Week 18 — Table of Contents
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April 30, 2026
Judges 16:1–17:13; John 1:29–51; Proverbs 10:31–11:8
Judges 16:1–17:13 Samson’s end begins where his story always begins: with a woman who is not his and a desire he will not govern. Delilah is hired by the Philistine lords to discover the secret of his strength, and she asks him three times before he finally tells her the truth about the Nazirite vow and his uncut hair. What is striking is not that she eventually gets the answer but that he gives it. He knows what she is doing. He has watched her hand him over three times already. And still he tells her, because he is a man who has never learned that some things are not to be surrendered regardless of the pressure.
When his hair is cut and the Philistines seize him, the text delivers one of its most chilling lines: he did not know that the Lord had left him. He had used God’s power so casually and for so long that he could no longer tell the difference between having it and not having it. His eyes are gouged out, he is bound with bronze shackles, and he grinds grain in prison, the work of a beast. The man who burned the Philistines’ grain with three hundred foxes is now doing grain work himself.
But his hair begins to grow. And when the Philistines bring him out to perform at their festival to Dagon, he asks the boy leading him to let him feel the pillars. He prays the only genuine prayer we hear from him in the whole narrative: "Lord God, please remember me and please strengthen me only this once, O God." God answers, and Samson brings down the temple, killing more in his death than in his life. It is a mercy wrapped in judgment, a last gift to a man who spent his whole life spending gifts.
The Micah episode that follows is jarring in its mundaneness after the drama of Samson. A man steals silver from his mother, confesses, returns it, and she uses part of it to make an idol. He installs his own son as priest, then upgrades to a wandering Levite, convinced that God will now prosper him because he has secured professional religious services. The chapter is a portrait of religion entirely on human terms: shaped by convenience, structured around personal prosperity, and utterly disconnected from the God it claims to honor.
John 1:29–51 John the Baptist sees Jesus coming toward him and says, "Behold, the Lamb of God, who takes away the sin of the world." The sentence is one of the most compressed theological statements in the New Testament, connecting the entire sacrificial system of Israel to the person walking toward him on an ordinary day by the Jordan. He has not yet seen a miracle. He has not yet heard a sermon. He knows who this is because God told him: the one on whom the Spirit descends and remains is the one who baptizes with the Holy Spirit.
Two of John’s disciples hear him say this and follow Jesus. When Jesus turns and asks what they are seeking, they ask where He is staying. He says, "Come and see." It is one of the simplest invitations in Scripture and one of the most consequential. They spend the day with Him, and Andrew immediately goes to find his brother Simon and tells him they have found the Messiah. The good news does not wait for a proper evangelism strategy; it moves person to person, brother to brother, before the day is out.
Philip’s call follows the same pattern: Jesus finds him and says "Follow me," and Philip finds Nathanael and says "Come and see." Nathanael’s skepticism about anything good coming from Nazareth is answered not with argument but with the same invitation. When Jesus tells Nathanael He saw him under the fig tree before Philip called him, Nathanael’s skepticism collapses entirely and he confesses Jesus as Son of God and King of Israel. Jesus tells him he will see greater things: heaven opened and angels ascending and descending on the Son of Man. The Jacob’s ladder of Genesis has found its fulfillment.
Proverbs 10:31–11:8 The mouth of the righteous brings forth wisdom while the perverse tongue is cut off, and what the righteous speak is what survives. The lips and the tongue are not incidental to character but revelatory of it; what comes out of a person under pressure or in unguarded moments tells the truth about what has been formed inside. Proverbs keeps returning to this because the formation of the mouth is the work of a lifetime and the evidence of every other formative effort.
Honest scales and just weights are what the Lord requires, and a false balance is an abomination to Him. Commerce and covenant are not separate domains in Proverbs; the way a person conducts business is a theological statement about what they actually believe about God’s seeing and God’s care for those who could be cheated. Integrity in the small economic transactions of daily life is as much an act of worship as any sacrifice brought to the altar.
The righteous are delivered from trouble while the wicked fall into it instead, and the blameless person’s integrity guides them while the crookedness of the treacherous destroys them. These are not promises of a trouble-free life but descriptions of a moral architecture that is already in place. The person of integrity is not protected from difficulty but is guided through it by the very character that makes them who they are, while the person whose life is built on crookedness finds that what they built against others eventually turns on them.
Together Samson’s final prayer and Andrew’s first announcement share a surface similarity, both men speaking of something they have found or been given, but the trajectories could not be more different. Samson reaches for God only after everything is gone: sight, strength, freedom, dignity. Andrew reaches for his brother Simon the moment he finds Jesus, not from desperation but from the overflow of an encounter that immediately demands to be shared. One man’s relationship with God is transactional and terminal; the other’s is immediate, relational, and generative.
Micah’s homemade religion in Judges sits as a background warning behind the disciples’ eager "come and see" in John. Micah wants the form of God’s blessing without any actual encounter with God; he hires a Levite the way one hires a contractor, expecting professional services in exchange for payment. The disciples in John 1 are drawn not by a professional offering but by a person, and the invitation they receive and pass on is simply to come and be in His presence. The difference between those two approaches to God is the difference between religion and faith.
