5/23/26

"I have" aspirations, longing and waiting with open hands and exposed heart (Psalm 119:81-88, 121-128)

Yesterday I changed my blog caption to Psalm 119:30, from Psalm 119:45. I've been wondering from faithfulness in my freedom and want to meditate and come back to the basics. Looking at Psalms "I have" we see life as a series of true ups and downs. It's good to remember the mission and the great commission. What's important and of lasting value. Our legacy and future belong to the Lord. The Lord is my banner. 

Psalm 119:10, I have tried hard to find you— don’t let me wander from your commands. 

Psalm 119:11, I have hidden your word in my heart, that I might not sin against you. 

Psalm 119:13, I have recited aloud all the regulations you have given us. 

Psalm 119:14, I have rejoiced in your laws as much as in riches.

Psalm 119:22, Don’t let them scorn and insult me, for I have obeyed your laws. 

Psalm 119:30, I have chosen to be faithful; I have determined to live by your regulations. 

Psalm 119:45, I will walk in freedom, for I have devoted myself to your commandments.

Psalm 119:54, Your decrees have been the theme of my songs wherever I have lived. 

Psalm 119:74, May all who fear you find in me a cause for joy, for I have put my hope in your word. 

Psalm 119:81, Kaph I am worn out waiting for your rescue, but I have put my hope in your word. 

The word kaph means "palm of the hand" or "hollow of the hand" — and the shape of the letter visually suggests a cupped or open hand.

Symbolic and Theological Significance

The palm/hand imagery carries rich meaning in the Hebrew Bible:

  • God's "kaph" — the hollow of His hand — appears in passages like Isaiah 40:12, where He measures the waters in the palm of His hand, conveying His immeasurable power
  • The hand as an instrument of blessing, work, and covering runs throughout Scripture
  • In Psalm 119, the stanza beginning with kaph (verses 81–88) reflects longing and waiting — some connect this to an open, upturned hand waiting to receive

In the Psalms

Psalm 119 is an acrostic poem where each 8-verse stanza begins with a successive Hebrew letter. The Kaph stanza (vv. 81–88) is one of the most anguished sections — the psalmist cries out in exhaustion, waiting for God's salvation like a wineskin shriveled in smoke.

It's a small but theologically rich letter, tying physical gesture (the open hand) to spiritual posture (dependence, reception, blessing). - Claude Sonnet 4.6 adaptive

Psalm 119:83, I am shriveled like a wineskin in the smoke, but I have not forgotten to obey your decrees. 

Psalm 119:94, I am yours; rescue me! For I have worked hard at obeying your commandments. 

Psalm 119:99, Yes, I have more insight than my teachers, for I am always thinking of your laws. 

Psalm 119:100, I am even wiser than my elders, for I have kept your commandments. 

Psalm 119:101, I have refused to walk on any evil path, so that I may remain obedient to your word. 

Psalm 119:107, I have suffered much, O Lord; restore my life again as you promised. 

Psalm 119:121, Ayin Don’t leave me to the mercy of my enemies, for I have done what is just and right. 

Ayin simply means "eye" — and the ancient Phoenician/paleo-Hebrew form of the letter was literally drawn as a circle representing an eye. The modern ע still faintly suggests that shape.

Symbolic Significance

The eye carries deep meaning throughout Hebrew thought:

  • Seeing and perception — not just physical sight but spiritual discernment and understanding
  • Presence and attention — "the eye of the LORD" (ayin YHWH) appears throughout the Psalms and Proverbs, conveying God's watchful care and moral attention
  • Fountain or spring — interestingly, ayin also means spring of water in Hebrew (as in Ein Gedi, Ain, etc.), since both an eye and a spring are openings that pour forth
  • The number 70 in gematria connects to completeness and fullness — 70 elders of Israel, 70 nations of the world in rabbinic thought

In Psalm 119

The Ayin stanza (verses 121–128) opens with themes of justice, sight, and longing — fitting for a letter meaning "eye." The psalmist asks God to see his affliction and act. The prayer is essentially: "Turn your eye toward me."

