Editor’s Note: The AMI Quiet Time Devotionals from December 27-31 are provided by Pastor (intern) Andrew Kim who serves at Tapestry Church (Los Angeles).
Devotional Thoughts for Today
Hosea 11:8-12
“How can I give you up, O Ephraim? How can I hand you over, O Israel? How can I make you like Admah? How can I treat you like Zeboiim? My heart recoils within me; my compassion grows warm and tender. I will not execute my burning anger; I will not destroy Ephraim; For I am God and not a man, the Holy One in your midst, and I will not come in wrath. They shall go after the Lord; when he roars, his children shall come trembling from the west; they shall come trembling like birds from Egypt; and like doves from the land of Assyria, and I will return them to their homes, declares the Lord. Ephraim has surrounded me with lies, and the house of the Israel with deceit, but Judah still walks with God.”
In my early 20’s, I was going through a very difficult season while dealing with depression. Although I was attending church, I wasn’t necessarily looking for God. Instead, I sought comfort in all the wrong places; in fact, I rebelled against God in every way imaginable. But one Sunday, I found myself at a prayer meeting and God met me in a way that left no part of me untouched. And for the first time in many years I felt whole again. This was the beginning of a journey that continues even to this day. You see, this is a picture of grace—God’s undeserved favor bestowed upon someone who not only didn’t deserve it but wasn’t even looking for it!
In Hosea 11, we find a similar story. The chapter begins with a heartbreaking depiction of God’s relationship to Israel. He likens it to a son dismissing his own father through a series of betrayal and rebellion. And like many fathers would, God responds with judgment and discipline: the Assyrians will be sent to destroy Israel. If this were the end of the story, we would say, “What a fitting end; they deserve it!” However, in a surprising turn of events God does the unimaginable: He promises a day when they will be called back and be made His own forever. This is a perfect picture of grace—God saving a people who deserved nothing less than to be eternally exiled.
It bears repeating: God’s grace can reach anyone. Many feel as though their sins are too great for God to love them. Some of us struggle with an immense amount of guilt and believe that God has given up on us. But understand that no sin is too grievous or disturbing that God will forsake us. Just as He said to Israel, “How can I give you up, O Ephraim? How can I hand you over, O Israel?” He says to us, “How can I give YOU up?” The rest of the Bible tells the same story of God’s relentless love bestowed on us in His Son Jesus. Through the outstretched arms of Christ, God’s grace reaches out to even the most distant sinners. So let us approach the throne of God with boldness today because we can trust that His grace is greater than our sins, and that we are never too far from His love!
Prayer
Precious Savior, thank you for remaining faithful to me despite my sinful ways. Help me to understand more of your grace and love in a way that will bring transformation to my character and boldness in my relationship with You.
Bible Reading for Today: Philippians 2![]()
Lunch Break Study
Read Romans 5:8: “But God shows His love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”
Questions to Consider
- Why is the word “while” very important to this verse?
- How did God show us His love for us?
Notes
- The word “while” is important because it shows us that our salvation is never based on performance. God didn’t show us His love after we stopped being sinners but even as we were rebellious towards Him. This is an important point to understand. This is the crux of the Gospel message.
- God shows us His love through the sacrificial death of His Son Jesus Christ. This is the ultimate demonstration of God’s grace, offering us eternal life and communion with Him in spite of our sinful ways.
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Evening Reflection
Our culture is obsessed with performance. From the outset of our lives, we are taught that everything needs to be earned, whether it’s the relationships we want or the promotions we strive after. Many times this way of thinking bleeds into our relationship with God, where we feel the need to earn God’s love. Do you struggle with accepting God’s grace and love? Do you find it hard to approach God after you’ve sinned? Ask God to reveal His amazing grace to you, that you would be able to experience the freedom that only God’s grace can give!
The conclusion of a nationwide survey conducted in the early 2000’s by sociologist Christian Smith, who attempted to gauge the spiritual DNA of Americans, was unsettling: Most Americans believed in what he coined as moralistic therapeutic deism, meaning the goal of life is to feel good about oneself and that God exists to serve us. This shouldn’t surprise us since we live in a time when church services aim to entertain rather than to challenge; it’s more about keeping people in the pews happy, rather than challenging them to follow Christ regardless of the cost. Consequently, we’ve produced consumers, not disciples. So then, why did God save us?