Proverbs ties it together at the level of daily life. Honest weights, truthful mouths, and integrity in commerce are not separate from worship but continuous with it. The person who follows Jesus and then cheats in business has not integrated what they claim to believe. The person who prays in desperation and then grinds through the consequences of years of self-indulgence is not an anomaly; they are simply Samson. The call in all three passages is toward a coherent life where what is believed, what is said, and what is done in the marketplace are all of one piece.
May 1, 2026
Judges 18:1–19:30; John 2:1–25; Psalm 54:1–7
Judges 18:1–19:30 The tribe of Dan, still looking for an inheritance because they failed to drive out their own enemies, sends spies who stop at Micah’s house and consult his Levite priest for a divine omen. When the spies return with six hundred men, they steal Micah’s idol and his priest without a moment’s hesitation, and the Levite goes with them eagerly because leading a tribe is a better position than serving one household. Micah pursues them and protests, and they threaten him with his life. He turns back, because what can he do. The whole episode is a portrait of religion as portable commodity, something to be acquired, carried off, and installed wherever it is most useful.
The Levite of chapter nineteen is a different man but a similarly dark story. He goes to retrieve his concubine from her father’s house, and the father detains them with hospitality until they finally leave late in the day. They stop at Gibeah in Benjamin, where an old man takes them in but the men of the city surround the house and demand the Levite be brought out for sexual violence. The Levite sends out his concubine instead, and she is gang-raped through the night and found dead on the threshold in the morning.
What happens next is as cold as anything in Scripture. The Levite loads her body on his donkey, goes home, and cuts her into twelve pieces, sending one to each tribe of Israel with the demand: consider it, take counsel, and speak. The act is designed to force a reckoning, and it does, but the way he tells the story in the next chapter omits his own role entirely. He is a man who will let someone else bear the full cost of his survival and then narrate the event in a way that makes him the victim. The book of Judges is not romanticizing the period before the monarchy; it is making the case that something has gone catastrophically wrong.
John 2:1–25 The wedding at Cana is the first of Jesus’ signs in John’s Gospel, and its setting matters. He does not begin His public ministry with a healing or an exorcism but with wine at a wedding feast, an act that belongs entirely to the category of abundance and celebration rather than necessity. Mary notices the wine has run out and brings it to Jesus, and His response, "Woman, what does this have to do with me? My hour has not yet come," is less a rebuff than a disclosure: what He is about to do will carry implications far beyond this particular feast.
He tells the servants to fill six stone water jars with water, each holding twenty to thirty gallons, and then to draw some out and take it to the master of the feast. The master tastes wine, the best wine, and calls the bridegroom over to commend him for saving the good wine for last. Only the servants know where the wine came from. The sign is quiet, generous, and completely unnecessary by any measure of urgency. It is exactly the kind of thing you do when you are not performing for an audience but simply responding to a moment of genuine need with the full resources at your disposal.
The cleansing of the temple that follows is a sharp tonal shift. Jesus drives out the money-changers and the animal sellers with a whip of cords and overturns their tables, declaring that His Father’s house is not a market. When the authorities demand a sign to justify this disruption, He speaks of destroying this temple and raising it in three days, which they hear as architectural hubris. John tells us He was speaking of His body, and that the disciples remembered this after the resurrection and believed. The sign He offers the authorities is not a performance for their satisfaction but a pointer to the event that will make everything make sense, provided they are willing to wait for it and willing to look.
Psalm 54:1–7 David cries out for God to save him by His name and vindicate him by His might, because strangers have risen against him and ruthless men seek his life without regard for God. The situation is urgent and the prayer is direct. David does not build to his request through extended praise or careful theological framing; he states his need and appeals immediately to God’s character. He is not being disrespectful; he is being honest, which is its own form of reverence.
He declares his confidence that God is his helper and the upholder of his life before the deliverance has arrived. This is the structure of biblical faith throughout the psalms: the affirmation of trust is not the conclusion of the prayer after the answer comes but a declaration made in the middle of the crisis. He then commits to a freewill offering and thanks God for His deliverance, speaking of it in the past tense even though he is still in the present trouble. The eye of faith looks at what God has always done and speaks of the coming deliverance as if it has already arrived.
Together The Levite of Judges 19 and Jesus at the temple cleansing are both responding to desecration, but their responses reveal everything. The Levite’s house has been violated in the most terrible way, and his response is to use the body of the one who bore the violence as a political instrument, cutting her into pieces and sending her out to make a point, while never once naming his own complicity. Jesus enters His Father’s house and finds it turned into a market, and He clears it with a whip of cords and the declaration of whose house it is. One man turns someone else’s suffering into leverage for his own purposes; the other takes the wound of desecration personally and acts out of the integrity of who He is.
The wedding at Cana stands in quiet contrast to everything in Judges 18–19. In Judges, hospitality becomes a trap, possession is seized rather than given, and women are traded as objects in desperate situations. At Cana, Jesus quietly ensures that a young couple’s celebration is not diminished, turning the ordinary anxiety of running out of wine into an occasion for the first glimpse of His glory. He gives abundance where there was lack, and He does it without fanfare, visible only to the servants who obeyed and to the disciples who believed.
