『Borrowed Faith Leads to Bought Faith | Judges 17:10-11』のカバーアート

Borrowed Faith Leads to Bought Faith | Judges 17:10-11

Borrowed Faith Leads to Bought Faith | Judges 17:10-11

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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.

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Our text today is Judges 17:10-11.

"And Micah said to him, 'Stay with me, and be to me a father and a priest, and I will give you ten pieces of silver a year and a suit of clothes and your living.' And the Levite went in. And the Levite was content to dwell with the man, and the young man became to him like one of his sons." — Judges 17:10-11

Micah's religion has now become a business deal. He hires the Levite—ten pieces of silver a year, new clothes, free housing. It's faith on payroll. What began as borrowed faith has now turned into bought faith. Micah thinks that by hiring a holy man, he can buy holy favor.

It's spiritual consumerism—the idea that God's presence can be purchased if we just find the right people, say the right words, or make the right donation. But you can't buy what only grace can give.

Micah wanted divine legitimacy without surrendering to the divine. He didn't want to be changed; he wanted to feel covered. He didn't want the presence of God; he wanted the appearance of blessing. So he threw money at religion like it was a spiritual vending machine.

And before we judge Micah, we should ask—do we do the same?

We start thinking that giving more, serving harder, or knowing the right people will earn God's favor. We assume that being around "spiritual" people makes us spiritual too. But that's not faith—that's a transaction.

We see it everywhere: churches chasing charisma over conviction, money over mission, platforms over prayer. Believers often confuse activity with intimacy, assuming that attendance or effort earns them grace points with God.

But God's presence isn't for sale. His power isn't a product. His favor doesn't run on contract—it runs on covenant.

Micah missed that entirely. He thought hiring a priest made him holy, but all he did was build a payroll for pride. He tried to control what could only be received.

That's the trap of bought faith—it turns worship into work and relationship into ritual. It trades intimacy for image. It pays for what's already been purchased—by the blood of Jesus.

The gospel flips that thinking: you can't buy God's presence, but you can surrender to it. You can't earn grace, but you can receive it. So receive it today. And stop trying to earn it.

ASK THIS:

  1. Where are you trying to earn what God already offers freely?
  2. Have you ever mistaken spiritual activity for intimacy with God?
  3. What do you rely on more—God's grace or your own performance?
  4. How can you rest in the truth that grace is received, not achieved?

DO THIS:

  • Take inventory of where you've been "performing" for God instead of walking with Him.
  • Stop treating faith like a transaction—spend time with God without an agenda today.
  • Thank God for his grace today.

PRAY THIS:

Father, thank You that grace can't be bought or earned. Forgive me for trying to perform my way into Your favor. Teach me to receive Your presence as a gift, not a payment. Amen.

PLAY THIS:

"Grace Alone."

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