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  • When Your Joy Disappears | Hosea 9:1-2
    2026/07/05

    Welcome to The Daily.

    Read more about our mission to teach every verse of the bible in what we call Project23.

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal.

    Our text today is Hosea 9:1-2:

    Rejoice not, O Israel!
    Exult not like the peoples;
    for you have played the whore, forsaking your God.
    You have loved a prostitute's wages
    on all threshing floors.
    Threshing floor and wine vat shall not feed them,
    and the new wine shall fail them. — Hosea 9:1-2

    Not all joy is real.

    Israel was celebrating, but God told them to stop. Why? Because their joy was disconnected from the reality of a living relationship with Him. They were celebrating life while abandoning the God who gave them a reason to celebrate.

    And God says that kind of joy won't last. I love this line:

    "The new wine shall fail them."

    The very things they trusted for temporal happiness were about to leave them spiritually dry.

    You see, you can stay entertained and still feel empty.
    You can have more and enjoy less.
    You can build a full life and still feel hollow.

    Because intoxication with things may provide temporary relief, but they will not bring fulfillment like God. They cannot sustain you. They were not meant to sustain you. They are circumstantial. They fade. They demand more. They will eventually, it leave you restless.

    When this happens, this is not God taking joy away. This is God exposing a joy that was never true joy.

    So turn the question inward: What is my joy built on right now? Where am I seeking joy?

    If it is built on temporal comfort, success, or escape, it will fail you. Those things were never meant to carry your soul. Real joy is rooted in God. And it doesn't disappear when life shifts.

    Here's the hope. It's not too late.

    If your joy feels thin… return to the Lord.
    If your soul feels tired… return to the Lord.

    Because real joy isn't found in running from God. It's found in coming back.

    DO THIS:

    Notice what you reach for today when you want relief, and turn to God first instead.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where am I looking for joy apart from God?
    2. What has stopped satisfying me?
    3. What would it look like to return?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, show me where I've settled for shallow joy. Lead me back to you and restore what only you can give. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Graves Into Gardens"

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    4 分
  • When Worship Stops Working | Hosea 9:5-6
    2026/07/07

    Welcome to The Daily.

    Read more about our mission to teach every verse of the bible in what we call Project23.

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal.

    Our text today is Hosea 9:5-6:

    What will you do on the day of the appointed festival,
    and on the day of the feast of the Lord?
    For behold, they are going away from destruction;
    but Egypt shall gather them;
    Memphis shall bury them.
    Nettles shall possess their precious things of silver;
    thorns shall be in their tents. — Hosea 9:5-6

    What if everything about your worship looks right, but God isn't in it?

    Hosea asks a probing question: "What will you do on the day of the appointed festival?" In other words, what happens when your worship gatherings continue, but God no longer accepts them?

    Israel had it all. Feasts. Rhythms. Sacred days. They showed up, went through the motions, and kept the system running. But God was gone from it. He had been gone a long time.

    Their worship had become routine without relationship.

    God makes it clear: when judgment comes, none of it will help. Their religious gatherings won't save them. Their religious celebrations won't protect them. Their religious habits won't carry them through what's coming.

    That's the warning.

    Everyone knows you can stand in a room full of worship and still be far from God. You can sing loudly, listen weekly, serve consistently, and never actually surrender. You can look alive spiritually and be empty at the core.

    And eventually, this empty form of worship crumples.

    That's why Hosea paints a stark ending. Homes overtaken. Possessions lost. Futures cut off. Everything they leaned on disappears, and their worship offers no refuge.

    Is your worship real? Not passionate. Not polished. Not consistent. But real, authentic, genuine. It flows from a life that actually walks with God.

    Worship was never meant to be something you attend. It's something you live.

    And here's the grace. He's still inviting you back. You don't have to keep faking it. You don't have to keep going through motions that lead nowhere. You can come back with honesty, humility, and a heart that actually wants Him.

    DO THIS:

    Before your next moment of worship, pause and ask God to make your heart sincere, not just your actions.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Is my worship connected to how I actually live?
    2. Have I been going through the motions?
    3. What would it look like to come back to real worship?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, don't let my worship become empty. Bring my heart back to you and make my devotion real again. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Heart of Worship"

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    5 分
  • You Reap What You Sow | Hosea 8
    2026/07/04

    The storm you're asking God to stop… might be the one you planted.

    Summary:
    Hosea 8 delivers a hard truth: you don't just experience storms—you often sow them. Israel planted rebellion through empty religion, self-made authority, idolatry, compromise, and forgetfulness of God, and the consequences returned with greater force. The same principle still applies today—what is sown privately will eventually surface publicly. Yet the chapter also offers hope: if destructive seeds grow, so can seeds of repentance, truth, and obedience.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions:
    1. Why do people often ask God to remove consequences instead of changing behavior?
    2. What does "they sow the wind and reap the whirlwind" (Hosea 8:7) teach about cause and effect?
    3. How can someone practice "empty religion" while still appearing spiritually active?
    4. What are examples of "self-made authority" in a person's life today?
    5. Why are modern idols harder to recognize than ancient ones?
    6. What does it mean that idols begin in the heart before appearing in actions?
    7. How does compromise slowly gain control over a person's life?
    8. Why is forgetting God described as the root of all other storms?
    9. What storm in your life might be the result of seeds planted over time?
    10. What is one "good seed" you can begin sowing today that leads toward restoration?

