Daily Scripture Reading – Week 25

Week 25 — Table of Contents


June 18, 2026

2 Kings 3:1–4:37; Acts 12:19b–13:12; Psalm 74:18–23


2 Kings 3:1–4:37
When Moab rebels, three kings march out together and immediately run dry — no water for the army or the animals — and Jehoram of Israel can only see disaster in it. It is Jehoshaphat of Judah who asks the right question: "Is there no prophet of the LORD here, that we may inquire of the LORD by him?" Elisha is found, and his blunt words to Jehoram cut through the false piety of a king who blames God for a crisis he walked into. The prophet makes plain that he answers only for Jehoshaphat’s sake, then calls for a musician and delivers the word: dig the valley full of ditches, and God will fill them with water though no wind or rain will come.

The deliverance arrives quietly through the night and then becomes a trap. Morning sun on the standing water looks like blood to the Moabites, who rush in expecting plunder and meet an army instead. The chapter ends on a horror — the king of Moab sacrificing his own son on the wall — a reminder that the nations around Israel served gods who demanded everything and gave nothing.

Chapter 4 turns from armies to households, and the God who fills a desert valley now fills a widow’s empty jars. A prophet’s widow is about to lose her sons to her creditor; all she has is a little oil. Elisha tells her to borrow vessels and pour, and the oil flows until the last jar is full, then stops — enough to pay the debt and live on the rest. God meets her exactly at the edge of her need and not a drop beyond, teaching her that the limit on his provision was the number of vessels she was willing to gather.

The Shunammite woman’s story raises the stakes higher still. She builds a room for the prophet expecting nothing, receives the promise of a son, and then watches that son die in her lap. Her refusal to say the word "dead" — insisting only "It is well" as she rides to find Elisha — is the faith of a woman who will hold God to his own gift. Elisha stretches himself over the boy and life returns. The same power that opens a barren womb can also reach into death itself.

Acts 12:19b–13:12
Herod Agrippa’s death is a study in the difference between a king who steals glory and a God who will not share it. Dressed in royal splendor, accepting the crowd’s cry that he speaks with the voice of a god, Herod is struck down "because he did not give God the glory," and the very next line pivots without pause: "But the word of God increased and multiplied." The throne rots; the word grows. Luke wants us to see which one is actually advancing through history.

That advancing word now sends out its first long-distance mission. As the church at Antioch worships and fasts, the Holy Spirit sets apart Barnabas and Saul for the work he has called them to. This is the launch point of everything that follows — not a human strategy meeting but a Spirit-directed commissioning of a praying, fasting congregation. The church lays hands on them and lets them go.

On Cyprus they meet the first open opposition of the journey: Bar-Jesus, a magician and false prophet attached to the proconsul, trying to keep the official from the faith. Saul — here named Paul for the first time as he steps onto the wider Gentile stage — fixes him with a hard word and strikes him blind for a season, and the sorcerer who darkened others’ eyes now gropes for someone to lead him by the hand. The proconsul believes, astonished at the teaching of the Lord. The contest between counterfeit and true power ends with a Gentile leader coming to faith.

Psalm 74:18–23
The psalm has spent itself describing a ruined sanctuary and mocking enemies, and now it turns the whole weight of that grief into petition: "Remember this, O LORD, how the enemy scoffs." The plea is not first for the worshipers’ comfort but for God’s own honor — the foolish people who revile his name are the real scandal. Three times the psalmist presses God to remember, to look, to rise.

Underneath the urgency is the covenant — "Have regard for the covenant" — the ground on which a battered people dares to make demands of heaven. They ask God not to forget the life of his poor forever and to arise and defend his own cause. It is a model for praying in seasons that look like defeat: when the evidence says God has abandoned his people, faith answers by appealing to what God has promised about himself.

