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  • God Takes Back What We Misused | Hosea 2:9-10
    2026/05/20

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to Clinton Cann from Kingston, ON. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 2:9-10

    Therefore I will take back
    my grain in its time,
    and my wine in its season,
    and I will take away my wool and my flax,
    which were to cover her nakedness.
    Now I will uncover her lewdness
    in the sight of her lovers,
    and no one shall rescue her out of my hand.— Hosea 2:9-10

    One word dominates this passage.

    My.

    "My grain."
    "My wine."
    "My wool."
    "My flax."

    Israel had begun to believe the blessings of life came from somewhere else—from Baal, from fertility rituals, from the surrounding cultures they had started to imitate. The harvest was good, the economy was strong, and the nation assumed their idols were responsible.

    But God interrupts that illusion.

    He reminds them that every blessing they enjoyed was never theirs in the first place.

    The crops came from him. The resources came from him. Even the clothing that covered them came from him.

    And now God says he will take it back.

    This is not petty anger. It is a necessary correction.

    Israel had not just forgotten God—they had reassigned credit. They took God's gifts and used them to serve other gods. Prosperity became the fuel for spiritual betrayal. So God removes the prosperity.

    Not because he delights in hardship.

    But because sometimes the only way to expose a false belief is to remove the thing that belief depends on.

    When the harvest disappears, the illusion disappears with it.

    This principle still plays.

    It is possible to enjoy God's gifts while slowly forgetting God himself. Success grows. Opportunities multiply. Comfort increases. And somewhere along the way, gratitude fades and independence rises.

    We begin to believe we built it. Or our "gods" have done it.

    But every breath we take… every ability we possess… every opportunity we steward… ultimately belongs to God.

    And sometimes the most merciful thing God can do is remind us of that. Because the moment we remember that everything comes from him… our hearts begin to return to him.

    DO THIS:

    Take one blessing in your life—your job, health, income, or influence—and thank God specifically for it today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What blessing in your life is easiest to take credit for?
    2. Why do prosperity and comfort often cause people to forget God?
    3. How can gratitude protect your heart from drifting away from him?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, everything I have ultimately comes from you. Guard my heart from pride and help me live with daily gratitude for your provision. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Jireh"

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    4 分
  • God Takes Back What We Misused | Hosea 2:9-10
    2026/05/20

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to Clinton Cann from Kingston, ON. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 2:9-10

    Therefore I will take back
    my grain in its time,
    and my wine in its season,
    and I will take away my wool and my flax,
    which were to cover her nakedness.
    Now I will uncover her lewdness
    in the sight of her lovers,
    and no one shall rescue her out of my hand.— Hosea 2:9-10

    One word dominates this passage.

    My.

    "My grain."
    "My wine."
    "My wool."
    "My flax."

    Israel had begun to believe the blessings of life came from somewhere else—from Baal, from fertility rituals, from the surrounding cultures they had started to imitate. The harvest was good, the economy was strong, and the nation assumed their idols were responsible.

    But God interrupts that illusion.

    He reminds them that every blessing they enjoyed was never theirs in the first place.

    The crops came from him. The resources came from him. Even the clothing that covered them came from him.

    And now God says he will take it back.

    This is not petty anger. It is a necessary correction.

    Israel had not just forgotten God—they had reassigned credit. They took God's gifts and used them to serve other gods. Prosperity became the fuel for spiritual betrayal. So God removes the prosperity.

    Not because he delights in hardship.

    But because sometimes the only way to expose a false belief is to remove the thing that belief depends on.

    When the harvest disappears, the illusion disappears with it.

    This principle still plays.

    It is possible to enjoy God's gifts while slowly forgetting God himself. Success grows. Opportunities multiply. Comfort increases. And somewhere along the way, gratitude fades and independence rises.

    We begin to believe we built it. Or our "gods" have done it.

    But every breath we take… every ability we possess… every opportunity we steward… ultimately belongs to God.

    And sometimes the most merciful thing God can do is remind us of that. Because the moment we remember that everything comes from him… our hearts begin to return to him.

    DO THIS:

    Take one blessing in your life—your job, health, income, or influence—and thank God specifically for it today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What blessing in your life is easiest to take credit for?
    2. Why do prosperity and comfort often cause people to forget God?
    3. How can gratitude protect your heart from drifting away from him?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, everything I have ultimately comes from you. Guard my heart from pride and help me live with daily gratitude for your provision. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Jireh"

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    4 分
  • Is Drinking A Sin: What The Bible Says | Brief
    2026/05/19

    The real question isn't "Can a Christian drink?"—it's "What's controlling you?"

