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  • When Men Stop Leading, Everything Breaks | Hosea 4:12-14
    2026/06/05

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    What happens when men stop leading spiritually? Everything starts to break.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:12-14:

    My people inquire of a piece of wood,
    and their walking staff gives them oracles.
    For a spirit of whoredom has led them astray,
    and they have left their God to play the whore.
    They sacrifice on the tops of the mountains
    and burn offerings on the hills,
    under oak, poplar, and terebinth,
    because their shade is good.
    Therefore your daughters play the whore,
    and your brides commit adultery.
    I will not punish your daughters when they play the whore,
    nor your brides when they commit adultery;
    for the men themselves go aside with prostitutes
    and sacrifice with cult prostitutes,
    and a people without understanding shall come to ruin. — Hosea 4:12-14

    Hosea starts this section by showing how far the people have drifted from God. "My people inquire of a piece of wood…" God's covenant people are looking for guidance from lifeless wood objects, something that required zero obedience whatsoever?!

    They even had rituals, sacrifices, and sacred spaces for these lifeless wood objects and false gods. They worshiped on the hills, under trees, in places that felt peaceful and appealing. Hosea even tells us why: "because their shade is good." It was comfortable. It felt right.

    And these woke ideas spread.

    "Therefore your daughters play the whore, and your brides commit adultery."

    What began in corrupted worship showed up in corrupted relationships. What they practiced before God eventually shaped how they lived with one another.

    Then comes the stunner in the text.

    "I will not punish your daughters… nor your brides…"

    Why? Because it was an issue with men and male spiritual leadership—or the lack of it. God tracks the issue back to the source. The issue is not just the outcome—it is the leadership. The men led this. The men normalized this. The men participated in the very sin that shaped the culture.

    And everyone else followed.

    This is how all nations fall.

    Not just because of sin, but because those responsible for spiritual leadership abandon it. When men stop leading with truth, others are left to follow confusion. When men compromise, culture drifts. When men stay silent, sin spreads.

    And eventually, as God says, "a people without understanding shall come to ruin."

    That is always the conclusion.

    If you are a man, you are called to spiritual leadership—first in your own life, then in your home, then at church, then at work, and anywhere God has placed you. If you are passive, compromised, or silent, that absence will shape more than just you. Because when men stop leading spiritually, everything else begins to fall apart. So if you are a man listening today, lead. Do something in the name of the Lord to lead others back to Him. If you are in, write "I will take a lead" in the comments below.

    DO THIS:

    Take responsibility for one area of spiritual leadership in your life today—your habits, your home, or your influence—and lead it toward God.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where have you seen the absence of spiritual leadership affect others?
    2. Are you leading spiritually—or drifting passively?
    3. Who is shaping your spiritual direction right now?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, call me out of passivity and into leadership. Give me the courage to lead with truth and the humility to follow you fully. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Give Me Jesus"

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    6 分
  • When Pastors Look Like Everyone Else | Hosea 4:9-11
    2026/06/04

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    What happens when spiritual leaders stop looking different?

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:9-11:

    And it shall be like people, like priest;
    I will punish them for their ways
    and repay them for their deeds.
    They shall eat, but not be satisfied;
    they shall play the whore, but not multiply,
    because they have forsaken the Lord
    to cherish whoredom, wine, and new wine,
    which take away the understanding. — Hosea 4:9-11

    The priests were meant to be set apart. They were called to teach truth, guard God's Word, and lead people back to him. Instead, they blended into the culture around them. They began to look, sound, and live like everyone else—and the people followed.

    Because when spiritual leaders stop leading, the culture consumes them.

    We see this same thing happening right now. Pastors who look more like executives than shepherds. Churches shaped more by strategy than Scripture. Messages that reflect cultural crazes more than biblical truth. Over time, the edge softens, conviction fades, and truth grows silent.

    And eventually, there is no meaningful difference between the church and the world around it. Thus God says:

    "Like people, like priest."

