the Shepherd who comes after you to carry you home. He’s the Lord who died for you—because He really does delight in you.
If this truth is hard for you to wrap your head around like it has been for me, I want to recommend a book: Gentle and Lowly by Dane Ortlund. I think both of our churches still have free copies; I’d encourage you to grab one and be reminded of just how tender His heart really is toward you.

2 Corinthians 4:14 | Paul reminds us here that our hope isn’t just survival after death—it’s resurrection. On Monday when we read Isaiah 65, we saw God’s promise of a new heavens and a new earth, a world where sorrow and pain are gone and life is full of joy in His presence. Paul’s words connect directly to that vision: the same God who raised Jesus will raise us to share in that restored creation. This means our future is not a disembodied spiritual escape, but a life more real and more whole than anything we’ve known. We will worship, work, feast, and rejoice in the presence of God and His people forever. Even when this life feels crushing, that promise steadies us. One day, Jesus will raise us, and we will step into the world Isaiah longed for—a world made new.

Thursday
Psalm 73 | There are a number of the poems of the Psalms that deal with the success of bad people. It’s one of those things that we all notice in life. It’s a basic universal human experience: bad people are awful, and they seem to do pretty well in this world. It’s really disturbing at times, especially when you’re on the receiving end of the rude indifference of wealthy folks. It wears you out, testing your faith, making you doubt yourself and God’s love. That’s what has happened to our poet. As we follow his poem, we find that he gets to the point of despair in verse 16, but then something about God’s worship awakens his understanding. He becomes aware that his own bitterness has almost shipwrecked him. As he struggled with the outward success of wicked men, he had slowly given himself over to resentment and unbelief. His relationship with God had broken down too, so much so that he’s like a wild animal in front of God. His emotions and despair have overwhelmed him. But it’s right at this point that our poet experiences grace. God is holding on to him anyways, guiding and empowering and loving him the whole time. Even as he struggles with God’s justice, God has been loving him—which is just proof for him that God will definitely accept him into His presence in verse 24. God has loved him through his doubts and chased him through his complaint. This experience of grace is so powerful that he comes to a new understanding of God. This God loves him completely and is with him continually, and that means nothing else matters. He comes to a new conclusion about what’s important: there is nothing in all of heaven he wants but God, and that leaves the earth—and there’s nothing he wants there either. His struggle with God’s justice led him to a knowledge of God’s amazing mercy. This path has been walked many times by the children of God and has surprised many by the joy they discovered in their struggling. Praise Him.

2 Corinthians 5:20 | It’s amazing that God chooses to spread His message through regular people like us. Paul calls us “ambassadors”, that means we represent the King wherever we go. We don’t need a pulpit, a title, or a platform. God’s plan has always been to work through ordinary church people who carry the gospel into their homes, workplaces, schools, and neighborhoods. That’s why we talk so much about PABST (praying for people, asking questions and listening to them, blessing them, sharing your story, and talking about Jesus.) This isn’t just a program, it’s the way God has chosen to make His appeal to the world—through us. When you love and invest in your PABST people, you’re stepping right into the role of ambassador that Paul describes.

Friday
2 Chronicles 34-35 | 2 Kings 22-23 | The story of Josiah is one of the most inspiring in the Old Testament, and it’s told twice—once in Kings and once in Chronicles. Both highlight Josiah’s rediscovery of the Law and his bold reforms, but the emphasis shifts depending on when the book was written.
In Kings, written before the exile, the narrative stresses that even Josiah’s obedience could not turn aside God’s anger. After describing Josiah’s sweeping reforms, 2 Kings 23:26 still says, “Still the LORD did not turn from the burning of His great wrath…” The point is sobering: judgment was inevitable, and exile was coming. Josiah’s faithfulness is honored, but the overall tone is heavy, highlighting the seriousness of Judah’s sin.
Chronicles, written after the exile, tells the story differently. While it includes Josiah’s reforms, it expands on his devotion, showing him purging idolatry not just in Judah but also in the lands of Israel (2 Chron. 34:6). It highlights his personal humility when hearing the Law, his leadership in covenant renewal, and the joy of the great Passover he led in chapter 35: “there had not been kept a Passover like it in Israel since the days of Samuel the prophet” (2 Chron. 35:18). The emphasis isn’t on the inevitability of judgment but on the hope of renewal. For a people who had already lived through exile and were trying to rebuild, this retelling would have been deeply encouraging: obedience to God’s Word could still bring life and joy.
For us, both perspectives are vital. Kings reminds us that sin is deadly serious, and no amount of half-hearted reform can erase its consequences. Chronicles reminds us that God delights to bring renewal, even after seasons of failure, when His people humble themselves and return to Him. And as Christians, we see that the deepest hope of Josiah’s reforms is fulfilled in Jesus. He not only restores true worship but makes us into living temples filled with His Spirit. In Him, we have both the warning of judgment and the hope of lasting renewal.

2 Corinthians 6:14-18 | Is this about marriage? No. It’s about relationships—all relationships. So, in a roundabout way it is about marrying as a subset of all human relationships. But here’s the problem: marriage is a subset, but it's a hopped up subset. It’s a specially holy, revelatory (it tells us who God is too), and intense version of relationship. So anything that this passage says about relationships it also says doubly about marriage. Paul doesn’t make an argument about marriage specifically here because he doesn’t have to. The whole Bible teaches time and time again, through commands and stories, that His children are not to marry the children of this world. No wiggle room. No discussion. The children of light cannot have “partnership, fellowship, accord, portion, agreement” with the children of darkness. Those are the five words used in these verses. If that’s too abstract, Numbers 25 puts it into a plain and brutal story, where a man named Phinehas is honored by God for violently stopping two people who were doing all five and more. All of this is to say, this is how seriously God takes this stuff. He’s quite consistent about it. Anyone who suggests otherwise is being intellectually dishonest.

Week 37

September 8-12
[M] Isaiah 45-48; 1 Corinthians 13
[T] Isa 49-52; Psalm 69; 1 Cor 14
[W] Isa 53-55; Psalm 128; 1 Cor 15
[T] Isa 56-59; Psalm 70; 1 Cor 16
[F] Isa 60-63; 2 Cor 1

Dwell Plan Day 181-185 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Isaiah 45 | This is a remarkable prophecy where God calls a pagan king by name more than a century before Cyrus of Persia was born. Cyrus conquered Babylon in 539 BC and issued the decree that allowed the Jewish exiles to return to Jerusalem (Ezra 1:1–4). Ancient historians like Josephus even suggest that Cyrus read Isaiah’s prophecy about himself and was moved to fulfill it. What makes this chapter so striking is that God uses a Gentile ruler—someone who did not know Him—to accomplish His redemptive purposes. The same Cyrus who toppled empires became God’s chosen instrument to rebuild Jerusalem and release His people, showing that the Lord’s sovereignty extends over nations, kings, and the whole course of history.
Verses 4–7 bring this truth into sharp focus: Cyrus is only the tool, but God is the craftsman. “For the sake of my servant Jacob… I call you by your name,” God declares, making it clear that Cyrus’s victories are not his own achievements but God’s design. The Lord is the One who “forms light and creates darkness,” who “makes well-being and creates calamity.” He is the sovereign God who rules over all circumstances, raising up rulers and pulling them down according to His will.
This passage reminds us that no human power—no empire, no king, no cultural force—can ever stand outside the control of the Creator. God bends even unbelieving rulers to serve His purposes, so that His people might be redeemed and His glory made known.

