The Bible in a Year: Daily Reading & Devotion

June 10 | Listen to God's Word and Respond

25 min · 10. juni 2026
episode June 10 | Listen to God's Word and Respond cover

Description

Today's reading from 2 Chronicles 34–36 and John 19:1–22 invites us to reflect on how we respond when God's truth confronts us. Both passages reveal that spiritual formation is not primarily about gaining information, but about allowing what we hear and see to shape the posture of our hearts over time. In 2 Chronicles, Josiah encounters the Book of the Law after years of neglect within the nation. His response is marked by humility, repentance, and a renewed desire to align the people of God with what God had spoken. The passage highlights the importance of listening in ways that lead to faithful obedience and a renewed identity. In John 19, Jesus stands before Pilate and the crowds as the truth is placed directly before them. Some mock Him, some reject Him, and some remain uncertain. The scene reminds us that being near the truth is not the same as responding to it, and that our reactions often reveal what is forming within us. Together, these passages invite us to consider how we respond when God speaks. They encourage us to move beyond simply hearing God's Word and to reflect on what it means to receive it with humility, awareness, and a willingness to be shaped by His truth over time.

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174 episodes

episode June 22 | Trust God's Protection artwork

June 22 | Trust God's Protection

Today’s reading from Esther 6-8 and Acts 6 invites us to reflect on God's protection and on how His care for His people often works long before we recognize it. Both passages remind us that spiritual formation grows through learning to trust God's presence and guidance even when circumstances seem uncertain or challenging. In Esther, the dramatic reversal surrounding Mordecai, Haman, and the king's signet ring reveals God's protective hand at work behind the scenes. What appeared to be a hopeless situation becomes a testimony of God's faithfulness as authority once used against God's people is transformed into a means of their preservation and defense. In Acts 6, the early church faces growing challenges as ministry expands and practical needs increase. Rather than allowing division or distraction to weaken the mission, the apostles respond with wisdom, prayer, and delegation, demonstrating how God's protection often comes through Spirit-led leadership, unity, and faithful service within the body of Christ. Together, these passages invite us to notice where God may be working in ways we cannot yet see. They encourage us to reflect on how trust is formed over time as we learn to rest in God's protection, remain faithful in our calling, and remember that His purposes are often unfolding even when the full picture remains hidden.

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episode June 21 | Courage in the Calling artwork

June 21 | Courage in the Calling

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episode June 20 | Trust What You Didn’t Choose artwork

June 20 | Trust What You Didn’t Choose

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episode June 19 | The Importance of the Sabbath artwork

June 19 | The Importance of the Sabbath

Today’s reading from Nehemiah 12–13 and Acts 4:23–37 invites us to reflect on the importance of the Sabbath and how God has established rhythms of stopping and gathering to shape His people over time. Both passages reveal that spiritual formation is not accidental; it is built through intentional patterns that keep us anchored in God’s presence. In Nehemiah, the people begin treating the Sabbath like any other day, filling it with work, trade, and constant activity. What God designed as a sacred rhythm of rest and remembrance becomes crowded out by productivity. Nehemiah recognizes that this is not just about breaking a command, but about losing a rhythm that was meant to remind them they belong to God and depend on Him. In Acts, the early church models a different rhythm. Under pressure, they gather together in prayer instead of scattering into busyness. Their instinct is to return to God, to seek His presence, and to remain unified as His people. This pattern of gathering reveals the kind of life the Sabbath was always meant to cultivate. Together, these passages invite us to consider the role of Sabbath in our own lives, not just as a day, but as a God-given rhythm that calls us to stop, remember, and return. They remind us that who we are becoming is shaped by whether we make space to consistently come back to God.

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episode June 18 | God Uses Ordinary People artwork

June 18 | God Uses Ordinary People

Today’s reading from Nehemiah 10–11 and Acts 4:1–22 invites us to consider how God forms people through ordinary faithfulness over time. Both passages remind us that God’s work is often accomplished not through status, recognition, or influence, but through people who simply continue walking with Him day after day. In Nehemiah, we encounter communities and families committing themselves to God’s covenant and taking their place within the life of His people. Many of the names recorded in these chapters are unfamiliar to us, yet their obedience mattered. Their lives were shaped by the steady rhythms of commitment, identity, and faithfulness in the places God had assigned them. In Acts, Peter and John stand before powerful religious leaders who are astonished by their boldness. What stands out is that these apostles are described as ordinary men. Their influence did not come from prestige or advanced training, but from having spent time with Jesus. Their response reveals how God works through people formed by His presence. Together, these passages invite us to reflect on the ordinary places where God is shaping our lives. They remind us that spiritual formation often happens through daily faithfulness, quiet obedience, and continued trust in God’s purposes, even when those moments seem small or unnoticed by others.

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