Loading...
2,214 illustrations
If Psalm 99 never disrupts comfort, it may be tradition pretending to be fire—today, not someday.
Revelation 22: Through the margins, it demands a faith that repairs harm and includes the excluded.
Psalm 27:1, 4-9 1:1-4; 2:1-4 assures us: God is not confused by our weakness; He supplies grace for the journey.
Revelation 1: Through the margins, it doesn’t flatter us—demands a faith that repairs harm and includes the excluded.
Psalm 92:1-4, 12-15 comforts us: the future is not chaos; it is held in God’s sovereign timeline.
Psalm 15 16:1-13 comforts the weary: grace holds you when your grip is weak—today, not someday.
Psalm 148 confronts our distractions—without watchfulness, we lose our souls by inches—today, not someday.
John 12:1-8 invites holy urgency without panic—faithful living while we wait—today, not someday.
Isaiah 6:1-8 is a mirror—if it offends, it’s doing honest work—today, not someday.
In Psalm 8, the via media holds: doctrine with humility, practice with reverence—today, not someday.
In Psalm 99, love becomes public: the kingdom confronts systems that crush the vulnerable—today, not someday.
Revelation 1: On the path of theosis, it doesn’t flatter us—invites healing communion with God and a transfigured life.
Psalm 97 asks who benefits and who bleeds; God’s good news always has a direction—toward the marginalized.
In Psalm 81:1, 10-16, the ancient gospel meets today’s anxieties with steady mercy—today, not someday.
Psalm 15 Luke 16:1-13, Christ stands at the center: promise fulfilled, mercy embodied, kingdom revealed—today, not someday.
John 12:1-8 reminds us: the gospel is for proclamation, and faith must be owned personally.
In Psalm 97, the Spirit strengthens the broken and restores joy for the journey—today, not someday.
Revelation 1: In context, it calls us to live the text’s core truth with integrity.
Colossians 3: In the red thread, it meets us gently—leads us to Jesus—the center and fulfillment of Scripture.
If Psalm 99 sounds political, remember: oppression is already political—today, not someday.
In Psalm 104:24-34, 35b, God’s covenant faithfulness outlasts human failure and calls forth obedience—today, not someday.
Psalm 148 exposes pious excuses—if faith never costs power, it’s probably not liberation—today, not someday.
Psalm 67 calls the community to visible discipleship—Jesus’ way embodied, not merely admired—today, not someday.
In Matthew 2:1-12, the text presses one question: will we trust God’s Word and live it?