    God will not ignore this. He says he will punish and repay the spiritual leaders for their negligence. Leadership matters in God's church, but so does followership. Both are accountable for what they become.

    Then God describes the outcome of poor leadership and followership.

    1. Busyness without fulfillment — "They shall eat, but not be satisfied…"
    2. Indulgences without fruit — "They shall play the whore, but not multiply…"

    And why? "Because they have forsaken the LORD…"

    When God is replaced—even subtly—everything begins to hollow out. What takes his place promises satisfaction but never delivers. Instead, it slowly erodes spiritual clarity. It..

    "…takes away the understanding."

    That is the cost. Poor spiritual leadership leads to the blurring of truth and the fading of discernment, and thus, people are lost.

    But this is not just for pastors. It is about you. Are you following leaders anchored in God—or leaders who merely reflect the culture around them?

    DO THIS:

    Evaluate one voice you regularly follow and ask whether it is shaping you toward God or toward culture.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where do you see spiritual leaders blending into culture today?
    2. How has leadership shaped your beliefs and decisions?
    3. Are you pursuing truth or simply what feels comfortable?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, give me discernment to recognize truth and courage to follow it. Keep me from drifting with the culture. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Christ Is Enough"

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    5 分
  • A Dangerous False Teacher Doesn't Look Like a False Teacher
    2026/06/03

    The most dangerous false teacher doesn't look dangerous—he looks trustworthy.

    Summary
    Using James Talarico as a contemporary case study, this message examines how theological drift happens inside the church rather than outside it. The concern is not merely one individual, but a pattern where biblical language remains while biblical meanings slowly change through redefinition, emotional appeals, shifting authority, and cultural accommodation. Through passages like 2 Peter 2, Acts 20, and Matthew 7, believers are reminded that false teaching rarely begins with outright denial but with subtle revisions to historic Christian doctrine. Ultimately, the lesson calls Christians to become Bereans who test every teacher—including James Talarico, pastors, influencers, and denominational leaders—against the authority of Scripture.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions

    1. Why does Scripture repeatedly warn about false teachers arising from within the church rather than outside it?
    2. What makes theological drift more difficult to recognize than outright heresy?
    3. Why is charisma, intelligence, or compassion not enough to determine whether a teacher is biblically sound?
    4. How does redefining biblical terms like love, sin, salvation, or repentance change the gospel itself?
    5. Why are emotional stories powerful, and how can they sometimes become substitutes for biblical authority?
    6. What does it mean to let Scripture interpret culture rather than letting culture reinterpret Scripture?
    7. Why is the question of authority ultimately at the center of most theological debates?
    8. How does theological drift often move across generations according to the examples discussed in the lesson?
    9. What are some modern examples where Christians may be tempted to prioritize cultural acceptance over biblical faithfulness?
    10. How can you practically become more like the Bereans in Acts 17:11 and test what you hear against Scripture?

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    35 分
  • When Pastors Profit From Your Sin | Hosea 4:6b-8
    2026/06/03

    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 spiritual leaders leading you actually benefit from you remaining unproductive?

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:6b-8:

    I reject you from being a priest to me.
    And since you have forgotten the law of your God,
    I also will forget your children.
    The more they increased,
    the more they sinned against me;
    I will change their glory into shame.
    They feed on the sin of my people;
    they are greedy for their iniquity. — Hosea 4:6b-8

    Hosea's prophecy shifts from addressing the people to speaking directly to the priests—the spiritual leaders responsible for teaching the truth and guiding others toward him.

    God declares, "Because you have rejected knowledge, I reject you from being a priest to me." These leaders failed because they abandoned the truth. They had access to God's Word, yet they chose not to uphold it, teach it, or live by it.

    Then God adds, "Since you have forgotten the law of your God…" This was willful neglect. They set aside what God had revealed and replaced it with something easier, more appealing, and less demanding. Something that attracted more butts in seats and bucks in wallets.