1 Corinthians 13 | In this chapter, Paul is not giving the church a sentimental ode to love for wedding ceremonies, but rather a sharp rebuke and a vision for what true Christian community should look like. The Corinthians were a gifted church, overflowing with spiritual abilities, but they were fractured by pride, rivalry, and self-promotion. In chapters 12–14, Paul addresses how spiritual gifts are meant to build up the body of Christ, not inflate egos. It is in this context that he declares, “I will show you a still more excellent way” (1 Cor 12:31), and that way is love. Paul is showing them that without love, even the most spectacular gifts are worthless. This chapter, then, is about how the church must reflect the self-giving love of God if it is to truly be the body of Christ.
The love Paul describes here is not rooted in fleeting emotion but in God’s own character revealed in Christ. It is patient, kind, and enduring; it bears all things and does not insist on its own way. In other words, this is love in action, love that embodies the gospel. It is the opposite of the Corinthian tendency toward division, arrogance, and competition. When Paul says that love is the greatest gift, he is elevating it above every spiritual ability because it alone reflects the very nature of God. Far from being a flowery poem for weddings, 1 Corinthians 13 is a radical call to the church: to lay down self-interest, to embody Christlike love, and to show the world what it means to be the family of God.

1 Corinthians 13:4-7 | This famous passage is useful for straight up personal conviction! Conviction about our sin is something we must seek out and value in this world. We need fresh ways to see ourselves and our morally distorted hearts. One of the troubles we have with sinfulness and what makes sinfulness so difficult to deal with is this: we don’t think of sinfulness as a horror. We’re so used to our brokenness, weakness, and ruin that we can get quite comfortable in it. We aren’t alarmed by our sinful attitudes and thoughts like we should be. Here’s the trick to seek out some uncomfortable truths for yourself about yourself. Read these verses out loud, but instead of using the word love or a pronoun for love, use your own name. So instead of saying “love is patient and kind; love does not envy or boast” you would say (if you were me!) “Chris is patient and kind, Chris does not envy or boast, etc.” It’s quite a shocking thing to do if you haven’t tried it before. It makes you painfully aware of just how unloving you really are. If you’re looking for material to bring you to confession before God, this is an effective way to get there. 

Tuesday
Isaiah 49:14-15 | Doesn’t it sometimes feel like the Lord has forgotten you? There are seasons when, in His sovereign will, He leads you down a path you never would have chosen for yourself, or He begins shaping you in ways you resisted. In those moments, it can feel like He’s distant—like He’s not paying attention, or worse, like He’s forgotten you altogether. But hear this: that is never the case. Even when His hand feels heavy or His ways are confusing, God is still present, still faithful, and still working for your good. His promise to His people is unshakable—He will never forget you.

1 Corinthians 14:34-35 | Let’s be honest, when you got to this part of the reading, you probably cringed a little, didn’t you? That’s one of the reasons I (Jon) love doing projects like this reading plan: they push us to wrestle with the hard stuff in scripture. And these two verses are definitely the hard stuff. So what’s going on here? I thought about writing a long explanation myself, but then I came across an author that explains it even better than I could. If you have the time, I encourage you to read it. It’s from Andrew Wilson’s 1 Corinthians for You (part of the excellent “God’s Word for You” series), and I think he does a great job unpacking this passage. Here’s his explanation, quoted at length.

There are various parts of the Bible, and of Paul’s letters, about which people say, “Surely it can’t mean that”. Usually, that is because we don’t like it. We read something that doesn’t fit with our modern sensibilities, so we do a huge amount of exegetical work to try and make it look as if it means something else. (Scholars who are not Christians can be a huge help here. Because they don’t claim to obey Scripture, they are sometimes better at admitting what it actually says.) But occasionally, the “surely it can’t mean that” reflex is based on the text itself. Something in the passage, or the book as a whole, makes it clear that the obvious interpretation is not actually correct. Nowhere is this truer than of Paul’s statement in verse 34: “Women should remain silent in the churches. They are not allowed to speak, but must be in submission, as the law says”.
It sounds like an absolute ban on women speaking in the church service. But this cannot be what Paul means. He recently spent fifteen verses on the question of what women should wear over their heads while praying or prophesying in the church service (11:2–16), which would make no sense whatsoever if women were prohibited from public speech. He has also spent much of the last few chapters explaining how “each one” in the congregation has a gift, and how “each one” can and should use it—whether in songs, teaching, prophecy, languages or interpretation—for the edification of the body (14:26). So he cannot mean that women are not allowed to speak at all. Unless we are to conclude that Paul did not write these verses at all (and these verses appear in all the manuscripts we have), he must mean something else.
The two most plausible explanations are these. One: Paul is prohibiting women from the weighing of prophecy (v 29–30) because it involves a governmental responsibility that Paul limits to the fathers of the church (the elders, the overseers, or whatever we call them). Two: some women at Corinth were in the habit of interrupting their husbands while they were prophesying, asking questions and bringing shame on themselves in the process, and Paul will not allow this because it is not submissive or honourable, and it leads to disorder rather than peace. In either scenario, the requirement of wives to be submissive “as the law says” is probably a reference to Genesis, whether the creation story (as in 1 Corinthians 11:7–9; see 1 Timothy 2:13–14) or the patriarchal stories (see 1 Peter 3:5–6). Personally I take the second view on the interpretation of 1 Corinthians 14:34, which fits well with the next sentence: “If they want to enquire about something, they should ask their own husbands at home; for it is disgraceful for a woman to speak in the church” (v 35). But it is difficult to be sure. (1 Corinthians for You, page 161-162)

Wednesday
Isaiah 53 | This is one of the most breathtaking prophecies in all of Scripture, describing the Suffering Servant who would be despised, rejected, pierced for our transgressions, and crushed for our iniquities. We often read it from the outside, marveling at how clearly it points to Christ.
Luke tells us that Jesus “increased in wisdom and in stature and in favor with God and man” (Luke 2:52). Imagine the mystery of that—Jesus, fully God and fully man, learning the Scriptures as a boy. Somewhere along the way, as He read Isaiah 53, He would have realized that these words were about Him. That His mission would not be to overthrow Rome with power, but to be pierced, crushed, and led like a lamb to the slaughter—for us.
What must it have been like for Jesus to carry that knowledge as He grew? To see Himself in the ancient text, to realize that salvation for God’s people would come through His own suffering? We can only imagine the weight of it, but also the clarity and resolve it must have given Him. Isaiah 53 was not just a prophecy of a future Savior, it was Jesus’ roadmap. And He walked it all the way to the cross, willingly, in love for us and for the glory of God. When we read this chapter today, we don’t just see a prediction fulfilled, we see the heart of our Savior who embraced suffering for our redemption.

1 Corinthians 15 | This might be the most important chapter in all of Paul's writings. It stands as the high point of Paul’s teaching because it anchors the entire Christian faith in the reality of the resurrection. Without the resurrection of Jesus, Paul says, our preaching is in vain and our faith is futile—we remain in our sins and have no hope beyond this life. This chapter is critical because it ties the historical fact of Christ’s rising to the theological truth that death itself has been defeated. Paul unfolds the resurrection as not only proof of Christ’s victory but also the guarantee of our own future resurrection. Because Jesus has been raised, we know that we too will be raised, and this fuels our hope in the promised life of the new heavens and the new earth, where death will be swallowed up in victory forever.