Deeper Word Connections

Many Hebrew words built on the root ע carry sight-related meaning:

  • Ra'ah (to see) — though a different root, the concept of seeing pervades ayin's semantic field
  • Place names like Ein Gedi (spring of the young goat) and En Hakkore (spring of the one who called) use ayin in its spring/fountain sense

A Dual Picture

The letter beautifully holds two ideas together — eye and spring — both are openings, both pour something outward, and both speak to the way God sees His people and the way living water flows from His presence. It is one of the richest letters in the alphabet symbolically.

Psalm 119:152, I have known from my earliest days that your laws will last forever

Psalm 119:153, Resh Look upon my suffering and rescue me, for I have not forgotten your instructions.

Resh means "head" — from the Hebrew word rosh (רֹאשׁ), the common biblical word for head, top, chief, or beginning. The ancient Phoenician form of the letter was drawn as a profile of a human head, and the shape of the modern ר still suggests a head turned downward.

Symbolic Significance

The head carries enormous weight in Hebrew thought:

  • Authority and leadershiprosh is the word for a chief, ruler, or leader throughout the Old Testament
  • Beginning and preeminencerosh appears in Bereshit (בְּרֵאשִׁית), the very first word of the Bible: "In the beginning." The universe opens with resh.
  • New YearRosh Hashanah (ראש השנה) literally means "head of the year"
  • Summit and pinnacle — used for mountaintops, the top of a scepter, the head of a procession

In Psalm 119

The Resh stanza (verses 153–160) opens with a cry for deliverance and pleads for God to consider the psalmist's cause. Fittingly for a letter meaning "head," the stanza moves toward appeals to God's sovereign judgment and the foundational truth that His word stands from the very beginning — verse 160 declares: "The sum of your word is truth." The word for "sum" or "entirety" there is rosh — head, totality, the whole.

Contrast With Dalet

Interestingly, resh and dalet (ד) look nearly identical and are easily confused in ancient manuscripts — a small serif distinguishes them. Yet their meanings are near opposites: dalet means door (lowly, humble, poor) while resh means head (exalted, chief). Scribes had to pay careful attention — the difference between dalet and resh in a word could completely change its meaning.

Key Word Connections

Many foundational Hebrew words are built on resh:

  • Rosh (רֹאשׁ) — head, chief, beginning
  • Bereshit (בְּרֵאשִׁית) — in the beginning
  • Rishon (רִאשׁוֹן) — first, foremost
  • Rosh Hashanah — head of the year
  • Rosh Chodesh — head of the month (new moon celebration)

A Governing Letter

Resh speaks to headship and origin — the place where things begin, the one who leads, the summit that defines everything below it. In a biblical worldview, every rosh points upward to the ultimate Head, the One from whom all authority and all beginnings flow. It is a letter about preeminence in its fullest sense.

Psalm 119:157, Many persecute and trouble me, yet I have not swerved from your laws. 

Psalm 119:166, I long for your rescue, Lord, so I have obeyed your commands. 

Psalm 119:167, I have obeyed your laws, for I love them very much. 

Psalm 119:173, Give me a helping hand, for I have chosen to follow your commandments. 

Psalm 119:174, O Lord, I have longed for your rescue, and your instructions are my delight. 

Psalm 119:176, I have wandered away like a lost sheep; come and find me, for I have not forgotten your commands.


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5/22/26

Before You Ask God for Anything, Do What Nehemiah Did First (Nehemiah 1:4-11)

Enjoying a weekend to remember the dreams and visions the Lord has placed in my heart. Thinking about the past year, where Nehemiah reminds us to seek the Lord in prayer and fasting. Rediscovering Hardships can bring us closer to the Lord. I had a wonderful conversation with Beverly, a long-time servant leader with a passion for bringing God's Word into the lives of people all over the world. She invited me to prepare a presentation on a Bible Requirements Interface for AI-enabled translation. As I was contemplating I realized I needed to slow down and take Nehemiah's prescription found in Nehemiah 1:4-11. 

In Nehemiah 1, a man learns that the walls of Jerusalem are rubble and its people are in disgrace. His response is not a plan. It is not a petition. It is grief.

"When I heard these things, I sat down and wept. For some days I mourned and fasted and prayed before the God of heaven." — Nehemiah 1:4

Notice the order. He wept first. He mourned. Then he fasted. Then he prayed.