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    26 分
  • The Freedom That Leads Back to Slavery | Hosea 9:3-4
    2026/07/06

    Welcome to The Daily.

    Read more about our mission to teach every verse of the bible in what we call Project23.

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal.

    Our text today is Hosea 9:3-4:

    They shall not remain in the land of the Lord,
    but Ephraim shall return to Egypt,
    and they shall eat unclean food in Assyria.

    They shall not pour drink offerings of wine to the Lord,
    and their sacrifices shall not please him.
    It shall be like mourners' bread to them;
    all who eat of it shall be defiled;
    for their bread shall be for their hunger only;
    it shall not come to the house of the Lord. — Hosea 9:3-4

    Not all freedom is real freedom.

    Israel believed they were moving forward, but God says, "They shall return to Egypt." In other words, they were heading back into the slavery that God had delivered them from. What looked like progression was actually regression.

    That is how sin works. It feels like freedom at first, but over time, it enslaves. What starts as a choice becomes a habit, and what becomes a habit slowly turns into dependence. In the end, what felt like freedom becomes bondage.

    And it was because of their abuse of freedom that God says their religious practices and sacrifices would no longer please Him. Their connection with God was gone. While God had not moved, they had drifted into their own version of "freedom."

    You know this drift into freedom. You know it just like me. You go through the motions, but something feels off. You show up to church, but there is no sense of closeness anymore. You try, but it feels pointless.

    And here's the warning in these moments: The personal freedom you enjoy is leading you back into slavery.

    But here is the hope: you do not have to continue down that path. You can give up these "freedoms" for freedom in Christ.

    Turn now, before personal freedom hardens, before it worsens, before it begins to control you. Real freedom is not found in doing whatever you want. Real freedom is found with God, who provides ultimate freedom—freedom from sin.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one "freedom" in your life that may actually be forming a habit you do not want, and bring it honestly before God today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What feels free but may be controlling me?
    2. Where have I drifted from God?
    3. What step can I take today to turn back?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, show me where I have mistaken bondage for freedom. Lead me back to you and into what is truly life. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "No Longer Slaves"

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    4 分
  • When Your Life Feels Off | Hosea 9:10-12
    2026/07/09

    Welcome to The Daily.

    Read more about our mission to teach every verse of the bible in what we call Project23.

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal.

    Our text today is Hosea 9:10-12:

    Like grapes in the wilderness,
    I found Israel.
    Like the first fruit on the fig tree
    in its first season,
    I saw your fathers.
    But they came to Baal-peor
    and consecrated themselves to the thing of shame,
    and became detestable like the thing they loved.
    Ephraim's glory shall fly away like a bird—
    no birth, no pregnancy, no conception!
    Even if they bring up children,
    I will bereave them till none is left.
    Woe to them
    when I depart from them! — Hosea 9:10-12

    Do you feel like something's off? Not broken. Not falling apart. Just… off?

    So let's say, you're doing the right things. Life is moving. You're showing up, staying busy, keeping things together. But underneath it all, there's a quiet emptiness you can't explain.

    Well, Hosea describes that moment.

    God says Israel was once like "grapes in the wilderness." They were alive, fruitful, and set apart. There was clarity, purpose, and blessing. Then something shifted.

    "They… became like the thing they loved."

    There was a turning point. They chose another love. Eventually, that thing you love shapes you. And over time, the fruitfulness starts to dry up. Not all at once. Gradually.

    Effort now has no impact.
    Movement feels like you are going nowhere.
    A full life that somehow feels hollow.

    If this is you, and you feel a little empty, what love has replaced your love for God?

    If God is not at the center, then something else is—and whatever that is will eventually take more than it gives. That's why God says, "Woe to them when I depart from them!"

    That is the real loss when we fall for other loves... The loss of God's presence and the fulfillment of his love.

    So if something feels off, don't ignore it. Don't numb it with more. Don't explain it away. Respond to it by returning to the Father who loves you. He alone fills you with understanding, purpose, and lasting fulfillment.

    That quiet emptiness is not failure. It is a void, and God will use it to call you back to the fulfillment of his love.

    DO THIS:

    Pay attention today to where your time, attention, and affection are going. Identify one influence shaping you more than God—and realign it.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What has been forming me lately?
    2. Where does my life feel hollow right now?
    3. What would it look like to put God back at the center?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, show me what has been shaping my heart. If I've drifted, draw me back. Restore what feels empty and make my life fruitful in you again. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Abide"

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    4 分
  • Dry Breasts and a Dried-Up Nation | Hosea 9
    2026/07/11

    A nation doesn't dry up overnight—it happens when culture slowly replaces God.