Thursday
Isaiah 56:4–5 | This is a stunning promise for those who felt forever cut off from God’s people. Eunuchs, who were excluded from the temple by law, are here promised something far greater than earthly inclusion: “a monument and a name better than sons and daughters.” The upside-down way of the kingdom breaks through—those considered outsiders by human standards are welcomed and honored by God. When we read Acts 8, we meet a eunuch who had traveled to Jerusalem, likely barred from entering fully into worship. Yet it was through reading Isaiah that he met Christ, and in Christ, he found the welcome and belonging that no earthly law could give.
This is the heart of God’s kingdom: the outcasts brought near, the broken given a new identity, the excluded granted everlasting inclusion. It is not lineage, status, or earthly wholeness that secures our place in God’s family, it is faith in Christ. The kingdom of God reverses expectations: the barren become fruitful, the nameless receive a lasting name, and the outsider is brought all the way in. That eunuch’s joy in Acts is the joy of every believer who knows what it is to be brought from far off and made part of God’s eternal household.

Psalm 70:1 | If I ever told my dad to hurry—which I never even conceived of doing as a kid—I’m not sure if I could’ve sat down for a week after the spanking I would’ve gotten. This is why God is such an amazing Dad: it doesn’t bother Him one bit! But the point stands even more beautifully than that. The God who runs the engines of all creation, who sustains the galaxies by His power, isn’t offended by us asking Him to hurry up. Maybe it’s because He knows how short our lives and attention spans are. Maybe it’s simply an amazing grace. But don’t forget this, we get to address God’s timing. We get to ask about it. We get to look at our watch, look at Him, and say “Can we get this moving?” Sometimes that won’t make the slightest difference. Our God is good and wise and His timing always is on time. He knows that, and He wants to be sure you know it too. But He also doesn’t mind us wanting things on a different schedule. So we get to ask. And if He hurries, we get to praise Him! And if He doesn’t, we get to praise Him for that too. It’s a win-win with our amazing Heavenly Father.

Friday
Isaiah 60:19-22 | These last chapters of Isaiah begin to describe God’s kingdom in ways that will only be fulfilled in heaven. Verse 19 is how the new Jerusalem is described in Revelation! When we read chapters like this it can be a little disorienting. Is the prophet describing heaven or is this something for this world? Much like the night sky, where you can’t tell which stars are closer and which are further, these prophecies have parts that we can see happening right now and parts that are for later. It can make reading and interpretation a bit difficult at times. One of the things it reveals to us, however, is something we easily miss. The prophets are partly describing the way that God looks at the universe. He is eternal, without beginning or end. Time is something below Him, apart from Him. When God speaks through the prophets, describing future events, we often see a mixture of near future, future, and far future all combined. There’s a unity to God’s perspective, where His mercy at the cross, His mercy for your lies to your parents when you were a kid, and His mercy at the final judgment seat are all one piece to Him and united in Him. We’re getting to see God’s view of time and history, and it’s so much greater than ours that it confuses us. But this is meant to encourage us because it allows us to claim heaven’s joys and truth even before we get there. We are stuck in time, but He isn’t. He gives us His transcendent perspective in the prophets so we can look outside ourselves and our “moment” in His story. We’re always living and walking in the shadows of His everlasting light, which shines even now in His word and through us.

2 Corinthians 1:3–7 | The prosperity gospel whispers a lie: that if you only have enough faith, your life will be marked by health, wealth, and ease. But this text gives us the opposite picture. Paul exalts “the God of all comfort” not because He keeps His people from suffering, but because He meets them in it. At the very center of Christianity is the suffering of Christ: His anguish, His cross, His wounds taken out of love for us and for the glory of God. If the Son of God was perfected through suffering, then how could we expect the Christian life to be free of pain? The prosperity gospel is man-centered, promising earthly gain; the gospel of Jesus is God-centered, promising eternal comfort even when our path is hard.
When we suffer, we are not abandoned. God has not lost control, nor has He ceased to be good. In fact, Paul tells us that our afflictions are the very place where God’s comfort flows most richly, so that we can extend that same comfort to others. Suffering becomes not meaningless but missional: as we endure, we show the sufficiency of Christ, we bring glory to God, and we spread the gospel of grace. This is the paradox the prosperity gospel can’t explain—weakness that becomes strength, sorrow that bears witness to hope, and suffering that multiplies joy as we share in Christ’s own afflictions and in his overflowing comfort.

2 Corinthians 1:20 | People often misuse this verse as if it were a blank check from God, that every desire of our hearts is guaranteed a “yes” in Jesus. But Paul is not talking about the whimsical and fleeting desires of man; he is talking about the promises of God, which are infinitely better and far more secure. These promises include not only salvation, forgiveness, and eternal life, but also the reality that “all who desire to live a godly life in Christ Jesus will be persecuted” (2 Timothy 3:12). In other words, God’s promises are not always about ease and comfort now, but about His faithfulness to us in suffering, His sovereign purposes in our trials, and His unfailing comfort in Christ. This ties directly to Paul’s earlier words in 2 Corinthians 1:3–7, the God of all comfort meets us in affliction so that His glory is revealed and His grace is spread.
Think of how many Old Testament promises find their fulfillment in Jesus. God said through Isaiah, “Fear not, for I am with you; be not dismayed, for I am your God; I will strengthen you, I will help you” (Isaiah 41:10). That promise is not simply a vague encouragement—it finds its deepest “Yes” in Christ, who promises to never leave us nor forsake us, even in the valley of affliction. In Him, every promise of God becomes rock solid, whether it’s the promise of comfort in sorrow, the promise of strength in weakness, or the promise of final victory over death. Every promise of God, including the promise of hardship, is fulfilled in Christ, and therefore every promise comes with His sustaining “yes” for our good and His glory. Our “Amen” in response is not entitlement, but worship, as we rest in the unshakable faithfulness of God revealed in Jesus.

Week 36

September 1-5
[M] 2 Chr 29-31; 1 Corinthians 8
[T] 2 Kings 18-19; 2 Chr 32; Ps 67; 1 Cor 9
[W] Isaiah 36-37; Ps 123; 1 Cor 10
[T] 2 Kings 20; Isa 38-40; Ps 68; 1 Cor 11
[F] Isa 41-44; 1 Cor 12

Dwell Plan Day 176-180 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
2 Chronicles 29:25-30 | The choreography of this worship, with its order and timing of events, is one of the most detailed pictures we get of the Old Testament worship. It’s encouraging, because it describes a planned and scripted worship, much like our modern liturgy. The people of God have always been doing mostly the same things. The particular details have changed. We have an offering basket for giving, not an altar and knife to slaughter the lamb for sacrifice, but those changes are largely superficial, even if they look dramatically different. The theological truths are still the same. The sacrificial part is still there, but our offerings are now praise, service, and giving. The order and choreographed timing resonates even today, echoing our own practices across time. This familiarity and synchronicity makes our faith unified across all of history—which only makes sense. God is the same yesterday, today, and forever. It stands to reason that His worship would be too!   