By the time Nehemiah asks God for anything (verse 11), he has done four things that most of us skip entirely. Those four movements are a complete model for fasting. They map onto a single day, a single week, or as I used them four days of intentional preparation over this memorial day weekend.


The Four Movements of Nehemiah's Prayer

1. Mourning (verse 4): Start with grief, not goals

Nehemiah did not open with a request. He opened with tears.

This is the part fasting guides leave out. We are taught to come to God with our needs. Nehemiah came to God with his sorrow first. He let the weight of what was broken land on him before he tried to fix anything.

Every fast should begin here. What is broken? What is missing? What have you been avoiding feeling?

Sit with it. That is not weakness. That is the beginning of prayer.

2. Confession (verses 6-7): Include yourself in the problem

Here is where Nehemiah earns our respect. He is not the one who broke the wall. He was not even in Jerusalem. He was a cupbearer to a foreign king, far away. Yet he prays: "I confess the sins we Israelites, including myself and my father's family, have committed."

He includes himself.

This is the hardest movement. We fast to get things from God, not to admit that we are part of what is broken. But Nehemiah knew something important: the people who build things carry responsibility for the systems they build and maintain, even the ones they inherited.

Ask during this movement: Where have I drifted? What do I need to own?

3. Claiming God's promises (verses 8-9): Stand on what God already said

After mourning and confession, Nehemiah does not invent a case. He quotes one.

"Remember the instruction you gave your servant Moses... if you return to me... I will gather them."

He finds the promise that fits the need. He brings God's own word back to God.

This is what makes fasting different from wishful thinking. You are not asking God to do something new. You are asking him to do what he already committed to do. The fast is a way of saying: I believe you meant it. I am holding you to it.

During this movement, find one verse that speaks directly to what you are fasting about. That is your anchor. Return to it every day.

4. Bold petition (verse 11): Now, ask

Only after grief, confession, and standing on a promise does Nehemiah make his ask. And when he does, it is plain and direct.

"Give your servant success today."

No hedging. No elaborate justification. Just: this is what I need, Lord.

The boldness is earned. It flows from the three movements before it. When you have sat with grief, when you have confessed your part, when you have found the promise that covers your need — you can ask without apology.


How to Use This as a 4-Day Fast

Each day takes one movement as its anchor. You do not rush to petition. You earn it.

Day 1 — Mourning. Ask God to show you what is broken. Let yourself feel it. Do not fix it yet. Psalm 19:4, Romans 10:14, Revelation 7:9 are good companions for this day. End the day by naming, before God, the specific person or situation you are fasting about.

Day 2 — Confession. Ask God to show you your part. Read Proverbs 3:5-6 and Psalm 25:4-5. Nehemiah included himself even when he was not the obvious culprit. Follow his example. Confess what you have not said out loud.

Day 3 — Claiming the promise. Find the verse that covers your need. Isaiah 55:10-11 is a strong anchor: God's word will not return void. Read it slowly. Pray it back to God. Let your faith grow before your ask.

Day 4 — Bold petition. Ask plainly. Colossians 4:3-4 is a good prayer for this day: an open door and clarity. Close the fast with Philippians 4:6-7 — thanksgiving, not more asking. End in peace.


One More Thing Nehemiah Did

He did not fast alone. He prays: "to the prayer of your servants who delight in revering your name" (verse 11). He includes the community.

If you can, share your fast with someone. Tell them what you are mourning. Ask them to pray on day four when you make your bold ask. Fasting in community multiplies what fasting alone only starts.


The wall got rebuilt. The people came home. It started with a man who sat down and wept.

Start there. 

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5/11/26

The resurrection life of Jesus brings understanding of our times (Matthew 27:50–53, Acts 1:9-11, Rev 19:8-14)

Growing up I remember seeing a painting of the Ascension of Jesus with a multitude of saints around him. Is he coming or going I thought, the scripture associated with the painting was Acts 1:9-11, 

"After saying this, he was taken up into a cloud while they were watching, and they could no longer see him. As they strained to see him rising into heaven, two white-robed men suddenly stood among them. "Men of Galilee," they said, "why are you standing here staring into heaven? Jesus has been taken from you into heaven, but someday he will return from heaven in the same way you saw him go!"

