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  • 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
  • How Sin Slowly Takes Over | Hosea 13:1
    2026/05/30

    Welcome to The Daily.

    We are 14 days away from beginning our next book of the Bible. We are moving to the New Testament, 1 Peter. We are going to discover how to live holy in a hostile world. Go ahead and pick up your 1 Peter Scripture Journal now. And if you are a Project23 donor giving $35 or more per month, this has already been shipped to you. So become a donor and partner with us in Project23.

    Our text today is Hosea 13:1

    When Ephraim spoke, there was trembling;
    he was exalted in Israel,
    but he incurred guilt through Baal and died. — Hosea 13:1

    One of the lessons we have learned throughout Hosea is that spiritual collapse never happens suddenly. It happens slowly. This warning continues in this chapter.

    You see, there was a time when Ephraim/Israel was respected, strong, and honored. There was spiritual weight and seriousness to their lives. But then something changed.

    "...he incurred guilt through Baal and died."

    Notice how slow the change is, but how quickly God perceives it. One compromise slowly opened the door to another. And eventually, the very people who once feared God became spiritually lifeless. That is how sin always works.

    Most people do not wake up one day planning to drift far from God. It begins with smaller compromises that do not seem dangerous at first:

    tolerated sin,
    ignored conviction,
    spiritual passivity,
    quiet pride,
    hidden lust,
    bitterness,
    greed,
    dishonesty,
    compromise with culture.

    Over time, what once bothered you stops bothering you. Your conscience grows unconscious. Your spiritual sensitivity saps. And slowly, sin begins to reshape into a new normal. That is why compromise is so dangerous. It never stays isolated and small.

    This is happening everywhere in our culture today. You see it happening right before your eyes.

    People are normalizing what God calls destructive. We celebrate things that slowly erode souls, families, marriages, identity, and truth itself. Hate speech, doxing, sexual sin, and killing children in the womb. Many Christians are slowly adapting to the spirit of the age until they no longer recognize how far they have drifted from the truth in God's Word. James Talirico in Texas is one of these men. He claims to be an evangelical Christian, but holds numerous views that no longer align with the truth in the Bible, and claims his positions do.

    Faithful believers have always faced pressure to compromise with the surrounding culture. That tension is not new. And it is exactly why believers must learn how to live differently inside a drifting world.

    Sin may slowly take over—but surrender can slowly restore too. The moment you stop justifying compromise and honestly bring it before God, healing begins. Conviction is not God rejecting you. It is God rescuing you before drift becomes destruction.

    Do not ignore the small compromises. Bring them into the light right now. Let the unchanging truth (in God's Word) change you. What you repeatedly tolerate in culture eventually shapes who you become. And yet truth has the power to turn you back to the God who loves you and wants you to return.

    DO THIS:

    Ask God to expose one area of compromise you have slowly started accepting as normal.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What small compromise have I been tolerating lately?
    2. When did my spiritual sensitivity start to grow weaker?
    3. Am I becoming more shaped by God's truth or by culture's values?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, help me recognize compromise before it hardens my heart. Keep me spiritually awake, sensitive to conviction, and quick to surrender anything pulling me away from you. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Unshakeable"

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    6 分
  • Redemption Has Terms | Hosea 3
    2026/05/30

    Redemption doesn't just rescue you—it rewrites who owns your life.

    Summary
    Hosea 3 reveals a powerful picture of redemption through the shocking act of Hosea buying back his unfaithful wife. This is not just forgiveness—it is costly redemption that restores relationship but also redefines ownership. God shows that while grace brings people back, his authority sustains them moving forward. Redemption is not permission to live unchanged—it is an invitation to surrender fully to the One who paid the price.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. What stands out most to you about Hosea paying to redeem Gomer (Hosea 3:1–2)?
    2. How does Hosea's act of redemption reflect what Jesus has done for us?
    3. Why is redemption more than just forgiveness—it includes ownership and belonging?
    4. What makes people uncomfortable about the idea of belonging fully to God?
    5. How does the phrase "grace brings you back, authority keeps you there" challenge modern thinking?
    6. In what ways do people try to accept redemption without surrendering control?
    7. What does Hosea reveal about the emptiness that comes from living apart from God (v.4)?
    8. How have you personally experienced the "emptiness before redemption" in your life?
    9. Why is the call to "return" (v.5) central to both Israel's story and ours?
    10. What is one area of your life where you need to stop redefining God and fully surrender to him?

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    25 分
  • You Don't Belong to Yourself Anymore | Hosea 3:3 (Part 2)
    2026/05/29

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Who do you belong to?

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

    "And I said to her, 'You must dwell as mine for many days. You shall not play the whore, or belong to another man; so will I also be to you.'" — Hosea 3:3

    Let's focus on this phrase today.

    "You must dwell as mine…"

    I don't want you to miss this word—mine.

    That is the operative word. Hosea doesn't just bring Gomer back to safety. He brings her back into belonging.

