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Friday, July 10, 2026

Verse of the Day for Friday, July 10, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 10, 2026

Philippians 1:6

The God Who Completes What He Begins

“Being confident of this very thing, that he who began a good work in you will complete it until the day of Jesus Christ.”

The Word Before Us

There is a tender strength in knowing that God does not abandon what he begins. Philippians 1:6 reminds us that the Christian life is not held together by our own ability to finish the work, but by the faithfulness of the One who first began his good work within us.

Some days we may feel strong in faith, clear in purpose, and steady in hope. Other days, we may feel unfinished, uneven, weary, or uncertain. We may see our weaknesses more clearly than our growth. We may wonder whether we are becoming the person God has called us to be. Paul’s words speak into that place with pastoral assurance: the work is God’s, and God is faithful to complete what he has begun.

Understanding the Context

Paul is writing to the believers in Philippi, a church he loved deeply and remembered with joy. Philippians begins with thanksgiving and prayer. Paul gives thanks for their partnership in the gospel “from the first day until now,” and he expresses confidence that God will continue the good work He started in them.

Paul is writing from imprisonment, yet his letter is filled with joy, affection, encouragement, and Christ-centered hope. His confidence is not based on easy circumstances. It is not rooted in the Philippians’ perfection or in his own freedom from trouble. It is grounded in God’s faithfulness. Paul sees evidence of grace in their lives, and he trusts that the Lord who began that grace-filled work will bring it to completion.

The phrase “until the day of Jesus Christ” points forward to the final fulfillment of God’s saving work. Paul is not speaking only about short-term improvement or temporary encouragement. He is looking toward the day when Christ will return, when God’s purposes will be fully revealed, and when the work of grace in his people will be brought to its promised completion.

This verse also fits within the broader message of Philippians. Throughout the letter, Paul calls believers to humility, endurance, unity, joy, prayer, and steadfast trust in Christ. Yet these commands are not given as burdens to be carried apart from God’s help. They are rooted in the truth that God is already at work in his people.

Living the Verse Today

Philippians 1:6 speaks gently to the believer who feels unfinished. Most of us know what it is to look at our lives and see places where growth is still needed. We may see habits not yet healed, fears not yet quieted, grief not yet settled, patience not yet formed, or trust not yet as steady as we wish it were. This verse does not deny those realities. Instead, it places them under the faithful care of God.

The good work God begins is not shallow self-improvement. It is the work of grace. It is the forming of Christ in us. It is forgiveness taking root, love being deepened, faith being strengthened, hope being renewed, and character being shaped through the presence and power of God. Sometimes that work feels encouraging. Sometimes it feels slow. Sometimes it comes through joy, and sometimes through suffering, correction, waiting, or loss. But the promise remains: God completes what God begins.

For those who are grieving, this verse offers quiet hope. Grief can make life feel interrupted, as though something precious has been left unfinished. It can make the future seem uncertain, and the heart feel fragile. Yet God’s work in us is not halted by sorrow. He continues to hold, heal, strengthen, and sustain. He is able to work even in the hidden places where no one else can see.

For those who are weary, this verse speaks of endurance. We are not asked to manufacture spiritual strength from nothing. The Lord who began the work is still present in the work. He does not stand at a distance, waiting to see whether we can finish on our own. He remains faithful in the middle, guiding us by his word, sustaining us by his Spirit, and drawing us nearer to Christ.

This verse also protects us from despair over slow growth. God’s timing is often more patient than ours. We may want immediate maturity, quick healing, or visible fruit. But the Lord works deeply, not merely quickly. He shapes the roots before we always see the branches. He forms trust through repeated acts of mercy. He teaches hope through seasons when hope must be practiced before it is fully felt.

To live this verse today is to trust that we are still in God’s hands. We can confess what is unfinished without losing heart. We can repent without despair. We can keep praying, serving, learning, forgiving, and enduring because the work does not depend on our faithfulness alone. It rests on God’s faithfulness first.

The One who began a good work in you has not forgotten you. He knows the whole story, the hidden wounds, the quiet prayers, the unfinished places, and the grace still being formed. In Christ, his work is not abandoned, and his promise is not empty.

Reflection

Where do I need to trust God’s continuing work in me today, especially in the places that still feel unfinished, weak, wounded, or slow to change?


