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Saturday, July 18, 2026

Verse of the Day for Saturday, July 18, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 18, 2026

Psalm 119:7

Learning the Way of Thanksgiving

“I will give thanks to you with uprightness of heart, when I learn your righteous judgments.”

The Word Before Us

Psalm 119:7 teaches us that thanksgiving grows as we learn the ways of God. The psalmist does not separate gratitude from obedience, worship from instruction, or praise from the shaping work of God’s word. He gives thanks with an upright heart as he learns the Lord’s righteous judgments.

This verse invites us into a patient and teachable faith. We do not always begin with full understanding. We often come to God with questions, burdens, fears, griefs, and unfinished places in our hearts. Yet as we learn his word, we begin to see more clearly who he is, what is good, what is true, and how his righteousness guides us toward life. Thanksgiving deepens when the heart is taught by God.

Understanding the Context

Psalm 119:7 comes from the longest psalm in Scripture, a sustained prayerful meditation on the beauty, authority, and goodness of God’s word. The psalm uses many terms for the Lord’s instruction, including law, statutes, commandments, precepts, testimonies, word, and judgments. Together, these words describe the ways God makes his will known to his people. Near the beginning of the psalm, this verse connects thanksgiving with learning, showing that gratitude deepens as the heart is taught by the righteous judgments of the Lord.

Psalm 119:7 appears near the beginning of the psalm, where the writer is expressing a desire to walk in God’s ways with sincerity. The psalm begins by declaring the blessedness of those whose way is blameless and who walk in the Lord’s law. It then turns into prayer: “Oh that my ways were steadfast to obey your statutes!” The psalmist knows that faithfulness is not automatic. He needs instruction, guidance, and grace.

When he says, “I will give thanks to you with uprightness of heart,” he is speaking of worship that comes from sincerity rather than appearance. An upright heart is not a flawless heart, but a heart made honest before God. It does not hide from the Lord’s correction or resist his truth. It comes ready to learn.

The phrase “when I learn your righteous judgments” shows that God’s instruction is not harsh or arbitrary. His judgments are righteous. His ways are just, faithful, and true. Learning them leads not only to knowledge, but to worship. The more the psalmist learns the Lord’s ways, the more he is moved to give thanks.

Living the Verse Today

Psalm 119:7 speaks tenderly to daily Christian life because we are all still learning. Faith does not mean we already understand everything. It means we keep bringing our hearts before God’s word, allowing him to teach us what is true. Some lessons come through quiet study. Some come through worship. Some come through correction. Some come through the long seasons of grief, endurance, waiting, and trust.

There are times when God’s ways may not be immediately clear to us. We may pray for relief and receive strength to endure. We may ask for answers and receive grace for the next step. We may long for a straight road and find ourselves being taught patience along a winding path. In such seasons, Psalm 119:7 gives us a gentle pattern: keep learning, keep trusting, and let thanksgiving rise as God forms the heart.

This verse also reminds us that gratitude is not only a response to pleasant circumstances. The psalmist gives thanks as he learns God’s righteous judgments. That means thanksgiving can grow from seeing God’s faithfulness, wisdom, justice, mercy, and truth, even while life remains difficult. We give thanks not because every burden has been removed, but because the Lord is teaching us how to walk with him through every burden.

For those who are grieving, this verse offers a quiet kind of hope. Grief often changes the way we hear Scripture. Words once familiar may reach us differently when the heart is tender. God’s word may not answer every question we carry, but it teaches us that the Lord is near, that our tears are not unseen, and that his righteousness does not fail when our world feels shaken. As we learn his ways, we may find thanksgiving returning slowly, not as forced brightness, but as trust taking root again.

For those who are enduring, this verse encourages a teachable spirit. Endurance is not only about getting through hardship. It is also about being formed in faith while we walk through it. God’s word teaches us to resist bitterness, to wait with hope, to seek wisdom, to speak truth, to forgive, to pray, and to trust Christ when our strength is small.

In Christ, we see the fullness of God’s righteous way. Jesus lived with perfect uprightness of heart. He trusted the Father completely, obeyed faithfully, suffered willingly, and opened the way of salvation. Through him, we are not merely instructed from a distance. We are forgiven, renewed, and taught by grace.

Today, Psalm 119:7 invites us to come before God as learners. We do not need to pretend we are already wise. We can ask the Lord to teach us his righteous judgments, shape our hearts with truth, and lead us into thanksgiving that is honest, humble, and steady.

Reflection

What is God teaching me through his word right now, and how might that lesson lead me toward a more upright heart and deeper thanksgiving?


If you have been enjoying my Scripture study, The Word Before Us, I’m grateful to share that my devotional book, The Word Before Us, is now available on Amazon:

https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GX38Z88C

This two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections is written to help readers slow down, listen carefully to Scripture, and begin each day rooted in the grace, hope, and wisdom of Christ.


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 Saturday, July 18, 2026: Seeds We May Never See Grow

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The Daily Devotional

Saturday, July 18, 2026

Seeds We May Never See Grow

“Let us not be weary in doing good, for we will reap in due season if we don’t give up.” — Galatians 6:9

Reflection

There is a quiet kind of faith required to plant a seed.

