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Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Verse of the Day for Wednesday, July 8, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 8, 2026

Psalm 138:2

Exalting His Name and His Word

“I will bow down toward your holy temple, and give thanks to your Name for your loving kindness and for your truth; for you have exalted your Name and your Word above all.”

The Word Before Us

Psalm 138:2 draws us into worship that is both humble and confident. David bows before the Lord, gives thanks for God’s loving kindness and truth, and declares that the Lord has exalted his name and his word above all.

This verse reminds us that worship begins with recognizing who God is. He is not distant, careless, or uncertain. He is faithful in love and steadfast in truth. His name reveals his character, and his word reveals his will, his promise, and his mercy. When life feels unsettled, when grief presses close, or when faith needs steadying, the people of God are invited to return to the Lord whose name is holy and whose word does not fail.

Understanding the Context

This passage comes from Psalm 138, a psalm of David shaped as a song of thanksgiving. David praises the Lord with his whole heart, worships toward God’s holy temple, and gives thanks because the Lord has answered him and strengthened his soul. The psalm holds together reverence and personal testimony. David is not speaking about God only as an idea; he is praising the God who has heard him.

Psalm 138:2 stands near the beginning of this prayer of thanksgiving. David bows in worship and gives thanks for God’s “loving kindness” and “truth.” These words point to the Lord’s covenant faithfulness, mercy, reliability, and steadfast care. David has learned that God’s love is not shallow affection and that God’s truth is not cold correctness. The Lord’s mercy and truth belong together. He is gracious without being false, and truthful without being cruel.

The final line of the verse is especially rich: “for you have exalted your Name and your Word above all.” God’s name represents his revealed character, and God’s word represents his trustworthy speech, promise, command, and self-disclosure. David is saying that the Lord has made himself known as the God whose character and promises stand above every earthly power, every human claim, and every uncertain circumstance.

For Christian readers, this verse also draws our hearts toward Christ, the living Word, in whom the fullness of God’s grace and truth is revealed. The God whom David worshiped is the same God who has made himself known through his Son. In Christ, the Lord’s loving kindness and truth are not merely spoken; they are embodied.

Living the Verse Today

Psalm 138:2 speaks deeply to daily Christian life because it teaches us where to turn when the soul needs grounding. The world offers many voices. Some flatter us, some frighten us, some confuse us, and some wear us down. Even our own hearts can become restless, especially in seasons of grief, waiting, disappointment, or uncertainty. David’s response is worship. He bows. He gives thanks. He remembers the Lord’s loving kindness and truth.

To bow before God is to acknowledge that we are not the center. That may sound difficult, but it is actually a mercy. We do not have to carry the weight of being our own savior, judge, defender, or source of hope. We can bend the heart before the One whose name is above all and whose word is faithful. In worship, we are placed back in the truth: God is God, and we are held by his mercy.

This verse also helps us endure. When grief comes, the Lord’s loving kindness reminds us that sorrow is not faced alone. When uncertainty comes, his truth reminds us that our lives are not governed by confusion. When faith feels weary, his word gives us a place to stand. We may not always understand what God is doing, but we can trust who God is. His name is worthy. His word is tested. His mercy remains.

Giving thanks does not mean pretending that everything is easy. David’s psalms often came from places of trouble, danger, and need. Thanksgiving, in Scripture, is frequently an act of faith spoken from the middle of real life. It remembers what God has done and trusts that his character has not changed. It says, “Lord, I do not see everything clearly, but I know your loving kindness. I know your truth. I know your name is holy, and your word will stand.”

Psalm 138:2 also invites us to let God’s word become more authoritative than our fears. Fear may speak loudly, but it does not deserve the final word. Shame may accuse, but it is not greater than God’s mercy. Grief may ache deeply, but it cannot erase the truth of God’s presence. Christ has spoken promises that remain: he is with us, he gives rest to the weary, he forgives sinners, he raises the dead, and he will complete what he has begun.

Today, this verse calls us to worship with a steady heart. We bow not because God is harsh, but because he is holy. We give thanks not because life is untouched by pain, but because the Lord’s loving kindness and truth are greater than all that threatens to undo us.

Reflection

Where do I need to let God’s name and word rise above my fears, grief, uncertainties, or competing voices today?