According to Matthew 27:50-53, at the moment of Jesus' death, an earthquake occurred, splitting rocks and opening the graves of many "holy people" (saints) who had died. These individuals were raised to life, came out of their tombs, and after Jesus' resurrection, appeared to many in Jerusalem, signifying Christ's victory over death. 

Then Jesus shouted out again, and he released his spirit. At that moment the curtain in the sanctuary of the Temple was torn in two, from top to bottom. The earth shook, rocks split apart, and tombs opened. The bodies of many godly men and women who had died were raised from the dead. They left the cemetery after Jesus’ resurrection, went into the holy city of Jerusalem, and appeared to many people.

Key Details of the Event (Matthew 27:50–53), The Resurrected Saints:

  • Timing: The tombs broke open at the moment of Jesus' death, but the saints were raised after his resurrection.
  • The Scene: This occurred in Jerusalem, specifically around Calvary, as part of a series of miraculous events.
  • The Saints: These were faithful people who had died prior to Christ’s resurrection.
  • Significance: The incident serves as a "token" or "first fruits" of the resurrection, demonstrating the power of Christ’s sacrifice.
  • Outcome: Matthew is silent on what happened to them afterward, leading to debates on whether they were permanently resurrected or temporarily raised to die again, similar to Lazarus. 

This event is exclusively recorded in the Gospel of Matthew and was intended to show that Jesus' death had a significant impact, validating his identity as the Son of God to the residents of Jerusalem. 

According to GotQuestions.org, Matthew 27:50-53 describes miraculous events—an earthquake, torn temple veil, and raised saints—occurring at Jesus’ death and resurrection to signify His power over death. The resurrected saints testified to the new life Jesus gives. The Ascension signifies the successful completion of His earthly ministry and his exaltation. 

The Ascension of Christ (Acts 1:9-11)

Significance: The Ascension marks the end of Jesus' earthly ministry and his return to heavenly glory, demonstrating his exaltation by God the Father.

Purposes:

Connection Between Events

  • Both events emphasize Jesus’ authority. The resurrection (and the accompanying saints) validates His claim to divinity and victory over death, while the ascension proves He has taken His place of power in heaven.
  • The resurrected saints are often interpreted as a sign of the in-breaking of the Kingdom of God, which is fully realized when Jesus ascends to sit at the right hand of the Father. 

The Messiah Coming from Heaven with His Holy Ones

This is one of the most theologically rich threads in all of Scripture, the parousia as a unified event anticipated across both Testaments. Here's a systematic look.

Acts 1:9–11 as the Interpretive Anchor

The angelic declaration establishes four markers for the return:

  1. Visible — "this same Jesus"
  2. Bodily — taken up physically
  3. From heaven — coming back the same direction
  4. In like manner — clouds, glory

Old Testament Passages That Match This Pattern

Daniel 7:13–14

The foundational text. The Son of Man comes with the clouds of heaven and approaches the Ancient of Days to receive dominion over all nations. This is the direct antecedent Jesus cites in Matthew 26:64. The "coming" is cosmic, visible, and triumphant.

Zechariah 14:1–5

The most precise fulfillment match: the LORD comes, his feet stand on the Mount of Olives (the same mountain of Acts 1), and  "all the holy ones with him" (v.5). This is the clearest OT picture of Acts 1:11 fulfilled. The geography (Olivet), the company (holy ones), and the cosmic disruption all align.

Isaiah 63:1–6

The warrior-Messiah comes from Edom, garments stained, treading the winepress of wrath alone. This matches Revelation 19 explicitly. The question "Who is this coming from Edom?" frames a dramatic entrance from outside Israel, a heavenly warrior arriving for judgment.

Psalm 68:17

"The chariots of God are tens of thousands and thousands of thousands; the Lord has come from Sinai into his sanctuary." The vast heavenly army accompanies the LORD's triumphant procession, a template for the Messiah's retinue.

Zechariah 9:14

"The LORD will appear over them; his arrow will flash like lightning." This is a military theophany, the LORD visibly appearing in power on behalf of his people.

