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Monday, June 29, 2026
Psalm
Sarah Chen worked the overnight shift in the ICU at Memorial Hospital in Houston during the spring of 2020. Every evening she suited up in...
In September 1955, Mamie Till-Mobley stood in a Chicago funeral home and made a decision that would change a nation. Her fourteen-year-old son, Emmett, had...
In the film *Good Will Hunting*, we meet Will, a young man whose extraordinary intelligence is overshadowed by his profound pain. Picture him in a dimly lit Boston basement, the scent of stale coffee and old books hanging in the...
In February 2018, a group of hikers on Oregon's Mount Hood lost their trail in a sudden whiteout. Temperatures plunged. Their GPS failed. For six...
When Maria Chen opened her small bakery on Division Street in Portland, she struggled to get foot traffic. People walked past the storefront without a...
Imagine a quiet, secluded cabin nestled deep in the woods, a place painted with shadows and whispers of a past too painful to bear. This is the Shack—a haunting reminder of the tragedy that tore apart Mack’s world when his...
On the morning of October 15, 1844, George Müller sat at the head of a long table in his orphanage at Ashley Down, Bristol. Three...
In the winter of 1944, Corrie ten Boom huddled with her sister Betsie in Barracks 28 of Ravensbrück concentration camp. The stench was unbearable. Fleas...
In the film *Good Will Hunting*, we encounter Will, a brilliant young man with a mind that dances through complex equations and intricate theories, yet his heart is shackled by the weight of unbearable shame. Picture him: a scrappy Boston...
In 1636, Scottish pastor Samuel Rutherford was stripped of his pulpit and banished to the remote city of Aberdeen. The authorities meant it as punishment...
In 1862, missionary John Paton huddled with his wife inside their small mission house on the island of Tanna in the New Hebrides. Outside, hostile...
Every Saturday morning at 6 a.m., Maria Gonzalez unlocks the side door of St. Gregory's Church in the Bronx and begins slicing bread. By seven,...
"Don't just know ABOUT God—TASTE Him! EXPERIENCE Him! Feel His presence! See His power! The Lord is GOOD—not just doctrinally but EXPERIENTIALLY! When you ENCOUNTER God, you KNOW He's good! Stop reading about the feast and START EATING!" — T.D.
"Taste and see—supremely in the Eucharist! We literally taste the Lord's goodness; His Body and Blood nourish body and soul. The Mass is the invitation: come, taste, see that the Lord is good. Sacramental feeding is spiritual tasting." — St.
"Taste and SEE—this is experiential religion. Not mere doctrine but experience; not just hearing but tasting. God's goodness is not proven by argument but savored by encounter. The one who has tasted needs no convincing; they KNOW the Lord is good." — Charles Spurgeon.
"The poor taste God's goodness in bread shared, in community sustained, in justice done. God's goodness is not abstract—it is food for the hungry, freedom for the captive. When the poor experience liberation, they taste and see. God's goodness is concrete." — Gustavo Gutiérrez.
"Taste the gospel and see that the Lord is good! The law is bitter—accusation, condemnation, death. But the gospel! Sweet beyond words: forgiveness, acceptance, life! Those who have tasted law's bitterness know gospel's sweetness. Taste Christ; He is good." — Martin Luther.
"I was surprised by joy—tasting God's goodness when I least expected. He is not safe, but He is good. Those who taste Him find their deepest desires fulfilled in ways they never anticipated. Taste and see: He is better than...
"TASTE His PRESENCE! SEE His GLORY! God is not concept but ENCOUNTER! When you step into His presence, you TASTE His goodness—tangible, real, overwhelming! Don't settle for theology about God; experience the God of theology! The goodness is meant to be FELT!" — Bill Johnson.
"Taste and see—in a world of scarcity anxiety, God offers abundance to taste. The empire says 'never enough'; God says 'taste My goodness.' Those who taste justice know God is good; those who experience liberation know His sweetness. Share the feast." — Walter Brueggemann.
"Those who have tasted life's bitterness—oppression, rejection, suffering—know God's goodness is sweeter still. The disinherited taste the Lord and find Him good even when circumstances are bitter. This is sustaining faith: tasting God's goodness in the midst of hardship." — Howard Thurman.
"To taste the Lord is to taste Christ—He is God's goodness in person. In Him we see and taste what God is like. His life, death, and resurrection are the flavor of divine goodness. Taste Christ crucified and risen; see...
"YOU taste and YOU see—this is personal experience. Others can tell you God is good; YOU must discover it for YOURSELF. Come to Christ personally; experience Him individually. No one can taste for you; no one can see for you.
"Taste and see—and keep tasting! Initial experience deepens into rich knowledge. The more we taste, the more we want; the more we see, the more there is to see. Sanctification is tasting ever more deeply the goodness we first savored at conversion." — John Wesley.