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Friday, June 26, 2026

Verse of the Day for Friday, June 26, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for June 26, 2026

Leviticus 19:18

Love Your Neighbor as Yourself

“Don’t seek revenge, nor bear any grudge against the children of your people; but you shall love your neighbor as yourself. I am Yahweh.”

The Word Before Us

Leviticus 19:18 brings us to one of the most important commands in Scripture: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” Jesus later identified this command as one of the two great commandments, joined with the call to love God with all the heart, soul, mind, and strength. Long before it was quoted in the Gospels, this word stood at the heart of God’s instruction to His people.

This verse teaches that love is not merely a feeling of kindness toward others. It is a holy way of life. It refuses revenge. It releases grudges. It seeks the good of the neighbor. It is grounded not in personal preference, social convenience, or natural affection, but in the character and command of Yahweh. God’s people are to love because they belong to Him.

Understanding the Context

Leviticus 19 is part of what is often called the Holiness Code, where the Lord teaches Israel how to live as a people set apart for Him. The chapter begins with the command, “You shall be holy; for I, Yahweh your God, am holy.” What follows is a series of instructions showing that holiness is not limited to worship rituals or sacred spaces. It reaches into daily life, family relationships, work, justice, honesty, care for the poor, treatment of neighbors, and the way people speak and act toward one another.

Leviticus 19:18 comes in a section concerned with relationships within the community. The Lord commands His people not to hate their brother in their heart, not to take vengeance, and not to bear a grudge. Then comes the positive command: “You shall love your neighbor as yourself.” The verse ends with the words, “I am Yahweh,” reminding Israel that this command carries the authority of the covenant Lord.

This context matters because the command to love one’s neighbor is not sentimental or vague. It is placed directly beside the refusal to seek revenge or hold grudges. In other words, neighbor-love is tested most clearly when we have been wronged, disappointed, offended, or hurt. Love is not only shown when relationships are easy. It is also shown when the heart is tempted to keep score.

The Lord was forming Israel into a people whose life together would reflect His holiness and mercy. They were not to imitate the harshness, exploitation, and bitterness of the nations around them. They were to live under the rule of Yahweh, whose justice and compassion shaped the community from the inside out.

Living the Verse Today

This Scripture speaks directly to daily Christian life because all of us know how easily grudges can take root. A harsh word, a betrayal, a misunderstanding, an old wound, or a repeated frustration can settle into the heart and begin to shape how we see another person. We may not call it hatred. We may simply call it memory, caution, or self-protection. Yet the Lord knows when a wound has become a grudge and when pain has begun to harden into resentment.

Leviticus 19:18 does not make light of wrongdoing. It does not say that justice is unimportant or that harmful behavior should be ignored. The same chapter contains commands about honesty, fairness, and righteous judgment. But the verse does forbid the kind of revenge and bitterness that takes judgment into our own hands and allows anger to rule the heart.

To love our neighbor as ourselves means we seek another person’s good with the same seriousness with which we naturally seek our own. We want mercy when we fail, patience when we struggle, fairness when we are judged, and compassion when we are hurting. God calls us to extend that same concern toward others. This kind of love is not easy, and it cannot be sustained by human willpower alone. It requires the grace of God at work within us.

For Christians, this command is deepened and fulfilled in Christ. Jesus not only taught us to love our neighbors; He showed us what love looks like when it is costly. He loved sinners, forgave enemies, touched the rejected, welcomed the weary, and gave Himself for those who could not save themselves. At the cross, we see love that refuses revenge and offers mercy without denying truth.

This verse also speaks to hope, grief, endurance, faith, and trust. Some wounds take time to heal. Some relationships remain complicated. Some wrongs cannot be repaired quickly. Yet God invites us to bring our grudges, resentments, and desire for revenge into His presence. We can trust Him with justice. We can ask Him for a heart that is honest about pain but not ruled by bitterness.

Today, Leviticus 19:18 calls us to examine the way we love. Neighbor-love may begin with a prayer for someone we struggle to forgive. It may look like refusing to repeat a hurtful story, choosing a gentle answer, making peace where possible, or asking God to loosen the grip of resentment. Because Yahweh is holy, His people are called to love in ways that reflect His mercy, justice, and truth.

Reflection

Where is God inviting you to release revenge, surrender a grudge, and love your neighbor with a heart shaped by His mercy?


