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  • Knowing God vs Using God | Hosea 6:3
    2026/06/16

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

    Grab your Hosea Scripture Journal right now.

    Our text today is Hosea 6:3:

    Let us know; let us press on to know the Lord;
    his going out is sure as the dawn;
    he will come to us as the showers,
    as the spring rains that water the earth." — Hosea 6:3

    Every word here sounds right. It even sounds passionate. But in the context of this chapter, something is off with this declaration in verse 3. Something is just not right.

    Israel says they want to know God, but they haven't truly returned (i.e., repented) to God. They speak about pursuit, but there's no evidence of surrender. They talk about knowing God, but they're still holding onto the very things that keep them from God.

    Again, in Hosea, we learn you can talk about knowing God and still not actually be pursuing him. "Knowing God" is not about information. It's relationship. It's not just learning about him. It's walking with him. It's obedience, intimacy, trust, and submission all woven together.

    To "press on to know the Lord" means you don't settle and won't settle. You pursue him daily. You move toward him even when it costs you something. But Israel wasn't doing that. They said it but they were not about to live it. They wanted a Savior without surrendering to him as Lord.

    Then they called for a "shower" of blessing. Something refreshing. A great provision. But we know they skipped the pursuit.

    In the same way, many believers today do the same. They listen to teaching. They read Scripture. They show up at church. But if there is no daily pursuit—no intentional movement toward God—then they are not pursuing or returning to God. They are using him.

    Using God is occasional obedience.
    Knowing God is consistent obedience.

    You cannot use God. He won't allow it. Eventually, he will cut you off. And you can call for a "shower of blessing" all you want. You can continue your shell game. But God isn't going to play the game with you.

    Be honest with yourself.

    Are you just pursuing God for blessings, or are you pursuing God to know God?

    Press into God today in some new way. Battle with sin. Pray a little longer. Refuse an earthly desire. Speak more kindly. Let God consume your desires, motivations, thoughts, and will, and then receive the shower of blessings that is God himself.

    DO THIS:

    Set aside intentional time today to pursue God—without distraction, without rushing, and without asking for anything. Just seek Him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Do I pursue God daily or only occasionally?
    2. Am I growing in knowing Him—or just learning about Him?
    3. What would it look like to truly "press on" in my relationship with God?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, I don't want to just know about you—I want to know you. Teach me to pursue you daily with consistency and sincerity. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Fill The Room"

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    4 分
  • You Must Die To Heal | Hosea 6:2
    2026/06/15

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    What if the reason you're not changing is because you haven't died yet?

    Listen to Hosea 6:2:

    After two days he will revive us;
    on the third day he will raise us up,
    that we may live before him. — Hosea 6:2

    Israel wants revival. They want revival again. They want to be restored and to stand before God as if nothing ever happened.

    But there's a problem. They want resurrection without death. They want a new life without letting go of the old one.

    And that's not how revival works.

    Real repentance always involves death. Not physical death, but something in you has to die. Your pride. Your control. Your attachment to the very sin that created the problem. Because God isn't an improvement of your old life.

    He wants to replace it. That's the driving issue behind this moment, and it echoes all the way into the gospel. Resurrection only comes after death. New life only comes after surrender.

    But Israel skips that step. All the way through the chapter.

    They speak confidently about being raised up, but they never deal with what needs to be put down.

    We, too, want God to fix things, restore things, renew things, but we resist the one thing that makes it possible. We don't want to let go. We try to manage sin rather than kill it. We try to adjust behavior instead of surrendering the heart. We want God to add something new without taking anything away.

    But real repentance doesn't work like that. You cannot hold onto the old life and step into the new one at the same time.

    What in your life needs to die?

    Because until that happens, you're not stuck—you're resisting.

    Fake repentance talks about change.

