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Romans 12:1

Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God—this is your true and proper worship.

TO PONDER

There was a college commencement speech given way back in 2005 that went viral by an award-winning secular author and professor, David Foster Wallace in which he made the point that everybody worships something. He said that worship is the default of humanity and the only choice we get is what we actually worship.

As good Lutherans we perhaps feel we have already made that choice because we choose to attend worship every Sunday (unless we are busy) but what if I told you attending worship could be one of the least worshipful things you might do.

In today’s verse, Paul is strongly encouraging the church in Rome (and by extension us) to do more than attend worship weekly, or even daily if that was possible. After all, going to weekly worship is barely a sacrifice and probably, doesn’t change our every day, it often only alters our Sundays.

Paul was challenging God’s people to change our everyday, to live for Him daily, to sacrifice daily, to step out of the comfortable and live a life for Him that actually costs more than what is reasonable (and he wasn’t talking about the price of petrol).

Now, here is the “cheat-code” from today’s verse on how to worship God; live sacrificially for others, give your life for the needs of others, put others first, worship God by doing for the people around you what He has done for you, love and serve sacrificially those you interact with everyday.

Remember, the thing you give your everyday to, you give your time to, the thing you sacrifice for, this is what you worship.

PRAYER: Merciful God, I thank you for the love and mercy you have and continue to lavish on me, I do not deserve your grace, help my life become an act of worship as I offer it as a living sacrifice given for others. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Danny Brock, LifeWay Westside

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Galatians 2:20

I have been crucified with Christ and I no longer live, but Christ lives in me. The life I now live in the body, I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave himself for me.

TO PONDER

Every morning do you look at yourself in the mirror and say “dead-man/woman-walking” to remind yourself of who you are/should be on the other side of the cross?

In today’s verse, Paul is identifying himself as a dead-man-walking. Not in the sense that he is mortal and with a sigh of resignation admitting one day he will die but rather, as a reminder that who he was before the cross of Jesus is now dead, and that he was now living a new life, a Jesus life.

The background of the verse is a discussion about how the Jewish brethren were treating the Gentile (non-Jews) converts, the "others", the "neighbours".

The “dead-person-walking” or the “crucified-person-walking” Paul is talking about in the verse, is a person who gives themselves for others, just as Jesus did for us, gave himself for the us while we were still the "other".

As an “exvangelical” I would often talk about “giving my life to Jesus” while the words of Jesus were actually calling me to give my life for others. I eventually realised it was less about “doing” church on a Sunday and more about “being” church daily, living as a dead-person-walking, a crucified person reflecting Jesus to those around me.

To sum it up; Jesus gave his life for you, your task is to follow him and give your life for others daily.

PRAYER: Almighty God, you described yourself to Moses as “merciful and gracious” highlighting your unreasonable hospitality towards me, inviting me, the “other”, to become family through your sacrifice, help me sacrifice myself for others. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Dany Brock, LifeWay Westside.

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Matthew 16:24

Then Jesus said to his disciples, “Whoever wants to be my disciple must deny themselves and take up their cross and follow me.

TO PONDER

Do you ever get annoyed when you are ALWAYS the one who takes the high-road in disputes, maintaining relationship, saying sorry, and doing all the work? I can relate, its hard… Welcome to marriage, and family, and friendship, and employment, and, I guess, life?

We are always the hero of our own story, better than who we really are, worse than what we remember and, more often than not, pretty selfish (sorry, this is probably just me!)

In today’s verse we have Jesus telling his disciples about his coming suffering, death (a shameful criminal’s death) and his resurrection on the third day. The disciples didn’t get it, at all.

And then Jesus took it a few steps past the unreasonable when he said that unless they follow his lead and carry their own self-sacrificial death daily they weren’t his disciples.

Death on a cross was shameful, painful, and very messy/bloody and that’s what Jesus expects from his followers, expects from us.

Daily/ALWAYS, dying to our own hopes and dreams for the sake of the hopes and dreams of others, saying sorry first, forgiving before there is a “sorry”, doing the work, restoring relationships over being right.

PRAYER : Lord Jesus, thank you for carrying you cross, the cross you didn’t deserve, the cross you asked to be taken away from you in the Garden of Gethsemane with the hope of restoring me into a relationship with you, help me carry my cross daily with your sacrifice in mind. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Danny Brock, LifeWay Westside

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Philippians 2:6-8

Though he was God, he did not think of equality with God as something to cling to. Instead, he gave up his divine privileges; he took the humble position of a slave and was born as a human being. When he appeared in human form, he humbled himself in obedience to God and died a criminal’s death on a cross. (NLT)

TO PONDER

What do you do? The first question usually asked when we meet someone. Yeah sure, it is an easy, go to question to fill in the discomfort of an awkward first meeting, but why?