Psalm 54 holds the posture that both Judges and John are implicitly calling for: the direct, honest appeal to a God who sees, who helps, and who delivers, made before the answer arrives. The Levite never prays. The disciples at Cana simply trust. David speaks of God’s deliverance in the past tense while the enemy is still at the gate. That confidence is not wishful thinking but faith rooted in who God has shown Himself to be, and it is the thread that holds every one of these disparate stories together.
May 2, 2026
Judges 20:1–21:25; John 3:1–21; Psalm 55:1–11
Judges 20:1–21:25 The final two chapters of Judges are among the darkest in all of Scripture. All Israel assembles against Benjamin because of the Gibeah atrocity, and the Benjaminites defend the men of Gibeah rather than hand them over for justice. The tribe chooses solidarity with wickedness over accountability, and what follows is catastrophic. Israel asks God twice whether to go up against Benjamin and is told yes, and twice they are defeated with enormous losses before they finally prevail on the third assault. Even just war, divinely authorized, carries a terrible cost.
After the battle, Israel discovers it has nearly wiped out an entire tribe, and collective grief follows collective destruction. They had sworn not to give their daughters to Benjamin in marriage, which means the tribe has no way to continue. The solutions Israel devises to get around its own oath are themselves morally troubling: they find a town that did not send men to the assembly and kill all its inhabitants except the virgins, whom they give to Benjamin. When this is not enough, they advise the remaining Benjaminites to hide in vineyards and seize women from Shiloh during their annual festival. The book of Judges ends not with a resolution but with a summary: in those days there was no king in Israel. Everyone did what was right in their own eyes. The reader understands by now exactly what that looks like, and it is not a romantic picture of freedom.
John 3:1–21 Nicodemus comes to Jesus at night, and his opening words are careful: he knows Jesus is a teacher come from God because no one could do the signs He does unless God is with him. He is feeling his way toward something he cannot yet name. Jesus does not respond to the compliment but goes straight to the thing Nicodemus most needs to hear: unless one is born again, he cannot see the kingdom of God. The directness is not unkind; it is the directness of a physician who will not pretend the diagnosis is anything other than what it is.
The conversation moves through misunderstanding to disclosure. Nicodemus takes "born again" literally and stumbles; Jesus redirects to birth from water and Spirit and the freedom of the wind that blows where it will. He is describing a transformation that is entirely outside human management or achievement, something that happens to a person from the outside rather than something a person generates from within. The teacher of Israel, who has made his life in the business of understanding God’s ways, has not understood this. Jesus says so gently but without apology.
The famous verse that follows, "For God so loved the world that he gave his only Son," is embedded in a context of judgment averted rather than simply blessing offered. God did not send His Son to condemn the world but to save it, and the judgment that remains falls on those who prefer the darkness because their deeds are evil. Light has come into the world, the very thing John’s prologue announced, and the response of each person to that light is the decisive thing. Nicodemus himself is a man who comes in the dark, who has not yet stepped into the full light; John will show us his journey completing itself much later in the Gospel.
Psalm 55:1–11 David’s prayer here is saturated with the anguish of betrayal, not by an enemy but by a companion and close friend. The terror he feels is physical: his heart is in anguish, the terrors of death fall on him, fear and trembling overwhelm him. He wishes he had the wings of a dove so he could fly away and be at rest, escape the storm and the tempest. The desire to flee rather than face what is coming is one of the most honest impulses in the psalter, and David does not pretend he does not feel it.
The city itself has become violent, with strife and iniquity and malice and oppression in its midst. The public square, the walls, the marketplaces are all infected. And the worst of it is that the one doing this is not a stranger but a familiar friend, one who walked to the house of God with David in the throng. The psalm does not resolve to calm in these verses but stays in the middle of the distress, giving the anguish full voice before it moves anywhere else.
Together The end of Judges and the beginning of John’s Gospel together make the case for exactly what Jesus tells Nicodemus: something more than better behavior or clearer leadership is needed. Judges ends with a tribal civil war that nearly eliminates one of Israel’s twelve tribes, initiated by a sexual atrocity, sustained by misplaced solidarity, and resolved through further atrocities dressed up as creative problem-solving. Everyone thought they were doing what was right. That is precisely the problem. Moral self-direction without transformation from above is not a path to a better outcome; it is a path to Judges 21.
Nicodemus is not a bad man. He is a serious man, a student of Scripture, a ruler of Israel who takes the signs seriously enough to come and investigate. But Jesus tells him that none of that is sufficient, that what is needed is not more or better religion but a new birth from above that only the Spirit can accomplish. The darkness that covers Judges is not lifted by more law or stronger leadership but by the very thing Jesus is announcing: light has come into the world, and it is available to anyone willing to come out of the darkness to meet it.
Psalm 55 holds the emotional truth of all of this: that living in a world organized around self-determined right and wrong, especially when those closest to us participate in the betrayal, is genuinely terrifying. The answer David reaches for, and the answer Jesus offers Nicodemus, is not a political solution or a therapeutic one but a personal one: God himself entering the situation, as present help for the one who prays and as incarnate Son for the one who will be born again. The darkness does not get the final word, but it is real, and the psalms are honest enough to say so.
