Embark on a journey through the scriptures with biblical scholar Kenny Sallee as your guide. With a Master's degree in Theology and a passion for biblical studies, Kenny offers insightful commentary, profound reflections, and enriching discussions. Whether you're a seasoned scholar or a curious seeker, this platform provides a space for deepening your understanding of the Bible and growing in faith. Join us as we explore the timeless truths of God's Word together.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Verse of the Day for Thursday, May 14, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 14, 2026

Psalm 139:13-14

Wonderfully Known by God

“For you formed my inmost being. You knit me together in my mother’s womb. I will give thanks to you, for I am fearfully and wonderfully made. Your works are wonderful. My soul knows that very well.”

The Word Before Us

Psalm 139:13-14 invites us to stand before God with quiet wonder. The psalm does not begin with human achievement, usefulness, appearance, or reputation. It begins with God, the One who knows us more deeply than we know ourselves and whose care reaches back before our first breath. David’s words remind us that every life is seen, known, and held by the Lord. We are not accidents moving through an indifferent world. We are creatures of God’s wisdom, fashioned with intention and surrounded by his searching, steadfast love.

There are days when a person may feel overlooked, ordinary, weary, or even diminished by the judgments of others. There are also days when we are tempted to measure our worth by what we can produce, how much strength we have, or how well we appear to be doing. This passage gently draws us away from those fragile measurements. It calls us to remember that our deepest worth is not something we earn. It is received from the God who formed us, knows us, and calls his works wonderful.

Understanding the Context

Psalm 139 is traditionally attributed to David and is written as a prayerful song addressed to the Lord. It is not merely a statement about human life in general; it is a personal confession spoken in the presence of God. Throughout the psalm, David reflects on the Lord’s complete knowledge of him. God knows when he sits down and rises up. God discerns his thoughts from far away. God is present in the heights, in the depths, in darkness, and in light. There is nowhere David can flee where God is not already there.

Verses 13-14 come within this larger meditation on God’s intimate knowledge and faithful presence. David looks back to his beginning and recognizes that even in the hidden place of the womb, God was at work. The language is tender and reverent. God formed his inmost being. God knit him together. David’s response is not pride, but thanksgiving. He sees the mystery of his own life as one more testimony to the wonder of God’s works.

This context matters because the verse is not meant to flatter the self apart from God. It is meant to awaken worship. David’s confidence does not rest in self-admiration, but in the Creator’s wisdom. To say, “I am fearfully and wonderfully made,” is to confess that the God who made us is worthy of reverence, trust, and praise.

Living the Verse Today

To live this verse today is to receive our life from God with humility and gratitude. It means refusing to treat ourselves or others as disposable, accidental, or unseen. Every person we meet bears the dignity of one known by the Creator. The neighbor who tries our patience, the child who needs tenderness, the aging parent, the wounded friend, the stranger on the road, and even the person we struggle to understand all stand beneath the gaze of the God who forms and knows.

This verse also speaks tenderly to those who carry shame, grief, illness, weakness, or regret. Being wonderfully made does not mean life is painless or that our bodies never suffer. It does not erase the reality of disability, age, trauma, or sorrow. Rather, it tells us that none of these things cancels the truth of God’s care. Our worth is not reduced by our limitations. Our identity is not defined by our wounds. The Lord who formed us also meets us in our frailty with mercy.

In prayer, Psalm 139 teaches us to bring our whole selves before God. We do not need to hide the parts of our lives that feel unfinished, fragile, or complicated. The One who knit us together already knows us completely, and his knowledge is not cold or distant. It is the knowledge of the Creator who searches, sustains, corrects, and loves. Today, we may give thanks not because we understand every part of our story, but because we belong to the God whose works are wonderful.

Reflection

Where do I most need to receive the truth that I am fully known by God, lovingly formed by him, and still called to give thanks for his wonderful works?


The Bible texts are from the World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM. All rights reserved.

Daily Devotions for Thursday, May 14, 2026: Living Stones in the Hands of God

Experience the story: click the image above to listen
 

The Daily Devotional

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Living Stones in the Hands of God

“You also as living stones are built up as a spiritual house, to be a holy priesthood, to offer up spiritual sacrifices, acceptable to God through Jesus Christ.” — 1 Peter 2:5

Reflection

Peter writes to believers who needed to remember who they were in Christ. Many of them were scattered, pressured, misunderstood, and learning how to live faithfully in a world that did not always welcome their faith. Into that uncertainty, Peter gives them a powerful image: “living stones.” They were not loose fragments lying forgotten on the ground. They were being gathered, shaped, and built by God into a spiritual house.