Leprosy causes the loss of all physical sensations, including pain. Even an open wound, infected and full of puss, doesn’t hurt; if left untreated, it will disfigure the entire body, limb by limb. At the risk of offending some, many evangelicals suffer from spiritual leprosy. Living in this world that is becoming increasingly militant against God’s truth, we feel no tension, no indignation, and certainly no desire to fight back (that is, not with the weapons of this world).
Let’s be honest: We say God’s word is the most important source of truth for us, but do our core beliefs and values really reflect that? In the church we say, “Yes, that is a sin,” but as soon as we are out the door, we become politically correct. We sing these great songs about the greatness of God, but are we really all that different from the world? Are we not as selfish, insecure, and pleasure-driven as those who do not confess Christ?
Every year, TV advertisements seem to be funnier and cleverer during the holiday season. However, this is also the season for my least favorite ad, the animal cruelty commercial with the forlorn animals. While I don’t disagree with its necessity, I find myself annoyed every time it comes on because my mood is ruined –the heaviness is not what I am looking for during my Christmas programming.
When I was in school, my friends and I enjoyed some go-to study spots. But, just as typical irresponsible teenagers might, we left the clean-up responsibilities to others. Eventually, school administrators, fed up with the amount of clean-up needed, locked us out. The rest of the school year, wherever we went, we had to take more ownership for our presence and take greater care in picking up after ourselves. As Christians, we are frequently reminded that the Earth is not our home, as we should be pilgrims yearning for Heaven. However, we often use this as an excuse to leave the world’s chaos for someone else to deal with. Many of us are not interested in leaving this earth better than we found it: we don’t want to clean a place physically, or we don’t think we have the patience and time to restore someone in our community. Instead of tangling ourselves in the hard work of this world, it seems easier to live a quiet life before ending at Heaven. It should amaze and move us that God, beautiful and holy, came with a completely opposite intent. Though He could have lived in comfort with a blind eye to the world, He dwelt among the broken and sick, spending His life healing, restoring, and redeeming the world. Such was the importance of His work that, before returning to Heaven, He charged us to continue it and gave us access to the Spirit so we could have God’s presence and power. As we usher in Christmas this year, let us fix our eyes on our Savior, whose example should stir in us a desire to take part in God’s work of healing and restoring this Earth. May we yearn to live lives that echo the footsteps and the humility of our Lord, who did not come to earth to be served as a king, but came to serve.
What do you tend to do when you’ve messed up? We see movies that show the man insincerely buying flowers and chocolates in hopes of making up with his significant other—and we are baffled at his naiveté, thinking, Surely, he doesn’t think that forgiveness can be bought! Gifts (without sincere repentance) cannot appease broken relationships. We get that, but surprisingly, humans think that this works towards God. Subconsciously, this is what many of us do as we approach God, falling into the lie that we are allowed to continue with sin in our lives as long as we are attending church, giving tithes, serving and going on mission trips. We use these “acts of worship” to barter with God to justify sin. Yet God is not interested in those “acts of worship” if a repentant heart does not accompany them.
The purpose of Thanksgiving Day is to give thanks and be content. For Christians, it is to remember the faithfulness of God, as He is the source of every blessing. Yet the tragedy of Black Friday is that not even a day later, many who supposedly gave thanks and were “content” end up being consumed by greed and selfishness. Now, we might look at these people and think that we are not like them, but we are all similar to a certain degree. Although Thanksgiving was less than a month ago, I can already think of the many times I have forgotten the faithfulness of God. We all are guilty of forgetting His goodness.
Have you ever tried to live life in a way that you could get the “best of both worlds”? That’s what I tried to do when I was a freshman in college: While I absolutely loved the fellowship of my Christian community, I also loved the newfound freedom of being away from home by partying and partaking in many unwholesome activities. In my mind I wanted eternal life, but I also wanted to have the fun college life that the media portrayed—I wanted the best of both worlds. But by the end of the year, I was confronted by the futility of my thinking and knew there was no way I could straddle both worlds. God was calling me to either choose to follow the way of the world or the way of the Lord.
One of my favorite descriptions of God in Scripture is “the God who sees” (Gen.16:13). Hagar says this of the Lord when she felt hopeless in the face of Sarah’s harsh treatment; and God found her and cared for her. Abraham said something similar of the Lord when He provided a ram to be the replacement sacrifice for his son Isaac on Mount Sinai. There is great comfort for the people of God in knowing that He is neither deaf, dumb, nor blind – He sees all and knows all – and regardless of what circumstances suggest, He is not only present, but also active in our lives.