The Room Where Your Father Sits
In March 2017, Professor Robert Kelly was delivering a live analysis on South Korean politics for BBC News. The interview was formal, the stakes were high, and millions were watching. Then the door behind him swung open, and his four-year-old daughter Marion danced into the room with the cheerful swagger of someone who owned the place. She wasn't intimidated by the cameras. She didn't care about the broadcast. She saw her dad, and she walked right in.
The clip went viral because it was so disarmingly human. But watch it again and notice what Marion never does — she never hesitates. She doesn't knock. She doesn't peek around the corner to gauge whether the timing is right. She barges in with the full confidence of a child who knows she belongs wherever her father is.
That is the invitation of Hebrews 4:16. The writer tells us to approach the throne of grace with boldness — not timidity, not groveling, not the careful diplomacy of a stranger requesting an audience with a king. The throne we approach is occupied by a Father who knows our weakness because His Son shared it. The room is not a courtroom. It is a living room.
Whatever you are carrying today — the shame you cannot name, the need that keeps you up at three in the morning — you are not interrupting. The door is open. Walk in like you belong there, because you do.
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