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 Wednesday, July 8, 2026: Citizens of Heaven, Waiting for the Savior

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The Daily Devotional

Wednesday, July 8, 2026

Citizens of Heaven, Waiting for the Savior

“But our citizenship is in heaven, from where we also wait for a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ, who will change the body of our humiliation to be conformed to the body of his glory, according to the working by which he is able even to subject all things to himself.”Philippians 3:20–21

Reflection

On July 8, 1947, reports emerged from near Roswell, New Mexico, claiming that a flying saucer had crashed in the desert. Whether viewed as mystery, misunderstanding, military secrecy, or folklore, the Roswell story captured the imagination of generations. People looked toward the skies and wondered whether visitors from another world had come near. Decades later, on July 8, 2011, Space Shuttle Atlantis lifted off from Kennedy Space Center on STS-135, the final flight of the Space Shuttle era. That launch marked the close of thirty years of shuttle missions, years in which human beings reached beyond the atmosphere with courage, skill, and longing.

Both moments, in very different ways, remind us that humanity has always looked upward. We look to the heavens with curiosity, longing, fear, hope, and wonder. We wonder what lies beyond us. We dream of distant worlds. We ask whether we are alone. We reach toward the skies because something within the human heart knows that this visible world is not the whole story.

Philippians 3:20–21 speaks into that longing with holy clarity. Paul tells believers, “But our citizenship is in heaven.” He is not saying that Christians should despise the earth or neglect their responsibilities here. He is reminding us where our truest identity is found. We live in this world, but we do not finally belong to its systems, its anxieties, its passing honors, or its fading promises. Our first loyalty is to the kingdom of God. Our deepest belonging is in heaven. Our hope is not built on speculation, rumor, technology, or human achievement, but on the promised return of “a Savior, the Lord Jesus Christ.”

That is a powerful distinction. The Christian hope is not that something mysterious might someday arrive from the stars. Our hope is that Someone certain will come from heaven. We are not waiting for an unknown visitor, but for the known Savior. We are not looking for a strange power to explain the universe, but for the Lord who made the universe and holds all things together. Christ’s return is not science fiction, fantasy, or fear-filled imagination. It is the promise of the risen Lord, who will come again in glory.

Everyday life gives us a small picture of this. Imagine a traveler standing in a crowded airport far from home. Around him are announcements, delays, hurried footsteps, luggage carts, and unfamiliar faces. He may have business to conduct, people to help, and responsibilities to fulfill while he is away. Yet in his pocket is a passport that tells the truth about where he belongs. He may be passing through another land, but he is not without a home. He knows his destination. He knows where he is going. And when he sees the gate number appear on the screen, his heart lifts because the journey home is drawing nearer.

So it is with the people of God. We live here with purpose. We work, love, serve, suffer, build, forgive, raise families, care for neighbors, and bear witness to Christ. Christian citizenship in heaven does not make us careless about earth; it makes us faithful on earth. Because we belong to Christ, we live with moral clarity in a confused world. Because our Savior is coming, we do not have to surrender to despair. Because our true home is secure, we can serve humbly and courageously wherever God has placed us.

Paul also reminds us that Christ will “change the body of our humiliation to be conformed to the body of his glory.” This speaks tenderly to every person who knows weakness, aging, sickness, grief, or weariness. Our present bodies are real gifts from God, but they also bear the marks of a fallen world. They ache. They tire. They break. They remind us that we are dust. Yet the return of Christ includes the renewal of His people. The Savior who forgives our sins will also complete our redemption. He will transform what is lowly into glory, not by our strength, but “according to the working by which he is able even to subject all things to himself.”

That means nothing is beyond His authority. Not history. Not death. Not suffering. Not the future. Not the powers of this world. The One we await is not merely coming to comfort us privately; He is coming as Lord over all. Until that day, we live as citizens of heaven with our feet on the ground and our hope fixed above.

Today, it is worth asking: “Am I living today as though heaven is my true home?” That question is not meant to make us withdraw from life. It is meant to reorder life. It calls us to loosen our grip on what is temporary, to speak with grace, to choose holiness, to carry hope into ordinary places, and to remember that our Savior is nearer than our fears would have us believe.

The skies may stir human curiosity, but heaven gives the believer confidence. We do not wait in confusion, chasing every rumor or trembling before the unknown. We wait for Jesus Christ. And when He comes, He will not come as a stranger. He will come as Savior, King, and Lord—the One who knows His own, renews His people, and brings all things under His righteous reign.

Prayer

Lord Jesus Christ, help us to live today as citizens of heaven while serving faithfully here on earth. Lift our eyes above fear, distraction, and passing things, and fix our hope firmly on You. Teach us to walk with holiness, compassion, courage, and readiness as we wait for Your promised return. Strengthen those who feel weak, comfort those who are weary, and remind us that our future rests in Your hands. May our lives reflect the kingdom to which we belong, until the day when You come in glory and make all things new. 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.