May 3, 2026
Ruth 1:1–2:23; John 3:22–36; Psalm 55:12–23
Ruth 1:1–2:23 The book of Ruth opens in famine and ends in harvest, and almost everything that matters happens in between. Naomi and her husband leave Bethlehem for Moab because there is no bread in the house of bread, and in Moab her husband dies, her sons marry Moabite women, and then both sons die too. She is left with two daughters-in-law, no male provider, and a bitter assessment of what God has done to her. When she hears that the Lord has visited His people and given them food, she prepares to go home and releases her daughters-in-law to go back to their own families and their own gods.
Orpah kisses her goodbye, which is reasonable and generous. Ruth cleaves to her, which is something else entirely. The famous words of Ruth’s loyalty, "Where you go I will go, where you lodge I will lodge, your people shall be my people and your God my God," are not the product of religious instruction or covenant education. They are the declaration of a Moabite woman who has seen something in Naomi and her God worth attaching herself to, even at the cost of everything familiar. The narrator does not explain what Ruth saw. The reader is left to wonder at a faith that appears fully formed from the outside.
In Bethlehem, Naomi tells the women of the city to call her Mara, meaning bitter, because the Almighty has dealt very bitterly with her. She is not wrong about what has happened, and the narrative does not rebuke her for naming it accurately. What she cannot yet see is that Ruth is standing beside her, and that Ruth going out to glean in the fields will lead her into the field of a man named Boaz, a relative of her husband’s family and a man of great worth. The narrator adds a detail that Naomi does not know: it is the LORD who directs Ruth’s steps to that particular field. Providence moves beneath the surface of a story that looks, from the inside, like ordinary need and ordinary work.
John 3:22–36 John the Baptist’s disciples are troubled because Jesus is also baptizing and everyone is going to Him. They come to John with what sounds like a complaint wrapped in a question. John’s response is one of the most luminous pieces of self-knowledge in the New Testament. He does not defend himself or his diminishing ministry; he tells a story about a bridegroom and his friend. The friend of the bridegroom stands and hears him and rejoices greatly at the bridegroom’s voice, and John says this joy is now complete. He has heard the voice he was sent to prepare the way for, and now his role is to decrease.
The statement "He must increase, but I must decrease" is simple enough to memorize and deep enough to spend a lifetime working out. John has built something real: a ministry, a following, a reputation for holiness that reached even to Herod’s court. Watching it diminish in favor of another would be, for most people, a source of grievance. For John it is the fulfillment of his purpose. He was always the voice, not the word; always the friend, not the bridegroom; always the lamp, not the light.
The passage closes with a meditation on the Son: the one who comes from above is above all, the Father loves the Son and has given all things into His hand, and whoever believes in the Son has eternal life while whoever does not obey the Son will not see life but the wrath of God remains on him. The stakes of the encounter with Jesus are laid out plainly. This is not a teacher among teachers but the one in whom all of God’s self-giving is concentrated, and the response to Him is the decisive question of every human life.
Psalm 55:12–23 The betrayal David describes intensifies as he names it more specifically: it was a man his equal, his companion, his familiar friend, one with whom he took sweet counsel and walked to the house of God in the throng. The intimacy of the betrayal is what makes it devastating. Enemies are expected to be hostile; the wound from a friend cuts through the defenses an enemy never reaches.
David calls for judgment on the wicked and the treacherous, and then makes the move that transforms the psalm from lament into trust. He calls the community to cast their burden on the Lord, promising that He will sustain them and will never permit the righteous to be moved. David is now speaking not just from his own experience but offering the counsel he himself has had to receive: give it to God, do not carry it yourself, He is strong enough for what you are bringing. The man who wished for dove’s wings to fly away has found a better refuge.
He ends by declaring his own trust: he will trust in God. He names what his enemies will face and declares his own confidence in the same breath. The contrast is not vindictive but clarifying: there is a difference between those who trust God and those who do not, and that difference is not abstract. It shows up in what a person does when they are betrayed, when they are outnumbered, when they have wished they could disappear. David stays, prays, and trusts, and the psalm records both the full weight of the anguish and the full reality of the trust.
Together Ruth and John the Baptist are linked by a quality that is rare and difficult to name: they both know exactly what they are for, and they give themselves to it completely regardless of what it costs them. Ruth’s declaration to Naomi is a relinquishment of every claim she has on her own future. John’s declaration that he must decrease is a relinquishment of the ministry he has built. Both of them hand over the thing they might reasonably have held onto, and both of them do it with something that reads not like resignation but like joy fully clarified.
Psalm 55 provides the emotional scaffolding beneath both of those acts of relinquishment. The man who wishes for wings to fly away, who names the pain of a friend’s betrayal with brutal honesty, who stays in the city of strife rather than escaping it: he is the same man who says "cast your burden on the Lord." The trust is not achieved by suppressing the anguish but by carrying it all the way to God and leaving it there. Ruth carries her grief over her husband and her homeland all the way to Bethlehem and lays it down in Boaz’s field. John carries his awareness of his own diminishment all the way to the statement of his joy.
Providence is the theological thread connecting all three. Ruth "happens" upon the right field. John is sent before the right person. David’s trust is placed in the God who neither sleeps nor abandons those who cast their weight on Him. None of them can see the full picture; all of them act as if the one who holds the picture can be trusted. That is not a simple faith. It is a faith that has passed through real loss and real grief and come out the other side still holding on.