Enoch Quoted in Jude 14–15

"The Lord is coming with tens of thousands of his holy ones to execute judgment on all." This ancient prophecy (pre-flood tradition preserved in Jude) is arguably the most explicit OT-era statement matching Acts 1:11, vast company, judgment purpose, visible arrival.


New Testament Passages That Match

PassageKey Detail
Matthew 24:29–31Son of Man on clouds, angels sent to gather elect
Matthew 25:31"all the angels with him," seated on throne of glory
Mark 13:26–27Clouds, great power, angels gathering
Luke 21:27"Son of Man coming in a cloud with power and great glory"
1 Thess 4:14–17Lord descends from heaven, shout, trumpet, dead rise first, then living caught up in clouds
2 Thess 1:7–10"revealed from heaven with his mighty angels in flaming fire"
Revelation 19:11–16Heaven opens, white horse, armies of heaven in white linen following
Colossians 3:4"When Christ appears, then you also will appear with him in glory"
1 John 3:2"When he appears, we shall be like him, for we shall see him as he is"

The "holy ones" / "saints" in these passages is a debated point worth noting for your teaching:

  • Angels — most consistent with Matthew 25:31 and 2 Thess 1:7
  • Resurrected believers — supported by 1 Thess 4:14 ("God will bring with Jesus those who have fallen asleep"), Zechariah 14:5 LXX, and Colossians 3:4
  • Both — the most likely answer; Revelation 19 shows the armies of heaven (v.14) in white linen, the same garments given to the saints in Revelation 19:8

Passages About the Messiah That Do NOT Match This Description

These are equally important because they reveal why first-century Jews largely missed the two-stage fulfillment.

First Coming / Incarnation Passages

PassageDescription
Isaiah 7:14Messiah born of a virgin — hidden, quiet, not from clouds
Micah 5:2Born in Bethlehem — a specific geographic birthplace, not a heavenly descent
Isaiah 9:6–7"A child is born, a son is given" — incarnation, not parousia
Genesis 3:15Seed of the woman — implies human birth and suffering
Zechariah 9:9King comes "humble, riding on a donkey" — triumphal entry, but lowly, not glorious

Suffering Servant Passages

PassageDescription
Isaiah 52:13–53:12Despised, rejected, struck down, pierced — no armies, no clouds
Psalm 22"My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?" — abandonment, not triumph
Psalm 69:20–21Gall and vinegar, reproach — passion narrative
Zechariah 11:12–13Valued at 30 pieces of silver and thrown to the potter — betrayal
Zechariah 12:10"They will look on me, the one they have pierced" — mourning over crucifixion

Priestly Messiah Passages

PassageDescription
Psalm 110:4"A priest forever in the order of Melchizedek" — intercession, not conquest
Zechariah 6:12–13"He will be a priest on his throne" — reigning and priestly, but the manner of coming is unspecified
Malachi 3:1"The messenger of the covenant whom you desire will come to his temple" — often read as first coming (or as John the Baptist's preparation)

New Covenant Inaugurator

  • Jeremiah 31:31–34 — the Messiah inaugurates a new covenant written on hearts. This is fulfilled at the Last Supper (Luke 22:20) and ongoing through the Spirit — not a visible descent from clouds.

The Theological Key: Two Comings, One Messiah

The reason "other passages don't match" is not contradiction — it's progressive fulfillment across two advents

First Coming → Suffering Servant (Isaiah 53, Psalm 22, Zechariah 9:9)

                Priestly Mediator (Psalm 110:4, Malachi 3:1)

                New Covenant Inaugurator (Jeremiah 31)

Second Coming → Warrior-King (Isaiah 63, Zechariah 14)

                Son of Man on clouds (Daniel 7)

                With holy ones (Jude 14, Zechariah 14:5)

                → Fulfills Acts 1:11

First-century Judaism largely collapsed these into one event, expecting a conquering king. The disciples themselves held this confusion (Acts 1:6 — "Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?"). The angelic answer in Acts 1:11 is essentially: Yes — but not yet. He will return. Same Jesus, same manner, clouds.