Together
Across these readings runs one thread: God’s cause advances even when his people are at the end of their resources. A waterless army, a destitute widow, a grieving mother, a church facing a hostile king and an opposing sorcerer — each is a place where human capacity has run out, and each is exactly where God acts. The valley fills, the oil flows, the dead child breathes, the word multiplies. Scarcity is the stage on which God’s sufficiency is displayed.

The contrast between Herod and the Antioch church sharpens the point. Herod grasps for glory and is consumed; the church gives its strongest workers away in worship and watches the word run to the ends of the earth. The kingdom does not grow by accumulating and protecting but by releasing and trusting. What looks like loss — sending out your best, pouring out your last jar, riding away from a dead child to find a prophet — is the very channel God uses.

So the invitation today is to bring God your empty vessels rather than apologizing for them. Psalm 74 teaches the words: remember, regard, arise. The widow teaches the posture: gather what you can and start pouring. The Shunammite teaches the confession: "It is well," even before the answer comes. The God who increases his word against every Herod is the same God standing ready to fill whatever you are willing to set before him.

June 19, 2026

2 Kings 4:38–6:23; Acts 13:13–41; Psalm 75:1–10


2 Kings 4:38–6:23
The miracles keep coming, and they keep being ordinary in scale and extraordinary in mercy. A pot of stew is poisoned by a wild gourd thrown in by a hungry servant, and "there is death in the pot"; Elisha makes it wholesome with a handful of flour. A man brings firstfruits, and twenty loaves feed a hundred men with food left over — a small Old Testament rehearsal of the feeding that Jesus will one day perform on a far larger field. God’s prophet is a means of God turning poison into nourishment and scarcity into surplus.

Then comes Naaman, the great Syrian commander, mighty and favored but a leper. His cure exposes the pride that often clings to greatness: he is offended that the prophet won’t come out to perform a spectacle and only wants him to wash seven times in the unimpressive Jordan. It is his servants who reason him into obedience, and when he finally humbles himself, his flesh is restored "like the flesh of a little child." The healing of his body and the healing of his pride happen in the same river.

Gehazi’s story is the shadow side of Naaman’s. Where Naaman learns that grace cannot be bought, Gehazi tries to sell it, chasing the rejected gifts with a lie and pocketing what his master refused. The leprosy that left the Syrian now clings to the Israelite — a sobering picture of how greed in the household of faith can forfeit what an outsider gladly received. The floating axe head that follows, recovered for a poor borrower who feared the loss, shows again that no concern is too small for the God who cares about a working man’s debt.

The chapter closes with a parable in action. The Syrian raiders who hunt Elisha are themselves struck blind, led helplessly into the heart of Samaria, and then — instead of being slaughtered — fed a great feast and sent home. Elisha overrules the king’s instinct to kill, and the raids stop. Enemies are conquered by kindness rather than the sword, and the prophet who could call down judgment chooses to set a table.

Acts 13:13–41
In the synagogue at Pisidian Antioch, Paul preaches his first recorded sermon, and it is a guided tour of Israel’s whole story aimed at one destination. He traces God’s choosing of the fathers, the exodus, the wilderness, the conquest, the judges, Samuel, Saul, and David — building momentum toward the promise that from David’s line God has brought a Savior, Jesus. The sermon treats the Old Testament not as backdrop but as a single arc bending toward Christ.

At the center stands the cross and the empty tomb. Paul does not soften the rejection: the rulers in Jerusalem, not recognizing Jesus or the prophets they read every Sabbath, fulfilled those very prophecies by condemning him. But God raised him, and many witnesses can attest it. Paul reads the resurrection out of the Psalms — the Holy One who would not see corruption — to show that what happened on Easter was promised long before.

He ends with the offer and the warning together. Through this risen Jesus, forgiveness of sins is proclaimed, and "by him everyone who believes is freed from everything from which you could not be freed by the law of Moses." That is the heart of the gospel set against the limits of the law: justification the law could never give. The closing words from the prophets warn the scoffer not to dismiss a work so astonishing that he would never believe it if merely told.