The one who places it into the soil does not see a tree. There is no shade, no fruit, no branches reaching toward the sky. There is only a small seed disappearing into the darkness of the earth. For a time, nothing seems to happen at all.

Yet beneath the surface, hidden from human sight, life is beginning.

This is part of the encouragement Paul offers in Galatians 6:9. He understands that doing good can become wearying, especially when we cannot see any evidence that our faithfulness is making a difference. We pray and wait. We serve and wonder. We encourage someone and never know whether our words were remembered. We plant seeds of kindness, truth, mercy, and love, yet the field before us sometimes appears unchanged.

Paul says, “Let us not be weary in doing good, for we will reap in due season if we don’t give up.”

On July 18, 1817, the English novelist Jane Austen died in Winchester at only 41 years of age. She could not have known the enormous influence her writings would eventually have. Later that year, Northanger Abbey and Persuasion were published posthumously, and it was then that she was publicly identified as the author of her novels.

She had planted seeds through words, but much of the harvest came after her voice had fallen silent.

There is something deeply moving in that. We do not always live long enough to see what becomes of everything we have faithfully planted. Some prayers may be answered after we are gone. Some acts of kindness may bear fruit in another generation. A teacher may never know what became of the quiet student who was encouraged at just the right moment. A grandparent may pray for a child or grandchild for years without seeing the full answer. A few compassionate words spoken during someone’s darkest hour may be remembered long after the speaker has forgotten saying them.

A person planting a young tree knows this truth well. The sapling may be little more than a thin trunk with a handful of leaves. The one who digs the hole, settles its roots into the earth, and pours water around it may never sit beneath its mature shade. Yet years later, children may play beneath its branches. Travelers may rest there on a hot afternoon. Birds may build nests among its leaves.

The planter may never see any of it.

But the shade is no less real.

I think about this often in my own devotional ministry. Day after day, I write Christian devotionals and Scripture reflections, sending small seeds of faith into the world through the internet. Most of the time, I do not know who will read them. I do not know where the reader lives, what burdens they are carrying, what prayers they whispered the night before, or whether one sentence, one Scripture verse, or one prayer might reach them at precisely the moment they need it.

Those words now travel far beyond my home in Deming, New Mexico. They cross state lines and national borders. They enter homes and hearts I may never know. And recently, another seed was planted through an article I wrote for a Christian magazine in New Zealand.

There is something humbling about sitting quietly in New Mexico, writing words that can cross an ocean and reach people I will probably never meet. I may never know what fruit, if any, will come from a particular devotional or article. Perhaps someone will be encouraged to keep praying. Perhaps another person will find hope during a difficult season. Perhaps a Scripture verse will take root in a heart and continue growing for years.

I may never see it.

But seeing the harvest has never been the requirement for planting the seed.

Our responsibility is to plant, water, pray, love, encourage, serve, and remain faithful. The growth belongs to God.

Perhaps you are a parent who has prayed for years and wonders whether anything is changing. Perhaps you are a caregiver whose daily acts of kindness seem unnoticed. Perhaps you are a teacher who keeps encouraging students without knowing where their lives will lead. Perhaps you are a friend who continues showing compassion to someone who cannot yet receive it. Perhaps you are a writer whose words seem to disappear into silence. Perhaps you simply wonder whether the small good you do each day makes any lasting difference.

Do not underestimate what God can do with a seed.

A seed does its deepest work where no one can see it. Roots grow in darkness before anything green breaks through the soil. God often works in much the same way. What appears to us as silence may not be inactivity. What looks like delay may not be abandonment. The field may seem empty while something living is already stirring beneath the surface.

So ask yourself today: What seed can I faithfully plant, even if I never live to see it grow?

Send the note. Speak the kind word. Offer the prayer. Forgive. Give generously. Share the Scripture. Encourage the discouraged. Teach the child. Visit the lonely. Serve quietly. Keep doing good without demanding immediate proof that it matters.

The measure of a faithful life is not fame, recognition, applause, or immediate visible success. It is obedience to God.

Some of the most enduring fruit of our lives may appear only after we are gone. Some words may continue speaking. Some prayers may continue shaping generations. Some kindness may be passed from one person to another until its origin is forgotten by everyone except God.

No faithful seed entrusted to God is meaningless.

We may not see the entire harvest, but God sees the seed, the soil, the hidden roots, the coming rain, and the generations yet to come.

Our calling is simply to keep planting and to leave the harvest in His hands.

Prayer

Gracious God, thank You for the privilege of planting seeds of faith, love, kindness, prayer, truth, and encouragement in the lives of others. Give us strength when the harvest seems delayed, patience when growth remains hidden, humility when we are allowed to see the fruit, and faith when we are not. Keep us from growing weary in doing good, and remind us that no act of love offered in obedience to You is ever wasted. Use our words, our prayers, our service, and even the smallest acts of faithfulness in ways we may never fully understand. Help us to trust the work beneath the surface and to rest peacefully in Your perfect timing, knowing that the harvest belongs to You. Amen.


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

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. All rights reserved.