The Bible in a Year: Daily Reading & Devotion

June 6 | Remember Where Your Peace Comes From

21 min · 6. juni 2026
episode June 6 | Remember Where Your Peace Comes From cover

Beskrivelse

Today’s reading from 2 Chronicles 25–27 and John 16 invites us to reflect on where lasting peace is found and how our identity is shaped over time. Both passages reveal the tension between external circumstances and internal stability, reminding us that formation occurs when we anchor ourselves in God rather than in outcomes. In 2 Chronicles, we encounter kings whose lives were shaped by choices, influences, successes, and failures. Their stories remind us that position, achievement, and public perception do not ultimately determine a person's standing before God. What matters is the posture of the heart and the direction of one's life over time. In John 16, Jesus prepares His disciples for suffering, confusion, and disappointment. Rather than promising an easy path, He offers peace in the midst of hardship. His words invite believers to find stability in His presence rather than in changing circumstances, knowing that He has already overcome the world. Together, these passages encourage us to consider where we seek security when life becomes uncertain. They invite us to reflect on the source of our identity, the foundation of our peace, and the steady confidence that grows when our lives remain rooted in Christ.

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episode July 9 | Trust God When Life Feels Unfair cover

July 9 | Trust God When Life Feels Unfair

Today’s reading from Job 38–40 and Acts 16:1–23 invites us to wrestle with one of the hardest questions we face in life: What do we do when life feels unfair? Both passages remind us that following God does not guarantee a life free from hardship, confusion, or injustice. Instead, they invite us to trust God's character even when we cannot understand His purposes. Formation often takes place not when everything makes sense, but when we continue walking with Him through the things we cannot explain. In Job 38–40, God finally answers Job, but He does not begin by explaining Job's suffering. Instead, He asks a series of questions that reveal the vast difference between God's wisdom and human understanding. Job is reminded that the One who created the heavens, established the earth, and governs every part of creation sees a much larger picture than any of us ever could. Rather than receiving the explanation he longed for, Job encounters the greatness of the God who has been present all along. Sometimes God's greatest answer is not an explanation but a reminder of who He is. In Acts 16, Paul and Silas faithfully obey God's leading, deliver a young woman from spiritual bondage, and immediately find themselves falsely accused, publicly beaten, and thrown into prison. Nothing about their circumstances seems fair. They are not suffering because they failed God but because they faithfully served Him. Their experience reminds us that obedience does not always remove hardship. There are moments when doing the right thing still leads to misunderstanding, opposition, or pain. Yet even in those moments, God remains at work in ways that cannot yet be seen. Together, these passages invite us to slow down before concluding that God has abandoned us simply because life feels unfair. They encourage us to remember that our understanding is always limited while God's wisdom is complete. As we continue spending time in His Word each day, He forms within us a deeper trust that is not dependent on having every question answered, but on knowing the One who holds every answer.

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episode July 8 | How to Handle Conflict cover

July 8 | How to Handle Conflict

Today’s reading from Job 36–37 and Acts 15:22–41 invites us to reflect on how we respond when we don't have all the answers. Both passages remind us that spiritual formation is shaped by humility, especially when circumstances are confusing, relationships become strained, and our perspective is limited. We grow as we learn to trust God's wisdom more than our own understanding. In Job 36–37, Elihu speaks passionately about the greatness, power, and wisdom of God. Much of what he says about God's majesty is true, yet he also assumes he fully understands why Job is suffering. His words remind us that it is possible to speak truth about God while still misunderstanding what God is doing in a particular situation. The passage calls us to stand in awe of God's greatness while recognizing the limits of our own perspective. In Acts 15, the church experiences a beautiful moment of unity as the believers unanimously affirm Paul and Barnabas and send them out together with encouragement. Yet only a short time later, those same ministry partners become involved in such a sharp disagreement over John Mark that they separate and continue their ministries in different directions. The conflict was real, but God's mission continued through both men, reminding us that even sincere believers sometimes see situations differently. Together, these passages invite us to approach conflict, uncertainty, and disagreement with humility rather than confidence in our own conclusions. They remind us that we rarely see the whole picture, but God always does. As we continue to walk with Him, He forms in us a quiet trust that rests not in having every answer, but in knowing the One who does.

I går18 min
episode July 7 | How to Handle Disagreement cover

July 7 | How to Handle Disagreement

Today’s reading from Job 34–35 and Acts 15:1–21 invites us to reflect on how disagreement can reveal what is taking shape within us over time. Both passages show people wrestling with difficult questions, strong opinions, and the need for wisdom that goes deeper than personal reaction. In Job, Elihu continues speaking into Job’s suffering with confidence, correction, and theological claims about God’s justice. His words remind us that even when people speak about God, they can still struggle to understand the full weight of another person’s pain, and that wisdom requires humility, patience, and careful listening. In Acts 15, the early Church faces a serious disagreement over whether Gentile believers must follow the law of Moses in order to be saved. Instead of avoiding the conflict, the apostles and elders gather, listen, debate, remember what God has done, and return to Scripture for direction. Together, these passages invite us to consider how we respond when disagreement surfaces. They ask us to notice whether we rush to defend, avoid, or control the conversation, and to reflect on how God may use honest tension to form patience, humility, and discernment in us.

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episode July 6 | Pay Attention to What God Is Doing cover

July 6 | Pay Attention to What God Is Doing

Today’s reading from Job 32–33 and Acts 14 invites us to slow down and pay attention to the ways God speaks and works, even through people and moments we might otherwise overlook. Both passages remind us that spiritual formation often begins with careful observation before it leads to deeper understanding. In Job 32–33, Elihu enters the conversation after patiently listening to everyone else speak. Whether his conclusions are ultimately right or wrong, his willingness to listen before speaking highlights the importance of attentiveness and reminds us that wisdom often grows through careful observation rather than quick reactions. In Acts 14, Paul notices something others do not. He observes that a man listening to the message has faith for healing, and God works powerfully in that moment. When the crowd tries to give Paul and Barnabas the credit, they immediately redirect the glory to the living God, reminding everyone that He alone is the source of healing and life. Together, these passages invite us to reflect on whether we are moving through life with awareness or distraction. As we learn to notice God's work in His Word, in the lives of others, and in the ordinary moments of each day, He forms in us hearts that are attentive, humble, and ready to recognize His presence.

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episode July 5 | Expiration Date cover

July 5 | Expiration Date

Today’s reading from Job 30–31 and Acts 13:26–52 invites us to reflect on suffering, endurance, and the hope that even pain has a limit before God. Both passages remind us that formation often happens over time, especially when life feels unresolved, and we’re learning to trust God before we can see the ending. In Job 30–31, Job continues to wrestle honestly with grief, humiliation, physical pain, and unanswered prayer. His words reveal the deep rhythm of a wounded soul still crying out to God, and they remind us that obedience doesn’t always remove suffering quickly, but it can keep us turned toward God in the middle of it. In Acts 13, Paul proclaims the message of Jesus to people who have to decide how they’ll respond to the good news. Some receive the Word with joy, while others reject it, showing how awareness and calling are formed as people recognize what God’s doing through Christ. Together, these passages invite us to sit with the truth that suffering may be real, but it isn’t ultimate. They call us to reflect on the pain we carry, the hope we need, and the steady confidence that resurrection means even death itself doesn’t get the final word.

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