May 4, 2026
Ruth 3:1–4:22; John 4:1–26; Proverbs 11:9–18
Ruth 3:1–4:22 Naomi’s plan for Ruth is bold and potentially scandalous: she instructs Ruth to wash and anoint herself, put on her best clothes, go to the threshing floor where Boaz will be, wait until he has eaten and drunk and lies down, then uncover his feet and lie down. She is asking Ruth to make a claim on the custom of levirate kinship, essentially proposing that Boaz act as a kinsman-redeemer for the family line. It is a plan that requires Ruth to take a real risk, placing herself in a situation where her reputation and safety both depend on Boaz being the man Naomi believes him to be.
Boaz is exactly that man. He wakes in the night, finds Ruth at his feet, hears her request, and responds with blessing rather than rebuke. He calls her kindness greater than her former kindness, noting that she did not go after young men as she might have done. He promises to act as her kinsman-redeemer, but he is honest: there is a nearer relative who has the first claim. He sends her home before dawn with six measures of barley so she does not return to her mother-in-law empty-handed, and he settles the legal matter at the gate the same day.
The nearer redeemer steps back when he learns the deal includes Ruth the Moabite, and Boaz redeems the property and takes Ruth as his wife before all the witnesses at the gate. The child born to them is Obed, who is the father of Jesse, who is the father of David. The book that began with a Moabite woman choosing to attach herself to Israel’s God ends with that woman woven into the ancestry of Israel’s greatest king and, beyond him, into the line from which the Messiah will come. What looked like a series of small, faithful, ordinary choices turns out to have been the thread God was weaving through the darkness of the judges period toward something that would change the world.
John 4:1–26 Jesus’ conversation with the Samaritan woman at Jacob’s well is one of the longest one-on-one dialogues in the Gospels, and it crosses every available social boundary: Jew and Samaritan, man and woman, rabbi and the morally complex. He asks her for water, which is itself a breach of convention, and uses her surprise as the entry point for talking about living water that will become a spring welling up to eternal life. She hears it as a practical offer at first and wants it so she will not have to keep coming to the well, and Jesus gently redirects her by asking her to call her husband.
When she says she has no husband, He tells her she is right: she has had five husbands and the man she is with now is not her husband. He says it without judgment in the text, simply as fact, and she does not deny it. She pivots to theology, asking about the right place to worship, and Jesus answers her with a disclosure He has not yet made to anyone in John’s Gospel: God is spirit, and those who worship Him must worship in spirit and truth, and the hour is coming when neither this mountain nor Jerusalem will be the required location. The conversation that began at the surface level of water and thirst has moved to the deepest question of all.
When she says she knows the Messiah is coming and will tell them all things, Jesus tells her plainly: "I who speak to you am he." This is the first explicit self-disclosure of Jesus’ messianic identity in John’s Gospel, and He gives it not to a disciple, not to a religious leader, not to someone whose reception of it would be strategically advantageous, but to a Samaritan woman of complicated personal history at a well in the heat of the day. The kingdom of God has a way of showing up exactly where and with whom it is least expected.
Proverbs 11:9–18 The godless person destroys his neighbor with speech while the righteous person is delivered by knowledge. This contrast between destructive and constructive use of the mouth appears again because Proverbs insists that what we say to and about each other is not a secondary matter but a primary one. The person who uses words to tear down rather than build up is doing something that has consequences not just for the one they wound but for the whole community they inhabit.
Where the righteous prosper, a city rejoices, and the righteous person’s blessing lifts the city while the mouth of the wicked tears it down. The vision of Proverbs is consistently communal: wisdom and folly are not just personal attributes with private consequences but forces that shape the shared life of every community where they operate. The person who walks with integrity is not just personally flourishing; they are contributing to a social fabric that benefits everyone around them, often in ways they will never fully see.
A person who lacks sense gives a pledge and puts up security for a neighbor, taking on obligations without the wisdom to assess what they are assuming. The righteous person is gracious; the wicked person only gets gain. But the one who sows righteousness gets a sure reward, while the one who pursues evil finds it coming back on them. The harvest of a life is not immediate, which is why Proverbs keeps insisting on the long view: what you are building, day by day, in the texture of your speech and your choices, is the crop you will eventually eat.
Together The kinsman-redeemer at the heart of Ruth and the living water at the heart of John 4 are describing the same theological reality from two different angles. Boaz redeems what was lost, covers what was exposed, restores what had been stripped away, at personal cost and in the full light of public accountability. Jesus offers the woman at the well something that will permanently satisfy the thirst that has driven her through five husbands and into a sixth arrangement that is not marriage: not more water from the well but a spring arising from within. Both stories are about restoration reaching someone who had reason to expect nothing.
The Samaritan woman and Ruth are both outsiders by the standards of the communities they find themselves in. Ruth is a Moabite in Israel; the Samaritan woman is theologically suspect and personally compromised in the eyes of any Jewish observer. Neither of them receives their gift on the basis of social standing or religious credential. Ruth receives hers because she chose faithfulness over comfort and a kinsman-redeemer recognized her worth. The woman at the well receives hers because the Messiah sat down at a well and started a conversation.
