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Sunday, May 10, 2026

Verse of the Day for Sunday, May 10, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 10, 2026

Matthew 18:15

Free in the Spirit of Life

“If your brother sins against you, go, show him his fault between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained back your brother.”

The Word Before Us

Conflict is one of the most difficult places for Christian faith to become visible. It is one thing to speak of grace when relationships are easy; it is another to practice grace when someone has wounded us, disappointed us, or sinned against us.

Matthew 18:15 brings us into the tender and demanding work of restoration. Jesus does not teach his followers to ignore sin, gossip about it, nurse resentment, or use truth as a weapon. He calls us to go privately, honestly, and humbly, with the hope of gaining back a brother. The goal is not winning an argument. The goal is the recovery of fellowship, the healing of what has been broken, and the honoring of God in the way we handle pain.

Understanding the Context

These words are spoken by Jesus to his disciples during a larger teaching about life in the kingdom of heaven. Matthew 18 begins with the disciples asking who is greatest in the kingdom. Jesus responds by placing a child among them and teaching humility, care for the vulnerable, seriousness about sin, and the Father’s concern for the one who has wandered. This verse belongs within that same pastoral concern.

Matthew 18:15 is often treated only as a procedure for church discipline, and it does form the beginning of a wider process in the verses that follow. Yet the first movement is deeply personal and merciful. Jesus begins not with public exposure, but with private conversation. He addresses the one who has been sinned against and calls that person to take the first step toward truthful reconciliation. The offender is not to be humiliated. The wounded person is not told to pretend nothing happened. Both truth and mercy are held together.

The context matters because Jesus is shaping a community where sin is taken seriously, but people are not treated as disposable. The shepherd who seeks the wandering sheep stands behind this instruction. The Lord who teaches forgiveness later in the chapter also teaches honest confrontation. In Christ’s kingdom, love does not avoid truth, and truth is not separated from love.

Living the Verse Today

For daily Christian life, Matthew 18:15 asks us to examine how we respond when we are hurt. Many of us are tempted either to withdraw in silence or to speak about the person rather than to the person. Silence can harden into bitterness. Loose words can spread injury beyond the original wound. Jesus gives us a better way: go directly, go privately, and go with the hope of restoration.

This does not mean every situation is simple or safe. There are times when abuse, manipulation, or danger requires help, protection, and wise counsel. Jesus is not asking the vulnerable to place themselves in harm’s way. But in the ordinary wounds and sins that fracture Christian relationships, this verse calls us away from pride and toward courageous love. It invites us to speak honestly without cruelty, to listen carefully without defensiveness, and to seek peace without denying truth.

To live this verse is to remember that the person who hurt us is still someone God may be seeking. The aim is not to prove superiority, but to open a door where repentance, forgiveness, and restored fellowship may become possible. Sometimes the conversation will go well. Sometimes it will not. Yet faithfulness is shown in the spirit with which we go. We go as people who have also needed mercy. We go as those who have been sought, corrected, forgiven, and restored by Christ.

Reflection

When I have been wounded by someone else, do I seek restoration with humility and truth, or do I allow silence, resentment, or careless words to deepen the break?


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. Verse of the Day is a daily inspirational and encouraging Bible verse, extracted from BibleGateway.com. Commentary by Kenny Sallee, ThM. All rights reserved.

Verse of the Day for Sunday, May 10, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 10, 2026

Matthew 18:15

Free in the Spirit of Life

“If your brother sins against you, go, show him his fault between you and him alone. If he listens to you, you have gained back your brother.”

The Word Before Us

Conflict is one of the most difficult places for Christian faith to become visible. It is one thing to speak of grace when relationships are easy; it is another to practice grace when someone has wounded us, disappointed us, or sinned against us.

Matthew 18:15 brings us into the tender and demanding work of restoration. Jesus does not teach his followers to ignore sin, gossip about it, nurse resentment, or use truth as a weapon. He calls us to go privately, honestly, and humbly, with the hope of gaining back a brother. The goal is not winning an argument. The goal is the recovery of fellowship, the healing of what has been broken, and the honoring of God in the way we handle pain.

Understanding the Context

These words are spoken by Jesus to his disciples during a larger teaching about life in the kingdom of heaven. Matthew 18 begins with the disciples asking who is greatest in the kingdom. Jesus responds by placing a child among them and teaching humility, care for the vulnerable, seriousness about sin, and the Father’s concern for the one who has wandered. This verse belongs within that same pastoral concern.

Matthew 18:15 is often treated only as a procedure for church discipline, and it does form the beginning of a wider process in the verses that follow. Yet the first movement is deeply personal and merciful. Jesus begins not with public exposure, but with private conversation. He addresses the one who has been sinned against and calls that person to take the first step toward truthful reconciliation. The offender is not to be humiliated. The wounded person is not told to pretend nothing happened. Both truth and mercy are held together.

The context matters because Jesus is shaping a community where sin is taken seriously, but people are not treated as disposable. The shepherd who seeks the wandering sheep stands behind this instruction. The Lord who teaches forgiveness later in the chapter also teaches honest confrontation. In Christ’s kingdom, love does not avoid truth, and truth is not separated from love.

Living the Verse Today

For daily Christian life, Matthew 18:15 asks us to examine how we respond when we are hurt. Many of us are tempted either to withdraw in silence or to speak about the person rather than to the person. Silence can harden into bitterness. Loose words can spread injury beyond the original wound. Jesus gives us a better way: go directly, go privately, and go with the hope of restoration.