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 10, 2026: Grace in the Heat

Experience the story: click the image above to listen

The Daily Devotional

Friday, July 10, 2026

Grace in the Heat

“When you pass through the waters, I will be with you; and through the rivers, they will not overflow you. When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned, and flame will not scorch you.”Isaiah 43:2

Reflection

On July 10, 1913, the temperature in Death Valley, California, reached 134°F—the hottest temperature ever reliably recorded on earth. It is difficult to imagine air that hot, heat rising from the ground, breath feeling heavy in the lungs, and every step becoming a test of endurance. In such a place, survival is not casual. A person must pay attention, slow down, seek shade, drink water, and respect the severity of the environment.

Life has its own Death Valley seasons. They may not show up on a thermometer, but they are felt deeply in the soul. Grief can feel like heat pressing down with no breeze. Anxiety can make the heart race as though the air itself has grown thin. Betrayal can burn with a pain that lingers. Strained relationships, financial pressure, physical weariness, caregiving, disappointment, and spiritual dryness can all become “heat waves” of the heart. In those seasons, we may wonder how long we can keep going.

Isaiah 43:2 does not promise that God’s people will never face waters, rivers, fire, or flame. In fact, the verse assumes that they will. The Lord says, “When you pass through,” not “if you pass through.” These words were spoken to a people who knew hardship, exile, loss, and uncertainty. Yet in the middle of their trial, God’s promise was not distance but presence: “I will be with you.” The waters would be real, but they would not have the final word. The fire would be fierce, but it would not consume what God was preserving.

A delivery driver once described how he survived long summer days during extreme heat. His truck grew hot quickly, and the pavement reflected the sun like an open furnace. He kept a cooler of water beside him, tucked wet towels in the back, and made himself pause even when the schedule was pressing. Every hour or so, he would wrap a cool towel around his neck, drink water before he felt thirsty, and find a sliver of shade when he could. “You learn not to fight the heat,” he said. “You learn how to work through it wisely.”

That is a simple but holy lesson. Spiritual endurance is not pretending the heat is not real. It is learning to receive what God provides while we walk through it. Sometimes that provision is rest. Sometimes it is Scripture read slowly and prayer whispered honestly. Sometimes it is the courage to ask for help, the humility to let someone carry part of the burden, or the wisdom to step away from what is draining our spirit. Sometimes God sustains us through a friend’s call, a quiet morning, a small act of kindness, or the strength to do only the next faithful thing.

Here in the Southwest, July carries another image. The National Weather Service notes that New Mexico’s monsoon precipitation generally increases in July, and around Deming the early days of July show a dramatic rise in average precipitation. After weeks of dry heat, the clouds begin to gather. The scent of rain comes before the drops fall. The desert ground, cracked and thirsty, receives mercy from the sky.

That is a picture worth carrying in the heart. God’s grace does not always arrive by removing the heat immediately. Sometimes grace comes as shade enough for the hour. Sometimes it comes as strength enough for the day. Sometimes it comes like monsoon rain after a long dry spell, reminding us that the Lord has not forgotten the ground beneath our feet or the weariness within our souls.

Today, name the “heat wave” you are facing. Do not hide it from God or dress it in religious language. Tell Him plainly: “Lord, this grief is heavy.” “This relationship is strained.” “This anxiety is wearing me down.” “My body is tired.” “I do not know how much longer I can carry this.” Then choose one faithful step. Rest if you need rest. Pray if words will come. Sit silently before God if they will not. Open Scripture. Ask for help. Set a healthy boundary. Forgive where grace is calling you to forgive. Offer kindness even while weary.

The Lord does not stand far off from our difficult seasons. He is present in the waters. He is present in the fire. He is present in the dry valley and in the long waiting before the rain. God’s sustaining presence does not always spare us from hardship, but it keeps hardship from consuming us. The heat may be real, but so is His mercy. The season may be exhausting, but His grace is near. And when the soul feels dry and the road feels long, the God who walks with us is still able to bring rain to weary ground.

Prayer

Lord God, sustain us in the seasons that feel too hot, too heavy, and too long. Be near to every weary heart walking through grief, pressure, betrayal, anxiety, strained relationships, physical exhaustion, or quiet discouragement. Teach us to receive Your presence as shade in the heat and rain upon dry ground. Give us wisdom to slow down, courage to ask for help, faith to remain rooted in Your Word, and grace to take the next faithful step. Remind us that we are not abandoned in the fire or forgotten in the desert, for You are with us, preserving us, strengthening us, and leading us toward refreshment in Your time. 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.