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Tuesday, May 12, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, May 12, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 12, 2026

Proverbs 31:10, 27–28

A Life Worthy of Praise

“Who can find a worthy woman? For her value is far above rubies. She looks well to the ways of her household, and doesn’t eat the bread of idleness. Her children rise up and call her blessed. Her husband also praises her.”

The Word Before Us

There are lives that speak quietly, yet their faithfulness echoes long after the day is done. Proverbs 31 gives us a picture of such a life, not as a burden to imitate perfectly, but as a testimony to wisdom lived out in ordinary places. The worthy woman is praised not merely because she is busy, capable, or admired, but because her life bears the marks of steady love, careful stewardship, and reverence for God. Her value is described as far above rubies because character shaped by wisdom is more precious than anything that can be bought, displayed, or possessed.

Understanding the Context

Proverbs 31 begins with “the words of King Lemuel,” which are described as a revelation his mother taught him. The chapter first addresses the responsibilities of a ruler, calling him to sobriety, justice, and care for the poor and needy. Then, beginning in verse 10, the focus turns to the well-known poem about the worthy woman. This closing section is an acrostic poem in Hebrew, meaning each verse begins with the next letter of the Hebrew alphabet. That careful structure suggests fullness and completeness, as though wisdom is being shown from beginning to end through the life of one who fears the Lord.

These verses are often read in connection with wives and mothers, and they do honor the faithful woman whose care blesses her household. Yet the passage should not be reduced to a list of impossible expectations. It is wisdom literature, not a measuring stick for guilt. The woman described here embodies the wisdom praised throughout Proverbs. She is diligent, generous, strong, trustworthy, and reverent. Her household rises and calls her blessed because her hidden faithfulness has borne visible fruit. The praise she receives is not flattery, but recognition of a life poured out in love.

Living the Verse Today

This passage invites us to honor faithful love wherever we see it. Many acts of devotion are unseen by the wider world. Meals are prepared, prayers are whispered, children are encouraged, homes are tended, burdens are carried, and weary hearts are strengthened. These quiet labors may not receive public applause, but they matter deeply to God. Proverbs 31 reminds us that faithful care is not small simply because it happens close to home.

For those who serve others day after day, this verse offers encouragement. God sees the labor that others may overlook. He sees the patience, the sacrifice, the wisdom, and the love that hold a household, a church, or a community together. The praise of children and family in this passage points to something more than polite gratitude. It reflects the blessing that comes when a life has become a shelter of wisdom and grace for others.

For those who receive such care, the verse calls us to gratitude. It is easy to take faithful people for granted because their love is so steady. Scripture teaches us to notice, to bless, and to speak words of honor while we have the opportunity. Whether we are remembering a mother, thanking a wife, encouraging a servant-hearted friend, or honoring any person whose life reflects godly wisdom, we participate in the biblical practice of giving thanks for the fruit of faithful love.

Reflection

Who in your life has quietly reflected God’s wisdom through faithful love, and how might you bless or encourage that person today?


The Bible texts are from the 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, May 12, 2026: The Ministry of Presence: Bearing the Light of Christ

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, May 12, 2026

The Ministry of Presence: Bearing the Light of Christ

“I was naked and you gave me clothing, I was sick and you took care of me, I was in prison and you visited me.” — Matthew 25:36

Reflection

On May 12, hospitals and clinics around the world observe International Nurses Day, a date deliberately chosen to honor the birthday of Florence Nightingale. Born in 1820, Nightingale became the foundational figure of modern nursing. When the Crimean War broke out, she organized care for wounded soldiers in Constantinople, drastically reducing death rates through improved hygiene, disciplined care, and relentless advocacy for better living conditions. But beyond her brilliance as a statistician and social reformer, she left the world with an enduring, poignant image: “The Lady with the Lamp.” In the dark, quiet hours of the night, when the pain of the wounded was sharpest and the loneliness most profound, Nightingale would walk the miles of hospital corridors, holding a solitary lamp, checking on her patients. Her simple, steadfast presence became a profound symbol of compassionate service.

This image of a quiet, illuminating presence in the midst of suffering beautifully echoes the heart of Jesus’s teachings, particularly His words in the Gospel of Matthew. In the twenty-fifth chapter, Jesus describes the final judgment, separating the faithful based on how they treated the most vulnerable among them. He says, “I was sick and you took care of me.” The profound mystery of this teaching is that Christ intimately identifies Himself with the suffering. He does not say, “When you cared for the sick, you pleased me.” He says, “I was sick.” To sit beside the ailing, the broken, and the frightened is to sit beside Christ Himself. The Greek word often translated as "took care of" or "visited" is a word of movement and proximity. It implies looking upon, going to see, and relieving. It requires purposefully closing the distance between our own comfort and someone else’s pain.

We often misunderstand healing as solely the physical cure of an ailment—the exclusive domain of doctors, medicines, and medical charts. While physical restoration is a beautiful and necessary gift, the Christian call to healing is broader and deeper. It is the quiet ministry of presence. Think of what it is like to sit in a hospital room with a loved one in the middle of the night. The room is softly illuminated by the glow of monitors, the silence punctuated only by the rhythmic beep of machines and the quiet breathing of the person in the bed. If you have ever kept this vigil, you know the profound sense of helplessness that can wash over you. You cannot cure them. You cannot make the physical pain vanish. But your presence matters infinitely. Fetching a cup of ice chips, adjusting a blanket, or simply sitting in the dim light reading a book so that they know they are not alone when they briefly open their eyes—this is sacred work. It is the translation of God’s love into the language of human proximity. In those moments, you are holding a lamp in their darkness.

This quiet ministry extends far beyond hospital walls. The world is full of people carrying hidden wounds and quiet fevers of the soul. True Christlike compassion asks us to clothe ourselves in mercy and patience, stepping into the margins of someone else’s life without the demand to "fix" them. It might look like taking a warm, home-cooked meal to a neighbor who is recovering from an outpatient surgery. It might mean offering to run errands for a deeply exhausted caregiver who rarely gets a moment to breathe. Or, it might simply involve sitting on the porch with a friend who is navigating a season of grief, perfectly comfortable letting the silence exist between you without rushing to fill it with platitudes. Jesus invites us to pay attention to the spaces we inhabit every day. Look around your neighborhood, your workplace, or your own extended family today. Who is sitting in the dark? Who is feeling the acute ache of isolation that so often accompanies physical or emotional pain?

Your challenge today is to offer a simple, faithful act of care to someone who is hurting. You do not need to have the perfect words, a profound theological answer, or a miraculous cure. You only need to offer your presence. The spiritual encouragement of this day is the reminder that God rarely works through loud, earth-shattering spectacles; rather, He binds up the brokenhearted through the quiet acts of mercy, the steady presence, and the humble care of His people. When we choose to bear one another's burdens, we become the hands and feet of Jesus. We pick up the lamp, walk into the shadowed corridors of human suffering, and bring with us the healing, comforting light of Christ.

Prayer

Gracious and loving God, who draws near to the brokenhearted and binds up their wounds, we ask that You would form in us the deep, abiding compassion of Christ. Open our eyes to see the suffering in our own neighborhoods and homes, and grant us the courage to close the distance between our comfort and another’s pain. When we feel helpless in the face of illness or sorrow, remind us of the profound healing found in a steady, loving presence. Make us bearers of Your mercy, willing to sit in the quiet, dim hours with those who are hurting, offering the simple gifts of our time, our hands, and our hearts. May our lives be lamps that carry Your comforting light into the shadowed places of this world, trusting that whenever we care for the vulnerable, we are caring for You. In the holy and healing name of Jesus, we pray. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.