1 Corinthians 8 | Paul is addressing the issue of eating food that had been sacrificed to idols, a common reality in Corinth. Corinth was filled with pagan temples, and much of the meat sold in the marketplace had first been offered in sacrifice to various gods. For wealthier Corinthians, invitations to banquets often took place inside these temples, where food and drink were consumed in connection with pagan rituals. This raised a pressing question for new believers: was it acceptable for Christians to eat such food? Some in the church, boasting of their knowledge that idols were nothing, felt free to eat without hesitation. Others, however, especially those who had come out of idol-worship, felt their conscience wounded by any association with idolatrous practices.
Paul’s response places love above knowledge. While it is true that idols have no real existence and that food itself cannot commend or condemn us before God, Christians are called to consider how their actions affect the faith of others. To eat in a way that emboldens a weaker brother or sister to violate their conscience is to sin against Christ Himself. Paul therefore sets the principle that Christian freedom is always governed by love: knowledge must be tempered by humility and the willingness to lay down one’s rights for the sake of others. In Corinth’s idol-saturated culture, this meant that believers were to use their freedom not for self-indulgence, but to build up the body of Christ and display their exclusive loyalty to Him.

1 Corinthians 8:2-3 | If you think you’re intelligent, insightful, or wise, then you’ve got real problems. Because if you think you are any of those things, then you aren’t any of those things. That’s the plain and simple riddle of knowledge. The one who prattles on about what they know and tells you how much they know is the one who knows the least.
But the riddle deepens in these verses, because if we love God then we know that God knows us! But this is even more mysterious. Doesn’t God know everything? He has all facts and all details about all things in the universe. God has pure and perfect and infinite knowledge; it’s a part of being God to know in this way. So why does it say that God “knows” the one who loves Him? Because God’s knowing is His perfect loving in the Bible. God knows the facts of the ways of wicked people, but He doesn’t “know” their ways. They aren’t His ways. God’s knowing is the personal knowing of a loving and eternal God.
So we find ourselves in paradoxes when we talk about this stuff. We know all sorts of things, but our “knowing” isn’t understanding. Having more data doesn’t give us wisdom. God knows all details and facts perfectly, but He “knows” us specially when He sets His love on us. And when God knows us, we can finally start knowing things in ways that don’t just make us more ignorant. Praise Him! 

Tuesday
2 Kings 19:14 | When Hezekiah received the threatening letter from the Assyrians, he did not begin scheming or rallying his army, he went straight to the temple and spread it out before the Lord. This act shows a heart of dependence, refusing to trust in human strategy and instead laying the burden before God. In this, Hezekiah reflects the devotion of David, who consistently poured out his heart before the Lord in prayer and worship. Even more, it points us forward to Jesus in Gethsemane, who, faced with the crushing weight of the cross, fell before His Father and prayed, “Not my will, but yours be done.” Both Hezekiah and Jesus reveal that true strength is found in surrender, not in self-reliance. And because Jesus fully entrusted Himself to the Father, we too can bring our greatest fears and threats before God, confident that He hears us and will deliver according to His perfect will.

Psalm 67 | Verse 1 of this ancient praise poem is a reference to the well known benediction of Numbers 6. This is the benediction that God gave Aaron, to be spoken over the assembly as a blessing: that God’s face would shine on His people. This gets picked up in the New Testament in Ephesians 5 as a picture of Jesus, whose light Himself is able to shine on us with resurrection power. But what’s so striking in this poem is how universal its vision is. The opening verse anchors the poem in the Numbers benediction, but the blessing that follows is for the whole earth, for all of the nations. The blessing is for praise, worship, and joy, with God’s judgment, abundance, and guidance—to the ends of the earth! This is the trajectory of God’s love; it was the same scope of promise that God gave Abraham, that through him all of the nations of the world would be blessed. In this poem, it is made clear again. It’s what Jesus understood when He commissioned His disciples to go out into the nations. It’s why we’re rejoicing as we read it thousands of years later: because this ancient praise poem came true in us.

Wednesday
Psalm 123 | This psalm reminds us that, in our sin, we are utterly helpless apart from God’s mercy. Like servants looking to the hand of their master, we can only wait on Him to show us grace. The psalmist’s cry for mercy exposes our desperate need: we cannot save ourselves or endure the contempt of the world without His help. Yet this longing ultimately points us forward to Christ, who bore our shame and opened the way for God’s mercy to be poured out on us. In Him our plea for compassion is answered once and for all with redemption and eternal grace.

1 Corinthians 10:14 | That's pretty good advice.

Thursday
2 Kings 20:8-11 | If you’re going to ask for a sign, make it a big one. Go big or go home. Time and again this seems to be a part of God’s design, that we ask for something so great, so amazing and difficult, that it’s doomed for failure unless God is in it. We should pray for miracles, for God to take specific and supernatural action. Whether He does or not is His business and is irrelevant. Our expectations should be getting our minds blown and our asking should match our expectations.

Isaiah 39-40 | Isaiah 39 closes with a heavy shadow. Hezekiah, though a faithful king in many ways, falters by showing off Judah’s treasures to Babylonian envoys. Isaiah warns that these same Babylonians will one day carry everything away, and even Judah’s descendants will be taken into exile. The tone is one of impending judgment, grief, and uncertainty. It feels like the end of the road for Judah’s story, a bleak reminder of sin’s consequences and the coming weight of God’s discipline.
But then, in Isaiah 40, the tone shifts dramatically from judgment to comfort. With the same prophet’s voice, God now speaks tenderly to His people: “Comfort, comfort my people.” The exile will not be the final word. God promises forgiveness, restoration, and the coming of His glory in a way that all nations will see. For those who believe that Isaiah wrote the whole book, this transition is not a change of authors but a change in God’s message: from warning to hope, from the reality of sin to the certainty of redemption. This prepares us for the greater comfort that comes in Christ, who bears our judgment and ushers in God’s lasting peace. The same God who announces exile in chapter 39 also promises salvation in chapter 40—showing us that His justice and His mercy are never at odds, but always working together to bring His people back to Himself.

Isaiah 40 | Take time to really let this chapter wash over you. Isaiah’s words open one of the most breathtaking visions of God’s grace in all of Scripture. It is no accident that when Handel composed The Messiah, he returned again and again to these verses. They are meant to lift weary hearts with hope, comfort, and the unshakable promise that God Himself has come to redeem His people.
After reading Isaiah 40, let the music help carry it deeper. Open up Spotify (or wherever you listen to music) and find Handel’s Messiah. Start with Chorus No. 4 – “And the glory of the Lord shall be revealed, and all flesh shall see it together: for the mouth of the Lord hath spoken it.” (Isaiah 40:5). Then move to Aria and Chorus No. 9 – “O thou that tellest good tidings to Zion, get thee up into the high mountain. O thou that tellest good tidings to Jerusalem, lift up thy voice with strength; lift it up, be not afraid; say unto the cities of Judah, Behold your God!” (Isaiah 40:9). As you listen, remember that these promises echo all the way to Isaiah 60:1: “Arise, shine, for your light has come, and the glory of the Lord has risen upon you.” This is the hope of the gospel—God has come, His glory revealed, and His people renewed.