    Summary
    Hosea 9 is a sobering warning about what happens when God's people allow culture to disciple them instead of truth. Israel slowly adopted the values, pleasures, and compromises of the surrounding nations until their spiritual life dried up from the inside out. The chapter warns that hidden spiritual roots can die long before outward collapse becomes visible, eventually leading to God giving people over to the life they demanded without him. Yet even here, God's call remains the same: return, rebuild the roots, and be nourished again by truth.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. How does culture gradually disciple people away from God without them noticing?
    2. Why is compromise often more dangerous than open rebellion?
    3. What does Hosea 9 teach about the relationship between truth and compassion?
    4. How can churches slowly reshape biblical truth to fit cultural pressures?
    5. Why are "hidden roots" so important in a person's spiritual life?
    6. What are some signs that spiritual roots are drying up beneath the surface?
    7. How can someone appear spiritually alive publicly while privately drifting from God?
    8. Why does repeated resistance to God eventually lead to spiritual dryness and rejection?
    9. What practical steps help rebuild healthy spiritual roots before collapse happens?
    10. In what area of your life are you being discipled more by culture than by Scripture?

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    23 分
  • Does The Truth Offend You? | Hosea 9:7-9
    2026/07/08

    Welcome to The Daily.

    Read more about our mission to teach every verse of the bible in what we call Project23.

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal.

    Our text today is Hosea 9:7-9:

    The days of punishment have come;
    the days of recompense have come;
    Israel shall know it.
    The prophet is a fool;
    the man of the spirit is mad,
    because of your great iniquity
    and great hatred.
    The prophet is the watchman of Ephraim with my God;
    yet a fowler's snare is on all his ways,
    and hatred in the house of his God.
    They have deeply corrupted themselves
    as in the days of Gibeah:
    he will remember their iniquity;
    he will punish their sins. — Hosea 9:7-9

    There is a moment when someone stops resisting sin—and starts resisting the truth.

    That's where Israel is.

    "The prophet is a fool… the man of the spirit is mad."

    The people weren't just ignoring God's messengers. They were mocking them. God's truth is marked as crazy, extreme, out of touch, and even dangerous.

    This is precisely where we have come as a nation today. Good has become evil, and evil has become good. Progressivism and relativism have led to tribal truths that now turn The Truth into offensive because individual truth and tribal social truth have taken over. So, instead of adapting their behavior to God's Truth, they attack the messenger who opposed their truth.

    This is not a new pattern.

    When truth confronts our comfortable truth, people don't always repent. Sometimes they reframe the truth as the problem. They call conviction "judgment." They call clarity "hate." They call correction "intolerance."

    And the more a person or nation drifts, the louder that reaction becomes.

    Hosea says a prophet was supposed to be a "watchman." The watchman sees danger early and warns people before it's too late. But instead of listening to the watchman, they set traps for him and filled the house of God with hostility.

    This is a radical turn against the watchmen of God. And once that happens, decline accelerates.

    We need more watchmen today. Teachers and preachers who will teach and preach the truth. But while these courageous men are needed on the other side, we need men and women who are willing to let this truth confront them.

    So, let me present the question: What do you do when truth confronts you?

    Do you listen—or do you resist?
    Do you lean in—or shut it down?
    Do you receive correction—or question the source?

    Be careful. If the truth that challenges you begins to feel offensive, the issue may not be the truth. It may be you. Your heart.

    But here's the hope in this text. God is still heralding truth. There are still watchmen sounding the alarm. God is still speaking through the progressive heresy. There are still heralds of truth.

    When the truth is mocked, dismissed, and resisted—God keeps speaking. So don't harden your heart. Let truth do its work. Let it cut where it needs to cut. Let it correct what needs to change.

    The truth is not your enemy. Listen to it and submit to it.

    DO THIS:

    The next time you feel defensive about something in God's Word, pause and ask, "What is this revealing in me?"

    ASK THIS:

    1. When truth confronts me, how do I respond?
    2. What have I labeled "offensive" that might actually be true?
    3. Am I open to correction—or resisting it?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, soften my heart toward your truth. Keep me from rejecting what I need to hear, and give me humility to respond when you speak. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Speak, O Lord"

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    6 分
  • The Hardest Person You'll Ever Lead Is You
    2026/07/09

    The hardest person a man will ever lead is himself. In this short teaching from The Armory of Leadership, Vince Miller challenges Christian men to confront the internal battle of leadership: pride, sin, resistance, and the heart that must first be surrendered to Christ. Before a man can lead his family, church, workplace, or circle of influence, he must first let God forge him from the inside out.

    Get the book: https://beresolute.org/product/the-armory-of-leadership/

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    2 分