Proverbs insists that these stories are not exceptions to how things work but illustrations of a principle: righteousness has consequences that extend far beyond the person practicing it, and grace given becomes grace multiplied. Boaz’s one act of redemption produces Obed, Jesse, David, and ultimately the Messiah. Jesus’ conversation with one woman sends her back to a whole city, saying "Come, see a man who told me all that I ever did." What starts at a well with one thirsty person can water a city before the day is out.
May 5, 2026
1 Samuel 1:1–2:26; John 4:27–42; Psalm 56:1–13
1 Samuel 1:1–2:26 Hannah’s barrenness is presented as the LORD’s doing, which is simultaneously difficult theologically and consistent with the narrative pattern of the entire Bible: the most significant births in Scripture almost always begin with a closed womb. Peninnah provokes her year after year, and the pain is not softened by Elkanah’s well-meaning but inadequate love: "Am I not more to you than ten sons?" He is asking her to receive something real but insufficient in place of the thing she most deeply wants. She does not answer him. She goes to the temple and prays.
Her prayer at Shiloh is one of the most raw and honest in Scripture. She weeps bitterly, she vows the child to God before he is born, and she prays silently enough that Eli the priest assumes she is drunk. His rebuke and her response are a small masterpiece of misunderstanding and grace: she is not drunk, she is pouring out her soul to the LORD, and when Eli understands he sends her away with a blessing and she leaves with her face changed. She eats, which is the first physical sign that something has shifted in her. Faith does not wait for the answer to arrive before it begins to live differently.
Samuel is born, weaned, and brought to the temple, and Hannah’s song in chapter two is one of the great theological poems of the Old Testament. It is a song about reversal: the barren bears seven, the hungry are fed, the poor are raised from the dust, the mighty are brought low, the feeble are clothed with strength, the LORD kills and brings to life. This song, which Mary will echo in the Magnificat, is not merely about Hannah’s personal story but about the way God characteristically operates in history, overturning the assumptions of the powerful and the comfortable by working through the small, the overlooked, and the empty. Samuel grows in stature and in favor with the LORD and with men, a phrase that will be used later of another child dedicated to God’s service.
John 4:27–42 The disciples return from the city to find Jesus talking with the Samaritan woman and are astonished, though none of them asks the questions they are thinking. The woman leaves her water jar and goes back to the city to tell everyone about the man who told her everything she ever did, inviting them to come and see. She does not go back as an expert on Jesus; she goes back as a witness to an encounter, offering her own experience and asking a question rather than making a declaration. That open-ended invitation, "Could this be the Christ?", is exactly the right evangelistic posture.
While she is gone, the disciples offer Jesus food and He declines, saying He has food they do not know about. They wonder whether someone brought Him something to eat while they were away, and He tells them His food is to do the will of the one who sent Him and to finish His work. He then speaks of the harvest that is already white: others have labored, and they are entering into that labor. He is not simply talking about the Samaritans coming across the field toward them at that moment, though He is certainly including that. He is describing a posture toward mission that sees the work of God already underway before any of His workers arrive.
Many Samaritans believe because of the woman’s testimony, and when they come to Jesus they ask Him to stay, and He stays two days. After that they tell the woman that they no longer believe because of what she said but because they have heard for themselves, and they know that this is indeed the Savior of the world. The movement from witness to personal encounter to communal confession is the pattern the Gospel of John will follow from here to the end. Faith that begins in someone else’s testimony is meant to move toward personal encounter, and personal encounter is meant to overflow into communal declaration.
Psalm 56:1–13 David is in the hands of the Philistines at Gath when he writes this psalm, and his opening is urgent: "Be gracious to me, O God, for man tramples on me; all day long an attacker oppresses me." He is surrounded, outnumbered, and afraid, and he does not pretend otherwise. Then he inserts the refrain that he will repeat in various forms throughout the psalm: "When I am afraid, I put my trust in you." The word "when" is important. This is not a man who never fears; it is a man who has found where to go with the fear.
He describes his enemies conspiring, watching, waiting for his life, and then prays for God to count his tossings and keep his tears in His bottle, as recorded in His book. The image of God collecting his tears is one of the most intimate in the psalter: not a God who demands strength and scorns weakness, but a God who notices every tear and keeps account of every troubled night. The suffering is not invisible, and the one suffering is not alone.
He declares that in God, whose word he praises, he will not be afraid. What can flesh do to him? He commits to thank offerings and to walking before God in the light of life, because God has delivered his soul from death. As with other psalms in this mode, the deliverance is spoken of as already accomplished before it has arrived. The declaration of trust reaches forward into what has not yet happened and speaks of it as certain, because the character of God is more reliable than the outcome of any present danger.
Together Hannah’s prayer in the temple and the Samaritan woman’s testimony in the city share a quality that distinguishes genuine faith from mere religious observance: both of them go to the right source with the full weight of their actual situation, and both of them come back changed. Hannah goes in weeping and comes out eating. The Samaritan woman goes in to draw water and comes back without her jar, carrying something that cannot be contained in stone. Neither of them has fully arrived; Hannah’s son is not yet born, and the Samaritans are still processing their encounter. But both have been set in motion by an encounter with the living God.
Psalm 56 provides the internal landscape of what it feels like to live between the prayer and the answer, between the encounter and its full fruit. David is afraid and says so, then trusts and says so, both in the same breath. That is not contradiction but the actual texture of faith: not the absence of fear but the consistent choice of where to take it. Hannah chooses to take her grief to the temple rather than into a permanent bitterness. The Samaritan woman takes her complicated history into the most honest conversation she has ever had. David takes his fear into prayer and finds that God keeps his tears in a bottle.
