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Sunday, July 12, 2026

Verse of the Day for Sunday, July 12, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 12, 2026

Matthew 4:4

Living by the Word of God

“But he answered, ‘It is written, “Man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word that proceeds out of God’s mouth.”’”

The Word Before Us

There are hungers in the human life that bread alone cannot satisfy. Matthew 4:4 reminds us that we were created not only for physical provision but for the living word of God that nourishes faith, steadies the soul, and teaches us how to trust when life feels barren.

Jesus speaks these words in a place of hunger, testing, and solitude. He does not deny the body’s need for bread. He does not treat physical weakness as unimportant. Yet he refuses to live by appetite, pressure, or temptation. He anchors himself in the word of God. In doing so, he shows us that true life is sustained by more than what can be held in the hand. We live because God speaks, provides, guides, corrects, and remains faithful.

Understanding the Context

Jesus speaks these words in the wilderness after fasting forty days and forty nights. Matthew 4 describes the temptation of Jesus, when the devil urges Him to command stones to become bread. Jesus answers by quoting Scripture from Deuteronomy, recalling Israel’s wilderness journey and the lesson God had taught His people there.

In Deuteronomy, Moses reminded Israel that the Lord had humbled them, allowed them to hunger, and fed them with manna so they would learn that human life depends on God’s word, not bread alone. Israel had often struggled to trust God in the wilderness. Jesus, the faithful Son, stands in the wilderness and trusts perfectly. Where Israel faltered, Jesus obeys. Where temptation presses, Jesus rests in the truth of God’s word.

This matters because Matthew is showing us more than an example of personal discipline. He is revealing the obedience and faithfulness of Christ. Jesus does not use his power to serve himself apart from the Father’s will. He refuses to let hunger define his obedience. He will not turn from trust to self-preservation on the tempter’s terms. His life is governed by the Father’s word.

For Christian readers, Matthew 4:4 becomes both comfort and instruction. We are reminded that Christ understands hunger, weakness, temptation, and testing. We are also taught that the word of God is not an ornament for easy days, but bread for wilderness days.

Living the Verse Today

Matthew 4:4 speaks to daily Christian life because we all know what it is to feel need. Some needs are physical and immediate. Some are emotional, spiritual, relational, or hidden. We may hunger for security, healing, answers, companionship, peace, forgiveness, or strength to continue. These longings are not meaningless. God knows them. Yet this verse reminds us that our deepest life cannot be sustained by receiving what we want most quickly. We need the word that proceeds from the mouth of God.

In grief, this truth becomes especially tender. Grief can make the soul feel empty, and the world feel unfamiliar. In those seasons, we may not have many words of our own. But God still speaks. His word tells us that he is near to the brokenhearted, that Christ has conquered death, that sorrow will not have the final word, and that those who belong to the Lord are not forgotten. Scripture may not remove the ache all at once, but it gives us truth to hold when feelings rise and fall.

In times of endurance, Matthew 4:4 teaches us not to live by circumstance alone. Bread is necessary, but bread is not enough. Provision is a gift, but provision is not God himself. Comfort is welcome, but comfort must not become our master. The word of God forms us to trust the Giver more deeply than the gift. It teaches us to wait without surrendering hope, to obey when obedience is costly, and to resist the temptation to satisfy a real need in a faithless way.

This verse also invites us to examine what has been feeding our hearts. We are shaped by the voices we listen to. Fear can feed fear. Anger can feed anger. Despair can feed despair. But the word of God feeds faith. It does not always speak what we expect, but it speaks what we need. It corrects us when we wander, comforts us when we are wounded, humbles us when we grow proud, and strengthens us when we are weary.

Jesus shows us that Scripture is not merely something to know, but something to live from. When temptation came, he did not answer with panic, argument, or self-defense. He answered with the word of God. That same word is given to us, not as a weapon for pride, but as daily bread for the soul.

To live this verse today is to return to God’s voice with trust. It is to bring our hunger, weakness, grief, and uncertainty before him and say, “Lord, speak what is true. Teach me to live by your word. Feed what is deepest in me with your faithfulness.” The God who speaks is also the God who sustains.

Reflection

What hunger, need, or pressure in my life today needs to be brought under the sustaining truth of God’s word?


