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Sunday, January 25, 2026
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →91:1-6, 14-16 anchors us in God’s character: He speaks, acts, and calls us to faithful response.
32:1-3a, 6-15 whispers hope: prevenient grace is already at work, drawing you toward life.
Luke 16:19-31 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →12:18-29 anchors us in God’s character: He speaks, acts, and calls us to faithful response.
14:25-33 invites a next step: repentance today, obedience tomorrow, love always—today, not someday.
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →32:1-3a, 6-15 anchors us in God’s character: He speaks, acts, and calls us to faithful response.
1:2-10 whispers hope: prevenient grace is already at work, drawing you toward life—today, not someday.
In Room, five-year-old Jack has spent his entire life in captivity—a small shed his mother calls "Room." When they escape into the real world, the world terrifies him. Everything is too big, too bright, too much. But his mother's love anchors him.
Psalm 81:1, 10-16 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire.
Louise Banks learns the alien language—and it changes how she experiences time. She can see her future: the joy of her daughter's birth, the agony of her daughter's death. Knowing the end, she still chooses to begin. She embraces a...
Evelyn Wang can access infinite versions of herself across the multiverse—every choice she didn't make, every life she could have lived. At first it's overwhelming chaos. But she discovers the secret: in a universe where nothing matters, the only thing...
Corinth Corinth was one of the oldest cities of Greece, with evidence of settlement going back to at least 3000 BC.
In Coco, the dead truly die only when no one living remembers them. Héctor is fading because his daughter Coco, now elderly, is forgetting him. Miguel races to restore her memory before it's too late. "Remember me," the song pleads—a...
Paul renounced the "wisdom of words" because human eloquence veils the gospel's truth.
In Big Fish, Edward Bloom tells fantastical stories his son Will dismisses as lies. Only at his father's deathbed does Will understand: the stories were how Edward loved—transforming ordinary people into giants, witches, and mermaids because that's how he saw them.
17:5-10 exposes our control; the Spirit refuses to be managed—today, not someday.
Simon Peter Simon Peter was the most prominent of the twelve apostles. After Jesus’ death, he became the primary spokesman for the early Christians in Jerusalem and was the apostle primarily responsible for evangelizing the Jews (Gal 2:7-8).
The Victorian expositor understood this command as operating on five essential dimensions.
Matthew 4:1-11 2:6-15 is inconvenient on purpose—God interrupts comfort to liberate the oppressed—today, not someday.
Matthew 4:1-11 16:1-13 invites us to practice mercy with hands, budgets, and policies—not just feelings—today, not someday.
Matthew 4:12-23 65 confronts comfortable religion—God sides with the exploited, not the exploiters—today, not someday.
Matthew 4:1-11 32:1-3a, 6-15 invites a pilgrim’s heart: return, receive grace, and keep walking with the saints.