Samuel grows in stature and in favor. The Samaritans come to know the Savior of the world for themselves. The psalmist walks before God in the light of life. All three of these outcomes begin in the same place: someone bringing what they actually have, in all its insufficiency and grief and fear, to the one who is actually sufficient. The invitation in all three passages is not to have it together before approaching God but to approach, and to trust that what He does with what we bring will be far better than what we could have managed ourselves.
May 6, 2026
1 Samuel 2:27–4:22; John 4:43–5:15; Psalm 57:1–6
1 Samuel 2:27–4:22 The man of God who speaks against Eli’s house delivers one of the most sobering prophetic messages in the early books: Eli has honored his sons above God, allowing them to grow fat on the offerings meant for the LORD, and therefore the priesthood will be stripped from his line. The judgment is precise in its indictment: Eli knew what his sons were doing and he failed to restrain them. He did not participate in their corruption, but his passivity in the face of it made him complicit. The leader who will not act on what he knows is not neutral; he is simply choosing inaction over obedience.
Samuel’s first prophetic word is this same message confirmed. He hears his name called in the night three times before Eli understands what is happening and instructs him to respond: "Speak, Lord, for your servant hears." When Samuel delivers the message to Eli in the morning, Eli’s response is striking: "It is the LORD. Let him do what seems good to him." It reads as resignation, but it is also a kind of theological submission that stands in contrast to the manipulative use of the ark that follows. Eli knows who God is and bows to His word even when the word is against himself.
The Philistines capture the ark after defeating Israel twice, and Eli’s sons Hophni and Phinehas are killed in the battle, fulfilling the first part of the prophecy. When the messenger arrives with the news, Eli falls backward off his seat at the mention of the ark being taken, breaks his neck, and dies. The Phinehas’s wife, in labor when the news arrives, names her son Ichabod, meaning "the glory has departed," and dies in childbirth. The glory of God cannot be manipulated, stored, or deployed as a weapon by people whose relationship with God is entirely transactional. The ark is not a talisman; it is the symbol of a presence that will not be coerced.
John 4:43–5:15 Jesus returns to Galilee and is welcomed there, though He notes that a prophet has no honor in his own hometown. A royal official comes from Capernaum to ask Him to heal his son, who is close to death, and Jesus’ initial response seems almost testing: "Unless you see signs and wonders you will not believe." But the man does not argue or perform; he simply says, "Sir, come down before my child dies." Jesus sends him home with a word: his son will live.
The man believes the word and goes. He is on his way home when his servants meet him with the news that the boy lives, and he asks when the fever left and discovers it was the exact hour Jesus spoke. He and his whole household believe. The story is structured around a faith that is tested and found genuine: first in the man’s willingness to come at all, then in his refusal to be put off by the initial response, then in his willingness to go home on the basis of a word with no visible confirmation. He does not demand that Jesus accompany him; he trusts the word. That trust, not the miracle, is what the narrative commends.
The healing at the pool of Bethesda introduces a different kind of encounter. The man has been ill for thirty-eight years and is lying among the colonnades waiting for a moment of healing that has never come. Jesus asks him whether he wants to be healed, which seems obvious but is not: a person can become accommodated to their condition to the degree that health requires more change than illness does. The man answers obliquely, explaining why healing has not been possible. Jesus simply tells him to take up his bed and walk, and he does. When the Jewish leaders object to the Sabbath violation, the man cannot even say who healed him because Jesus has moved on. Later Jesus finds him in the temple and tells him to sin no more lest something worse befall him. The connection between his illness and his personal history is left suggestive rather than explicit, but the warning is clear.
Psalm 57:1–6 David cries out for mercy from a cave, hiding from Saul, and his opening metaphor is one of taking shelter under the shadow of God’s wings until the destroying storms have passed. The image is maternal and intimate, not the language of a military campaign but of a small creature seeking cover under something large enough to provide it. He sends out his steadfast love and faithfulness to rescue him, speaking of God’s attributes as if they are emissaries dispatched on his behalf.
He is in the midst of lions, people whose teeth are spears and arrows and whose tongues are sharp swords, and he cries out in the middle of it that God’s glory be above all the earth. The doxology in the center of the danger is not detachment from reality but a reorientation of perspective: whatever is happening at ground level, there is a level above it where God’s glory is the governing reality, and David chooses to address that level even from the floor of a cave. The net spread for his feet belongs to his enemies; they have dug a pit and fallen into it themselves. The pattern Proverbs keeps describing is one David keeps living.
Together Eli’s sons and the man at the pool of Bethesda are both portraits of people whose relationship with something sacred has become corrupted by familiarity. Hophni and Phinehas grew up at the altar and treated it as a source of personal advantage. The man at the pool has been there long enough that he can describe exactly why healing has not come, as if the system’s failure is simply his condition. Both are proximate to something holy and entirely disconnected from its actual power.
The royal official in John 4 is the counterpoint: he comes from outside the religious establishment, makes a long journey, and trusts a word he cannot verify until he is halfway home. He does not have the familiarity that breeds contempt; he has the urgency of a parent whose child is dying, and that urgency creates a simplicity of faith that the man at the pool, after thirty-eight years of waiting in the right place, seems to have lost.
