Personal Study

Each week, we publish prompts with daily Bible readings from the Old and New Testaments. These questions are designed to open up a deeper level of thought or conversation about what we read in the Bible. Work through them on your own, with others, or make them a part of your devotional life.


First Week of Lent

Feb 22 - 28

Genesis, Gospel of Mark

This week we are presented with Biblical characters who want God to demonstrate his greatness. They want him to prove his justice, his deity, even his frugality. In effect, they say, prove that you are God.

Such demands are easy to make from positions of privilege. Job had wealth. The Pharisees were ethnic and religious elites. Still, our insistence that God prove himself comes from something deeper, a sinful human nature, which reasons that a God who does not bless or recognize us in ways we expect must not be a great God at all.

Naturally, insolent questions bring about disappointing answers. Job is left wondering. The Pharisees harden their hearts. Even when he heals, cures, cleanses, and chases the demons away, the sinner is left unimpressed by the humble rabbi who does not look like the Son of God. And it’s easy for us to follow suit when we find ourselves facing God’s hard teaching and discipline.

But Jesus humbles himself to reach the unworthy, the sick in need of a physician. That humility culminates in his death on the cross for us, and his resurrection points ahead to the glory we we had always hoped to see. This week, as we see his transfiguration, we get a glimpse, a firm reminder that his glory is coming - but for now, while we live in this world, God shows his glory in weakness.

So, on the eve of the Lenten season, we prepare ourselves to labor and suffer and sacrifice in the steps of our Savior, but we do so with surprising joy, learning as Job learned that our Redeemer lives, and in our flesh, we will see God.

Second Week of Lent

Mar 1 - 7

Genesis, Gospel of Mark

In the time before the flood, the world has not only descended into evil, but has been consumed by it. The inclinations of the heart are “only evil every day.” This kind of sin grieves the LORD to the point that he regrets his own creation. It is a timely reminder during Lent, a season that reveals we are not so far above those evil inclinations as we might think. It forces us to reckon with our sin and its consequences.

The LORD is indeed grieved by our sin, but we have found favor in God’s eyes. The deluge, which would have destroyed us, now saves us on account of Jesus’ death and resurrection. It is sealed in our baptism. Jesus has turned the raging storm of our chaotic and discontented sin into a placid sea. We are a new creation.

Knowing this, Lent teaches us to pray with confidence. Though our sins are as real and wicked as illness, demons, and death itself, we know that they cower at a mere word or brush with Jesus. In him, we are made sons and daughters. The Father loves his creation. There is no need to turn anywhere else. So, we pray and believe.

During this season of repentance, the weight of our sin is always lifted by the infinite grace found in Jesus. May it embolden us all to live by faith and in righteousness before our Lord!