Psalm 75:1–10
This psalm answers the question of who actually runs the world. "It is I who keep steady its pillars," God says — when the earth totters and its people with it, the unseen hand holding everything together is his. The thanksgiving that opens the psalm rests on the confidence that God sets the time of judgment and judges with equity, not on human schedules of impatience.

The image of the cup makes the point unforgettable. In the LORD’s hand is a foaming cup of wine, and the wicked of the earth will drain it to the dregs. Boasting and lifted-up horns are warned off — exaltation comes not from east or west but from God alone, who puts down one and lifts up another. The righteous can be patient under arrogant power because the ledger is held by a steady and even hand.

Together
Today’s readings circle the theme of grace that humbles before it heals. Naaman must stoop into a muddy river; the proud sinner in Paul’s synagogue must accept that the law he reveres cannot save him; the boasters of Psalm 75 must learn that their horns mean nothing against the God who steadies the pillars. In every case the path to blessing runs downhill through humility.

And the grace that humbles is also lavish. The same prophet who heals a foreign general feeds a hundred men, sweetens a poisoned pot, recovers a borrowed axe, and spares an army of enemies. The same gospel that exposes the law’s limits announces full forgiveness in Christ. God is never stingy with those who come empty-handed; he is only opposed to those who come demanding.

The cup of Psalm 75 ties it together. There is a cup of wrath the wicked will drink, and there is — though this psalm does not yet say it — a cup that Christ would drink in their place. The invitation is to take Naaman’s road today: lay down the pride that wants God on its own terms, wash where he tells you to wash, and receive a cleansing you could never earn and would never have to buy.

June 20, 2026

2 Kings 6:24–8:15; Acts 13:42–14:7; Psalm 76:1–12


2 Kings 6:24–8:15
The siege of Samaria drives the narrative to its darkest point: famine so severe that a donkey’s head sells for a fortune and two mothers strike a bargain to eat their own children. When the king hears it, he tears his clothes and vows to kill Elisha, blaming the prophet for the catastrophe — the old reflex of turning rage on God’s servant rather than turning back to God. Into this despair Elisha speaks an absurd promise: by this time tomorrow, food will be cheap at the city gate.

The deliverance comes through four lepers who have nothing left to lose. Reasoning that they will die whether they stay or go, they walk toward the enemy camp and find it abandoned — God had made the Syrians hear the sound of a great army and flee, leaving everything behind. Their first feast gives way to conscience: "We are not doing right. This day is a day of good news, and we are silent." The outsiders become the evangelists of the city’s salvation.

The officer who had mocked Elisha’s promise — "even if the LORD made windows in heaven, could this thing be?" — sees it fulfilled and dies in the stampede at the gate, trampled exactly as the prophet had foretold. He saw the abundance with his eyes but never tasted it, a warning that unbelief can stand at the edge of God’s provision and still perish in it.

The reading ends with two scenes that look forward in dread. The Shunammite’s land is restored at the very moment Gehazi is recounting her son’s resurrection — God’s quiet timing vindicating faith. And Elisha weeps as he tells Hazael the cruelties he will inflict on Israel, then watches the man murder his master and seize the throne. The prophet who has dispensed so much mercy must also announce the judgment that is coming through this rising king.

Acts 13:42–14:7
The response to Paul’s sermon splits the city. The next Sabbath nearly the whole town gathers to hear the word, and the sight of it provokes the jealousy of those who had enjoyed being its custodians. Paul and Barnabas answer the rejection with a decisive turn: since the word is being thrust aside by some, "we are turning to the Gentiles" — and the Gentiles who hear rejoice and glorify the word, while the gospel spreads through the whole region.

Opposition forces them onward to Iconium, where the same pattern repeats with greater intensity. They speak boldly, the Lord confirms the word with signs and wonders, and the city divides — some with the apostles, some with their opponents. When a plot forms to abuse and stone them, they do not stand on principle and wait to be martyred; they flee to Lystra and Derbe and keep preaching. The mission moves not by avoiding rejection but by refusing to let rejection stop it.

