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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
  • 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
  • Why Money, Success, and Control Won't Save You | Hosea 8:5-6
    2026/06/30

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

    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 8:5-6:

    I have spurned your calf, O Samaria.
    My anger burns against them.
    How long will they be incapable of innocence?
    For it is from Israel;
    a craftsman made it;
    it is not God.
    The calf of Samaria
    shall be broken to pieces. — Hosea 8:5-6

    Why do people trust idols more than God?

    Because idols are easier. They do not correct you, confront you, or call you to repent. They do not ask for surrender. They say nothing and demand nothing. You can shape them, place them where you want, and remain in control.

    That is what the nation of Israel had done.

    They made a calf in Samaria, their capital, and trusted it like a savior. It was something they created, something they could see, something they could manage. And that was the attraction.

    A false god never challenges your life.
    A false god never exposes your sin.
    A false god always lets you stay on the throne.

    So God says, "A craftsman made it; it is not God."

    The issue was bigger than a statue. Israel trusted what came from their hands more than the God who made their hands.

    And don't be too quick to judge, because we still do the same. We trust money, plans, technology, status, success, influence, and ourselves. We often feel safer with what we can build than with the God we must obey.

    But spoiler alert, Hosea gives the conclusion for every idol: "The calf of Samaria shall be broken to pieces."

    Everything we make is temporary. Wealth fades. Systems fail. Bodies weaken. Reputations disappear. Nations rise and fall. Idols do not last.

    But God does. His word stands. His kingdom remains. His rule endures. His judgment is coming.

    But the real question is not whether you trust something. Everyone does. It is who you trust in. Will you trust what will break—or the One who cannot be shaken?

    Do not build your life on lifeless, fragile, and frail things. Put your faith in the living, everlasting, and powerful God. Besides, things will break. God will remain.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one thing you trust more than God right now, and surrender that area to Him in prayer today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What created thing feels safer to me than trusting God?
    2. Where am I relying on myself more than the Lord?
    3. Am I building on what will last or what will break?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, forgive me for trusting temporary things more than you. Teach me to rest in what cannot be shaken and place my confidence in you alone. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Build My Life"

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    4 分
  • Leadership Without Lordship | Hosea 8:4
    2026/06/29

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

    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 8:4:

    They made kings, but not through me.
    They set up princes, but I knew it not.
    With their silver and gold they made idols
    for their own destruction. — Hosea 8:4

    Not every leader has God's approval, nor should they be lord over you. That is the blunt message of this text.

    Israel had kings. They had princes. They had systems, succession, and political movement. From the outside, things may have looked legitimate. But God says, "They made kings, but not through me."

    That does not mean God was unaware of events. It means these leaders were established apart from God's will, without submission to God's truth, and without respect for God's authority.

    In other words, they wanted leadership without lordship. Or leadership without any accountability.

    They wanted the benefits of order, protection, and prosperity, but they did not want God to rule over how leaders were chosen or how leaders should govern.

    People always choose leaders for the wrong reasons. We are drawn to charisma over character, image over integrity, promises over principle, strength over righteousness. We often ask who can win, protect us, make life easier, and deliver what we want. We rarely ask the better questions about their wisdom, humility, justice, and truth.

    Then Hosea adds another layer: "With their silver and gold they made idols…"

    Government and idolatry were tied together. Remember, every nation is a theocracy; they have just shifted their theocracy to another god—materialism, syncretism, and polytheism. They trusted these substitutes to save them. Just like we do in our time.

    Today, just look around. We have placed our hope in governments, markets, personalities, parties, platforms, and institutions. We expect created things to carry authority that only God can bear. In doing so, we have slowly shifted from one theocracy to another, or many others.

    But no human leader can save your soul. No system can replace God. No nation can survive indefinitely while celebrating what God condemns and ignoring what He commands.

    This also reaches into your personal life.

    Who leads your decisions right now?

    Ambition? Fear? Approval? Comfort? Money? Anger?

    Whatever rules you functionally becomes your king.

    So be careful what you crown. Choose leaders wisely. Pray for those in authority. Seek justice and truth in public life. But reserve your deepest trust for God alone.