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, June 26, 2026: Through the Fire, Unconsumed

Experience the story: click the image above to listen

The Daily Devotional

Friday, June 26, 2026

Through the Fire, Unconsumed

“When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned, and flame will not scorch you.”Isaiah 43:2b

Reflection

Wildfires are a grim reality in the Gila National Forest. In that rugged and beautiful land, where mountains rise above canyons, ponderosa pines stand against the sky, and dry winds can move with sudden force, fire season is never taken lightly. What begins as a spark—whether from lightning, a careless campfire, or human error—can quickly become a roaring force. In a matter of hours, flames can consume thousands of acres. For ranchers, campers, firefighters, and small communities nearby, the season often brings anxious watching, packed bags near the door, livestock trailers ready, and smoke-filled skies that turn daylight strange and heavy.

Isaiah 43:2 speaks into that kind of fear with a promise that is both honest and deeply comforting. God does not say, “You will never face the fire.” He says, “When you walk through the fire.” The verse assumes that fire will come. Hardship is not treated as an exception to the life of faith. God’s people knew exile, loss, judgment, displacement, and fear. Yet into their uncertainty, the Lord spoke a word of covenant faithfulness. They belonged to Him. He had redeemed them. He would be with them through waters, rivers, and flames.

That promise still speaks to us today. It does not remove every danger from the road before us, but it assures us that danger does not have the final word.

One summer, a family living near the Gila watched helplessly as fire crept closer to their land. They had worked for years restoring a small homestead. They had repaired fences, planted trees, cleared space for animals, and slowly shaped that place into something that felt like home. Every post, pasture, and planted seed carried a memory of labor and hope.

Then the fire came.

In a matter of hours, much of what they had built was undone. Flames swept across the land with a force they could not stop. When the fire finally passed and it was safe to return, they walked through a place they barely recognized. There were blackened stumps where trees had stood. The earth was scorched. The air smelled of ash. The pastures were burned. It was the kind of sight that can leave a person silent because there are no words large enough for the loss.

And yet, in the yard, lying where it had been left, was one lone garden hose—unburnt.

It was not much. It could not replace the trees. It could not rebuild the fencing. It could not restore in a moment what the flames had taken. But there it was, a quiet symbol of what endured. Something remained.

There are seasons in life when we feel much the same. The fires we face may not be literal, but they are real. Illness can sweep through the body and change life overnight. Grief can blacken the heart’s landscape. Financial hardship can threaten what took years to build. Broken relationships can leave behind a silence that feels like ash. Anxiety can fill the mind like smoke, making it hard to see the next step.

In those moments, Isaiah’s promise does not deny the heat of the flames. It does not minimize the pain of loss. It does not pretend that faith makes suffering easy. Instead, it gives us something stronger than denial. It gives us the nearness of God.

“When you walk through the fire, you will not be burned, and flame will not scorch you.”

This does not mean nothing painful will ever touch us. It means the fire will not ultimately destroy what God is holding. It means that beneath the ash, grace is still alive. It means that even when we cannot see Him clearly through the smoke, the Lord has not stepped away from us. His presence is not fragile. His mercy is not consumed. His faithfulness does not burn up when life becomes difficult.

Sometimes grace looks like courage for one more day. Sometimes it looks like a friend who calls at the right moment. Sometimes it looks like a meal brought to the door, a prayer whispered through tears, or the quiet strength to begin again when everything in us feels weary. Sometimes grace looks like one small thing left standing, reminding us that the fire did not take everything.

Today, consider what fires you may be walking through. Are you scorched with worry? Charred by grief? Wearied by a burden that seems to keep spreading? Bring that place honestly before God. You do not have to pretend the flames are harmless. You only need to remember that you are not walking through them alone.

And then consider who around you may be facing their own fire. Someone may be carrying sorrow quietly. Someone may be overwhelmed by illness, family strain, loneliness, or fear. A simple act of kindness may become a sign of God’s sustaining grace. Check on someone today. Offer a word of assurance. Pray for those affected by wildfires and for those who fight them. Send a message, make a call, carry a meal, or sit with someone long enough to remind them they have not been forgotten.

The Gila fires will pass, and the forest will one day grow green again. New life often begins beneath what looks ruined. In time, shoots rise from blackened ground. The earth, though scarred, is not abandoned. So it is with the soul held by God. Even when everything seems consumed, He is at work beneath the surface—renewing, restoring, reviving.

The promise of Isaiah 43:2 is not that we will avoid hardship, but that we will walk through it unconsumed.

Prayer

Gracious and faithful God, when the fires of life draw near and the smoke of fear clouds our vision, remind us that we do not walk alone. Be near to those facing wildfires, loss, illness, grief, uncertainty, and every burden that threatens to overwhelm the heart. Strengthen the weary, protect the vulnerable, guide those who serve in danger, and help us notice the quiet signs of grace that remain even after hardship has passed. Give us courage to trust Your presence in the flames, compassion to care for others who are hurting, and hope to believe that renewal is still possible through Your loving and sustaining hand. 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.