Psalm 76:1–12
This is a psalm of the God who is known where he chooses to be known — "In Judah God is known; his name is great in Israel." The picture is of a warrior who shatters the weapons of war in the very place of battle, breaking the flashing arrows and the shield and the sword. The strongest forces of the strongest nations sleep their last sleep at his rebuke.

The refrain is fear in its proper, worshipful sense: "But you, you are to be feared." When God rises to judgment, he does it "to save all the humble of the earth," so that even human wrath ends up praising him. The psalm closes by calling the surrounding nations to bring tribute to the One who cuts off the spirit of princes — terrible to the kings of the earth and the refuge of the lowly.

Together
Three scenes of God overturning the powerful run through today’s readings. An invincible Syrian siege collapses overnight at a phantom sound; the religious establishment’s grip on the gospel is broken as the word leaps to the Gentiles; and Psalm 76 sings of a God who snaps the weapons of war in his hand. Human power that looks unstoppable is, before God, a thing easily undone.

And in each case the deliverance flows to the unlikely. Four lepers, the lowest of the low, carry the good news of salvation into the starving city. Gentiles, long outside the covenant promises, rejoice in a word they were not expecting. The humble of the earth are precisely the ones God rises to save. The kingdom keeps overturning the world’s order, lifting up those at the bottom.

The four lepers preach the application. "This day is a day of good news, and we are silent; if we are silent, punishment will overtake us." Those who have stumbled into God’s abundance cannot keep it to themselves. The same word that drove Paul to the Gentiles drives every recipient of grace outward — to go back to the gate and tell the starving city that the enemy has fled and the table is spread.

June 21, 2026

2 Kings 8:16–9:37; Acts 14:8–28; Proverbs 15:11–20


2 Kings 8:16–9:37
The narrative tracks the spread of Ahab’s poison into Judah. Jehoram of Judah marries into Ahab’s house and walks in its ways, and his son Ahaziah does the same — the northern apostasy now flowing south through a royal marriage. God preserves Judah only "for the sake of David his servant," a thread of covenant faithfulness running beneath a tide of compromise. The two corrupt houses, north and south, are now bound together for judgment.

That judgment arrives in the person of Jehu. A young prophet, sent by Elisha, pours oil on Jehu’s head and names him king with a commission to strike down the whole house of Ahab and avenge the blood of God’s servants. Jehu wastes no time; his men proclaim him king on the stairs, and he sets out driving "furiously," a man wholly given to a single, violent task.

He kills Joram of Israel on the very ground Ahab had stolen from Naboth, recalling the exact prophecy spoken there, and runs down Ahaziah of Judah as well. The two kings fall in a single sweep, the entangled houses cut down together. Every detail underscores that this is not mere ambition but the working out of a word spoken long before.

The death of Jezebel is the chapter’s grim climax. Painted and defiant at her window, she taunts Jehu, and at his command her own servants throw her down; she is trampled by horses, and when they go to bury her, only her skull, feet, and hands remain — the dogs have eaten the rest, "according to the word of the LORD" through Elijah. The woman who had murdered prophets and propped up Baal meets exactly the end that was foretold. God’s patience with evil is long, but his word does not fail.

Acts 14:8–28
At Lystra a man lame from birth is healed when Paul sees that he has faith to be made well, and the crowd erupts — not in worship of God but in worship of Paul and Barnabas, hailing them as Hermes and Zeus come down. The apostles tear their clothes in horror and rush to redirect the praise: "We also are men, of like nature with you." They point the pagan crowd to the living God who made heaven and earth and has never left himself without witness, sending rain and harvest and gladness.

