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Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, June 16, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for June 16, 2026

Psalm 103:13

The Compassion of the Father

“Like a father has compassion on his children, so Yahweh has compassion on those who fear him.”

The Word Before Us

Psalm 103:13 gives us a tender picture of the heart of God. The Lord is not presented as distant, cold, or indifferent to the weakness of His people. He is described as a compassionate Father, one who sees His children with mercy, patience, and understanding. His compassion is not shallow sentiment. It is faithful love that stoops toward human frailty and holds His people with care.

This verse speaks gently to the places where we feel small, weary, ashamed, or uncertain. We may come before God aware of our failures, our limitations, our griefs, and our need for mercy. Psalm 103 reminds us that the Lord knows how to look upon His children with compassion. He does not forget that we are dust. He does not treat our weakness as a surprise. He meets those who fear Him with fatherly mercy.

Understanding the Context

Psalm 103 is a psalm of David, calling the soul to bless Yahweh and remember His benefits. It begins with worship that rises from personal gratitude: “Praise Yahweh, my soul!” David then names the mercy of God in many ways. The Lord forgives iniquities, heals diseases, redeems life from destruction, crowns His people with loving kindness and tender mercies, and satisfies them with good things.

As the psalm unfolds, David praises the Lord for His righteousness, justice, patience, and steadfast love. God is merciful and gracious, slow to anger, and abundant in loving kindness. He does not deal with His people according to their sins, nor repay them according to their iniquities. Instead, His mercy is as high as the heavens above the earth, and He removes transgressions as far as the east is from the west.

Psalm 103:13 belongs within this rich declaration of divine mercy. David compares God’s compassion to the compassion of a father for his children. The comparison is personal and relational. God’s people are not merely subjects under His rule; they are children under His care. Those who fear Him—those who revere Him, trust Him, and walk humbly before Him—are met by a compassion that understands their need.

The next verse deepens the meaning: God knows our frame and remembers that we are dust. His compassion is not blind to our condition. He knows exactly what we are. He knows our weakness, our shortness of life, our vulnerability, and our dependence on Him. Yet He loves with mercy.

Living the Verse Today

This Scripture speaks to daily Christian life because many of us struggle to receive the compassion of God. We may believe that God is powerful, holy, and just, but still wonder whether He is tender toward us. We may carry wounds from harsh voices, strained family relationships, or experiences where compassion was withheld. For some, the word “father” may bring comfort; for others, it may carry sorrow. Yet Psalm 103 does not ask us to measure God by the failures of human fathers. It invites us to see true fatherly compassion in the Lord Himself.

God’s compassion does not excuse sin, but it does meet sinners with mercy. It does not ignore our failures, but it provides forgiveness. It does not remove every consequence, but it surrounds the repentant heart with steadfast love. The compassion of God is strong enough to tell the truth and gentle enough to restore the wounded.

This verse also brings hope in grief and endurance. When we are tired from carrying sorrow, God has compassion. When we feel overwhelmed by responsibilities or uncertain about the future, God has compassion. When faith feels weak and prayers feel quiet, God has compassion. His mercy is not reserved only for those who feel strong. It is especially precious to those who know their need.

To fear the Lord is not to run from Him in terror, but to come before Him with reverence, trust, and surrender. It is to recognize His holiness and receive His mercy. Those who fear Him do not have to pretend to be self-sufficient. They can come as children come to a faithful father, bringing their burdens, confessions, tears, and hopes into His presence.

Today, Psalm 103:13 invites us to rest in the compassion of God. We may still need correction, healing, patience, and growth. But we do not seek those things before a hard-hearted master. We come before a compassionate Father whose mercy is deeper than our weakness and whose love is steadier than our fear.

Reflection

Where do you most need to receive the Lord’s fatherly compassion and trust that He sees your weakness with mercy rather than rejection?


My devotional book, The Word Before Us, is now available on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GX38Z88C.

The Word Before Us is a two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections written to help readers slow down, listen carefully to Scripture, and discover the grace, hope, and wisdom of Christ for daily life.

Each entry opens God’s Word with warmth, reverence, and practical insight, offering a brief reflection on the meaning and context of the verse while inviting readers to live its truth with faithfulness and humility.

Written in a pastoral and accessible style, The Word Before Us is for anyone who desires to begin the day rooted in Scripture and attentive to the voice of God.