    Summary

    This message confronts the modern confusion surrounding alcohol, freedom, and spiritual maturity by shifting the focus from permission to mastery. Scripture does not condemn alcohol itself, but it consistently warns against drunkenness, addiction, loss of self-control, and being mastered by anything other than Christ. The deeper issue is dependence—whether believers are looking to substances for escape, peace, identity, or relief instead of the Holy Spirit. Mature Christianity stops asking, "What can I get away with?" and starts asking, "What best reflects Christ and builds others up?"

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. Why do you think many Christians ask, "How much can I get away with?" instead of "What honors Christ?"
    2. How does 1 Corinthians 6:12 help frame the issue of alcohol and personal freedom?
    3. Why is the Bible's concern more about mastery and dependence than the substance itself?
    4. What is the difference between freedom in Christ and freedom to sin?
    5. How does modern intoxication culture differ from the biblical context of wine and celebration?
    6. Why is self-control such an important fruit of the Spirit (Galatians 5:22–23)?
    7. How can a believer unintentionally damage their witness or influence weaker believers through their choices?
    8. What are some modern "escape mechanisms" people use besides alcohol?
    9. Why is the "cool pastor" drinking culture potentially harmful to recovering addicts and struggling believers?
    10. What would it look like practically to live "fully alive" without dependence on substances?

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    14 分
  • God Blocks the Road to Your Idols | Hosea 2:6-8
    2026/05/19

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to Jerry DeVries from Cleveland, GA. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    Have you ever chased something you were convinced would make life better—only to watch the door slam shut?

    Plans fall apart.
    Opportunities disappear.
    The road suddenly becomes hard.

    In Hosea 2:6-8, God explains why that sometimes happens.

    Listen to our text today.

    Therefore I will hedge up her way with thorns,
    and I will build a wall against her,
    so that she cannot find her paths.
    She shall pursue her lovers
    but not overtake them,
    and she shall seek them
    but shall not find them.
    Then she shall say,
    'I will go and return to my first husband,
    for it was better for me then than now.'
    And she did not know
    that it was I who gave her
    the grain, the wine, and the oil,
    and who lavished on her silver and gold,
    which they used for Baal. — Hosea 2:6-8

    Israel was chasing other "lovers"—the fertility gods of Baal. They believed these idols were the ones providing rain, crops, prosperity, and success.

    So they ran after them.

    But God steps in and blocks the road. Not because he hates them. Because he loves them.

    Sometimes God makes the wrong path difficult, so we will stop running down it.

    He frustrates the pursuit. He closes the doors. He removes the illusion that the idol can deliver what it promised.

    Eventually, the people begin to realize something:

    "It was better for me then than now."

    This is the moment of awakening.

    But verse 8 reveals the deeper tragedy.

    "She did not know that it was I who gave her the grain, the wine, and the oil."

    Everything Israel thought Baal provided had actually come from God all along. Even worse, the silver and gold God gave them were being used to worship the very idols that replaced him.

    This is the madness of idolatry.

    We use the gifts of God to run from the God who gave them. Our abilities. Our money. Our influence. Our success. All of it can slowly become fuel for the very idols that pull our hearts away from him.

    That's why God sometimes blocks the road. Because the most loving thing God can do is interrupt a path that leads to destruction.

    And when that happens, it's not rejection.

    It's rescue.

    So if you're facing a closed door today, pause before assuming God is against you.

    He may be guiding you back to what matters most.

    DO THIS:

    Think about one closed door or frustration in your life recently and ask God if he might be redirecting you toward him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Have you ever experienced a time when a closed door later proved to be God's protection?
    2. Why do we often give credit to other things for blessings that ultimately come from God?
    3. Is there anything in your life that might be slowly replacing your dependence on him?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, help me recognize you as the source of every good gift in my life. Redirect my heart whenever I begin chasing things that cannot truly satisfy. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Gratitude + Great Are You Lord"

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    5 分
  • The Lie Behind Every Idol | Hosea 2:4-5
    2026/05/18

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to EB Cologne from St. Augustine, FL. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    Why do people turn to idols in the first place?

    Because they believe a lie.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 2:4-5.