Zechariah 14:5 paired with Jude 14–15 is a particularly powerful cross-reference cluster for showing that the OT always envisioned the Messiah arriving with a retinue. The question of who those holy ones are (angels? saints? both?) opens rich discussion on the resurrection, glorification, and the corporate nature of the parousia. Revelation 19:8 and 19:14 together suggest the armies of heaven include the bride — which ties eschatology directly to ecclesiology.

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5/10/26

Aim and Application principles when teaching ( Nehemiah 8:8, Ezra 7:10)

They read from the Book of the Law of God and clearly explained the meaning of what was being read, helping the people understand each passage. Nehemiah 8:8

...the gracious hand of his God was on him. This was because Ezra had determined to study and obey the Law of the Lord and to teach those decrees and regulations to the people of Israel. Ezra 7:9-10

Nehemiah 8:8 captures the full movement: reading the text, giving the sense (the meaning), and causing the people to understand. Ezra 7:10 is a strong parallel showing that study, doing, and teaching flow in deliberate sequence. 

"God's Word into our hearts and lives"

  • Deuteronomy 6:6 — the commands are to be "on your heart"
  • Psalm 119:11 — hiding God's Word in the heart to avoid sin
  • James 1:22-25 — being doers of the Word, not hearers only

"It is essential that truth makes a difference"

  • John 13:17 — blessed are those who know and do
  • Luke 6:46-49 — the wise and foolish builders; hearing without doing is building on sand
  • James 2:17 — faith without works is dead

"Sanctifying work of the Holy Spirit, not a human work"

  • John 17:17 — "Sanctify them in the truth; your word is truth" (Jesus praying to the Father)
  • 1 Thessalonians 5:23 — God himself sanctifies completely
  • Philippians 2:13 — it is God who works in you both to will and to act
  • Galatians 5:16-17 — walking by the Spirit, not the flesh

Aim


"Shift from analysis to truth the passage teaches"

  • 2 Timothy 2:15 — rightly handling (cutting straight) the word of truth
  • Nehemiah 8:8 — Ezra read distinctly and gave the sense, causing the people to understand
  • Acts 17:11 — the Bereans examined the Scriptures daily to see if these things were so

"What the original author intended to communicate"

  • 2 Peter 1:20-21 — no prophecy is of private interpretation; men spoke from God carried by the Spirit
  • 1 Corinthians 2:12-13 — we have received the Spirit so we might understand what God has freely given us
  • Hebrews 1:1-2 — God spoke through the prophets in many ways; intentional, purposeful communication

"The main lesson / overarching truth"

  • Matthew 22:37-40 — Jesus distills the entire law into its governing principles
  • Luke 24:27, 44-45 — Jesus opened the Scriptures to show the central thread running through Moses, Prophets, and Psalms
  • John 20:31 — John states his explicit authorial purpose in writing

"Identifying truth upon which to base our lives"

  • Matthew 7:24-25 — the wise man hears and acts on what he has heard; understanding precedes doing
  • Psalm 119:105 — the Word is a lamp and a light; truth orients and directs life
  • Proverbs 4:7 — get wisdom; though it cost all you have, get understanding

"Embracing life-changing truth benefits you and those you teach"

  • 1 Timothy 4:16 — watch your life and doctrine closely; persevere, because doing so saves both you and your hearers
  • Ezra 7:10 — Ezra set his heart to study the Law, do it, and teach it — the sequence matters
  • Proverbs 9:9 — instruct the wise and they become wiser still

"Examining thoughts, concepts, and themes pervasive in the passage"

  • Psalm 119:15-16 — meditating on God's precepts, fixing eyes on his ways
  • Psalm 1:2-3 — meditating on the law day and night produces fruitfulness
  • Joshua 1:8 — the Book of the Law shall not depart; meditate day and night so you may act carefully

"Truth about God or people — clarifying the key teaching"

  • Romans 15:4 — whatever was written was written for our instruction
  • Isaiah 55:10-11 — God's word does not return empty; it accomplishes his intended purpose
  • Ecclesiastes 12:9-10 — the Preacher sought to find words of delight and write words of truth uprightly

"Learning before acting (CATL emphasis)"

