Free To Please The Lord | 1 Corinthians 7:32-35
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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.
Our shout-out today goes to Jay T. Stilkey from Post Falls, ID. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you.
Our text today is 1 Corinthians 7:32-35.
I want you to be free from anxieties. The unmarried man is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to please the Lord. But the married man is anxious about worldly things, how to please his wife, and his interests are divided. And the unmarried or betrothed woman is anxious about the things of the Lord, how to be holy in body and spirit. But the married woman is anxious about worldly things, how to please her husband. I say this for your own benefit, not to lay any restraint upon you, but to promote good order and to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord. — 1 Corinthians 7:32-35
Paul slows down here.
He doesn't issue commands. He offers care. He doesn't shame. He clarifies.
His opening line reveals his heart: "I want you to be free from anxieties."
Paul isn't ranking marriage and singleness. He's naming reality. Life adds weight. Responsibilities multiply concerns. Love creates legitimate obligations that divide attention—not because something is wrong, but because something is real.
Marriage is not sinful. Singleness is not superior. Both are gifts. Both come with costs.
Paul's point is simple but searching: devotion is shaped by attention.
The unmarried believer has fewer competing demands and more flexibility to focus on pleasing the Lord. The married believer carries additional responsibilities—to a spouse, to a household, to shared decisions—and that naturally divides attention.
Paul does not condemn that division. He acknowledges it.
And then he tells us why he's saying any of this:
"I say this for your own benefit… to secure your undivided devotion to the Lord."
That's the key phrase in this section.
Paul is not trying to restrict your life. He is trying to protect your focus. He knows that devotion doesn't usually disappear overnight—it gets crowded out slowly. Good things pile up. Legitimate concerns take center stage. And before long, what matters most gets pushed to the margins.
Paul wants better for us.
He wants a life ordered around what lasts. A heart that knows why it exists. A devotion that is clear, intentional, and unconflicted.
This is not a call to escape responsibility. It's a call to clarity.
Whether married or single, the question is the same:
What has my attention—and what is quietly competing with my devotion to the Lord?
Paul's vision is not a stripped-down life, but a focused one. Not fewer loves, but rightly ordered loves.
Because true freedom is not the absence of responsibility.
It is the ability to live with clear, undivided devotion to the Lord.
DO THIS:
Take five quiet minutes today and list the top five things that currently demand your attention. Ask God to show you which ones are crowding out your devotion to Him.
ASK THIS:
- What responsibilities most divide my attention right now?
- Where have good things begun to crowd out devotion to the Lord?
- What would undivided devotion look like in my current season of life?
PRAY THIS:
Lord, You know the weight I carry and the concerns that fill my mind. Help me order my loves rightly. Free me from anxiety and lead me into clear, undivided devotion to You. Amen.
PLAY THIS:
"Clear the Stage"