January 30 | Slowing Down to Celebrate
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概要
Today’s readings deal with how God shapes people over time, not just through work and obedience, but through stopping, remembering, and celebrating what He has already done. There’s a common tendency to keep moving forward, measuring progress and focusing on what’s next, and these passages slow us down long enough to notice what that constant motion can do to us.
In Exodus 23–24, God builds rest and celebration directly into the life of His people. He ties their calendar to real moments of deliverance and provision, reminding them again and again where their freedom came from and who was sustaining them as they moved ahead. These rhythms weren’t accidental; theywere meant to keep God’s faithfulness in front of them year after year.
In Matthew 20:1–16, Jesus tells a story that exposes how quickly joy disappears when comparison takes over. The workers all receive what they were promised, yet some leave frustrated because they’re focused on what others received instead of what was freely given to them. It’s a picture of how grace can be missed when expectations start driving the conversation.
Taken together, these passages slow us down enough to ask some honest questions about our pace, our expectations, and our ability to receive what God gives. They leave us thinking about whether we’re taking time to remember God’s faithfulness, or whether we’re so focused on what comes next that we overlook what’s already been placed in our hands.