    Real repentance kills what stands in the way of it. So kill that sin today. And if you don't know what it is, ask God and I promise he will let you know.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one thing you've been holding onto—an attitude, habit, or sin—and make a decisive move today to remove it.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What am I trying to keep that God is asking me to release?
    2. Where am I resisting full surrender?
    3. What would it look like for me to fully die to this area?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, show me what in me needs to die. Give me the strength to surrender it so I can walk in the life you want for me. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Yet I Sin"

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    3 分
  • When Repentance Sounds Right But Isn't | Hosea 6:1
    2026/06/14

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Have you ever said the right thing, but then changed nothing?

    That's the fake repentance that Hosea exposes in Hosea 6:1:

    Come, let us return to the Lord;
    for he has torn us, that he may heal us;
    he has struck us down, and he will bind us up. — Hosea 6:1

    "Come, let us return to the Lord…" sounds right. It sounds spiritual. It even sounds hopeful. But when you read closely, something is missing. There is no confession, no ownership, no naming of sin—just a general desire for things to get better.

    Israel acknowledges that God has ripped them apart, but they never acknowledge why. Now they want healing, but they avoid the root issue. They want restoration, but not repentance.

    And that's the danger.

    Because repentance that sounds right can still be wrong.

    This is what "fake" repentance looks like. It uses spiritual language without deep surrender. It asks God to fix the outcome, the situation, the circumstance, without ever asking Him to change our heart.

    And if we're honest, we do the same thing.

    We pray, "God, help me." We say, "God, forgive me." We promise, "God, I'll do better." But underneath those words, the same patterns stay the same. We continue the same habits. We continue the same sin, abusing the grace extended to us.

    Why?

    Because nothing actually changed.

    Real repentance is not just saying "I repent"—it is accompanied by a change in direction. It is not returning to God for relief; it is turning away from the very thing that caused the distance in the first place.

    That's what Israel refused to do. And it's what you have to face.

    Where in your life are you saying the right things but avoiding the real change? Where have your prayers become words instead of surrender?

    Fake repentance sounds right, but it costs you nothing when it costs God his Son, and it costs Jesus his life.

    Real repentance will cost you something. It will cost your pride, your habits, and your excuses. But it is the only kind that leads to healing.

    What are you saying you'll change, that you have not changed? Change it. That's repentance.

    DO THIS:

    Stop offering vague prayers. Name one specific sin today, confess it clearly, and take one concrete step to turn from it.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where am I saying the right things but not actually changing?
    2. What sin have I avoided naming directly?
    3. What would real repentance look like in my life right now?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, help me move beyond empty words. Show me where I need to truly repent and give me the courage to turn. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "We Repent"

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    4 分
  • You Can't Fix a Spiritual Problem with a Worldly Solution | Hosea 5:8-15
    2026/06/13

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 5:8-15:

    Blow the horn in Gibeah,
    the trumpet in Ramah.
    Sound the alarm at Beth-aven;
    we follow you, O Benjamin!
    Ephraim shall become a desolation
    in the day of punishment;
    among the tribes of Israel
    I make known what is sure.
    The princes of Judah have become
    like those who move the landmark;
    upon them I will pour out
    my wrath like water.
    Ephraim is oppressed, crushed in judgment,
    because he was determined to go after filth.
    But I am like a moth to Ephraim,
    and like dry rot to the house of Judah.

    When Ephraim saw his sickness,
    and Judah his wound,
    then Ephraim went to Assyria,
    and sent to the great king.
    But he is not able to cure you
    or heal your wound.
    For I will be like a lion to Ephraim,
    and like a young lion to the house of Judah.
    I, even I, will tear and go away;
    I will carry off, and no one shall rescue.

    I will return again to my place,
    until they acknowledge their guilt and seek my face,
    and in their distress earnestly seek me. — Hosea 5:8-15

    Because we have a long text today, I want to focus on verse 13. The point being, you cannot fix a spiritual problem with a worldly solution.

    That's the mistake Israel makes—and it's the same mistake we still make.

    Israel finally realizes the damage. The nation is sick, and they can't ignore it anymore. So they act. But they don't turn to God. They go to Assyria. The nation that is going to destroy them. They look for power, protection, and a solution they can see and control. They reach for something political, strategic, and immediate.

    And God says plainly: "[Assyria] is not able to cure you."

