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Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Verse of the Day for Wednesday, July 1, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 1, 2026

Romans 12:3

A Sober Measure of Grace

“For I say through the grace that was given me, to every man who is among you, not to think of himself more highly than he ought to think; but to think reasonably, as God has apportioned to each person a measure of faith.”

The Word Before Us

There is a quiet mercy in learning to see ourselves truthfully before God. Romans 12:3 calls us away from pride, comparison, self-importance, and false humility, and invites us into a life shaped by grace, honesty, and faithful dependence on Christ.

Paul’s words remind us that Christian maturity is not found in thinking too much of ourselves or too little of ourselves, but in seeing ourselves rightly. We belong to God by grace. Whatever gifts, strength, wisdom, endurance, or faith we have received did not begin with us. They have been entrusted to us by the Lord, and they are meant to be used with humility, gratitude, and love.

Understanding the Context

Paul is writing to the believers in Rome. In Romans 12, he has just urged them to present their bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and acceptable to God, and he now begins to describe the humble, transformed life that flows from the mercy of God. After unfolding the mercy of God throughout the earlier chapters of Romans, Paul now turns toward the shape of a transformed life. The gospel is not only something believers confess; it becomes the way they think, speak, serve, suffer, and live together.

Romans 12:3 begins that practical instruction with humility. Paul does not speak from personal pride, but “through the grace” given to him. Even his authority as an apostle is understood as a gift of grace, not a reason for self-exaltation. He urges every believer not to think too highly of themselves, but to think “reasonably,” according to the measure of faith God has given.

This matters because the verses that follow speak about the body of Christ. Believers have different gifts, different roles, and different ways of serving, but they belong to one another. Pride fractures the body. Envy weakens it. Comparison distracts it. Humility strengthens it. When each person receives their place as a gift from God, the community is able to serve faithfully without rivalry or resentment.

Paul’s teaching here is not about despairing over our weakness or denying the gifts God has given. It is about refusing to make ourselves the center. A sober mind recognizes both grace and dependence. It says, “What I have is from the Lord, and what I lack teaches me to trust him.”

Living the Verse Today

Romans 12:3 speaks tenderly and firmly into ordinary Christian life. We live in a world that often pushes us to prove our worth, defend our importance, compare our gifts, and measure our lives against others. Even in the life of faith, we can be tempted to ask whether we are doing enough, being noticed enough, suffering with enough strength, or serving in ways others can see. Paul calls us back to a quieter and truer place.

To think reasonably is to stand before God without pretending. It allows us to confess our weakness without shame and receive our gifts without pride. It helps us recognize that faith itself is not a personal achievement, but a grace God has placed within us. When grief comes, this kind of humility teaches us not to demand that we be strong in ourselves. When endurance is required, it reminds us that perseverance is sustained by God’s mercy. When hope feels fragile, it helps us trust that Christ holds us even when our faith feels small.

This verse also frees us from the burden of comparison. God has not called each believer to carry the same assignment, possess the same gifts, endure the same trials, or walk the same path. He has apportioned grace according to his wisdom. Some serve quietly. Some encourage. Some teach. Some pray faithfully in hidden places. Some bear sorrow with a gentle witness that others may never fully understand. None of these are small when they are offered to God.

Humility also deepens our relationship with others. When we no longer need to place ourselves above others, we are free to love them more sincerely. When we no longer despise our own place, we are free to serve with peace. A reasonable view of ourselves makes room for gratitude, patience, and compassion. It allows us to see others not as competitors, but as fellow members of Christ’s body, each one dependent on the same grace.

Faithful living begins with this kind of truthful surrender. We are not the source of our strength, but we are not abandoned in our weakness. We are not the giver of grace, but we are invited to live from it. We are not called to magnify ourselves, but to offer ourselves. In Christ, humility is not a lowering of our worth. It is the restoration of our proper place before the God who gives, sustains, and calls us beloved.

