More Than Sacrifice

In Hosea 6, two verses sit side by side and illuminate one another with remarkable clarity. God declares that He desires faithful love rather than sacrifice and the knowledge of God rather than burnt offerings. Then, almost immediately, He says that Israel, like Adam, has violated the covenant. Suddenly the problem is seen in a different light. Israel’s failure was not primarily ceremonial but relational. Like Adam before her, she had not merely broken rules; she had betrayed the God who loved her. Yet Hosea’s message does not end with betrayal. The God who exposes the wound is the God who intends to heal it, and the story ultimately points beyond both Adam and Israel to Jesus Christ, the faithful Man who succeeds where all others have failed.

When God’s Word Finds a Voice

God’s word was never meant to remain silent on the page. When we speak what He has said—simply, faithfully, and without striving—we are not trying to create reality, but agreeing with it. “By His stripes you are healed. Amen.” And sometimes the quiet power lies not in saying it once, but in saying it again, and again, until the truth settles deeply within and the word itself does its work.

Romans 15, Christian Love, and the Authority of Scripture

Romans 15 calls Christians to patience and humility toward one another, but it also reminds us that the Scriptures remain the teacher of the Church. Christian love does not mean reshaping God’s Word to fit the spirit of the age; it means submitting ourselves together to the truth that was given for our instruction and our hope.

A Brand Snatched from the Fire

We often do not fail through ignorance, but through choice. We know what we should not do, and yet for a moment it is pleasurable, and we do it anyway. What follows is not indifference but misery — regret, shame, and the terrible feeling that we are hypocrites.
Zechariah’s vision of Joshua the high priest, clothed in filthy garments while the accuser stands beside him, speaks directly into this place. God does not deny the filth, but He silences the accuser and clothes Joshua anew. The verdict comes before the instruction. Grace comes before change. And because of that, there is now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.

Obedience, Authority, and the Limits of Law

In a time when good is increasingly called evil and evil is called good, Christians often struggle to know how faithfulness and obedience fit together. Drawing on Micah 6 and Romans 13, this article explores the biblical distinction between honouring authority and obeying unrighteous laws, offering clarity for believers seeking to live faithfully without rebellion in confusing times.