    From the outside, it looked successful because it was moving up and to the right. Their influence grew. Their numbers expanded. Their presence became more visible. But spiritually, things were moving in the wrong direction. "The more they increased, the more they sinned…" Growth did not equal health. Expansion did not equal faithfulness.

    Then we get to the heart of the issue: "They feed on the sin of my people; they are greedy for their iniquity."

    Instead of confronting sin, they benefited from it.

    The system worked for their spiritual leaders when the people remained dependent. Influence increased when the truth was softened. Dependence grew when clarity was removed. Rather than leading people toward repentance and transformation, they allowed sin to continue because it sustained their position.

    Any spiritual system that avoids truth to keep you comfortable, any leader who softens sin to maintain influence, and any voice that tells you what you want to hear instead of what you need to hear is not helping you—it and they are using you.

    Pursue spiritual leaders who tell you the truth—even when it is hard. And reduce those who make you feel affirmed but leave you unchanged. One leaves you sharpened. The other keeps you stuck.

    And know God does not tolerate leaders who profit from people's sin, and he does not excuse people who choose comfort over truth. So be careful who you follow. Not every voice that speaks about God is actually leading you toward him.

    DO THIS:

    Evaluate one spiritual voice you regularly listen to and ask whether it confronts sin or quietly accommodates it.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where do you see leaders avoiding truth in order to maintain influence?
    2. Have you ever preferred teaching that felt good over teaching that was true?
    3. What kind of leadership are you choosing to follow right now?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, give me discernment to recognize truth and courage to follow it. Protect me from voices that lead me away from you. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Speak O Lord"

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    7 分
  • Destroyed for Not Knowing God | Hosea 4:4-6a
    2026/06/02

    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 greatest danger in your life isn't open rebellion, but quiet distance from God?

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:4-6a:

    Yet let no one contend,
    and let none accuse,
    for with you is my contention, O priest.
    You shall stumble by day;
    the prophet also shall stumble with you by night;
    and I will destroy your mother.
    My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge;
    because you have rejected knowledge, — Hosea 4:4-6a

    God says, "My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge." He does not say they are inconvenienced, distracted, or struggling. He says they are destroyed. And the cause is not a lack of resources or opportunity. It is a lack of knowledge.

    But this is not talking about information alone.

    The Hebrew idea behind this word points to real, personal, covenant knowledge. God is not accusing them of forgetting a few facts about him. He is saying they no longer know him as they should. The relationship has thinned. The truth has been neglected. What should have been living and personal has become distant and hollow.

    And notice this carefully: God says they rejected knowledge.

    This was not innocent ignorance. This was chosen distance and outright rejection.

    They had access to God's Word. They had priests. They had covenant history. But instead of receiving what God had revealed, they pushed it aside. They preferred other voices, other loves, and other ways of living.

    That is why this prophecy hits so hard.

    Destruction in our lives does not begin when we become openly wicked. It begins much earlier, when we stop pursuing the knowledge of God. That is when the drift begins. Truth grows thin. Conviction weakens. Sin becomes easier to justify. What once felt dangerous begins to feel normal.

    If your knowledge or relationship with God is shallow, your life will not stay strong for long. If you live on old truth, borrowed truth, or occasional truth, you will eventually feel the effects of it. You cannot neglect God privately and stay steady personally.

    So instead of fixing peripheral issues in your life, maybe it's time to address the relational issues with God. It might be time to address your intimacy.

    Take some time today to sit in God's presence. Sing to him. Pray to him. Sit quietly in his presence and merely listen to him. Get to know the Lord again, and not just more about him.

    DO THIS:

    Spend time in God's Word today with one aim: not just to learn something, but to know him more deeply.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where has your knowledge of God become thin or secondhand?
    2. What habits are helping you know God more personally, and what habits are pulling you away?
    3. What is one step you need to take today to pursue God more intentionally?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, keep me from drifting into distance from you. Deepen my knowledge of you and draw me into a living, faithful relationship with you. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "The Secret Place"

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    6 分
  • The Decay of a Nation | Hosea 4:1-3
    2026/06/01

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    What causes a nation to slowly fall apart?

