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.

Friday, July 3, 2026

Verse of the Day for Friday, July 3, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 3, 2026

Proverbs 14:34

The Quiet Strength of Righteousness

“Righteousness exalts a nation, but sin is a disgrace to any people.”

The Word Before Us

There are some verses that speak not only to private faith, but to the shared life of families, churches, communities, and nations. Proverbs 14:34 reminds us that righteousness is never a small thing. It lifts, strengthens, steadies, and blesses, while sin slowly dishonors and wounds whatever it touches.

This verse invites us to think deeply about the kind of life that honors God. Righteousness is not merely outward respectability or public reputation. It is life ordered by the character of God. It is justice, mercy, truthfulness, humility, faithfulness, and reverence for the Lord. When those things are practiced, they bring dignity and strength. When they are neglected, even great power, wealth, influence, or success cannot protect a people from spiritual decay.

Understanding the Context

This passage comes from the book of Proverbs, a collection of wisdom sayings that teach God’s people how to live faithfully in the ordinary patterns of life. Proverbs speaks often about the difference between wisdom and folly, righteousness and wickedness, humility and pride, truth and deceit, always rooting faithful living in the fear of the Lord. Its words are practical, but they are never merely practical. They are rooted in reverence for Yahweh, which Proverbs presents as the beginning of wisdom.

Proverbs 14:34 stands within that wisdom tradition. It looks beyond the individual and considers the moral condition of a people. “Righteousness exalts a nation” means that a society is strengthened when its life is shaped by what is right before God. Justice matters. Honesty matters. Compassion matters. The treatment of the poor, the weak, the stranger, the elderly, and the vulnerable matters. The character of leaders matters, but so does the character of ordinary people. A nation is not exalted by pride, conquest, wealth, or self-congratulation. It is lifted by righteousness.

The second half of the verse is equally clear: “sin is a disgrace to any people.” Sin may be hidden for a time, excused by culture, defended by power, or normalized by habit, but it still leaves shame in its wake. It damages trust. It breaks fellowship. It hardens hearts. It makes people less able to see one another as neighbors created in the image of God.

This verse does not invite arrogance or national self-righteousness. It does not give any people permission to boast over another. Instead, it humbles all people before God. Every nation, every community, every church, every household, and every heart must ask whether its life is being shaped by righteousness or by sin.

Living the Verse Today

Proverbs 14:34 speaks to daily Christian life because righteousness begins close to home. It begins in the heart, in the words we choose, in the way we treat others, in the truth we tell, in the mercy we show, and in the quiet decisions no one else may see. It is easy to think of righteousness only in public or political terms, but Scripture often brings us back to the personal and the communal. A people are shaped by the lives of persons.

For the believer, righteousness is not self-made moral achievement. Our hope rests in Christ, the truly Righteous One. He is the one who reveals the heart of God, bears our sin, forgives our failure, and teaches us to walk in newness of life. Because of him, this verse does not leave us in despair over the sin we see around us or within us. It calls us to repentance, trust, and faithful witness.

In seasons of grief or uncertainty, this verse reminds us that God has not abandoned his concern for what is right. When injustice seems loud, when truth seems fragile, when communities feel divided, and when sin appears to have the upper hand, the Lord still calls his people to live faithfully. We may not be able to repair everything at once. We may not be able to change the heart of a nation by our own strength. But we can bear witness to the kingdom of God in the place where we stand.

Righteousness may look like refusing bitterness when anger would be easier. It may look like speaking truth without cruelty. It may look like honoring the dignity of someone with whom we disagree. It may look like praying for leaders, caring for neighbors, confessing our own sins before condemning others, and choosing mercy when the world expects contempt.

This kind of life requires endurance. It requires faith when results are slow. It requires hope when the world feels heavy. It requires trust that God sees what is done in secret and that no act of righteousness offered to him is wasted. The Lord can use faithful lives as quiet lights in dark places.

Proverbs 14:34 calls us to more than concern over the condition of the world. It calls us to examine the condition of our own hearts. If righteousness exalts a nation, then righteousness must also shape the people of God. We are invited to live as those who belong to Christ, not with pride, but with humility; not with despair, but with hope; not with harshness, but with holy steadiness.

Reflection

Where is God calling me to practice righteousness today in a way that brings honor to him and blessing to those around me?


