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  • Job Chapter 1

    Faithfulness, Devotion, and the Sovereignty of God in the Face of Testing Before diving into the chapter, it helps to place Job chronologically after Genesis 11. Many scholars date Job roughly 400 years after the flood. Humanity has multiplied, but sin, pride, and human complexity persist. Job appears as a post-flood exemplar of faithfulness, much like Noah —…

  • Genesis 6

    Reading Genesis 6 Together: Reflections on Sin, Judgment, and God’s Mercy Genesis 6 is a pivotal chapter. Humanity’s sin has escalated, God’s grief is revealed, and yet His plan of redemption quietly unfolds. As we read, let’s pause verse by verse, ask questions, and let God speak to us about holiness, judgment, and grace. Verses 1–2: The “Sons of…

  • Leviticus Chapters 26 & 27

    Covenant, Consequence, and the Call to Belong.. As Leviticus draws to its close, chapters 26–27 gather everything the Lord has spoken—from sacrifices and priesthood to justice, worship, and holy rhythms—and press it into one searching question: What does it mean to live in covenant with a holy God who desires to dwell among His people?…

  • Exodus Chapters 8–10

    When Power Is Confronted and the Heart Is Exposed… By the time we reach Exodus 8–10, the question is no longer whether God is powerful. That has already been demonstrated.The question now is: What happens to the human heart when God’s power becomes undeniable? These chapters show us that miracles alone do not produce repentance. In fact, repeated…

  • Genesis Chapter 40

    Faithful While Forgotten: Trusting God’s Timing.. Genesis 40 opens without fanfare.Joseph is still in prison.Nothing has changed outwardly—yet everything is quietly moving. Two officials of Pharaoh, the cupbearer and the baker, are imprisoned and placed under Joseph’s care (Gen 40:1–4). Once again, Joseph is trusted—not because of position, but because of character. God often advances…

  • Job Chapter 4 & 5

    Friendship, Misguided Counsel, and Understanding Suffering After Job 2–3, we see Job wrestling with physical, emotional, and existential suffering. Now his friends — Eliphaz, Bildad, and Zophar — enter the narrative, beginning with Eliphaz in Job 4, who offers his interpretation of Job’s plight. 1. Eliphaz Speaks: Assumptions About Suffering (Job 4) Eliphaz opens by reminding…

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