    God answers that question with surprising clarity.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:1b-3:

    There is no faithfulness or steadfast love,
    and no knowledge of God in the land;
    there is swearing, lying, murder, stealing, and committing adultery;
    they break all bounds, and bloodshed follows bloodshed.
    Therefore the land mourns,
    and all who dwell in it languish,
    and also the beasts of the field
    and the birds of the heavens,
    and even the fish of the sea are taken away.— Hosea 4:1b-3

    That is where the decay begins. Not with politics. Not with policies. With the absence of God. Not the absence of religious talk—but the absence of truly knowing him. That word "knowledge" has more meaning than it sounds.

    The Hebrew word is: דַּעַת (daʿat) — from the root יָדַע (yada). It doesn't mean information—it means relationship. Personal, experiential, covenant knowing.

    God isn't saying they forgot facts about him. He's saying they don't know me intimately or relationally anymore. And once that foundation is gone, everything built on it begins to weaken. Faithfulness fades. Love becomes shallow. Truth becomes flexible. What follows is predictable. A list of five behaviors follows:

    "Swearing, lying, murder, stealing, and committing adultery…"

    These are not just individual sins. They are symptoms of something deeper. When people lose their knowledge of God, they lose the standard that once shaped their lives. Boundaries begin to disappear.

    "They break all bounds…"

    And when there are no boundaries, there is no restraint.

    "Bloodshed follows bloodshed."

    This is what decay looks like. It spreads. It compounds. It becomes cultural. But it doesn't stop with people.

    "The land mourns…"

    Even creation feels the destruction of it. This takes us all the way back to Genesis. When sin enters, it never stays contained. It affects everything—relationships, communities, even the earth itself.

    So let's make this personal.

    If your life feels unstable, truth feels negotiable, love feels inconsistent, don't blame others or your circumstances too quickly. It might be that you have drifted in your relationship with God. Not your belief in him. Not your language about him. Your knowledge (or relationship) with him.

    Because you don't drift into a relationship with God. You drift away from him. Quietly. Gradually. Almost without noticing. Until one day, what once felt wrong feels normal. And what once felt true feels optional.

    Don't just ask, "What needs to change?"

    Ask: "Do I actually know God anymore?"

    DO THIS:

    Spend time today in God's Word and focus on one truth about who he is, not just what he commands.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where do you see the effects of a lack of God's truth in the world around you?
    2. How has your understanding of God shaped your daily decisions?
    3. What is one way you can grow in truly knowing God this week?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, deepen my knowledge of you. Help me build my life on your truth so I don't drift into confusion or compromise. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Knowing You (All I Once Held Dear)"

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    6 分
  • God Takes a Nation to Court | Hosea 4:1
    2026/05/31

    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 God put your nation on trial… and you were part of the evidence?

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 4:1:

    Hear the word of the Lord, O children of Israel,
    for the Lord has a controversy with the inhabitants of the land. — Hosea 4:1

    "Hear the word of the LORD…"

    Underline that because this chapter isn't a suggestion to hear. It's a summons to hear. God is calling his people to listen because he is about to present a national case against the nation of Israel. For what?

    "A controversy…"

    The Hebrew word is rîb. It's not a casual disagreement. It's courtroom language— a legal dispute, a formal charge, a covenant lawsuit being brought against them.

    God is confronting everyone. Not just their national leaders, or their priests, but the whole land. Everyone is included.

    This is what makes this chapter so sobering. God is not addressing a single failure. He is addressing the entire culture. A people who have drifted so far from him that their entire way of life is now under review.

    So chapter 4 is where Hosea's tone shifts. The first three chapters showed us God's heartbreak. The wounded husband (God) pursuing an unfaithful whoring bride (Israel). But now we see something else, someone new. The righteous judge.