    Why? Because their problem wasn't external. It wasn't about enemies, resources, or positioning. It was about their relationship with God.

    No worldly solution can repair a spiritual issue.

    And this attempt shows up in our lives the same way. We chase success to fix insecurity. We look to relationships to fill emptiness. We distract ourselves to avoid conviction. We try to manage behavior instead of surrendering our heart. We keep applying worldly solutions to spiritual problems.

    And they never work.

    They may numb it. They may delay the consequence. But they never heal what's actually broken. Because only God can do that.

    What are you turning to right now that cannot actually fix you? Because until you bring a spiritual problem back to God, it will remain. Stop reaching for what looks strong but cannot save. Turn to God. He's not just a better option. He's the option.

    DO THIS:

    Bring one area of your life to God today that you've been trying to fix on your own. Be honest about it and surrender it to Him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What worldly solution am I relying on instead of God?
    2. What deeper issue am I trying to manage instead of surrender?
    3. Where do I need God—not just improvement?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, forgive me for turning to other things instead of you. Help me trust you to heal what I cannot fix on my own. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Turn Your Eyes Upon Jesus"

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    5 分
  • Why God Abandons You | Hosea 5
    2026/06/13

    What if God's silence in your life isn't accidental—but intentional?

    Summary
    Hosea 5 answers a hard question most people avoid: why does God withdraw from his people? After repeated warnings, ignored truth, and persistent rebellion, God steps back—not out of indifference, but as a response to ongoing rejection. The chapter outlines clear reasons—ignored warnings, hidden sin, pride, false repentance, misplaced trust, and refusal to return. Yet even in withdrawal, God's goal is restoration, waiting for his people to recognize their need and come back to him.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. Why does God sometimes move from warning to withdrawal instead of continued correction?
    2. What does it mean to "ignore God's repeated warnings" in a practical, modern sense?
    3. How can someone know about God but still not truly know him (Hosea 5:3)?
    4. Why do repeated sinful actions make it harder for someone to return to God (Hosea 5:4)?
    5. How does pride prevent genuine repentance and a relationship with God?
    6. What is the difference between true repentance and performative religion (Hosea 5:6)?
    7. Why do people often turn to other solutions instead of God when problems arise (Hosea 5:13)?
    8. What does it mean that God "withdraws until we return" (Hosea 5:15)?
    9. How does the story of the Prodigal Son help us understand God's posture in Hosea 5?
    10. In what area of your life might God be calling you to stop resisting and start returning?

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    24 分
  • Raising a Generation That Doesn't Know God | Hosea 5:7
    2026/06/12

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 5:7:

    They have dealt faithlessly with the Lord;
    for they have borne alien children.
    Now the new moon shall devour them with their fields.
    — Hosea 5:7

    How do you raise a generation that doesn't know God? You start by drifting yourself.

    "They have dealt faithlessly with the Lord…"

    Israel wasn't engaging in loud rebellion. It was a quite unfaithfulness. A slow shift away from God in a time of prosperity,ty while still keeping the appearance of religion. And over time, that drift produced something.

    "They have borne [undiscipled] children."

    They raised a generation that wore crosses on their neck and tattooed verses on their body—but had no knowledge of God.

    What one generation tolerated, normalized, and modeled shaped the generation that came after them. And the result was predictable. A generation disconnected from God.

    This is how it still happens. We don't have to reject God to lose Him. We just have to stop living as if He matters. And eventually, the next generation mirrors it.

    But note the warning:

    "Now the new moon shall devour them…"

    In other words, their meaningless religious activities—their rhythms, their gatherings, their routines—would not save them. Their worship of creation rather than the Creator would fail them.

    So what are you passing on? Not just in what you say, but in how you live. Because you are always discipling. And the next generation will not become what you hope. They will become what you model. If you want to raise a generation that knows God, then it's time to be someone who actually walks with Him.