The same crowd’s adoration curdles into violence with stunning speed. Jews from Antioch and Iconium arrive, win the people over, and Paul is stoned and dragged out of the city, left for dead. Yet when the disciples gather around him, he rises and walks back into the very city that nearly killed him, then moves on to Derbe to keep preaching. The man who refused the crowd’s worship will not be stopped by the crowd’s stones.

The journey ends in pastoral care, not just evangelism. Paul and Barnabas retrace their steps through the dangerous cities they had just fled, strengthening the new disciples, telling them plainly that "through many tribulations we must enter the kingdom of God," and appointing elders in every church with prayer and fasting. Then they return to Antioch and report all that God had done — careful to say that God opened the door, not that they did. The first missionary journey closes with churches planted, leaders set in place, and glory given where it belongs.

Proverbs 15:11–20
These sayings keep returning to the heart as the place God reads and the place trouble starts. If Sheol and Abaddon lie open before the LORD, "how much more the hearts of the children of man" — nothing is hidden from him. A glad heart makes a cheerful face, but heartache crushes the spirit, and a discerning heart seeks knowledge while a fool’s mouth feeds on folly.

Several proverbs then weigh small goods against large miseries: better a little with the fear of the LORD than great treasure with trouble, and better a dinner of herbs where love is than a fattened ox with hatred. The cluster ends with the relational fruit of wisdom and folly — a hot-tempered man stirs strife while the patient quiet it, and a wise son makes a glad father. Real wealth is measured in fear of God and presence of love, not in the size of the table.

Together
The day sets two responses to glory side by side. Jezebel and Ahab’s house seized glory for themselves and propped up false gods, and they are swept away to the last bone exactly as God said. Paul and Barnabas, offered glory on a platter, tore their clothes and threw it back to God. The dividing line between judgment and faithfulness is often simply this: who gets the credit.

The cost of that faithfulness is real. Paul is stoned almost to death the same day he refuses to be worshiped, and he tells the churches to expect tribulation on the way to the kingdom. Jehu’s commission, too, is bloody and hard. Following God in a corrupt world is not a path of ease, but it is the path on which God’s word proves true and his churches take root.

Proverbs supplies the heart-check underneath it all. God sees the hidden motives that drive a Jezebel to grasp and an apostle to deflect. The invitation today is to choose the little with the fear of the LORD over the great treasure with trouble — to want a dinner of herbs where love and humility dwell more than the fattened ox of self-exalting power. Examine the heart, since that is what lies open before him.

June 22, 2026

2 Kings 10:1–11:21; Acts 15:1–21; Psalm 77:1–9


2 Kings 10:1–11:21
Jehu completes his commission with ruthless thoroughness. He maneuvers the elders of Samaria into executing Ahab’s seventy sons, piles their heads at the gate, and wipes out the remnant of Ahab’s house, the priests and close associates included — fulfilling the word against Ahab "down to the last man." Then, with a chilling pretense of zeal for Baal, he gathers every Baal worshiper into the temple for a great "sacrifice" and slaughters them all, tearing down the pillar and making the place a latrine. Baal worship is purged from Israel.

But Jehu’s reform stops short of his heart. He destroys Baal yet keeps the golden calves of Jeroboam at Bethel and Dan, and the text’s verdict is mixed: God commends him for executing judgment on Ahab and grants him four generations on the throne, yet notes he "was not careful to walk in the law of the LORD." Zeal against someone else’s idolatry coexists with comfort toward his own. Reformation that does not reach the heart leaves the deeper idols standing.

In Judah, meanwhile, the line of David nearly dies. When Athaliah, Ahab’s daughter, sees her son dead, she sets out to destroy the whole royal family and seize the throne — and she very nearly succeeds. The covenant promise to David hangs by a single thread: the infant Joash, snatched away by his aunt and hidden in the temple for six years while a usurper reigns. The drama is not just political; the entire messianic hope rides on one rescued child.