    The One who sees clearly through this national mess. One who speaks truthfully into the whoredom of the land.
    One who will not ignore what has been done. Because love never cancels justice or ignores injustice. It demands it.

    And before God lists the charges in this chapter in his courtroom, he calls for attention with the word:

    "Hear…"

    This is the Hebrew word shema—the same word from Deuteronomy 6:4, the central confession of Israel: "Hear, O Israel…" It doesn't just mean listen. It means listen with the intent to obey. And don't miss this. These are the same people who recited the Shema daily, who knew the words, who claimed to hear God, and yet—they no longer shema. They heard the words, but stopped obeying the voice.

    And what God is about to say to Israel isn't just for them. It presses into our time. Because it is possible for a nation to become so comfortable, so distracted, so self-defined that it stops listening to God entirely.

    So here's the question we all need to sit with today:

    Are you still listening to God?

    Not once in a while.
    Not when it's convenient.
    Not when things fall apart, and you need help.

    But consistently.

    Because before anything else changes in your life, you have to hear what God is saying. So slow down and hear from the great Judge who wants to speak the truth about you in your life today.

    DO THIS:

    Set aside five minutes today to read God's Word slowly and ask him to help you truly hear what he is saying.

    ASK THIS:

    1. When was the last time you intentionally listened to God through his Word?
    2. What distractions make it difficult for you to hear from God consistently?
    3. How can you create space in your life to listen more intentionally?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, help me hear your Word clearly and respond with humility. Keep my heart attentive to your voice. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Speak O Lord"

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    6 分
  • When God Removes Everything to Bring You Back | Hosea 3:4-5
    2026/05/30

    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 thing God removes is the thing you trust most?

    Listen to our text today, and yes, it is the same one from yesterday, Hosea 3:4-5:

    "For the children of Israel shall dwell many days without king or prince, without sacrifice or pillar, without ephod or household gods. Afterward the children of Israel shall return and seek the LORD their God, and David their king, and they shall come in fear to the LORD and to his goodness in the latter days." — Hosea 3:4-5

    In this text, God tells Israel that they will live for a time without a king, without leadership, without sacrifices, and without idols. Everything is stripped away—not only what was clearly wrong, but even what once seemed right. This is what makes the moment so unsettling.

    Why would God do this?

    Because everything had become compromised. Their leadership was unstable, their worship had become empty, and their rituals had lost their meaning. What once pointed them to God had slowly replaced their dependence on him.

    So God removes the entire system.

    He leaves them without anything to lean on—no structure, no substitute, no distraction. Only he remains. And that is exactly the point.

    It is possible to build a life around God and still not actually depend on God. It is possible to trust routines, systems, and familiarity while quietly drifting from a real relationship with him.

    So sometimes, God clears the stage—not to abandon his people, but to bring them back. It says:

    "Afterward… they shall return."

    That is always the goal.

    Then it reads...

    "They shall seek the LORD… and David their king."

    David had been dead for nearly 200 years when Hosea wrote this. This is not a call to look backward. It is a promise pointing forward—to a future king from David's line who would succeed where every other leader failed. A king who would not lead people away from God, but back to him. This is a clear portrayal of King Jesus.

    God says he will remove everything his people trust until they are ready to trust the right King.

    And when they return, they will come with both reverence and relief—"in fear and to his goodness." That captures what it means to really come back to God.

    So consider your own life today.

    If God began removing the things you rely on—your sense of stability, your routines, your control—would you turn toward him?

    Or have you learned how to live on what he provides without really seeking him? Because if you won't turn in comfort, he may use discomfort to get your attention. Not to push you away, but to bring you back.

    DO THIS:

    Ask God honestly if there is anything in your life you are relying on more than him, and surrender that area to him today.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What are you currently relying on that may be replacing your dependence on God?
    2. How has comfort made your faith passive?
    3. What would it look like for you to actively seek Jesus as your King today?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, remove anything in my life that keeps me from fully depending on you. Help me return to you and follow Jesus as my true King. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Clear The Stage"

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    6 分