David in the cave is not in the right place. He is hiding from the king who wants him dead, surrounded by people whose words are weapons, and yet his posture is one of active trust: "Be exalted, O God, above the heavens; let your glory be over all the earth." The geography of faith is not determined by location. Eli’s sons were in the tabernacle and were far from God. David was in a cave and was in the presence of God. The question is never where we are standing but what we are trusting, and that question Eli’s sons answered wrong and the royal official answered right.
May 7, 2026
1 Samuel 5:1–7:17; John 5:16–30; Psalm 57:7–11
1 Samuel 5:1–7:17 The Philistines place the captured ark in the temple of Dagon and find their god face-down before it the next morning. They set Dagon upright, and the following morning he is face-down again with his head and hands broken off on the threshold. The narrative is almost comic in its implications: the god who cannot keep himself upright in the presence of the LORD requires human help just to stand, and even then he cannot manage it through the night. The broken threshold becomes a reminder that Dagon’s inability to stand before the LORD is built into the very structure of the building.
The ark moves from city to city among the Philistines, and wherever it goes it brings tumors and death. The Philistines want it gone but are careful about how they return it, consulting their priests about a guilt offering and a test: put the ark on a cart with gold figures representing their afflictions, hitch it to two milk cows that have never been yoked, and see whether the cows go toward Israel or wander. The cows go straight to Beth-shemesh, lowing as they go, which is both a miracle and a small piece of agricultural comedy: nursing mothers who have never been yoked walking away from their calves in a straight line is not natural behavior, and everyone who sees it knows it.
Samuel leads Israel in a genuine renewal at Mizpah, where they draw water, pour it out before the LORD, fast, and confess their sin. When the Philistines advance during the assembly, God thunders against them with a great sound and throws them into confusion, and Israel pursues and defeats them. The stone Samuel sets up is called Ebenezer: "Till now the LORD has helped us." The word "till now" looks backward at everything and forward at everything still to come. It is a memorial with a direction.
John 5:16–30 Jesus’ response to the accusation that He violated the Sabbath is one of the most explicit claims to divine authority in the Gospels: "My Father is working until now, and I am working." The Jewish leaders understand exactly what He is saying and seek to kill Him for it, because He is making himself equal with God. Jesus does not retreat from the claim; He expands it, describing a relationship with the Father that is intimate, continuous, and total.
He describes a Son who can do only what He sees the Father doing, who does whatever the Father does, whom the Father loves and shows all that He Himself is doing. This is not a subordinate executing orders but a Son in whom the Father’s whole life is being expressed. The Father has given all judgment to the Son, so that all may honor the Son just as they honor the Father. These are claims so large that they cannot be absorbed gradually; they require a decisive response, belief or rejection, and the text makes clear that the moment of that decision is now.
The passage closes with a description of the resurrection: the hour is coming when the dead will hear the voice of the Son of God and live, and all who are in the tombs will come out, some to the resurrection of life and some to the resurrection of judgment. Jesus does not separate the offer of life from the reality of judgment; they are two faces of the same authority that the Father has given Him. This is not a gentle spiritual teacher offering helpful perspectives; this is the one in whom the Father’s own life and authority are fully vested, speaking plainly about what is at stake.
Psalm 57:7–11 My heart is steadfast, O God, my heart is steadfast. The repetition is not redundancy but resolve, the kind of statement a person makes when they need to hear themselves say it twice. David will sing and make melody; he calls his soul to awake, he calls the dawn to come. The posture is one of deliberate activation, choosing praise before the circumstance has changed rather than waiting for relief to arrive before offering thanks.
He will give thanks among the peoples and sing praises among the nations, because God’s steadfast love is great to the heavens and His faithfulness to the clouds. The thanksgiving is not private but public and expansive, addressed not just to the congregation of Israel but to the nations. The God who is great enough to be praised among all peoples is the same God who shelters David in the shadow of His wings, and the smallness of the one hiding and the greatness of the one hiding him are both held in the same song.
Together The broken Dagon on his own threshold and the claims of Jesus in John 5 make the same point from two different directions. Dagon cannot stand before the LORD’s presence and requires human help just to remain upright. Jesus tells His accusers that the Father has given Him all authority over life and judgment and that honoring the Father means honoring the Son. The contrast is between a deity that depends on its worshipers to stay on its feet and the Son of God in whom the Father’s own life is actively expressed and to whom all judgment has been given. These are not comparable categories.
Samuel’s Ebenezer stone and David’s deliberate choice to praise are related acts of theological memory. The stone says: till now the LORD has helped us. The psalm says: my heart is steadfast, I will sing and make melody. Both are acts of will that choose to anchor the present moment in what God has demonstrably done rather than in what the present moment feels like on its own. The Philistines in Ashdod have no category for what is happening with the ark; they can only experience it as affliction and try to manage it. David in the cave has every category he needs, because he has been filling his mind with who God is.
The invitation of all three passages is the same invitation the stone and the song always extend: do not lose the thread of God’s faithfulness in the noise of the present danger. Dagon is on the floor. Jesus is speaking. The dawn is coming. My heart is steadfast.