    After everything she had done—after the other lovers, the betrayal, the collapse of her life—he doesn't redefine her by her past. He reclaims her.

    "You are mine."

    This is not control. This is what covenant love does. She is no longer her own.

    And this is the part of redemption that modern people resist. We like grace when it rescues us. But we don't like it when it claims us. But this is how redemption works.

    Hosea didn't buy her back so she could go live however she wanted. He bought her back so she could belong to him again. And this is where redemption forces change, not more of the same.

    If you say you belong to God—but still live as if your life is yours—something doesn't line up.

    If you claim faith—but your decisions, priorities, and desires are still self-directed—you're holding onto something God has already purchased.

    Because you were not just forgiven. You were claimed, and that changes everything. It changes how you think. It changes how you live. And it changes what you pursue.

    Don't reduce your relationship with God to belief alone. When you surrender to him, he owns you. You are not your own anymore. And that is the best possible situation for you.

    DO THIS:

    Ask God today where you are still living as if your life belongs to you—and surrender that area to him.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What does it actually mean for your life to belong to God?
    2. Where are you still holding onto control instead of surrendering?
    3. How would your life change if you fully lived like you were his?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, remind me that I belong to you. Help me surrender every part of my life and live fully under your authority. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "I Surrender"

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    4 分
  • Grace Brings You Home—But Not Back to the Same Life | Hosea 3:3
    2026/05/28

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

    Get your Hosea Scripture Journal now.

    Are boundaries closing in on you today? If so, there could be a reason behind it.

    Listen to our text today, Hosea 3:3:

    "And I said to her, 'You must dwell as mine for many days. You shall not play the whore, or belong to another man; so will I also be to you.'" — Hosea 3:3

    Hosea brings his unfaithful wife home at a cost to himself, even though he was the offended. That's grace.

    But what follows isn't a rapid return—it's a slower and deliberate restoration. He says:

    "You must dwell as mine for many days…"

    Hosea is going to need time. A season where relational trust is rebuilt. Proximity is restored, but reconciliation is not rushed. Instead, there is a space of time—"many days."

    Then he states: "You shall not play the whore, or belong to another man…"

    Gomer is brought back into the home, but not back into the same life. The old ways are cut off. The patterns that shaped her whoring life are no longer permitted. This is protection. It's the beginning of change and healing.

    Real restoration doesn't ignore the past. It retrains what the past has formed and reforms it.

    And the same is true in our relationship with God.

    Grace brings us back. It redeems and pays for what was broken. But it demands a change in how we live. There are things we once tolerated that God will no longer tolerate. Habits once normalized that will now be out of place.

    This is not restriction, it is protection and restoration. And this is where many people struggle. Many want forgiveness without behavioral change. Restoration without reconciliation. Benefits from God—without letting go of other gods.

    But that's not how love, grace, and redemption work. God doesn't buy you back so you can stay the same.

    He buys you back into a life that is now his, not yours. So if you find yourself in a season where God is slowing things down, setting boundaries, or asking you to walk differently—don't resist it. That's restoration at work.

    DO THIS:

    Ask God to show you one area of your life he is reshaping, and take a step today to align with that change.

    ASK THIS:

    1. Where might God be asking you to embrace change instead of returning to old patterns?
    2. Why is it difficult to accept that restoration takes time?
    3. What would it look like for you to fully step into the new life God is giving you?

    PRAY THIS:

    Father, thank you for restoring me with patience and purpose. Help me embrace the change you are working in my life. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Better Man"

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    5 分
  • Should Christians Get Tattoos?
    2026/05/27

    The real issue with tattoos isn't ink—it's identity.

    Summary

    This message examines what the Bible actually says—and does not say—about tattoos, Christian freedom, cultural conformity, and spiritual wisdom. While the New Testament never directly prohibits tattoos, Scripture repeatedly calls believers to think carefully about identity, holiness, motives, and whether they are being shaped more by culture or by Christ. The deeper issue is not merely body art but the modern obsession with self-expression, branding, and external identity signaling. Mature believers move beyond asking "Can I?" and begin asking, "Does this glorify God and reflect wisdom?"

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions
    1. Why do Christians often debate tattoos so strongly compared to other cultural trends?
    2. What was the original context of Leviticus 19:28, and why does that matter?
    3. How can believers avoid both weaponizing Scripture and dismissing it carelessly?
    4. What does Romans 12:2 teach about conformity and cultural influence?
    5. Why is the question "Should I?" more mature than simply asking "Can I?"
    6. How does 1 Corinthians 6:19–20 shape the way Christians should think about their bodies?
    7. Why do motives matter so much in decisions involving self-expression and identity?
    8. How does modern culture push people toward "branding" and defining themselves externally?
    9. What is the difference between Paul's "marks of Jesus" and modern tattoo culture?
    10. What practical steps can help believers make wise, prayerful decisions instead of impulsive cultural ones?

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    23 分