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Showing posts from January, 2026

A Life That Abided: Remembering Mrs. Susan George as a True Disciple of Christ

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Psalm 90 begins with a profound confession: “Lord, You have been our dwelling place throughout all generations.” These words beautifully reflect the life and faith of Mrs. Susan George , whose journey with Christ was marked not by outward display, but by a quiet, steady abiding in God. Mrs. Susan lived with a deep awareness that life on earth is fleeting, yet life in Christ is eternal. Like the psalmist, she understood that human strength fades, plans change, and years pass quickly—but God alone remains unchanging. Her hope was never anchored in temporary securities, but in the eternal faithfulness of God. This eternal perspective shaped her choices, her relationships, and her perseverance through life’s joys and trials. Jesus’ words in John 15— “Abide in Me, and I in you” —were not merely scripture to be read, but a reality she embodied. Mrs. Susan’s discipleship was rooted in faithfulness rather than visibility. She trusted God even in moments of weakness and uncertainty, believin...

From Fragility to Fruitfulness: Reading Psalm 90 through John 13–15

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Psalm 90 and John 13–15 may seem far apart—one a sober prayer on human mortality, the other an intimate farewell discourse of Jesus. Yet when read together, they form a powerful discipleship conversation: Psalm 90 asks the question of meaning; John 13–15 shows the way of living it . Psalm 90 begins with God as our “dwelling place.” Life is fleeting, time is heavy, and human strength fades quickly. Moses’ prayer does not deny these realities; it names them honestly. Days pass like grass, years like a sigh. Sin weighs upon human life, and death frames our limits. But the psalm does not end in despair. It turns toward wisdom: “Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” Purpose, it suggests, emerges not from escaping mortality but from living rightly within it. John 13–15 answers how such wisdom is embodied. Jesus does not respond to human frailty with distance, but with nearness. He kneels, washes feet, and invites His disciples to abide in Him. Where Psalm 90 ex...

Psalm 90 Pathway of Purpose: What Life and Death Teach Us

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Psalm 90 confronts us with two realities we often avoid: life is brief, and death is certain . Yet instead of leading us into despair, this ancient prayer gently guides us toward purpose . It shows us that meaning is not found by escaping mortality, but by learning to live wisely within it. The psalm begins with God—not with us. “Lord, You have been our dwelling place in all generations.” Before life and death are discussed, we are reminded that God is our true home . Purpose does not begin with productivity or longevity, but with belonging. When God is our dwelling place, life is rooted, even when it is short. Psalm 90 is honest about mortality. Human beings return to dust; our years pass “like a sigh.” Death is not romanticized or denied. Yet Scripture does not present death as the final teacher— time is . “Teach us to number our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.” Life becomes meaningful when it is numbered, not assumed. Awareness of death sharpens life; it strips away il...

From Footwashing to Fruitfulness: Jesus’ Discipleship Pathway in John 13–15

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If we want to understand how Jesus intended his teaching to endure, John 13–15 offers a decisive clue. On the night before the cross, Jesus withdraws from the crowds and invests his final, most concentrated energy not in preaching to the masses but in forming his disciples. What unfolds is not a strategy document, but a lived pathway of discipleship—relational, embodied, and deeply transformative. The framework begins with love. John tells us that Jesus, “having loved his own… loved them to the end” (13:1). Discipleship is rooted not in performance or comprehension, but in secure, covenantal grace. From there, Jesus gathers his disciples around a shared table. Teaching happens in the context of ordinary life—meals, conversation, proximity—signaling that formation requires nearness, not distance. The shocking center of the narrative is footwashing. The Lord kneels, redefining authority and leadership through humble service (13:3–5). Before issuing any command, Jesus offers an example....