Jehoiada the priest’s careful, courageous coup restores the line. He arms the guards, brings out the hidden boy, crowns him, and gives him the testimony, and the people clap and shout, "Long live the king!" Athaliah cries "Treason!" and is led out and executed. Then Jehoiada makes a covenant binding king and people to the LORD, and the people tear down the temple of Baal in Judah too. The throne of David stands again, and the city is quiet.

Acts 15:1–21
The young church faces its first great doctrinal crisis: must Gentile believers be circumcised and keep the law of Moses to be saved? Men from Judea insist they must, and the question is sharp enough that Paul and Barnabas are sent to Jerusalem to settle it. The whole gospel hangs on the answer — whether salvation is by grace through faith or by grace plus the works of the law.

Peter stands and recalls how God gave the Spirit to the Gentiles at Cornelius’s house, "cleansing their hearts by faith," making no distinction between them and the Jewish believers. To require the law now would be to put on the Gentiles’ necks a yoke that neither they nor their fathers could bear. His conclusion is the heart of the matter: "We believe that we will be saved through the grace of the Lord Jesus, just as they will." Salvation is one and the same for all — by grace.

James, presiding, confirms it with the prophets, who foretold that the nations would be called by God’s name, and gives his judgment: do not trouble the Gentiles turning to God. He asks only that they abstain from a few practices that would needlessly wound their Jewish brothers and dishonor God. The verdict guards both the freedom of grace and the unity of the church — refusing to add to the gospel while asking love to limit its liberty for the sake of others.

Psalm 77:1–9
This psalm gives voice to the believer in the dark, when prayer itself feels useless. "I cry aloud to God… in the day of my trouble I seek the Lord," but the soul refuses to be comforted; the psalmist remembers God and only moans. Sleepless, too troubled to speak, he searches the past for evidence that God is still good.

Then come the questions no one is supposed to ask out loud: "Will the Lord spurn forever? Has his steadfast love forever ceased? Has God forgotten to be gracious?" The remarkable thing is that Scripture lets him say them. This is honest faith in agony, not unbelief — a man bringing his worst fears directly to God rather than hiding them. The psalm models a prayer life with room for the darkest night.

Together
Today is about what it takes to keep the covenant alive, and the answer is always God’s faithfulness rather than human strength. The line of David survives only because one baby is hidden in the temple; the gospel survives its first crisis only because the church names grace clearly; and the troubled soul of Psalm 77 survives the night only by reaching for the God it cannot feel. In each, the rescue comes from outside.

The threats are different but related. Athaliah would kill the promise by violence; the Judaizers would smother the gospel by addition; despair would silence the believer by doubt. And each threat is answered by holding fast to grace — a grace that preserves a royal child against all odds, that saves Jew and Gentile alike apart from the law, and that remains steadfast even when the heart cannot sense it.

Jehu’s half-finished reform leaves the warning, and it doubles as today’s application. It is possible to tear down the obvious idols and quietly keep the convenient ones, to be zealous about others’ compromises and careful about none of our own. Let Jehoiada’s covenant be the model instead — binding heart and life wholly to the LORD — and let Psalm 77 give permission to do it honestly, questions and all, trusting that the God who hid Joash and saved the Gentiles has not forgotten to be gracious.

June 23, 2026

2 Kings 12:1–14:22; Acts 15:22–41; Psalm 77:10–20


2 Kings 12:1–14:22
Joash of Judah begins well under Jehoiada’s guidance, and his great project is the repair of the LORD’s house. When the priests are slow to fund it, he devises a simple, honest collection — a chest by the altar — and the work goes forward with such integrity that the workmen are not even required to account for the money. Yet even this reign has its shadow: the high places are not removed, and when Hazael threatens Jerusalem, Joash buys him off by stripping the temple’s treasures. The king’s later murder by his own servants closes a reign that started in faith and ended in compromise.

In the north, Jehoahaz and Jehoash reign over a kingdom ground down by Hazael’s oppression, and the text records a striking moment of mercy: when Jehoahaz seeks the LORD’s favor, God listens and gives Israel a savior, "for he saw the oppression of Israel." Even an apostate northern king’s cry is heard. God’s compassion runs ahead of his people’s deserving, responding to affliction he has every right to ignore.