    DO THIS:

    Pray today for those in authority over your nation, church, workplace, and home. Then ask God to reveal what may be ruling your own heart besides Him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What qualities do I value most in leaders?
    2. Have I placed too much hope in human authority?
    3. What is functionally ruling my life right now?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, give me wisdom to discern leadership rightly and humility to submit to your authority above all others. Guard my heart from trusting in substitutes that cannot save. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "King of Kings"

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    5 分
  • Are You Listening To Your Alarm | Hosea 8:1-3
    2026/06/28

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

    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 8:1-3:

    Set the trumpet to your lips!
    One like a vulture is over the house of the Lord,
    because they have transgressed my covenant
    and rebelled against my law.
    To me they cry,
    "My God, we—Israel—know you."
    Israel has spurned the good;
    the enemy shall pursue him. — Hosea 8:1-3

    Some alarms are meant to wake you before it is too late. That is how Hosea 8 begins. "Set the trumpet to your lips!" In the ancient world, a trumpet was sounded when danger was near. It warned a city to prepare, to pay attention, and to act immediately. Trumpets were not filler music for a big band. It was an urgent signal that something had gone terribly wrong.

    Then Hosea gives the reason. Judgment is approaching "because they have transgressed my covenant and rebelled against my law." Israel's greatest problem was spiritual rebellion in a time of material prosperity. They had transgressed their relationship with God because they had forgotten and forfeited the law of God. Very similar to what we have done today. We have rejected prayer in school, removed the bible from the public square, legalized the killing of children in the womb, celebrated gay marriage and sodomy, and reidentified the very gender imparted by God. And in our prosperity, we have grown distant from God and his law. We no longer know God's Word and live by his truth in our prosperity.

    Yet the most revealing part of this text is what it says next:

    "To me they cry, 'My God, we—Israel—know you.'"

    They still used the right language and claimed identity with God.

    They talk like nothing had changed. But...

    A follower can say, "I know God," while resisting God's commands. A nation can use God's name while rejecting God's ways. Our use of spiritual language does not always measure spiritual dedication.

    That is why verse 3 is so blunt: "Israel has spurned the good."

    Israel did not merely make "mistakes." They outright rejected "spurned" what was good for them. They rejected the very God who gives life, wisdom, order, and blessing.

    We do the same more often than we admit. We have all ignored biblical wisdom and choose impulse. Every one of us has rejected a conviction and for personal comfort. You, like me, have neglected prayer and for self-reliance. We hear truth and delay obedience. Then we wonder why the alarm is sounding.

    Sometimes the disruptions in our life are not random. Sometimes it is mercy. God is using an alarm to wake us before deeper collapse arrives.

    What alarm is going off right now in your life?

    Do not silence what God is using to get your attention. The alarm is not the enemy. Your sin in the enemy, and that alarm may be the kindness of God calling you back before greater damage is done.

    DO THIS:

    Identify one warning sign in your life right now—spiritual dryness, repeated compromise, strained relationships, anxiety, or disobedience—and bring it honestly before God today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What alarm might God be sounding in my life?
    2. Where am I using spiritual language without real obedience?
    3. Have I been rejecting what is truly good for me?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, thank you for loving me enough to warn me. Help me hear your voice, respond quickly, and return to what is good before I drift farther away. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Rattle"

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    5 分
  • Why Nothing in Your Life Is Working | Hosea 7:16
    2026/06/27

    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 7:16:

    They return, but not upward;
    they are like a treacherous bow;
    their princes shall fall by the sword
    because of the insolence of their tongue.
    This shall be their derision in the land of Egypt.
    — Hosea 7:16

    Why does it sometimes feel like nothing in your life is working? Verse 16 holds the answer:

    "They return, but not upward."

    They were making moves. They were changing directions. They were trying things. But their movement never reached the place that mattered most. They turned politically, emotionally, socially, and strategically—but not toward God.

    That is the tragedy. Not all change is repentance. Not all movement is progress. Not all effort leads to healing.

    You can rearrange habits, change environments, make new plans, and start fresh routines—yet still avoid the deepest issue of all: your relationship with God.

    Then Hosea adds a second image: "They are like a treacherous bow."

    A bow is meant to send an arrow with force, direction, and accuracy. But a defective bow cannot be trusted. It misfires. It bends wrong. It sends the arrow off course.

    That was Israel. They were shooting arrows up with the wrong bow. They still had activity, but no true aim.

    And believers who feel like nothing is working live the same way. Busy, but ineffective. Driven, but unstable. Religious, but disconnected.

    Why?

    Because life cannot work rightly when it is aimed wrongly.

    If your heart has turned away from God, fixing that which excludes God will only touch the surface. A new schedule cannot heal a rebellious soul. More money cannot cure emptiness. Better branding cannot restore integrity. External adjustments cannot solve internal separation from God.

    That is why some people keep trying harder and getting nowhere, and thus feel like nothing is working. They return but not upward.

    What needs to turn within you?