    Upon her children also I will have no mercy,
    because they are children of whoredom.
    For their mother has played the whore;
    she who conceived them has acted shamefully.
    For she said, 'I will go after my lovers,
    who give me my bread and my water,
    my wool and my flax, my oil and my drink.' — Hosea 2:4-5

    In these verses, God reveals the thinking behind Israel's spiritual adultery. The nation is chasing other "lovers"—the false gods of the surrounding cultures. But notice why.

    Israel believes those gods are the ones providing their prosperity.

    "My lovers give me my bread and my water… my wool and my flax… my oil and my drink."

    In other words, Israel has started crediting Baal and the fertility gods for the blessings God himself provided.

    This is the lie behind every idol.

    An idol is not just something people worship—it's something they believe will provide what only God can provide.

    • Provision.
    • Security.
    • Identity.
    • Satisfaction.

    In ancient Israel, Baal was believed to control rain, crops, and fertility. So when the harvest came, the people assumed Baal had delivered it. They forgot the God who had given them the land in the first place.

    But this problem is not ancient history.

    People still misplace credit today.

    When life is going well, many assume success comes from their intelligence, their hard work, their financial strategy, or the system they trust. Others believe prosperity flows from political power, cultural influence, or personal ambition.

    And slowly, without even realizing it, gratitude toward God disappears.

    That's how idolatry grows.

    It rarely begins with open rebellion. It begins with misplaced credit—believing that something other than God is the true source of life's blessings.

    The book of Hosea pulls the curtain back on that deception.

    Everything Israel believed their "lovers" were providing had actually been coming from God all along.

    The same is true for us.

    Every good thing we enjoy—breath, provision, relationships, opportunity—ultimately comes from the Lord. When we forget that, we risk placing our trust in things that cannot sustain us—misplaced credit.

    Today is a good day to practice gratitude.

    Recognize the true source of every blessing in your life.

    Then give thanks to the One who provided it.

    DO THIS:

    Take a moment today to thank God for three specific blessings in your life and consciously acknowledge him as their true source.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Why do you think people naturally credit success to themselves or other systems instead of to God?
    2. How does gratitude protect us from drifting into idolatry?
    3. What blessing in your life have you most recently taken for granted?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, forgive me when I forget that every good thing comes from you. Help me recognize your provision and live with gratitude for your faithfulness. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Great Is Thy Faithfulness"

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    6 分
  • God Confronts Spiritual Adultery | Hosea 2:1-3
    2026/05/17

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to Joel Allman from Pella, IA. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    What does God do when the people he loves begin drifting away from him?

    He confronts them.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 2:1-3.

    Say to your brothers, "You are my people," and to your sisters, "You have received mercy."

    "Plead with your mother, plead—
    for she is not my wife,
    and I am not her husband
    that she put away her whoring from her face,
    and her adultery from between her breasts;
    lest I strip her naked
    and make her as in the day she was born,
    and make her like a wilderness,
    and make her like a parched land,
    and kill her with thirst. — Hosea 2:1-3

    Hosea 2 opens with a powerful image. God speaks to the faithful within Israel—the "children"—and tells them to plead with their mother, a symbol of the nation itself. Israel has broken the covenant with God. The marriage relationship has been violated.

    God's words are direct:

    "She is not my wife, and I am not her husband."

    This language may sound shocking, but it reveals something deeply important about the way God relates to his people. Throughout the Bible, God describes his relationship with his people using the language of marriage.

    Israel was not simply a nation that God ruled.
    She was a bride God loved.

    That's why idolatry is not just disobedience—it is spiritual adultery.

    When Israel worshiped Baal and other false gods, they were not just breaking a rule. They were abandoning their covenant love.

    And the consequences were serious. God warns that if Israel continues in her unfaithfulness, the blessings that once covered the nation will be stripped away. The land will become like a wilderness—dry, barren, and lifeless.

    But notice something important here.

    Even in confrontation, God's goal is not destruction. It is restoration.

    The command to "plead" shows that God is still calling his people to repentance. The door is not closed. The covenant is not forgotten. God is confronting the sin because he still desires the relationship.

    This is how love works.

    Real love does not ignore betrayal.
    Real love calls it out so it can be healed.

    And the same principle applies to us today. When God confronts our idols, exposes our misplaced loves, or disciplines our hearts, it is not because he has rejected us.

    It is because he refuses to share our hearts with things that will ultimately destroy us.

    Today, take a moment to examine your own heart. Ask God to reveal any place where your love for him has grown cold—or where something else has taken his place.

    Then return to him.