This does not mean every situation is simple or safe. There are times when abuse, manipulation, or danger requires help, protection, and wise counsel. Jesus is not asking the vulnerable to place themselves in harm’s way. But in the ordinary wounds and sins that fracture Christian relationships, this verse calls us away from pride and toward courageous love. It invites us to speak honestly without cruelty, to listen carefully without defensiveness, and to seek peace without denying truth.

To live this verse is to remember that the person who hurt us is still someone God may be seeking. The aim is not to prove superiority, but to open a door where repentance, forgiveness, and restored fellowship may become possible. Sometimes the conversation will go well. Sometimes it will not. Yet faithfulness is shown in the spirit with which we go. We go as people who have also needed mercy. We go as those who have been sought, corrected, forgiven, and restored by Christ.

Reflection

When I have been wounded by someone else, do I seek restoration with humility and truth, or do I allow silence, resentment, or careless words to deepen the break?


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. 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 Sunday, May 10, 2026: A Flower of Remembrance

Experience the story: click the image above to listen
 

The Daily Devotional

Sunday, May 10, 2026

A Flower of Remembrance

“As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you; you shall be comforted in Jerusalem.” — Isaiah 66:13

Reflection

Mother’s Day in the United States is observed on the second Sunday of May, and in 2026, it falls on May 10. For many, this day is filled with flowers, cards, phone calls, family meals, and tender memories. Yet Mother’s Day also carries a deeper history. On May 10, 1908, the first official Mother’s Day worship service was held at St. Andrew’s Methodist Episcopal Church in Grafton, West Virginia, through the efforts of Anna Jarvis. White carnations became associated with the day as a sign of honor and remembrance. Before Mother’s Day became surrounded by commerce and public celebration, it began as an act of gratitude, memory, and worship.

That is a helpful place to begin, because Mother’s Day is not simple for everyone. For some, it is a day of joy and thanksgiving. For others, it opens old wounds. Some remember a mother who has died. Some grieve a mother they never truly had. Some carry the ache of infertility, miscarriage, estrangement, adoption, or years of longing. Some mothers wonder if they did enough. Some children wish they had said more while there was still time. A faithful observance of Mother’s Day must be wide enough to hold both gratitude and grief.

Into that tender space, the Lord speaks through the prophet Isaiah: “As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you.” These words come near the close of Isaiah, where God speaks hope to a weary people. Israel had known exile, loss, judgment, and displacement. The people needed more than instruction; they needed comfort. They needed the assurance that God had not forgotten them. So the Lord chooses one of the most intimate images human beings know: a mother comforting her child.

We can picture it easily. A child runs across a yard, trips, and falls hard on the ground. For a moment, there is shock, then tears. The scraped knee is real, but so is the fear. Before the bandage comes, before the dirt is washed away, the child wants arms. The child wants to know that someone has seen the hurt and come close. A mother, grandmother, aunt, neighbor, or caring woman kneels down, gathers the child gently, and says, “I know. I know. You’re going to be all right.” The wound still stings, but the child is no longer alone in the pain.

That is the kind of comfort Isaiah points us toward—not shallow comfort, not the kind that pretends nothing hurts, but the kind that comes close enough to hold us while we heal. God’s comfort does not deny the wound. God does not say, “That did not matter,” or “You should be over it by now.” Instead, God draws near with a love that is tender, steady, and strong.

Motherly love appears in many forms. It may come through the woman who gave us birth, the one who adopted us, the grandmother who kept the family stories alive, the Sunday school teacher who noticed our gifts, the neighbor who brought food when life became too heavy, the mentor who encouraged us when our faith was fragile, or the spiritual mother who prayed for us long before we understood the power of prayer. Some women nurture children in their homes. Others nurture faith, courage, wisdom, and hope in quiet ways that may never be fully seen on earth.

White carnations, associated with that first Mother’s Day observance, remind us of both honor and remembrance. A flower is fragile, yet meaningful. It does not last forever, but while it blooms, it speaks. It says, “You are remembered. You are cherished. Your love mattered.” In a similar way, the faithful love of those who have nurtured us leaves a fragrance behind. Their words, prayers, corrections, sacrifices, and quiet examples may continue shaping us long after the moment has passed.

Yet even the best human love is not perfect. Mothers are human. Families are human. Memories can be mixed. That is why Isaiah’s promise matters so deeply. God does not merely tell us to think of motherly comfort; God uses that image to reveal something about himself. The tenderness we have received from loving women is a window into the heart of God, but God’s love is deeper still. His comfort is not limited by time, distance, weakness, regret, or death.

On this Mother’s Day, we can give thanks for those who have nurtured us. We can honor the women who loved us well. We can remember those who are no longer here. We can pray gently for those whose hearts are tender today. And we can also ask God to make us bearers of his comfort. Someone near us may need a listening ear, a patient word, a meal, a note, a prayer, or simply the steady assurance that they are not alone.

Mother’s Day began in worship, remembrance, and gratitude. Perhaps that is where it still finds its deepest meaning. Beneath every flower, every memory, and every act of love is the God who says, “As a mother comforts her child, so I will comfort you.” In his arms, the grieving are held, the weary are strengthened, the forgotten are remembered, and the beloved are comforted.

Prayer

Gracious and tender God, on this Mother’s Day, we give thanks for the many women whose love has nurtured, guided, protected, and strengthened us. We remember mothers, grandmothers, adoptive mothers, spiritual mothers, mentors, friends, and quiet servants whose care has reflected your own compassion. Hold close those for whom this day brings grief, longing, regret, absence, or complicated memories. Comfort us as a mother comforts her child, and teach us to become instruments of that same comfort in the lives of others. May our gratitude become kindness, our remembrance become prayer, and our love become a reflection of your faithful and unfailing care. Amen.


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

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.