1 Corinthians 11:2-16 | As a guy that you've never seen without a baseball cap on, I (Jon) can't stand how this passage is misinterpreted and applied with no historical context. Was Paul writing about Giants hats? Nope. Let me take a stab at explaining what was going on.
In this text, Paul addresses worship practices in Corinth that carried deep cultural meaning. When Roman men entered pagan rituals, they would sometimes pull part of their toga over their heads as an act of devotion to false gods. Paul warns Christian men not to imitate these customs in the gathered church, since doing so would dishonor Christ, their true “head,” by blending the worship of the living God with the practices of idolatry. For women, head coverings carried a different meaning: they signaled marital faithfulness and respect for their husbands in a society where going uncovered could imply independence or even sexual availability. Paul’s instruction is less about fabric on the head and more about honoring God through culturally understood signs of humility, modesty, and marital faithfulness.
At the heart of Paul’s teaching is the truth that God designed order and interdependence in creation and in marriage. Just as Christ lovingly submits to the Father while sharing His full divinity, so husbands and wives share equal worth but distinct roles that honor one another. In Corinth, this meant men worshiping without pagan coverings and wives worshiping with culturally understood symbols of respect. Today, the principle remains the same: in every generation, Christians are called to worship in ways that honor Christ rather than draw attention to self, and to embrace God’s good design for men and women without erasing their God-given differences. Our aim is always to point to Christ, the One who laid down His glory to serve us and redeem us.

Friday
The Servant Songs of Isaiah | These paint a picture of one chosen by God who would bring justice, restore His people, and bear their sins. Where Israel failed as God’s servant, Christ fulfilled this calling perfectly—gentle, obedient, and faithful to the end. In Isaiah 53 especially, we see the Servant suffering in our place, pierced for our transgressions so that we might be healed. These songs remind us that our hope is not in our own strength, but in Jesus, the true Servant who laid down His life and was exalted for our salvation.

1 - Isaiah 42:1–9 | The Servant of the Lord
The Servant brings justice to the nations with gentleness and faithfulness.
2 - Isaiah 49:1–13 | The Servant’s Mission 
The Servant is called from the womb to restore Israel and be a light to the nations. 
3 - Isaiah 50:4–11 | The Obedient Servant 
The Servant speaks with God-given wisdom, suffers opposition, and entrusts Himself to the Lord. 
4 - Isaiah 52:13–53:12 | The Suffering and Exalted Servant 
The Servant is despised, bears the sins of many, and is vindicated by God.
* Some interpreters also include Isaiah 61:1–3 (quoted by Jesus in Luke 4) as a “fifth Servant Song,” though traditionally the four above are the core group.

Isaiah 43:1-7 | This poetry reads like a love song from God to us, describing God’s passion for His people. In verse 1 and verse 7 we are “called by name,” but the prophet subtly changes the sense of it. At first it’s the friendly way we’re being “called”—it’s so personal. God knows us by name and claims us as His own. This idea that God knows your name is so immediate and intimate, reminds us of Samuel’s story. God may not have whispered your name in the nighttime to wake you up, but your name is still on His lips. It’s just that personal. And God’s calling isn’t like a wake up call or a shout—remember that His voice actually creates stuff when He speaks! But then in verse 7 the intimacy is bumped up a notch. Now we are called by His Name! The naked power of His calling is made clear now, we are actually made (and remade!) for His glory.

Week 35

August 25-29
[M] Isaiah 23-25; 1 Corinthians 3
[T] Isa 26-29; Psalm 65; 1 Cor 4
[W] Isa 30-32; 1 Cor 5
[T] Isa 33-35; 1 Cor 6
[F] 2 Chr 28; 2 Kings 17; Ps 66; 1 Cor 7

Dwell Plan Day 171-175 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Isaiah 23:8–9 | This text reminds us that God is a God of justice, bringing down the pride and power of nations that exalt themselves. Surrounded by a world that often looks like Babylon, marked by greed, corruption, and arrogance, we can take heart that God will not let evil reign forever. The judgment Isaiah foretold is a preview of the greater judgment still to come, when Christ will return to set all things right. This is why Christians are a people of hope: not because the world is safe or just, but because we know the day is coming when sin and evil will be dealt with, and God will make all things new.

Isaiah 24-25 | These two chapters are extreme. We see the judgment of God on the whole earth. The vision is ultimate and devastating, as if the curse has finally won. It’s apocalyptic in a Michael Bay sort of way, painting the terrible extent of God’s judgments on the earth. But, as the prophets do again and again, the very next chapter has descriptions of blessedness and God’s glory that are transcendent. These two realities live comfortably in the mind and imagination of the prophet, and should in our minds as well. The gospel speaks to these two realities. God’s judgments are actually far worse than we think they are; His holiness demands it and the suffering is cataclysmic. But His mercies are even more astounding, anticipating a paradise greater than our imaginations can conceive. This is the Old Testament gospel as much as the New.

1 Corinthians 3 | In this chapter, Paul confronts a problem that feels just as urgent today as it did in Corinth: people were rallying around human leaders rather than Christ. Some said, “I follow Paul,” others, “I follow Apollos,” as though salvation or maturity came through personalities instead of the Savior. This impulse runs deep in the human heart: we long for visible heroes, voices to admire, and figures to lift up. But the danger is that our admiration too easily slips into worship, and the glory that belongs to Christ alone is shared with mere servants.
Christian celebrity culture magnifies this problem. We place authors, preachers, and leaders on pedestals, and in doing so, we often insulate them from accountability and inflate their egos. The results are disastrous: scandals that wound the church, disillusionment that weakens believers, and distraction from the gospel itself. When our faith leans too heavily on personalities, it cannot stand firm when those personalities falter. God never designed leaders to be saviors; they are fellow workers in His field, pointing us to Jesus.
The gospel calls us back to a better focus. Paul reminds us that no one can lay a foundation other than Christ, and all our labor must be built upon him. Pastors and leaders have a place, but only as servants who plant and water—the growth belongs to God. When we treasure Christ above all, we are freed from the empty cycle of idolizing and then being let down by people. The true beauty of the church is not in celebrity, but in a crucified and risen Savior who alone deserves our worship.

Tuesday
Isaiah 26:19 | Don’t let anyone tell you that the Old Testament doesn’t teach resurrection or heaven. That is simply false. These chapters describe the destruction of death in different ways, and here it’s even more mysterious, where we become a kind of “resurrection dew” in God’s power! This is the morning dew that Mary first saw on the third day after the crucifixion. The hopes of God’s love and power are total reversal of death and judgment. They always have been. Praise Him.

Isaiah 27:1 | This text gives us a vivid picture of God slaying Leviathan, the great serpent, a symbol of his final victory over all forces of chaos and evil. This verse is a key to unlocking Revelation 20, where John describes the defeat of Satan, the ancient serpent. Isaiah was already pointing us forward to that promised day when God will crush the enemy of His people once and for all. The cross and resurrection of Christ were the decisive blow, and Revelation shows us the final fulfillment still to come. Evil will not get the last word; God’s triumph in Christ will.

Wednesday
Isaiah 30:1 | James warns us about making our own plans and not considering God’s. This is the perennial problem of God’s people. We have His words and His truth, but we make up our own minds about what is wise. The problems and rebellion of God’s people have not changed much since Isaiah’s or James’s day. The edge of the prophet’s warning still is just as sharp as it was thousands of years ago. We can apply it to our experience when it comes to practical wisdom, or the insights of AI, or certainties of scientific knowledge. They are all forms of the “Egypt” of our day, another version of the best of the wisdom and achievements of humanity. They are as seductive today as they were in ages past. 

