Monday, June 29, 2026

CITIZENS OF HEAVEN, WITNESSES ON EARTH

“But our citizenship is in heaven. And we eagerly await a Savior from there, the Lord Jesus Christ.” (Philippians 3:20 NIV)

In a world of flags and factions, it’s easy to forget where our true allegiance lies. We live in nations, vote in elections, and care deeply about the direction of our communities. But Scripture reminds us: our ultimate citizenship is not of this world. It’s of heaven.

That doesn’t mean we disengage. It means we engage differently.

Movements like Christian nationalism seek to blend faith with political power, often with good intentions -- desiring moral clarity, justice, and truth in public life. But when Christianity becomes a tool of nationalism, we risk distorting the gospel. Jesus didn’t come to build an empire. He came to establish a kingdom not of this world -- a kingdom marked by humility, mercy, and sacrificial love.

Peter urged believers to live as “foreigners and exiles” (1 Peter 2:11), not because they didn’t belong anywhere, but because they belonged to Someone greater. Their lives were meant to reflect Christ -- not conquer in His name, but serve in His Spirit. 

Lord, remind me that I am Yours before I am anything else. Let my love for You shape how I love my neighbor. Help me to speak truth with grace, to seek justice with humility, and to live as a citizen of heaven while serving faithfully on earth. May Your kingdom come -- not through force, but through faithfulness. Amen.

-- SOUND BITES Ministry™


#6401

Friday, June 26, 2026

JESUS’ LOVE DRAWS US NOW

I cannot prove to you that Jesus will accept you, should you come into His presence to let down your guard. I can tell you that the whole character of Jesus as we meet Him in the Gospels suggests this kind of love. "Come to Me, all you that are weary and are carrying heavy burdens, and I will give you rest," said Jesus in a famous passage (Matthew 11:28).  I can tell you as well that this love has been true for me and others… In Jesus' presence we may safely drop our strengths and reveal our weakness…

It takes faith, in the presence of all the voices that condemn us, to open up the old wounds before God. Jesus' love… draws us now. One elicits the other: faith and forgiving love. They circle around each other in glorious harmony.

I wish you the courage to enter that loop and be swept up in the healing love of Jesus. 

-- Gerrit Scott Dawson in “Heartfelt


#6400

Thursday, June 25, 2026

GOD’S RELENTLESS LOVE

It's safe to give ourselves up to God's love.  He created us out of love and His love is never wearied or worn out by our sins.  He is relentless in His pursuit of us and in His determination that one day we will be pure love, at whatever cost to us or to Himself.

"Good and upright is the Lord," the psalmist reminds us, "therefore He instructs sinners in His ways.  He guides the humble in what is right and teaches them His way" (Psalm 25:8-9, italics added).  The only requirement is humility and the patience to wait for His working.  God is not known for haste, but He does mean business. 

-- David Roper in “Growing Slowly Wise” 


#6399

Wednesday, June 24, 2026

HOW FAR CAN GRACE REACH?

“Surely the arm of the Lord is not too short to save…”  (Isaiah 59:1)

There are days when the distance feels real. Distance from God. Distance from who you hoped to be. Distance from the life you imagined. Sometimes it’s failure that convinces you you’ve wandered too far. Sometimes it’s shame that whispers you’ve crossed a line you can’t return from. Sometimes it’s simply the slow drift of a tired heart.

But grace has a longer reach than your longest detour. Grace is not limited by geography, history, or the mess you made yesterday. Grace does not check how far you’ve run before deciding whether to chase you. Grace does not measure the distance -- it closes it.

The prodigal son tried to rehearse his apology, but the Father ran to him before he could speak. Peter denied Jesus three times, but grace restored him with three invitations to love. Paul persecuted the church, but grace turned him into its greatest preacher. Every story in Scripture shouts the same truth: You are never farther than grace can reach.

Lord, thank You that Your grace reaches farther than my failures, fears, and wanderings. Draw me close again. Remind me that no distance is too great for Your love to cross. Help me accept that and live today as someone found, forgiven, and held by grace. Amen. 

-- SOUND BITES Ministry™


#6398

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

JESUS – THE MOST APPROACHABLE PERSON

“Now the tax collectors and sinners were all gathering around to hear Jesus. But the Pharisees and the teachers of the law muttered, “This man welcomes sinners and eats with them.” (Luke 15:1-2 NIV)

In Jesus' day, lepers and prostitutes and tax collectors were especially careful to steer clear of the rabbis, who were considered especially close to God. The rabbis' had the mistaken notion that their spirituality required them to distance themselves from people. The irony is that the only rabbi the outcasts could touch turned out to be God Himself.

Jesus was the most approachable person they had ever seen. The religious leaders had a kind of differentness that pushed people away. Jesus had a kind of differentness that drew people to Him. True spirituality is that way.

-- John Ortberg in “The Life You've Always Wanted


#6397