  • Colossians 1:9-10 — Paul prays for knowledge and understanding so they may walk worthy; knowing precedes walking
  • Hosea 4:6 — "my people are destroyed for lack of knowledge" — the absence of understanding has real consequences
  • John 8:32 — "you will know the truth, and the truth will set you free" — knowing comes first

Applications

"Prayerful, Spirit-led application"

  • Psalm 119:18 — "Open my eyes, that I may behold wondrous things out of your law"
  • 1 Corinthians 2:10-14 — the Spirit searches and reveals the deep things of God; the natural person cannot receive them
  • John 16:13 — the Spirit of truth guides into all truth

"Transformed by God's Word"

  • Romans 12:2 — "be transformed by the renewing of your mind"
  • Hebrews 4:12 — the Word is living and active, piercing soul and spirit
  • 2 Timothy 3:16-17 — Scripture is profitable for training in righteousness, that the man of God may be complete

"Conformed to Christlikeness"

  • Romans 8:29 — predestined to be conformed to the image of his Son
  • 2 Corinthians 3:18 — beholding the glory of the Lord, we are transformed into the same image from glory to glory — by the Spirit
  • Colossians 3:10 — renewed in knowledge after the image of its creator


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5/9/26

Conflict resolution God's way (Matt 18:15, Col 3:12-14)

“If another believer sins against you, go privately and point out the offense. If the other person listens and confesses it, you have won that person back. Matt 18:15

Since God chose you to be the holy people he loves, you must clothe yourselves with tenderhearted mercy, kindness, humility, gentleness, and patience. Make allowance for each other’s faults, and forgive anyone who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others. Above all, clothe yourselves with love, which binds us all together in perfect harmony. Col 3:12-14

The Matthew 18:15 passage is the structural backbone for almost the entire framework it's worth anchoring the whole discussion there. The Colossians 3:12–14 cluster covers the posture (humility, gentleness, patience, forgiveness, love) all in one tight unit, making it very useful for teaching the character required before any of the steps can work. 

Conflict is inevitable in a fallen world, but God uses it to reveal and develop spiritual maturity

  • James 1:2–4 — trials produce steadfastness and maturity
  • Romans 5:3–5 — suffering produces character and hope
  • Proverbs 27:17 — iron sharpens iron; conflict as sanctifying friction

Pray for solutions that honor God and all involved

  • Philippians 4:6–7 — present everything to God in prayer; the peace of God guards hearts
  • James 1:5 — ask God for wisdom when you lack it
  • 1 Timothy 2:1–2 — pray for all people; God desires peaceful, godly lives

Assume everyone has right motives

  • 1 Corinthians 13:7 — love believes the best, hopes the best
  • Philippians 2:3 — count others more significant than yourself
  • Romans 15:7 — accept one another as Christ accepted you

Address issues quickly, graciously, humbly, and face-to-face

  • Matthew 18:15 — go directly to the person, alone, first
  • Ephesians 4:26–27 — do not let the sun go down on your anger
  • Galatians 6:1 — restore gently, watching yourself
  • Proverbs 15:1 — a soft answer turns away wrath

Include only those involved

  • Matthew 18:15–17 — the full escalation process begins with just the two parties
  • Proverbs 11:13 — a gossip betrays confidence; a trustworthy person keeps a matter private
  • Proverbs 17:9 — whoever covers an offense promotes love; repeating it separates friends

Strive to protect unity

  • Ephesians 4:3 — make every effort to keep the unity of the Spirit
  • Colossians 3:13–14 — bear with one another; love binds everything in perfect harmony
  • John 17:20–23 — Jesus' own prayer for the unity of his people
  • Psalm 133:1 — how good and pleasant when brothers dwell in unity

The scope of Christ's grace enables us to forgive freely

  • Colossians 3:13 — forgive as the Lord forgave you
  • Ephesians 4:32 — be kind, tenderhearted, forgiving one another as God in Christ forgave you
  • Matthew 18:21–35 — the parable of the unmerciful servant; our forgiveness flows from being forgiven an unpayable debt
  • Luke 7:47 — the one forgiven much loves much
  • 2 Corinthians 5:18–19 — God reconciled us to himself and gave us the ministry of reconciliation


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