Isaiah 30:7, 31:1–9 | God rebukes his people for running to Egypt for protection from Assyria instead of trusting in Him. To Israel, Egypt seemed strong, secure, and reliable, but God calls them “Rahab who sits still,” a nation that cannot save. The tragedy is that His people had the living God on their side, yet their eyes were fixed on human power. Isn’t this the same pattern we repeat today? We place our confidence in money, careers, politics, relationships, or our own cleverness—idols that cannot deliver when the day of trouble comes.
The gospel shows us a better way. At the cross, Jesus accomplished what no earthly power could ever achieve: rescue from sin, Satan, and death itself. If God has defeated our greatest enemies through Christ, how can we not trust Him with the “lesser Assyrias” that loom in our lives? He invites us to leave behind our false saviors and rest in His strength. True freedom and peace come not from Egypt’s chariots or our modern idols, but from the Lord who reigns and who has already secured our salvation in Jesus.

Isaiah 30:18 | In case you need a tattoo idea.

1 Corinthians 5:9–10 | In this passage, Paul makes a surprising clarification: he never meant for Christians to avoid contact with unbelievers who sin, because that would mean leaving the world altogether. Instead, his concern is with unrepentant sin inside the church. Yet so often we flip his teaching—we become obsessed with condemning the sins of the culture while turning a blind eye to pride, greed, gossip, or immorality in our own congregations.
Paul’s point is clear: the church is called to holiness, not hypocrisy. Our first priority is to address sin in our own household of faith, because God’s name and reputation are tied to the purity of His people. The world doesn’t stumble because unbelievers act like unbelievers; it stumbles when believers act no differently. To follow Paul’s script is to live with humble integrity, showing that God’s grace truly transforms.

1 Corinthians 5:12 | When we read a verse like this, it’s hard to believe that so many Christians are regarded as judgmental by the world. Somehow we dropped the ball on the gospel with this one. Perhaps some folks feel guilty around Christians because of their lifestyle. That definitely happens. People are disturbed when you don’t join them in their wickedness or dissolution. They feel judged by their own conscience in that instance.
But that isn’t what this is talking about. This is about passing moral judgments on the people of this world for the things that they do, evaluating them according to God’s standards. We can’t do that. It isn’t our job. Instead, we tend to tolerate disobedience in other Christians out of fear. We get it all reversed. We’re supposed to hold other Christians accountable, but instead we condemn unbelievers.

Thursday
Isaiah 33:6 | The fear of the Lord is Zion’s treasure. | What an awesome idea. In a world that treasures money, power, fame, and comfort, God calls His people to a different kind of wealth. Our true treasure is not stored in vaults or displayed on pedestals, it is found in knowing and revering the Lord. To fear Him is to value His presence above everything else, to see His glory as more precious than gold.
This is what will make the new heavens and the new earth so glorious. Yes, we will enjoy resurrection bodies, harmony with creation, and a world without conflict—but these are not the greatest gifts. The deepest joy of eternity will be the presence of God Himself. Zion’s treasure is not the side benefits of salvation, but the Lord who saves, rules, and dwells with His people forever.

Isaiah 34-35 | Again we see the cycle of God’s judgments from chapters 24 and 25. Here the judgment is on the whole earth followed by God’s Holy Highway in Isaiah 35:8! This is the meta story, the bigger picture of all of history that the Bible is telling and inviting us into. But the promise is greater than the judgments; even a fool can’t get lost in this new world of grace that God is ushering in. 

Isaiah 35 | This text paints a vision of restoration: deserts blooming, the weak strengthened, the lame leaping, and the mute singing. When Jesus began His ministry, He pointed to these very signs as proof of who He was (Matt. 11:5). His miracles showed that Isaiah’s promise was breaking in through Him.
Yet those moments were only foretastes. What began in Christ’s first coming will be completed at His return, when sorrow and sighing flee forever. Until then, we walk by faith on the highway of holiness, strengthened by His grace, awaiting the joy of the new creation.

1 Corinthians 6:19 | This temple language is used here as a moral guide. If we regard our bodies as a dwelling place for God now, then our commitment to what we do with our bodies becomes a question of stewardship. Your body is God’s home, so there is a moral implication in everything you do with it. This can get a little heavy handed at times. Folks will scold you about your diet, or how much you exercise, or whether you’re taking the right supplements. That is a good inference from this teaching, but it isn’t what this text is primarily about. The Scripture has in mind a certain holiness when it comes to our sexuality here, a holiness which is directly affected by sexual sin. That is the direct teaching about our bodies being a temple. Sexuality has a particular holiness when it comes to our bodies and our spirit, a holiness we offend in our bodies in a unique way through sexual sin. We might be misusing our temple by smoking (that’s the most common application of this text), but that’s not what this passage is teaching. This is teaching us about the deep spiritual compromise that is happening in our casual attitudes and actions about sexual sin in particular. We are not just animals, evolutionary cocktails of desires and appetites that get out of control. No, we are also spiritual beings, and a part of that spiritual expression and existence is also gendered and sexually understood. This is a radically different view of our humanity and personhood than our modern world holds. 

Friday
2 Chronicles 28:2–4 | This is one of the most heartbreaking passages in Scripture (See also 2 Kings 17:17 about the northern kingdom of Israel). Look at how far the chosen people have wandered away from the heart of the Father: Ahaz, king of Judah, not only turned away from the Lord but led the people into the darkest practices of the surrounding nations. The horror of child sacrifice shows just how far the human heart can wander when it abandons the living God. Sin never stays small—it grows, corrupts, and deforms until what once seemed unthinkable becomes normal. This is the tragic depth to which Judah had sunk.
These verses also prepare us to understand the severity of the exile. When God sent His people into Babylon, it was not an overreaction or some random act of wrath—it was His holy response to unimaginable evil. A God of love cannot simply tolerate the slaughter of children or the worship of false gods that destroy people’s souls. Exile was God’s judgment against sin, and a sobering reminder that He will not allow wickedness to go unchecked forever. He is both patient and just, but His justice will come.
And yet even here we are pointed forward to Christ. The Son of God came into a world steeped in darkness, not to condemn, but to save. Where Ahaz sacrificed his children to false gods, the true King offered Himself for His people. At the cross, God’s justice against sin was satisfied, and His mercy overflowed to all who trust in Christ. These verses remind us of the seriousness of sin, but also of the wonder of the gospel—that Jesus took on Himself the judgment we deserved, so that we might receive life.

1 Corinthians 7:4 | A whole lot of problems in marriage can be settled by obedience to this one principle: your body belongs to the other person, not to you. Think of the implications for sexual intimacy. Too often we fall into the mistakes of the world, using marriage and sexuality as ways to please ourselves. But it was never supposed to be about ourselves. The pleasure and experience and body of the other person is your responsibility. We are to be “generous lovers” as the world puts it, when it comes to seeking the pleasure of others. But this principle keeps giving back to us. Good stewardship of your own body is something you owe your spouse. Your body simply doesn’t belong to you. What about single folks? This principle just gets kicked upstairs. Your body belongs to God. It never belonged to you to begin with! We aren’t trying to navigate our selfish needs in ways that somehow get us and others satisfied to the maximum amount. That’s pragmatism. No, we’re supposed to be surrendered to one another, so that the other’s needs and desires are more important than our own. This is the foundation of the Christian ethic: true selflessness in seeking out the best for the other person. In marriage, this takes a beautiful shape by the presence and power of the Holy Spirit, full of possibility. 