    Stop managing symptoms. Return to God. Realign your heart. Seek first what matters most. Because the issue may not be that nothing is working. The issue may be that everything is pointed in the wrong direction.

    Turn, return, upward, not outward.

    DO THIS:

    Choose one area of frustration in your life and bring it to God first today. Ask Him to reveal whether the deeper issue is spiritual, not just practical.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where am I making moves without truly turning to God?
    2. What in my life feels misaligned right now?
    3. Am I fixing symptoms while ignoring the deeper cause?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, show me where I have been turning everywhere except to you. Realign my heart, correct my aim, and teach me to seek you first. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Be Thou My Vision"

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    4 分
  • 7 Steps to Self-Destruction | Hosea 7
    2026/06/26

    Self-destruction rarely happens all at once—it happens one repeated step at a time.

    Summary
    Hosea 7 exposes the slow path of self-destruction through seven repeated patterns that ruin lives, homes, and nations. It begins by ignoring the sin God reveals and continues through feeding unchecked desires, celebrating corruption, living divided, drifting unnoticed, trusting false saviors, and refusing to return. Sin never stays still—it grows, spreads, and damages everything it touches. But God exposes the pattern not to shame us, but to stop the fall and lead us back to restoration.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. Why does self-destruction usually happen gradually instead of all at once?
    2. What does Hosea 7:1 teach about the connection between healing and exposure?
    3. What "fires" in life grow stronger because they keep being fed?
    4. Why do people sometimes celebrate leaders who reflect their own rebellion?
    5. What does the image of an unturned cake (Hosea 7:8) teach about divided loyalty?
    6. How can spiritual decline happen without someone noticing it (Hosea 7:9)?
    7. What are common things people run to instead of God for rescue today?
    8. Why is refusing to return to God the final and most dangerous step?
    9. Which of the seven steps feels most relevant to your life right now?
    10. What practical step can you take today to break the cycle before greater damage happens?

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    19 分
  • Why God Feels Far Away | Hosea 7:13-15
    2026/06/26

    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 7:13-15:

    Woe to them, for they have strayed from me!
    Destruction to them, for they have rebelled against me!
    I would redeem them,
    but they speak lies against me.
    They do not cry to me from the heart,
    but they wail upon their beds;
    for grain and wine they gash themselves;
    they rebel against me.
    Although I trained and strengthened their arms,
    yet they devise evil against me. — Hosea 7:13-15

    Why does God sometimes feel far away?

    Well, you may not like the answer...

    The issue was not that God had moved. Israel had. They wandered from the source of life, truth, and peace, then wondered why everything felt empty and unstable.

    I hear believers say that God sometimes feels distant, silent, or absent. But often the issue is not God's absence. It is our drift. We get distracted, compromised, prayerless, proud, or numb. Then we feel the ache of distance and assume God caused it.

    Yet even here, listen to the heart of God:

    "I would redeem them…"

    God was willing to rescue. Willing to restore. Willing to bring them back. His desire was mercy, not abandonment.

    But here was the identifiable problem.

    "They do not cry to me from the heart, but they wail upon their beds."

    They were emotional, but did not surrender. They cried over their pain, but did not turn over their sin. They wanted relief, but did not repent. They wanted help, but not God.

    There is a difference between wanting something from God and wanting God.

    Then God says in verse 3, "Although I trained and strengthened their arms, yet they devise evil against me."

    He had blessed, strengthened, and equipped them. They used His resources while rejecting His rule.

    This is a warning for you and me. It is possible to enjoy God's blessings while ignoring God's voice. To use your strength, success, resources, or opportunities for yourself while living disconnected from God.

    So what do you do when God feels far away? Start with getting honest with God. Here are some introspective questions you can ask yourself:

    Have I drifted?
    Have I stopped praying?
    Have I wanted relief more than repentance?
    Have I loved God's gifts more than God?

    After you assess your heart, do not remain at a distance.

    Return to Him. Cry out sincerely. Confess what is real. Seek Him again. Because many times when God feels far away, He has not moved. God is calling you back.

    So if God feels far away today, the answer may be to turn around.

    DO THIS:

    Spend ten quiet minutes with God today and ask Him to show you where drift has entered your life. Respond honestly to whatever He reveals.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Why does God feel distant to me right now?
    2. Have I wanted comfort more than repentance?
    3. What would it look like to fully return to God today?

    PRAY THIS:

    God, if I have drifted from you, show me clearly. Draw me back, restore my heart, and teach me to seek you sincerely again. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "God Turn It Around"

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    4 分