Are we asking; “are you worthy of my time and effort, are you accomplished enough to be of benefit to me in friendship?” Or maybe I am just shallow…

Today’s verses are stating the ultimate flex to the question of “What do you do”, when the person asked can reply with “I'm the designer, creator, and sustainer of everything!” But the answer given by Jesus and these verses was actually, “I'm a servant!”

Jesus came to earth, “moved into the neighbourhood” to serve, to give his life to and for those who should serve him. The one who should be served, served others, living a life of self-sacrifice.

On the night before Jesus literally sacrificed his life for the world he, in an act of extreme humility, knelt down in front of his disciples and washed their feet to demonstrate servanthood and when he had washed all 24 feet (even the feet of Judas who was about to betray him) he told them (and by extension, us) to do the same.

So, the next time you are asked the question “What do you do?” could you give the honest answer “I wash feet!”…

PRAYER: Jesus Servant God, help me to live a life of self-sacrifice, a life of servanthood, a life of foot-washing, a life copied on your example. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Danny Brock, LifeWay Westside

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Philippians 2:5

In your relationships with one another, have the same mindset as Christ Jesus:

TO PONDER

What would happen if we treated everyone like Jesus did, if we forgive like Jesus, if we loved like Jesus, if we sacrificed like Jesus?

Today’s verse is challenging us to do just that, to live like Jesus, to walk in his footsteps (not where he walked but how he walked), to have the attitude of Jesus.

The idea communicated in the verse is so simple yet so difficult, the idea is world changing, earth shattering; to have the mindset of Christ.

I am the type of preacher who chooses a Bible translation of a chosen verse by often a single word. One of my favourite verse is 1 Samuel 14:6 and the reason is because of the word used in both the NIV and the NLT, the word is “perhaps”, “PERHAPS the Lord will help us,” (NLT), the single word communicates to me so much, desperation, doubt, trust, faith, risk and so much more.

In today’s verse I am captivated by the punctuation. The colon “:” , which is not in the original text, carries the idea of more to come, it connects ideas, introduces more, draws attention to what is to follow. For me it asks the question stated above “what would happen if…”

What would happen if I had the same mindset of Christ:

PRAYER: Mighty Saviour Jesus, teach me to love like you, teach me to think like you, teach me to walk my everyday like you. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Danny Brock, LifeWay Newcastle

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Philippians 2:3-4

Don’t be selfish; don’t try to impress others. Be humble, thinking of others as better than yourselves. Don’t look out only for your own interests, but take an interest in others, too. (NLT)

TO PONDER

I am sure we all remember the Great Toilet Paper Panic of 2020, a widespread panic to buy a product that was not in shortage, at least not until the hysteria inspired people to buy multiple months worth of toilet paper.

Exposing a society looking out for oneself, a me-first culture revealed by a product not in short supply, an item that, to be honest, we could live without (70% of the world go toilet paper free).

Today’s verses speak directly to today’s “live your best life” culture, a culture that promotes “being true to yourself” as a virtue, the way to find happiness and fulfilment, the way to “find your truth.”

Paul was writing this letter to the church of Philippi, a church he had planted in a Roman Colony in Macedonia (modern day Eastern Greece), a church likely made up of primarily Gentiles known for their patriotic nationalism (think “Make Rome Great Again”).

The Philippian church was being pressed on three sides by the patriotic nationalism (me-first) culture of Rome as well as the Judaizers culture of law (religion) and the culture of Christ.

The culture of Christ today continues, as it did back when Paul penned his letter as a counter-culture standing in contrast to a me-first ethos, standing against a religiousness and standing against a society of toilet paper hoarders.

The counter-culture espoused by Paul in Philippians was an echo of the words of Jesus when He gave the new command to, “love one another. As I have loved you, so you must love one another. By this everyone will know that you are my disciples, if you love one another.”

The command of a self-sacrificial life, an ethos of unreasonable hospitality, putting the needs of others ahead of our own needs.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, as we journey towards Holy Week and celebrate the ultimate sacrifice for a lost world, help me live a self-sacrificial life for others, help me to reflect your image to a lost world. Amen.

Today's devotion written by Danny Brock, LifeWay Westside

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Colossians 1:10

“So that you may live a life worthy of the Lord and please him in every way: bearing fruit in every good work, growing in the knowledge of God.”

To Ponder

When Paul prayed for the Christians in Colossae, he did not pray that they would simply survive the Christian life. He prayed that they would live a life worthy of the Lord — in every way, in every work, in every season of growth.

That is a amazing prayer! Inside this prayer is a glimpse of what a fruitful life looks like in practice.

Notice that bearing fruit and growing in the knowledge of God are placed side by side — and that is no accident because they are inseparable. The two move together like roots and branches. You cannot genuinely grow deeper in your knowledge of God without that intimacy changing how you live. And you cannot consistently bear fruit in good works without being rooted in an ever-deepening relationship with the one who calls you to them. Each feeds the other. Each reflects the other.