Elisha’s death scene is one of the most arresting in the Old Testament. The dying prophet gives Jehoash a strange acted prophecy of arrows — and the king’s halfhearted striking of the ground limits the victory he might have had, a quiet lesson that faith’s boldness affects what God’s promise yields. Then, after Elisha is buried, a corpse thrown hastily into his tomb touches his bones and springs to life. Even in death, the man through whom God gave so much life carries that power; the God of resurrection is at work to the very end.

The reading closes with Amaziah of Judah, who follows the LORD but not wholeheartedly, wins a victory over Edom, and then lets success swell into pride. Flush with triumph, he provokes Jehoash of Israel to battle and is soundly defeated, Jerusalem’s wall broken and its treasures plundered. Victory unguarded by humility becomes the seed of a greater fall.

Acts 15:22–41
The Jerusalem council’s decision is delivered with pastoral care. The apostles and elders send a letter and trusted men — Judas and Silas — so the Gentile churches will not merely read a ruling but hear it confirmed by living voices. The letter’s gracious phrase, "it seemed good to the Holy Spirit and to us," frames the church’s discernment as the Spirit’s leading, and the Antioch believers rejoice at the encouragement. A potentially divisive question becomes an occasion for unity and gladness.

But the chapter ends with a painful reminder that even apostles are not above conflict. Paul and Barnabas, ready to revisit the churches, fall into "a sharp disagreement" over whether to take John Mark, who had deserted them on the first journey. Neither will yield, and the two long-time partners part ways — Barnabas taking Mark to Cyprus, Paul taking Silas through Syria and Cilicia. Luke does not tidy it up or assign blame; he simply records that the work went forward in two streams instead of one. The kingdom advances through imperfect, sometimes divided servants, and God is not stopped by their failures to agree.

Psalm 77:10–20
The psalm pivots on a deliberate act of memory. Having sunk into the despairing questions of the first half, the psalmist makes a decision: "I will remember the deeds of the LORD; yes, I will remember your wonders of old." He does not feel his way out of the darkness; he reasons his way out by rehearsing what God has done. Memory becomes the lever that lifts the soul.

What he remembers is the Exodus — the redeemed people, the waters that saw God and writhed, the path through the sea where God’s footprints "were unseen." The God who once made a way through impossible waters is the same God now, even when his way is hidden. The closing image, of God leading his people "like a flock by the hand of Moses and Aaron," answers every fear of the psalm’s first half: the shepherd has not let go.

Together
Today holds up the discipline that carries faith through hard seasons: remembering rightly. Psalm 77 turns the corner not on a change of circumstances but on a choice to recall God’s past deeds. Joash’s chest, Elisha’s bones, the savior given to oppressed Israel — all of them testify that the God who acted before is still acting. When feelings fail, memory of God’s faithfulness keeps the soul anchored.

The readings are honest about how mixed God’s people are. Joash starts well and ends bought-off; Amaziah obeys but not wholeheartedly and falls to pride; Paul and Barnabas, both godly men, split in a sharp dispute. None of this halts God’s purposes. He hears an apostate king’s cry, raises life from a dead prophet’s grave, and carries his gospel forward through two missionary teams instead of one. Grace works through flawed instruments.

So the application is twofold. First, guard against the slow drift that turns a Joash or an Amaziah from faithful beginnings to compromised endings — finish well, with humility intact. Second, when the night of Psalm 77 comes, do what the psalmist did: deliberately remember the deeds of the LORD, recall the sea he split and the flock he has led by the hand, and let remembered grace become present hope.