Reflection

Where might God be inviting me to see myself more truthfully today—with less pride, less comparison, and deeper trust in the grace he has given 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 Wednesday, July 1, 2026: Standing at the Midyear Threshold

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The Daily Devotional

Wednesday, July 1, 2026

Standing at the Midyear Threshold

“So teach us to count our days, that we may gain a heart of wisdom.”Psalm 90:12

Reflection

July 1st often feels like a threshold. The year is no longer new, yet it is not finished. Six months have passed behind us, and six months stretch before us. It is a quiet doorway in the middle of time, inviting us to pause and ask honest questions before God: What has the Lord carried us through? Where have we seen His mercy? What have we learned? Where have we grown weary? Where have we drifted? And how shall we walk faithfully into what remains?

Psalm 90 is a prayer traditionally associated with Moses, a man who knew what it meant to journey through seasons of uncertainty, wilderness, waiting, leadership, disappointment, and divine faithfulness. The psalm reflects on the brevity of human life and the eternal steadfastness of God. It reminds us that our days are not endless, but neither are they meaningless. Each day is held before the Lord, and each season is an opportunity to receive wisdom from Him.

When the psalmist prays, “So teach us to count our days,” he is not asking for a morbid awareness of time. He is asking for a holy awareness of life. To count our days is to remember that time is a gift, that each season matters, and that wisdom comes when we live with God in view. A heart of wisdom does not merely know how many days have passed. It learns how to walk faithfully within the days that remain.

July 1st gives us a natural moment to do that. It stands like a gate between two pastures. Behind us is the ground already crossed: mornings of grace, days of labor, burdens we carried, prayers we prayed, losses we endured, sins we confessed, joys we received, and mercies we may not have recognized at the time. Ahead of us is ground not yet traveled: decisions not yet made, conversations not yet spoken, burdens not yet known, blessings not yet seen, and opportunities for obedience still waiting.

Imagine a rancher standing at a gate early in the morning, hand resting on the weathered wood. Behind him is the field where yesterday’s work was done. He knows where the fence needed mending, where the water trough had run low, where the animals had wandered, and where the grass had grown stronger than expected. Before he opens the gate into the next pasture, he does not forget what he has seen. He carries the lesson of the first field into the second. He checks the latch, looks at the sky, considers the condition of the land, and steps forward with care.

That is a picture of faithful living. We do not enter the second half of the year by pretending the first half did not happen. We enter it by bringing our memories before God. Some memories call us to gratitude. Some call us to repentance. Some call us to release. Some call us to deeper trust. The Lord does not ask us to drag the past behind us as a burden, but He does invite us to let the past become a teacher under His grace.

Perhaps the first half of the year brought joy. Give thanks. Do not rush past the goodness of God. Name His blessings. Remember the provision, the friendship, the healing, the open door, the strength that came when you needed it.

Perhaps the first half brought hardship. Bring that too. The Lord is not offended by honest weariness. He carried Israel through wilderness places, met Elijah under a broom tree, restored Peter after failure, and walked with the disciples when their hearts were slow to understand. The God who has carried you through difficulty is not absent from the road ahead.

Perhaps the first half revealed places where you drifted. Do not hide from the Lord. Confession is not the end of hope; it is often the doorway back into wisdom. A heart of wisdom knows how to say, “Lord, I have not walked as faithfully as I should. Teach me again. Lead me again. Restore my steps.”

The practical call of July 1st is simple but searching: pause before you proceed. Before the demands of the remaining months sweep you along, take time to stand before God. Count your days. Count His mercies. Release what cannot be changed. Receive forgiveness where you have fallen short. Ask for wisdom before you make plans. Ask for courage before you face what remains. Ask for humility to walk with God rather than run ahead of Him.

The second half of the year is not empty. It is not random. It is not unknown to God. Every remaining day is already held within His sight. We may not know what the next months will bring, but we know the One who goes before us. The Lord who has carried us this far is faithful to guide our remaining steps. So we stand at this midyear threshold with reverence, gratitude, and hope, praying for hearts made wise by grace and lives made faithful one day at a time.

Prayer

Gracious and faithful God, as we stand at the threshold of the second half of this year, we thank You for carrying us through all that has passed—the joys, the burdens, the delays, the disappointments, the lessons, and the mercies we did not always recognize. Teach us to count our days with humility and wisdom. Help us release what cannot be changed, confess where we have drifted, and receive Your grace for the road ahead. Guide our steps in the months to come, strengthen us for faithful obedience, and keep our hearts attentive to Your presence. May we walk forward not in fear, but in trust, knowing that the One who has brought us this far will continue to lead us in 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.