This also tells us that fruitfulness is not reserved for grand, visible moments. Paul says every good work. The quiet act of kindness no one noticed. The patient response when frustration would have been easier. The faithful showing up, day after day, in the ordinary places of life. Every one of those moments is an opportunity for fruit. Every one of them matters to God.

A life worthy of the Lord is not a life of perfection — it is a life of direction. Moving toward him. Growing in him. Bearing fruit not in our own strength but as the natural overflow of knowing him more deeply today than we did yesterday.

This is not a standard to be anxious about. But rather it is an invitation to grow into.

Prayer

Father,

I want to live a life that is truly worthy of who you are and what You have done. Not a life of straining to impress You, but a life so rooted in knowing you that fruit becomes the natural result of our closeness. May every good work I do, however small or unseen, be rooted in you and pleasing to you. Grow me, Lord — in knowledge, in character, in fruitfulness — so that the life I live increasingly reflects the one I belong to.

In Jesus' name, Amen.

Today’s Devotion is written by Pr Nich

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Titus 2:14

“Who gave himself for us to redeem us from all wickedness and to purify for himself a people that are his very own, eager to do what is good.”

To Ponder

One thing I often think about is how Jesus didn't just come to save us from sin. He came to save us for life. In this reading It struck me that its holds both things together. Jesus gave himself to redeem us — to buy us back from the grip of sin and wickedness. But the rescue didn't end there. The purpose of the rescue is transformation and life. He redeemed us so that we might become a people who are purified and set apart for his purposes, eager to do what is good.

Not reluctant. Not merely compliant. Not dragging our feet toward obedience while longingly looking back. Eager. The word eager carries energy, desire, and forward momentum. It pictures someone who doesn't have to be pushed toward good works because they genuinely, deeply want to do them.

This is what redemption produces. Not just forgiven people — but transformed people. People whose hearts have been so changed by what Jesus did for them that goodness becomes something they lean toward rather than something they are dragged into. The cross was not only the payment for our sin; it was the beginning of our renovation.

So often we treat good works as the price we pay for grace, or the duty we owe in return for salvation. But Titus 2:14 reframes this. Good works are not what we do to earn God's favour — they are what we become eager to do because of it. The fruit is not the root. But where the root is healthy and the redemption is real, eagerness grows.

You have been redeemed. You have been purified. You belong to Him. And that changes not just what you do — but what you want.

Prayer

Lord Jesus,

Thank You for the staggering reality of what you gave — yourself, fully and freely — to redeem me. You didn't rescue me so that I could remain unchanged. You rescued me to make me new.

Where I have been reluctant, renew my eagerness. Where I have treated goodness as a burden rather than a gift, remind me of what you paid to make me yours. Stir in me a genuine, joyful desire to do good.

Help me to lean toward what is right, who looks for opportunities to reflect your goodness, and who lives every day as someone who knows they have been truly set free.

In Your name, Amen.

Today’s Devotion is written by Pr Nich

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Philippians 2:13

“For it is God who works in you to will and to act in order to fulfil his good purpose.”

To Ponder

Did you catch what this verse is actually saying as you read this? God is not just working through you he is working in you. Not only shaping what you do but transforming what you want to do.

That is amazing! Most of us know the frustration of wanting to want the right things but finding that our desires don't always cooperate (Paul writes about this in Roman 7). We want to love more generously, but selfishness creeps in. We want to forgive, but bitterness lingers. We want to be patient, and then someone tests us before breakfast. The will is often the hardest thing to surrender.

And yet Paul tells us that God is at work at precisely that level, not just on our behaviour, but on our desires. He is in the business of rewiring what we reach for, reshaping what we long for, and redirecting our deepest motivations toward his good purpose. The same God who spoke creation into existence is quietly, faithfully working in the interior places of your life that no one else can see.

This means that the fruit God calls us to bear is not ultimately dependent on our willpower finally being strong enough. It is dependent on his work being thorough enough. He who began a good work will carry it through. He who plants the desire also provides the power to act on it.

Our responsibility is not to produce the fruit ourselves. It is to remain open and cooperative with what God is already doing within us. He is at work. The question is whether we are paying attention — and whether we are willing.

The fruit begins from the inside out. And God is already there.

Prayer

Father,

What a relief it is to know that You are not standing at a distance, waiting for me to get my act together. You are already at work — inside me, in the very place where my will and my desires are formed. Thank You for not leaving that work to me alone.

Work deeply in me today. In the places where my desires are still misaligned with yours, redirect them. In the places where I know what is right but lack the strength to act, empower me. Help me to confidently trust that what you have begun in me, You will complete.

In Jesus' name, Amen.

Today’s Devotion is written by Pr Nich

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