This is a beautiful and challenging picture of the Christian life. We often think of faith in deeply personal terms, and rightly so. Each of us must respond to Christ. Each of us is loved by God. Each of us is called by name. Yet Peter reminds us that God does not save us merely to leave us standing alone. In Christ, we are brought into something larger than ourselves. We are joined to other believers, shaped by grace, and built together into a holy dwelling place for God’s presence.

A single stone may be strong, but by itself it is limited. It may sit in a field, rest beside a road, or lie unnoticed in the dust. But when a builder takes that stone, studies its shape, and places it carefully beside others, it becomes part of a wall, a path, a home, or a shelter. Its usefulness is not erased by being joined to other stones. Its purpose is revealed.

I once watched someone building a simple stone border along a garden path. At first, the stones looked unimpressive. Some were smooth, others jagged. Some were large and heavy, while others were small enough to hold in one hand. A few looked as though they would never fit anywhere. But the builder did not discard them too quickly. He turned them over, shifted them around, studied their edges, and found where each one belonged. A stone that seemed awkward in one place became just right in another. A small stone filled a gap that a larger stone could not. A rough stone gave strength to a weak place. Slowly, what had looked like a scattered pile became a firm and lovely path.

That is a gentle picture of what God does with His people. We may look at ourselves and see only rough edges, weakness, regret, or insignificance. We may compare ourselves to others and wonder whether we truly have a place. But God sees more than we see. He knows the shape of our lives, the weight of our experiences, the wounds we carry, the gifts we overlook, and the places where His grace has been quietly at work. He does not build His spiritual house with perfect stones, but with living stones made alive through Jesus Christ.

To be a living stone means we belong to Christ and to one another. Our faith is not meant to be isolated, hidden, or self-contained. God places us in relationships, communities, families, neighborhoods, workplaces, and churches where our lives can strengthen and encourage others. Sometimes we are placed where we would not have chosen. Sometimes we are shaped through difficulty, patience, forgiveness, and service. Sometimes God uses the very parts of us we considered unusable to bring steadiness and compassion to someone else.

Peter also says that we are being built into “a holy priesthood.” This does not mean that every believer has the same role, title, or responsibility. It means that in Christ, our daily lives can become offerings to God. We offer spiritual sacrifices not only in songs, prayers, and formal worship, but also in quiet acts of faithfulness. We offer ourselves when we forgive someone who has hurt us, when we speak with kindness instead of bitterness, when we serve without being noticed, when we pray for another person’s burden, when we choose honesty, mercy, patience, and love.

The challenge for today is to ask, “Where is God placing me, and how can I be faithful there?” Perhaps God is placing you beside someone who needs encouragement. Perhaps He is asking you to fill a gap with quiet service. Perhaps He is shaping your rough edges through humility. Perhaps He is reminding you that you do not have to carry your calling alone. You are part of a spiritual house built on Christ, the living cornerstone.

So do not despise the place where God has set you. Do not assume your life is too small to matter. Do not believe that your broken places disqualify you from holy purpose. In the hands of God, even the stone that feels overlooked can become part of something strong, beautiful, and sacred. We are not forgotten stones lying unused. We are living stones, held, shaped, and placed by God for His holy purpose.

Prayer

Gracious God, help us to see ourselves and one another as living stones in Your hands. Shape us with patience, place us with wisdom, and teach us to trust the work You are building through Christ. When we feel overlooked, remind us that we have value in Your sight. When we feel rough or unfinished, continue forming us by Your grace. Help us to serve with humility, encourage others with love, and offer our daily lives as spiritual sacrifices acceptable to You through Jesus Christ. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the The World English Bible (WEB), which is a Public Domain Modern English translation of the Holy Bible. The World English Bible is based on the American Standard Version (ASV) of the Holy Bible, first published in 1901, the Biblia Hebraica Stuttgartensia Old Testament, and the Greek Majority Text New Testament. It is in draft form and is currently being edited for accuracy and readability. All rights reserved.