Formation to Transformation | A Worship Devotional

Let the Peace of Christ Umpire Inside You | Before the Doors Open

2 min · 5 jul 2026
aflevering Let the Peace of Christ Umpire Inside You | Before the Doors Open artwork

Beschrijving

You are at the console. You are at the camera. You are at the ProPresenter computer with the next twelve slides queued and a fluorescent yellow note from yesterday's run that says do not forget the second baptism video. This is detail work. Most of you do not get to think theologically while you do it. You think operationally. The next move. The next cue. The next song. The next slide. And that is fine. That is what the work needs from you. But Paul has a verse that meets you in detail work. And the verb in it is one of the strangest in the New Testament. That word rule in Colossians 3:15 is brabeueto in the Greek. It means to umpire. To preside. To officiate the game. The peace of Christ is supposed to be the referee inside you today. Not the in-ear mix. Not the team chat. Not the last text you got from the senior pastor. Not the criticism you remembered while you were brushing your teeth. The peace of Christ. As the official. Calling the plays inside you. That changes detail work. Because when something goes wrong this morning, and something will go wrong, the question is not whether you can fix it. The question is who is officiating inside you while you fix it. If anxiety is the umpire, every problem becomes a crisis. If the peace of Christ is the umpire, every problem becomes a small thing to handle. Because the peace already won the game. He just needs you to play it. May the peace of Christ be the umpire in your heart today, in the booth, at the console, in the slide queue, behind the camera, on the platform. May he call the plays when something goes wrong, instead of letting anxiety make the call. May you be thankful even before the problem resolves. And may the work of Christ's word, rich, dwelling, singing inside you, be louder than the next ping on your phone. Go. The room is waiting. But more importantly, Jesus is already in it. I will see you tomorrow.

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148 afleveringen

aflevering What the Law Could Not Do | Romans 8:3 artwork

What the Law Could Not Do | Romans 8:3

Trying harder failed you. Not because you are weak. Because the law was never built for that job. Yesterday we said freedom is a jurisdiction change, not a stronger effort. Today Paul answers the question that verse leaves behind. If the law could not free me, whose fault was that? Was it mine, for not obeying it hard enough? Or was there something the law itself just could not do? Read the first phrase of Romans 8:3 again. What the law couldn't do. Paul is naming an incapacity built into the instrument itself. The law was not weak because it was a bad law. Paul says elsewhere the law is holy and righteous and good. The law is weak through the flesh. Which is Paul's way of saying: the law tells you what is right, but it has no power to make you into a person who does the right thing. It can convict. It cannot regenerate. It can diagnose. It cannot heal. It is like handing a person with a broken leg a book on running form. The book is not wrong. The book is just not the right instrument for that injury. Every time you have tried to fix your interior life by doubling down on the rules, you have been handing yourself the book. It does not matter how good the book is. The book was never going to set the bone. Then Paul makes the pivot the whole gospel turns on. What the law couldn't do... God did. The verb changes. The subject changes. The instrument changes. The Father sends the Son. The Son takes on flesh. Sin gets condemned in the flesh, not in your effort. For the worship leader, the musician, the tech, the vocalist, this is the release valve on a season of shame most of us have been carrying quietly. Paul says the loop is misdiagnosing itself. The failure is not your discipline. The failure is that you are still asking the law to do the work only the cross can do. Locate the failure at the instrument, and something loosens. The pressure comes off you. It goes onto the cross, where it was always supposed to be. And the interior life stops being a self-improvement project and starts being a life you receive. A question to sit with today: where have I been blaming my effort for a failure that actually belonged to the instrument? Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com.

9 jul 20263 min
aflevering The Only Thing That Ever Set You Free | Romans 8:2 artwork