1 Corinthians 7:10–11 | Paul gives clear teaching on marriage, urging husbands and wives not to separate. But later in the chapter, Paul also speaks of the gift of singleness, holding it up as a calling that is just as honorable as marriage. This is where the American evangelical church often struggles. We have elevated marriage so highly—sometimes idolizing it—that those who are single are left feeling incomplete or second-class. Yet Paul’s teaching shows us that our worth is never found in a spouse, but in Christ alone.
Tim Keller in The Meaning of Marriage reminds us that marriage is not ultimate—it is a signpost. It points to the greater reality of Christ’s love for the church. But if marriage is a signpost, then singleness is also a powerful sign. Singleness uniquely demonstrates that Jesus is enough, that ultimate fulfillment is not found in romance or family life but in belonging to Him. The single Christian, Keller notes, is a living testimony that the new creation is already breaking in—that in eternity, we will not marry or be given in marriage, because we will have God Himself.
When the church treats marriage as the only path to maturity or blessing, we distort the gospel. Marriage is a gift, yes, but it is temporary and earthly. Singleness, too, is a gift, sometimes a painful one, but one that bears witness to eternal realities in a way marriage cannot. Both marriage and singleness are meant to glorify God, and both need the community of the church to flourish. We are called to honor and support one another, not rank one calling above the other.
In Christ, the single person is not “waiting for life to begin”—they already possess the deepest love, the truest intimacy, and the most lasting covenant. And in Christ, the married person is reminded that their marriage is not about self-fulfillment, but about pointing to something greater. The gospel frees us from worshiping marriage or dismissing singleness. Instead, it calls us to treasure Christ as our life, our joy, and our fulfillment. Whether single or married, our hope is the same: the Bridegroom who will never leave us.

Week 34

August 18-22
[M] Isaiah 7-10; Psalm 22; Matt 26
[T] Isa 11-13; Ps 118; Matt 27
[W] Isa 14-16; Matt 28
[T] Isa 17-19; Ps 62; 1 Corinthians 1
[F] Isa 20-22; 1 Corinthians 2

Dwell Plan Day 166-170 | CSB | Digital PDF | Printable PDF


 

Notes from Jon & Chris

Monday
Isaiah 7:12 | If for some reason God ever asks you to ask for a sign, don’t play games with Him. Don’t suddenly decide, like king Ahaz in this moment, to act more godly than you are. When God actually tells Ahaz to ask for a sign, Ahaz pulls the worst kind of unbelief, he dresses up his lack of faith in some kind of false piety. “I wouldn’t want to test God,” he says. In almost any other context, that’s the right answer. But coming from Ahaz and his unbelief, it’s just a cheap knock-off of faith. It’s not the real deal. So in answer to Ahaz’s foolish piety and postured righteousness, God says He will give a sign anyway, and then mentions the virgin birth—the most amazing sort of miracle possible—the way God would send His own Son. So despite this phony humility of Ahaz, God responds by predicting His own coming in human flesh. Wow. What an amazing answer to human hypocrisy! God chooses to love those who don’t even trust Him enough to ask for a miracle. This is grace beyond grace.

Isaiah 7:14 | These words were first spoken into a moment of national crisis. King Ahaz of Judah was terrified by the threat of invading armies, and God promised him a sign of deliverance. Here is where the difficulty comes in: there has been much debate over whether Isaiah spoke of a young woman in his own day (as the Hebrew word ‘almah’ can mean) or if this was a far-off prophecy about the Messiah. As believers committed to the inspiration of Scripture, we don’t need to flatten the richness of God’s word. This sign had an immediate relevance for Ahaz, yet Matthew—under the Spirit’s inspiration—declares it to be fulfilled supremely in the virgin birth of Christ (Matt. 1:22–23).
The immediate historical sign may have reassured Ahaz that God was with His people in that generation, but the greater sign would come centuries later in Bethlehem. Here is where God’s promise breaks the boundaries of the ordinary: a true virgin conceives by the power of the Holy Spirit (Luke 1:34–35). This was not a symbolic virginity, nor merely a poetic way of speaking, it was a supernatural work of God, confirming that Jesus is not just another child of Adam but the Son of the Most High. “Immanuel” means “God with us,” and in Christ’s incarnation, God Himself stepped into human history to save His people from their sins. The virgin birth is not an optional doctrine; it safeguards the truth of Jesus’ sinless nature and His divine origin.
Isaiah 7:14 ultimately drives us to worship the One who came to be “God with us.” For Ahaz’s generation, the sign meant God’s presence in their political turmoil. For us, it means that in the deepest sense, God has drawn near to reconcile us to Himself. The same Lord who promised a sign to a wavering king has given His church the surest sign of His love—the Son born of a virgin, crucified for our sins, and risen in glory. Whatever fears press on your heart today, the truth of “Immanuel” stands: God is with us, not against us, because Christ has come.

Isaiah 8:11-13 | This is a vital truth for our age. Somehow, despite an explosion of information in our age, we have even less certainty about what’s true and what isn’t. Fake news is everywhere. On top of this, and as a part of it, every conspiracy theory and crackpot explanation is treated as possible truth. But this is not a modern problem. We have always been liars, and fake news was as much of a problem in the ancient world as it is in the modern one. And so the advice is even more timely. Don’t be afraid. Don’t even call it a conspiracy. Fear God. If God is truly sovereign, truly king of history as He tells us He is, then we can put all conspiracies to rest forever. They don’t matter. The only thing that counts, that we should be afraid of, is what God plans in His judgments. Man and his plans do not have the last word, the first word, or any words in between. God sets us free from worrying over and analyzing and listening to theories and conspiracies. Fearing God kicks out all of those other worries.

Isaiah 9:12, 17, 21; 10:4 | Four times this is repeated, as if to make the point through the repetition: God’s judgments are relentless “For all of this His anger is not turned away, and His hand is still stretched out.” There is a completion and resolution to the end in God’s judgments and in God’s mercies. He is absolute in all that He does. This enlarges a sense of fear, a sense of dread about God’s holiness. There is a relentless justice and purity to God, which comes from the nature of His eternal person. What He is, He is forever. This makes His judgments a terror to us, roaring at us how real hell must be; but it also reveals the contrast of His love, which also roars an endless pursuit and pleasure in His rescue and His heaven.  

Tuesday
Isaiah 11:7-8 | Isaiah paints a breathtaking picture: “The wolf shall dwell with the lamb… the lion shall eat straw like the ox… they shall not hurt or destroy in all my holy mountain.” On the surface, these words describe a radical shift in the animal kingdom—a predator resting beside its prey. But the Spirit’s intention here is far greater than zoology. The prophet is using imagery that God’s people would instantly understand: in this world, wolves devour lambs and lions tear apart calves. In the world to come—the new heavens and the new earth—there will be no threat, no violence, and no fear. We must be careful not to shrink this vision down by over-literalizing what was never meant to be read that way. The power of this poetry is not in its biology but in the way it grabs our hearts with a glimpse of absolute peace.
This is not a promise that God will reprogram every animal’s diet, but a promise that He will eradicate the enmity and danger that mark life in a fallen creation. The “wolf” and “lamb” represent natural enemies—whether in the animal world, human society, or spiritual realms—that will one day live together without harm. The image tells us that every cause of pain, every seed of conflict, and every shadow of death will be gone.
We live now in “the already and the not yet”—Christ has begun to bring this peace through the cross, reconciling us to God and to one another. But we still wait for the day when His work will be complete, and “they shall not hurt or destroy” will be the unbreakable law of the land.
The wolf-and-lamb vision is not meant to satisfy curiosity about the future habits of wildlife, it is meant to stir longing for God’s final work of redemption. It calls us to set our hope not on fragile earthly peace, but on the King whose reign will cover the earth “as the waters cover the sea.” When you see news of conflict, when relationships feel strained, or when your own heart wrestles with anger and fear, remember Isaiah’s picture. Let it remind you that the Prince of Peace will not stop until every corner of creation is as safe, whole, and harmonious as His holy mountain. That day is coming. And because it is certain, we can live now as people who reflect that peace in how we treat others, even in a world still waiting for its final renewal.