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 Friday, July 3, 2026: Equal Dignity Under God

Experience the story: click the image above to listen

The Daily Devotional

Friday, July 3, 2026

Equal Dignity Under God

“God created man in his own image. In God’s image he created him; male and female he created them.”Genesis 1:27

Reflection

Genesis 1:27 takes us back to the beginning, before nations, governments, courts, constitutions, social classes, achievements, failures, divisions, and labels. Before anyone could earn a reputation, hold a title, own property, speak a language, join a community, or prove usefulness, God spoke a sacred truth over humanity: every person is made in His image. Human dignity begins there. It is not granted by government, wealth, education, appearance, race, nationality, gender, age, ability, popularity, or success. It is given by God.

This means that the worth of a human being does not rise and fall with public opinion. It does not disappear when a person is poor, difficult, forgotten, elderly, disabled, imprisoned, unemployed, foreign-born, misunderstood, or unable to contribute in ways society easily measures. Each person we meet carries a God-given dignity that demands reverence, humility, and care.

The American ideal of equality under the Constitution echoes, in civic form, a truth that Scripture reveals at the deepest level. A just society seeks to recognize that people should not be treated as less than human before the law. The Constitution’s best vision calls a nation to justice, ordered liberty, and equal protection. Yet for the believer, equality is not merely a legal principle written into public life; it is a spiritual calling written into the conscience by the God who created all people in His image.

Faith should shape how we see people long before we enter a voting booth, courthouse, classroom, workplace, or public discussion. It should shape how we speak to the cashier whose line is moving slowly, how we listen to the neighbor whose opinion differs from ours, how we treat the immigrant who struggles with our language, how we notice the elderly person sitting alone, how we respond to the person with a disability navigating a world not always built with them in mind, and how we honor the worker doing quiet labor that many overlook.

Imagine standing in a grocery store checkout line near the end of a long day. The store is crowded. A young cashier is trying to keep up while an elderly man ahead of you counts his change slowly. Someone behind you sighs loudly. Another mutters under his breath. The cashier looks embarrassed. The elderly man’s hands tremble. In that small, ordinary moment, no one is giving a speech about dignity, justice, or equality. Yet the truth of Genesis 1:27 is being tested.

Will we see the elderly man as an inconvenience or as someone made in the image of God? Will we see the cashier as a servant to be hurried or as a person worthy of patience and kindness? Will we let frustration rule us, or will faith teach us to slow down, breathe grace, and honor the humanity before us?

Sometimes the most powerful witness to human dignity is not dramatic. It is making eye contact. It is saying, “Take your time.” It is refusing to mock what others do not understand. It is speaking respectfully when disrespect would be easier. It is choosing not to dehumanize someone because of their politics, poverty, accent, illness, weakness, or past. It is remembering that every person has a story, a burden, a soul, and a Creator.

The image of God in others also calls us beyond politeness into justice. Respect is not merely a pleasant attitude; it becomes action. We honor human dignity when we defend the vulnerable, refuse favoritism, tell the truth, listen before judging, and use whatever influence we have to make life more just for others. We honor human dignity when we treat people not as categories, obstacles, or enemies, but as neighbors.

This does not mean we must agree with everyone, excuse wrongdoing, or abandon moral conviction. Scripture never asks us to confuse compassion with compromise. But it does call us to hold truth and love together. Even when correction is needed, cruelty is not. Even when disagreement is real, contempt is not holy. The person across from us is still someone God created.

Today’s challenge is simple but searching: look for the image of God in the person you are most tempted to ignore, dismiss, or judge. Speak one word of respect where silence would be easier. Show patience where irritation rises. Listen with humility where pride wants to answer quickly. Act justly in one ordinary situation where someone’s dignity is at stake.

The God who created humanity in His image calls His people to live as witnesses to that truth. When we honor the dignity of others, we do more than practice good citizenship. We bear faithful witness to the Creator. We remind the world that every person matters because every person stands beneath the gaze of God.

Prayer

Creator God, You have made every human being in Your image, and You have given each person a dignity that no earthly power can erase. Open our eyes to see others as You see them. Forgive us for the times we have ignored, judged, dismissed, or treated people as less than worthy of respect. Teach us to listen with humility, speak with kindness, act with justice, and walk with compassion in ordinary life. Help us honor the poor, the lonely, the elderly, the disabled, the stranger, the worker, the difficult neighbor, and those with whom we disagree. Shape our hearts so that our faith is seen in the way we treat people, and let our lives bear witness to Your truth, Your mercy, and Your love. 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.