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 Tuesday, June 16, 2026: A House Divided

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, June 16, 2026

A House Divided

“If a house is divided against itself, that house cannot stand.”Mark 3:25

Reflection

On June 16, 1858, in Springfield, Illinois, Abraham Lincoln accepted the Republican nomination for the United States Senate and spoke words that would become woven into the moral memory of the nation: “A house divided against itself cannot stand.” He warned that the United States could not permanently endure half slave and half free. His words were not merely political strategy; they named a deep spiritual and moral reality. A nation cannot forever live with its conscience split in two. A people cannot keep walking in opposite directions without eventually facing the cost of that division.

Lincoln’s phrase came from the words of Jesus in Mark 3:25. In the Gospel setting, Jesus had been healing, delivering, and setting people free, yet some of the religious leaders accused Him of working by the power of evil. Jesus answered with a simple truth: a kingdom divided against itself cannot stand, and a house divided against itself cannot stand. Evil does not defeat evil by turning against itself. A divided power collapses from within.

Jesus’ words are sobering because they reach far beyond the moment in which they were spoken. They speak to nations, families, churches, communities, and individual hearts. Division is not always loud at first. Sometimes it begins quietly, with small compromises we learn to tolerate. We say one thing and live another. We confess faith but nurse resentment. We speak of justice but excuse unfairness when it benefits us. We pray for peace but keep feeding bitterness. We long for holiness but leave hidden corners of the heart untouched.

A divided house may look strong for a season, but cracks have a way of spreading.

Anyone who has lived around fences knows this truth. A ranch fence may stand for years, weathered but useful, holding its line across rough ground. But if a few posts begin to rot, if a strand of wire loosens, if one section leans while the rest pulls against it, the whole fence begins to lose its purpose. At first, the weakness may seem small. One broken post does not look like a crisis. One sagging stretch may not seem urgent. But then the wind comes, the animals push, the ground shifts, and the weakness that was ignored becomes plain. What was left unrepaired begins to affect everything connected to it.

So it is with the soul. The divided places we ignore eventually shape the life we live. A person cannot forever walk with one foot on the narrow way and the other on the road of self-will. A home cannot flourish where love is spoken but patience is absent. A community cannot remain healthy where truth is sacrificed for comfort. A nation cannot be whole where human dignity is honored in word but denied in practice.

Yet the word of Jesus is not only a warning of collapse. It is also an invitation to become whole.

When Christ names division, He does so as the One who came to heal what sin has broken. He exposes the crack not to condemn the house, but to call it back to its foundation. He reveals the divided heart not to shame us, but to draw us into repentance, truth, and restoration. The gospel does not leave us pretending that everything is sound when the foundation is shifting. Grace gives us courage to tell the truth before the collapse comes.

This is where Lincoln’s warning still speaks with spiritual weight. Moral compromise always asks us to make peace with what God calls us to confront. It asks us to live comfortably with contradiction. It teaches us to say, “This far, but no farther,” when God is calling us to integrity, justice, mercy, and obedience. But the kingdom of God does not invite us into a half-formed faith. Jesus calls us into wholeness: heart, mind, soul, strength, neighbor-love, truth-telling, and humble surrender.

Today, this verse asks us to look honestly at the divided places within us. Where are our words and actions pulling against each other? Where have we made room for resentment, fear, pride, prejudice, or indifference? Where have we chosen silence because truth felt costly? Where have we settled for outward peace while inward division remains unresolved?

The good news is that Christ is able to rebuild what division has weakened. He can strengthen the rotted posts, tighten what has sagged, and restore the line of faithfulness in our lives. But we must let Him show us where the repair is needed. We must be willing to repent where compromise has taken root. We must choose the steady work of reconciliation, humility, courage, and truth.

A house divided cannot stand, but a house surrendered to Christ can be made whole. A heart divided cannot know peace, but a heart yielded to God can be healed. A people divided by sin and fear can still find their way back to righteousness when they humble themselves before the Lord.

On this day, may we hear the warning with reverence and receive the invitation with hope. God is not calling us to despair over division. He is calling us to return to the foundation that stands: Jesus Christ, full of grace and truth.

Prayer

Lord God, search our hearts and reveal the divided places within us, our homes, our communities, and our nation. Heal what has been weakened by compromise, pride, fear, injustice, and indifference. Give us courage to stand in truth without bitterness, to seek peace without denying righteousness, and to walk humbly in the way of Christ. Make us whole in love, justice, mercy, and obedience, and rebuild our lives upon the foundation that cannot be shaken. 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.