    DO THIS:

    Take five quiet minutes today and honestly ask God to reveal anything that may be competing with your devotion to him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Why do you think the Bible uses marriage to describe God's relationship with his people?
    2. What are some modern "idols" people turn to instead of trusting God?
    3. Is there anything in your life right now competing for the place God should hold in your heart?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, search my heart and reveal anything that has taken your place in my life. Help me return to you with a renewed love and devotion. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Come Thou Fount"

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    6 分
  • The Mercy That Comes After Judgment | Hosea 1:10-11
    2026/05/16

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Our shout-out today goes to Thomas Hughes from Clarksville, TN. Thanks for your partnership in Project23.

    Our text today is Hosea 1:10-11.

    Yet the number of the children of Israel shall be like the sand of the sea, which cannot be measured or numbered. And in the place where it was said to them, "You are not my people," it shall be said to them, "Children of the living God." And the children of Judah and the children of Israel shall be gathered together, and they shall appoint for themselves one head. And they shall go up from the land, for great shall be the day of Jezreel. — Hosea 1:10-11

    What happens after judgment?

    Many people assume judgment is the end of the story. But in the Bible, God often does something surprising. Right after some of the strongest warnings, he gives one of the most beautiful promises.

    That's exactly what happens here.

    Just after declaring "You are not my people," God speaks a promise that echoes all the way back to Abraham.

    "The number of the children of Israel shall be like the sand of the sea."

    The same God who announced judgment also promises restoration. One day, the people who were called "Not My People" will be called "Children of the living God."

    This is the heartbeat of the book of Hosea.

    Israel's unfaithfulness is real. Their rebellion carries consequences. But God's covenant love runs deeper than their failure.

    Even when his people run away, God continues pursuing them.

    Hosea's story is not just about ancient Israel. The apostle Paul later quotes this very passage in Romans to show how God's mercy extends even further—to all who respond to him in faith.

    God takes those who were once far away and brings them near.

    And notice something else in this promise. God speaks of a future moment when Judah and Israel will be gathered together again under one head. The divided nation will one day be reunited.

    Throughout Scripture, that ultimate "head" points us forward to a greater king—Jesus Christ. Through him, God gathers people from every background and nation into one family.

    This is the surprising pattern of the gospel.

    Judgment exposes sin.
    Mercy offers restoration.
    Grace creates a new people.

    So if you ever wonder whether failure is the end of your story, Hosea reminds us that it is not. The God who warns also restores. The God who disciplines also redeems.

    Today, take a moment to thank God for the mercy that follows judgment—and the grace that makes restoration possible.

    DO THIS:

    Take a few minutes today to thank God for his mercy in your life and remind yourself that his grace always invites restoration.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Why do you think God often gives promises of restoration immediately after warnings of judgment?
    2. How does knowing God's mercy shape the way you respond to your own failures?
    3. What does it mean for you personally to be called a "child of the living God"?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, thank you for the mercy that follows your warnings and the grace that restores your people. Help me live today in the confidence of being your child. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "His Mercy Is More"

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    4 分
  • When a Nation Cheats on God | Hosea 1
    2026/05/15

    What if God told a prophet to marry a prostitute so an entire nation could see how badly it had betrayed him?

    Summary
    The book of Hosea opens with one of the most shocking commands in Scripture—God tells the prophet to marry an unfaithful woman so his broken marriage will become a living message to Israel. Beneath a season of prosperity during the reign of Jeroboam II, the nation had slowly drifted from the God who rescued them, blending worship of the Lord with the idols of their culture. Through Hosea's family and the prophetic names of his children, God exposes Israel's spiritual adultery and warns that judgment is coming. Yet even in the midst of confrontation, the chapter ends with hope, revealing the heart of a faithful God who continues to pursue and restore his people.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. Why do you think God chose Hosea's marriage to illustrate Israel's relationship with him?
    2. What does the story of Hosea and Gomer reveal about the seriousness of spiritual adultery?
    3. How did prosperity during Jeroboam II's reign contribute to Israel's spiritual drift?
    4. Why is mixing the worship of God with cultural idols so spiritually dangerous?
    5. What message was God communicating through the names Jezreel, Lo-Ruhamah, and Lo-Ammi?
    6. How can prosperity sometimes create the illusion that everything is spiritually healthy?
    7. What are some modern idols that people look to for provision, identity, or security instead of God?
    8. Why does Hosea describe idolatry as relational betrayal rather than simply breaking religious rules?
    9. What does Hosea 1:10 reveal about God's heart even after announcing judgment?
    10. Where in your life might God be calling you to turn away from competing loyalties and return fully to him?

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    27 分