June 24, 2026

2 Kings 14:23–15:38; Acts 16:1–15; Psalm 78:1–8


2 Kings 14:23–15:38
The northern kingdom’s prosperity under Jeroboam II is a study in mercy without repentance. He does evil like all the kings before him, yet God uses him to restore Israel’s borders, "for the LORD saw that the affliction of Israel was very bitter" and had not said he would blot out their name. The kindness is real but the heart is unchanged; outward success masks a nation still walking away from God. Prosperity, the chapter quietly warns, is not the same as God’s approval.

What follows is a dizzying collapse of the throne. Zechariah is murdered after six months, Shallum after one month, and on through Menahem, Pekahiah, and Pekah — a parade of assassinations and coups that reads like a kingdom devouring itself. Behind the chaos looms Assyria: Tiglath-pileser begins carrying Israelites away into exile. The judgment long delayed under Jeroboam’s prosperity now arrives in installments, and the end of the northern kingdom comes into view.

Judah’s account is steadier but not unblemished. Azariah (Uzziah) reigns long and does right, yet the high places remain and he ends his life a leper, living apart while his son governs. Jotham likewise does right but leaves the high places standing. Even the better kings of the south cannot bring themselves to root out the deepest compromises, and the slow erosion continues beneath the surface of decent reigns.

Acts 16:1–15
Paul gathers a new companion at Lystra — young Timothy, well spoken of by the believers — and the missionary band moves through the region strengthening churches as the numbers grow daily. Then the Spirit’s guidance turns surprisingly negative: they are forbidden to speak in Asia, prevented from entering Bithynia. God’s leading is as much about closed doors as open ones, steering the mission toward a destination they cannot yet see.

The destination becomes clear in a night vision at Troas: a man of Macedonia pleading, "Come over to Macedonia and help us." The team concludes at once that God has called them to preach there, and with that crossing the gospel steps from Asia into Europe. A blocked road and a midnight dream together redirect the whole future of the mission. What looked like frustrating obstacles were the Spirit’s hands on the wheel.

In Philippi the European church begins not with a crowd but with a single heart. At a riverside place of prayer, Paul speaks to the women gathered there, and Lydia — a dealer in purple cloth, already a worshiper of God — listens as "the Lord opened her heart" to pay attention to Paul’s words. She and her household are baptized, and she presses her hospitality on the apostles. The conversion is God’s work in her heart, and her immediate response is faith expressed in baptism and open-handed welcome.

Psalm 78:1–8
The psalm opens as a deliberate program of teaching across generations. The things heard from the fathers will not be hidden from the children; the next generation will be told the glorious deeds of the LORD, so that they in turn will tell their own children. Faith is meant to travel forward through intentional remembering, parent to child to grandchild.

The purpose is spelled out plainly: "that they should set their hope in God and not forget the works of God, but keep his commandments." The cautionary backdrop is the generation that came before — stubborn, rebellious, with hearts not steadfast toward God. The psalm teaches that each generation must be told the story precisely because hope and obedience are not inherited automatically; they must be passed down and freshly grasped.

Together
The day sets generational faithfulness against generational drift. The northern kings hand down rebellion until the kingdom shakes itself to pieces; even good southern kings hand down unaddressed high places to their sons. Psalm 78 names the antidote — a deliberate telling of God’s deeds to the children so they set their hope in him. The difference between a kingdom that crumbles and a faith that endures is often whether the story gets passed on.

Acts shows that same story leaping forward and outward under God’s hand. The Spirit closes doors in Asia to open one in Europe; a vision redirects the mission; a single woman’s opened heart becomes the seed of the Philippian church. The God steering Paul across the Aegean is the God of Psalm 78, intent on getting his works known to peoples and generations who have not yet heard.

The thread that ties it together is the heart that God alone can change. Jeroboam’s prosperity could not soften Israel’s heart; only the Lord could open Lydia’s. So the application reaches in both directions: tell the next generation the deeds of the LORD faithfully, as Psalm 78 commands, and pray that the same Lord who opened Lydia’s heart will open theirs. We do the telling; God does the opening — and where he opens, hope is set in him and not forgotten.

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