Matthew 27:35 | The actual crucifixion itself is said in such a matter of fact kind of way. It was just normal Roman business, something done every day in the Empire. We don’t get any of the pathos of it or its horror. It’s just blunt fact. In the days before any real entertainment, folks getting crucified was the most interesting thing to watch on a Friday night. It sums up all of the callous cruelty of humanity, and why Jesus has to die to begin with. There’s no melodrama and no fanfare. Mostly it’s just folks making jokes and casual commentary. For most of them it’s just another Friday. There’s something mysterious about how all of this casual violence is happening while our Savior conquers sin, death, and judgment. Something mysterious and amazing about the victory of eternal glory in the gore, mud, and blood.

Wednesday
Isaiah 14-22 | These chapters begin and end with God’s judgment on Egypt with many of the surrounding nations listed for their judgments and crimes. This is a consistent theme in the prophets, explaining God’s judgments on all humans and all human societies. No one is unaccountable before God. Whole people groups bear their judgments as a group. It is not a way that we often think in the modern world, assigning blame and responsibility to nations; but it is something that our God does. 

Mathew 28:17 | It always seemed like an embarrassing detail to include. Why mention, at this point of amazing triumph, with Jesus conquering death and claiming this incredible authority, why bring up that some doubted? Why stain this amazing moment with a note on the disbelief of some of the disciples? But these little details are where all the grace is. It hadn’t been the disciples' wisdom or faith or strength that had brought them this far. They weren’t there, getting commissioned, because of all of the success they’d had so far. Far from it! This little detail about their doubts is where we can find ourselves in the disciples. It’s an entry point for us into the story, as we struggle to sometimes believe that it could be true. God has surely and truly come to save us? Death has been actually trampled and God’s judgments on sin are complete? Our unbelief can terrorize us, until we realize that the disciples are our brothers in it. Even when the evidence was staring them in the face, they were still having misgivings. What an encouragement to us today! We sometimes have unrealistic expectations about our own faith. All of our unrealistic expectations should be about God’s incredible greatness and endless mercy, not about our own weaknesses. Those human frailties of understanding and belief are always with us and always have been. Praise Him that it’s only ever needed to be the size of a bit of dust. 

Matthew 28:18-20 | Jesus gives what we call the Great Commission, charging His followers to make disciples of all nations. Many Christians read these words and feel the weight of obligation—an almost crushing sense of duty. But the risen Christ doesn’t send His church out burdened; He sends us out blessed. Notice the order: Jesus first declares that all authority in heaven and on earth has been given to Him. Then He promises His presence: “I am with you always.” In between those two realities—His power and His presence—He gives His people the privilege of joining in His mission. Far from being a dreary task, disciple-making is an invitation to partner with the King of the universe in something eternal and glorious.
When we think of the mission of the church as a burden, we miss the grace built into the command. Evangelism and discipleship are not chores to endure but treasures to embrace. We get to tell a broken world that the Lord of life has conquered death. We get to baptize new believers into the family of God and teach them to walk in the ways of Jesus. What higher honor could we imagine? The Great Commission is not God piling work onto our shoulders; it is God lifting us into His own joy. To be caught up in His redeeming mission is not just our responsibility, it is our privilege, our delight, and our share in the very heart of God.

Thursday
Ps 62:7–8 | Look at the order here. Verse 7 begins with the unshakable truth: “On God rests my salvation.” Our relationship with Him starts not with our striving, but with His grace that rescues us. Because God has already accomplished such a great salvation, we can now respond with trust, pouring out our hearts before Him. If He has secured our eternal rescue, surely we can rely on Him in the lesser—though still weighty—needs of everyday life.

1 Corinthians 1:12 | The old Sunday School answer to just about any question at any given moment is: Jesus! If you’re not listening and suddenly put on the spot, this will be right more than half of the time. But here we discover that sometimes “Jesus” is actually the wrong answer. What would that look like? Here’s the question you would get wrong: “Who is it more important to follow and listen to, Jesus or Paul?” At first glance that seems like an easy question. Of course you should listen to Jesus instead of Paul! But that’s actually the wrong answer because Jesus spoke through Paul. If you could follow Paul and not follow Jesus, then Jesus didn’t speak through Paul. Jesus isn’t divided into different parts or teachings or groups. In fact, once you introduce division, you couldn’t be talking about Jesus any more. Jesus and His teaching are one unified whole. If anyone uses any part of that unified whole to divide folks up, then they aren’t from Jesus. You can be “right” and still be completely “wrong.” 

1 Corinthians 1:25 | This verse (and passage) reminds us that even the “foolishness” of God is wiser than human wisdom. We are quick to point out the folly of the world, but this verse presses us to first examine our own hearts. How often do we quietly assume that our strategies, instincts, or plans are better than God’s way of the cross? The call is to humble ourselves, trusting that His wisdom, found in His word—even when it looks weak—is always the path of true strength and life.

Friday
1 Corinthians 2:2 | It’s a bit funny that Paul says here that he resolved to know nothing but Jesus and Him crucified, but then goes on to write another fourteen chapters in 1 Corinthians. But we all know that simplicity doesn’t get rid of complex questions, it helps you navigate and understand them. This verse is a bit of a reset button for us, a truth to come back to again and again as a starting point. Like our computers, we need to reset at times, to reboot our thinking and get back to basics. Distractions and objections and details can bog us down in life. This is one of those truths that we can use for our baseline thinking. It’s a return to core assumptions about life and purpose and what’s important. Paul is teaching us how necessary this kind of reset is. Corinth was a complicated place full of wealth, idols, and every kind of pleasure. It was the moral playground of the Roman Empire, leading to every kind of decadence. This is where gospel clarity and focus are essential, getting back to basics and sticking to those basics when the world is so morally murky.

1 Corinthians 2:1–5 | This is a great passage to keep in your back pocket when you’re thinking about your church leaders. If—God forbid—either Chris or I ever start preaching something other than the cross, feel free to put a roll of nickels in a tube sock and start swinging.

Isaiah 22:1 | Isaiah opens this chapter with biting irony: “The oracle concerning the valley of vision.”  A mountaintop is where perspective comes, where you can see for miles in every direction. But a valley? That’s where your sightline is cut off, where your vision is cramped and limited. God is exposing the blindness of His people: they believed they saw the world clearly, but in reality, their vision was no better than staring at the dust and stones on the valley floor.
This is the human heart on display. We convince ourselves that we understand life, that our perspective is wide enough, wise enough, and true enough to guide us without God. But in truth, our “vision” is nothing more than a few rocks, a few shadows, a few lizards scurrying across the ground. We think we know better than the One who made the mountains and the valleys, yet only His word and wisdom can give us true sight.