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Sunday, March 8, 2026
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →119:137-144 shows the gospel pattern—God initiates grace, then forms a people who obey in love.
71:1-6 invites a next step: repentance today, obedience tomorrow, love always—today, not someday.
2 Timothy 4:6-8, 16-18 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire.
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →Luke 16:19-31, the text presses one question: will we trust God’s Word and live it?
2:6-15 invites a next step: repentance today, obedience tomorrow, love always—today, not someday.
Hebrews 12:18-29 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
LensLines™ — One Text. Seventeen Voices.
See all 54 voices →107:1-9, 43 anchors us in God’s character: He speaks, acts, and calls us to faithful response.
14 whispers hope: prevenient grace is already at work, drawing you toward life—today, not someday.
Psalm 121 50:1-8, 22-23 calls our “goodness” what it is without Christ: insufficient—today, not someday.
Psalm 121 1 Timothy 1:12-17, Jesus meets us in weakness and offers Himself as our hope.
Psalm 121 Luke 17:5-10, the Spirit strengthens the broken and restores joy for the journey—today, not someday.
Psalm 121 Luke 16:1-13, God’s covenant faithfulness outlasts human failure and calls forth obedience—today, not someday.
Psalm 121 14:1, 7-14 invites us to practice mercy with hands, budgets, and policies—not just feelings.
Psalm 121 85 calls for a real response—grace invites, but love must be chosen—today, not someday.
Romans 4:1-5, 13-17 1:1-6 comforts the faithful: God keeps His promises and strengthens His Church to endure.
Hebrews 11:29-12:2 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
In Hacksaw Ridge, Desmond Doss refuses to carry a weapon but volunteers as a combat medic. On Okinawa, he single-handedly rescues 75 wounded soldiers, lowering them down a cliff under enemy fire. Greater love has no one than this: to...
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...
Nicodemus Nicodemus was a highly respected Jewish Pharisee (John 3:1), one of the prominent members of the high council, who appears to have become a convert of Jesus. He is mentioned only in the Gospel of John.
In The Secret Garden, Mary Lennox arrives at Misselthwaite Manor bitter, unloved, and unloving. She discovers a hidden garden, dead from neglect. As she tends it back to life, she herself is transformed—her sour disposition softened, her cousin healed, the manor restored.
John 3: From the struggle for freedom, it doesn’t flatter us—proclaims hope, dignity, and God’s liberating justice.
John 3: By prevenient grace, it invites a real response that grows into holy love.