    And it's never too late.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one way you can model real, consistent faith today—at home, at work, or in your relationships.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What kind of faith am I modeling daily?
    2. Would someone following my life grow closer to God?
    3. Am I raising people who know God—or just know about Him?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, help me live a faith that is real and visible. Shape my life so that what I pass on leads others to truly know you. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Build My Life"

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    4 分
  • You Can't Use God | Hosea 5:6
    2026/06/11

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Have you ever gone to God, just because you needed something? That's exactly what Israel was doing.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 5:6:

    With their flocks and herds they shall go
    to seek the Lord,
    but they will not find him;
    he has withdrawn from them.
    — Hosea 5:6

    Israel showed up with sacrifices for their sins. They brought offerings for a blessing. They behaved spiritually. But this wasn't surrender. It was a strategy. They were coming to get something from God.

    Whatever they needed. Comfort. Provision. Protection.

    In the end, every parent who has a child who only shows up when they need something knows what they want. They wanted a favor. And God refused.

    "The [children] will not find him [because the Father] has withdrawn from them."

    God will never be used. He knows his children and their hearts. What they wanted was not a Father. They only wanted a favor from the Father.

    Israel had turned God into a means to an end. Someone to call when things went wrong, but ignore when things were going right. They wanted His help without His authority. His provision without His presence.

    And God said, "No." Because God is not a tool. He is Lord. And He will not play a role in a relationship where He is only wanted for what He can give.

    We do the same.

    We pray only when we're in trouble. We seek God only when something breaks. We ask him for direction only when we feel lost. But how often do we come to him to know him? Not always for answers. Not always for relief. Just him and nothing else?

    Today, don't ask God for a favor. Pursue a relationship. Lay down the transaction. Pick up devotion. Because you will never truly find God until you stop trying to use Him.

    DO THIS:

    Spend time with God today without asking for anything. Focus only on knowing Him—through Scripture, stillness, and honest presence.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Do I go to God mostly when I need something?
    2. Have I treated God like a solution instead of a relationship?
    3. What would it look like for me to pursue God—not His benefits?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, forgive me for the times I've tried to use you instead of knowing you. Teach me to seek you for who you are, not just for what you give. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Nothing Else"

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    3 分
  • Pride Is the Evidence Against You | Hosea 5:5
    2026/06/10

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 5:5:

    The pride of Israel testifies to his face;
    Israel and Ephraim shall stumble in his guilt;
    Judah also shall stumble with them.
    — Hosea 5:5

    What if the strongest evidence against you… is your pride?

    That's what God says here. "The pride of Israel testifies to his face."

    No investigation is needed. No external witness is required. Their pride testifies for them. It shows up in how they live, how they respond, and how they refuse to listen.

    Pride always reveals itself. Pride resists correction. Pride dismisses conviction. Pride assumes, "I'm fine," even when everything is drifting.

    And that's exactly what was happening. "Israel (the Northern Kingdom) and Ephraim (the lead tribe in the North) shall stumble…"

    This is a predicted collapse. Pride blinded them long enough that when the fall came, they didn't even see it coming.

    Then Hosea adds:

    "Judah (the Southern Kingdom) also shall stumble with them."

    Judah would witness the truth. They saw the warning because they watched Israel fall. And still—they followed them into the fall of pride. That's how pride works in us.

    We see it in our nation when we believe progress has replaced truth.
    We see it in churches when conviction is softened to keep people comfortable.
    We see it in leadership when influence matters more than integrity.
    We see it in our own lives when we resist correction but justify our choices.

    Our pride doesn't just oppose God. It pulls us away from God while convincing us that we're still close to God.

    So don't just look at Israel. Don't just look at Judah. Look at yourself. Where are you resisting God right now? Where have you grown too confident, too comfortable, too unwilling to listen? And then give that pride to God before your predictable fall.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one area where you've resisted correction or conviction, and take a step of humility today—listen, confess, or change.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where has pride shown up in my thinking or decisions?
    2. What correction have I resisted recently?
    3. Where am I assuming I'm fine instead of asking God to examine me?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, expose the pride in me that I cannot see. Humble my heart so I can walk closely with you and not drift away. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Humble And Kind"

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    4 分