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 Sunday, July 12, 2026: Good Soil in a Hard Place

Experience the story: click the image above to listen
     

The Daily Devotional

Sunday, July 12, 2026

A Witness to the True Light

“What was sown on the good ground, this is he who hears the word and understands it, who most certainly bears fruit and produces, some one hundred times as much, some sixty, and some thirty.”Matthew 13:23

Reflection

In Matthew 13, Jesus sits by the sea and teaches the crowds through the Parable of the Sower. A farmer scatters seed, and the seed falls on different kinds of ground. Some falls along the path and is quickly taken away. Some falls on rocky soil and springs up for a moment but has no depth. Some falls among thorns and is choked by the cares of the world. But some falls on good ground, where it takes root, grows, and bears fruit.

Jesus later explains that the seed is the word of the Kingdom, and the soils represent the condition of the human heart. The question is not whether God is generous with his word. The Sower scatters seed widely. The question is whether the heart is ready to receive it.

On July 12, 1917, the quiet mining town of Bisbee, Arizona, became the site of a painful chapter in American labor history. Nearly 1,300 striking miners and others—many of them immigrants—were rounded up at gunpoint, forced onto boxcars, and abandoned in the New Mexico desert without adequate food, water, or shelter. It is a hard story to remember, but some stories must be remembered because they reveal what can happen when hearts become hardened toward the suffering of others.

Jesus’ parable helps us look beneath the surface. Hard soil is not only found in fields. It can form in human hearts. A heart can become packed down by fear, resentment, pride, suspicion, or the desire to protect comfort at any cost. When that happens, the word of God may be heard, but it does not enter deeply. Compassion is dismissed. Mercy is delayed. The neighbor becomes a problem instead of a person.

There is also shallow soil. This is the heart that receives truth gladly for a moment, but without depth. It may admire justice, kindness, and mercy when they are easy, but when pressure rises, conviction withers. There is thorny soil too—the heart crowded by worry, self-interest, ambition, and distraction. In thorny ground, even good intentions can be choked before they become faithful action.

But Jesus speaks of good soil. Good soil receives the word, understands it, and bears fruit. Good soil does not simply feel compassion; it grows compassion. It does not merely hear about mercy; it practices mercy. It does not only agree that people matter; it treats the vulnerable, the immigrant, the laborer, the forgotten, and the wounded as people made in the image of God.

Anyone who has tried to grow something in dry Southwestern ground understands this parable. Hard earth does not become fruitful simply because seed is scattered across it. The soil must be worked. Rocks must be removed. Thorns must be pulled. Water must be given. Sometimes the ground must be broken open before it can receive life.

So it is with the heart. God’s word often comes to break up what has become hardened within us. Not to destroy us, but to prepare us. Not to shame us, but to make us fruitful. The Holy Spirit tills the hidden places—the prejudice we do not want to admit, the indifference we have learned to excuse, the fear that keeps us silent, the bitterness that keeps us from loving well.

The remembrance of Bisbee invites us to ask soberly: What kind of soil is my heart today? Where have I allowed fear to harden me? Where have I let convenience keep me from seeing another person’s pain? Where have I heard the word of Christ but failed to let it take root?

The good news is that Christ still sows generously. He still speaks in dry places. He still brings life where the ground seems barren. A softened heart can become a fruitful heart. A repentant life can become a healing presence. A person who receives the word of the Kingdom can bear fruit in small but holy ways: by speaking truth with humility, offering hospitality, praying for those who suffer, standing beside the overlooked, refusing cruelty, and practicing mercy when it would be easier to look away.

The fruit Jesus describes is not always dramatic. Sometimes it looks like listening. Sometimes it looks like remembering. Sometimes it looks like refusing to let another person be reduced to a label. Sometimes it looks like water in the desert, shade in the heat, or a steady hand extended to someone who has been pushed aside.

Today, the Lord invites us to become good soil. May his word sink deeply into us. May it root out what is hard, shallow, and crowded. And may our lives bear fruit that blesses others, especially those who are vulnerable, forgotten, or in need of mercy.

Prayer

Lord of the harvest, soften our hearts before you. Break up the hardened places where fear, resentment, prejudice, or indifference have kept your word from taking root. Forgive us for the times we have overlooked the suffering of others or remained silent when mercy was needed. Teach us to receive your word with humility and understanding, and make our lives fruitful in compassion, courage, justice, truth, and love. Help us to see each person as one made in your image, and guide us to bear the fruit of your Kingdom in our homes, communities, and daily choices. In the name of Christ, the generous Sower, we pray. 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.