The Only Thing That Ever Set You Free | Romans 8:2

Willpower has never once made you holy. Paul names the only law that has. Think about the last time you tried to white-knuckle your way into a habit you knew you needed. More time in the Word. Less time on the phone. A better tone with your team. A slower pace on Sundays. You made the vow. You held for a week. Maybe two. Then you were right back where you started, adding shame on top of it because now you had also failed at the fix. I have been in that loop more times than I want to admit. And most of the time my honest read is: I just did not try hard enough. Paul says that read is wrong. There are two laws in Romans 8:2. Not two suggestions. Two laws. A law is what governs something. It is the operating system underneath. The law of sin and death. And the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus. Both are jurisdictions. Both are real. And you used to live under one. Now you live under the other. Notice what Paul does not say. He does not say I tried harder and got free. He does not say I white-knuckled my way out of the old law. He says one law set me free from the other law. The freedom is not effort. The freedom is a jurisdiction change. This is where a lot of us have been getting Christian life wrong for years. Justified by grace, sanctified by grit. Get saved by faith, get holy by trying. That is not the Christian life Paul is describing here. That is a religion Paul spent his whole ministry arguing against. You cannot willpower your way out of a jurisdiction. You have to be transferred out. And that transfer is exactly what happened when Christ set you free. Freedom in Romans 8 is not a feeling of freedom. It is a legal transfer. You used to be under one law. Now you are under another. The old law had no power to change you. The new law is the Spirit of life himself. A question to sit with today: where am I still trying to willpower my way into holiness Christ already made available? Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com.

Gisteren3 min
aflevering There Is No Condemnation | Romans 8:1 artwork

There Is No Condemnation | Romans 8:1

You walked off the platform replaying everything you got wrong. Paul opens Romans 8 by closing that courtroom. You know the reel. The intro that landed a beat late. The bridge you took a half-step too high. The moment the click dropped out and nobody but you noticed. The look the pastor gave that was probably not what you thought it was. By the time you are in the car, you have prosecuted yourself for three services. I have done that drive home more times than I can count. Sometimes the review is honest. A lot of the time it is a courtroom. The word Paul uses for condemnation is katakrima. It is a legal word. It is a verdict. It is not a feeling and it is not a mood. It is what a judge hands down at the end of a trial. That matters, because the replay in your head assumes a verdict has already been reached. The replay is not asking a question. It is prosecuting. Your inner monologue is running the closing argument and the sentence at the same time. Paul walks into that courtroom and says the verdict is no. Not not much. Not some. Not there is a little bit right now and we will see about tomorrow. No condemnation. And notice where he locates it. Now. Present tense. Not a future promise you have to earn your way toward. Not a hope that becomes true once you get your walk cleaned up. Present standing. Right now. In this car. On this drive. After that service. There is a difference between reviewing a service and prosecuting yourself for it. Review says: what can I learn. Prosecution says: what am I. Review is a discipline. Prosecution is the courtroom Paul just closed. If this is true, the drive home changes. Not because you performed better. Because the case was already dismissed before you plugged in this morning. A question to sit with today: what am I still prosecuting myself for that the Judge already threw out? Read the written version and get extra notes at ryanloche.substack.com.

7 jul 20263 min
aflevering Let the Peace of Christ Umpire Inside You | Before the Doors Open artwork

Let the Peace of Christ Umpire Inside You | Before the Doors Open

You are at the console. You are at the camera. You are at the ProPresenter computer with the next twelve slides queued and a fluorescent yellow note from yesterday's run that says do not forget the second baptism video. This is detail work. Most of you do not get to think theologically while you do it. You think operationally. The next move. The next cue. The next song. The next slide. And that is fine. That is what the work needs from you. But Paul has a verse that meets you in detail work. And the verb in it is one of the strangest in the New Testament. That word rule in Colossians 3:15 is brabeueto in the Greek. It means to umpire. To preside. To officiate the game. The peace of Christ is supposed to be the referee inside you today. Not the in-ear mix. Not the team chat. Not the last text you got from the senior pastor. Not the criticism you remembered while you were brushing your teeth. The peace of Christ. As the official. Calling the plays inside you. That changes detail work. Because when something goes wrong this morning, and something will go wrong, the question is not whether you can fix it. The question is who is officiating inside you while you fix it. If anxiety is the umpire, every problem becomes a crisis. If the peace of Christ is the umpire, every problem becomes a small thing to handle. Because the peace already won the game. He just needs you to play it. May the peace of Christ be the umpire in your heart today, in the booth, at the console, in the slide queue, behind the camera, on the platform. May he call the plays when something goes wrong, instead of letting anxiety make the call. May you be thankful even before the problem resolves. And may the work of Christ's word, rich, dwelling, singing inside you, be louder than the next ping on your phone. Go. The room is waiting. But more importantly, Jesus is already in it. I will see you tomorrow.

5 jul 20262 min