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Tuesday, July 14, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, July 14, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 14, 2026

John 15:10

Remaining in His Love

“If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love; even as I have kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love.”

The Word Before Us

John 15:10 invites us into the deep and steady life of remaining in the love of Christ. Jesus does not speak of love as a passing feeling or a distant idea, but as a place of abiding, a holy relationship in which obedience, trust, and communion with him belong together.

This verse reminds us that Christian obedience is not meant to be cold or fearful. Jesus is not calling his disciples to earn his love, as though love were a wage paid for good behavior. He is teaching them how to remain in the love already given. Obedience becomes the way love takes shape in daily life. It is how trust becomes visible, how faith becomes embodied, and how the heart learns to stay close to Christ.

Understanding the Context

Jesus speaks these words to his disciples in the Gospel of John during the final evening before his arrest and crucifixion. John 15 is part of his farewell discourse, where he prepares them to abide in him, bear fruit, love one another, receive the Spirit, and endure the opposition they will face. John 15 is part of Jesus’ farewell discourse, where he prepares his disciples for the sorrow, confusion, and mission that will follow. He speaks to them tenderly about abiding in him, bearing fruit, loving one another, receiving the Spirit, and enduring the world’s opposition.

Just before this verse, Jesus uses the image of the vine and the branches. He tells his disciples that he is the true vine, and they are the branches. Apart from him, they can do nothing. Their life, fruitfulness, strength, and endurance depend on remaining in him. John 15:10 explains part of what that abiding life looks like: “If you keep my commandments, you will remain in my love.”

Jesus then points to his own relationship with the Father. He has kept his Father’s commandments and remains in his love. His obedience flows from perfect communion with the Father. It is not reluctant duty, but faithful love. As Jesus prepares to go to the cross, his obedience will be revealed in its fullest depth. He will give himself in love, trusting the Father completely.

For the disciples, this word would matter deeply. Their world was about to be shaken. They would soon face fear, grief, and uncertainty. Jesus was teaching them that their life would be sustained not by their own courage, but by remaining in him. Love and obedience would keep them rooted when everything around them seemed unstable.

Living the Verse Today

John 15:10 speaks tenderly to daily Christian life because we, too, need to learn what it means to remain in Christ’s love. Many believers carry quiet fears about whether they are loved by God, especially in seasons of weakness, grief, or failure. We may know the truth in our minds, yet still wonder in our hearts whether we are close to him. Jesus gives us a gracious invitation: remain in my love.

To remain in his love is to live close to him, to trust his word, to receive his mercy, and to follow where he leads. Obedience is not the enemy of grace. It is one of the ways grace trains us to live. When Christ commands us to love, forgive, pray, abide, serve, and trust, he is not drawing us away from joy. He is teaching us the life that belongs to those who are held by his love.

This is especially important when life is hard. Grief can make us feel untethered. Weariness can make obedience feel heavy. Fear can tempt us to draw inward or take control. In those moments, Jesus does not simply tell us to try harder. He calls us to remain. Stay with me. Keep my words. Walk in my way. Let my love be the place from which you live.

This verse also speaks to endurance. Obedience is often practiced quietly, one small faithful step at a time. It may look like praying when answers are slow, forgiving when the wound is tender, speaking truth with gentleness, refusing bitterness, serving without being noticed, or trusting Christ when feelings rise and fall. These acts may seem small, but they are part of remaining in his love.

Jesus also gives us the pattern of his own life. “Even as I have kept my Father’s commandments and remain in his love.” Our obedience rests within his obedience. We follow the One who has already walked the path faithfully. He knows the cost of obedience. He knows suffering, loneliness, betrayal, and sorrow. Yet he remained in the Father’s love, and through him, we are invited into that same communion.

The hope of this verse is not that we will obey perfectly in our own strength. The hope is that Christ holds us, teaches us, corrects us, forgives us, and draws us back when we wander. Remaining in his love is a daily life of dependence. It is a life where faith becomes trust, trust becomes obedience, and obedience becomes love made visible.

Reflection

Where is Jesus inviting me to remain more closely in his love today through trust, obedience, repentance, or a renewed willingness to follow him?*


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 Tuesday, July 14, 2026: The Heavens Still Declare

Experience the story: click the image above to listen
 

The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, July 14, 2026

The Heavens Still Declare

“The heavens declare the glory of God. The expanse shows his handiwork.”Psalm 19:1

Reflection

On July 14, 1965, NASA’s Mariner 4 spacecraft made its closest approach to Mars and completed the first successful flyby of the red planet. In doing so, it captured and transmitted the first close-up photographs of another planet’s surface in human history. What had once been a distant reddish light in the night sky became, before human eyes, a real world marked by craters, silence, mystery, and wonder.

For many, that day was more than a scientific milestone. It was a moment of awe. Humanity looked beyond the familiar boundaries of earth and saw something never seen in that way before. I remember watching with my eyes glued to the TV and taking my own pictures off the screen that evening as NASA showed the whole world pictures of the red planet. There was something almost holy about that kind of wonder—not because Mars itself was divine, but because discovery has a way of making the human heart feel small in the best possible way.

Psalm 19 begins with a declaration that does not need a pulpit, a sanctuary, or even human speech: “The heavens declare the glory of God. The expanse shows his handiwork.” David looks upward and sees the sky as a witness. The heavens are not silent emptiness. They are a testimony. The expanse above us proclaims that creation is not accidental clutter, but the work of God’s hand. The sun, moon, stars, and vastness of space do not speak with words, yet they preach continually to those willing to see.

Mariner 4 did not diminish that truth. It deepened our sense of it. Every photograph sent back from Mars was not merely data on a screen; it was a reminder that God’s creation is wider than our ordinary imagination. The more we discover, the more we are invited into humility. Faith is not threatened by wonder. True faith welcomes wonder, because all truth belongs to God, and every honest glimpse into creation can become an invitation to worship.

Think of a child finding a smooth stone on a walk. To an adult in a hurry, it may look like nothing more than a rock. But the child turns it over carefully, studies its color, feels its shape, and sees treasure. The stone has not changed. What changed was the attention given to it. Wonder often begins when we slow down long enough to truly see what has been in front of us all along.

So it is with God’s world. A sunrise over the mountains, the first stars appearing in the evening, the shape of a leaf, the cry of a hawk, the face of someone we love, the quiet order of the seasons, and even photographs from a distant planet can all become windows of praise. Creation does not replace Scripture, but it agrees with Scripture. It points beyond itself to the One whose wisdom, beauty, and power are greater than anything we can measure.

Psalm 19 reminds us that God’s glory is not hidden from the world. It is displayed above us and around us every day. The challenge is that we often become too distracted to notice. We rush beneath a sky filled with testimony. We worry under heavens that are declaring glory. We carry burdens through a world still marked by God’s handiwork.

The practical invitation for today is simple: recover wonder. Step outside and look up. Notice the sky. Watch the light move across the land. Give thanks for something in creation that you usually pass by without thought. Let the vastness of the heavens teach you humility, and let the beauty of creation teach you trust. The God who formed the expanse also knows your name. The Lord who set worlds in motion is not distant from your life. He is near, sustaining, speaking, and inviting you to see his glory with renewed eyes.

Mariner 4 helped humanity see Mars more clearly, but Psalm 19 helps us see creation more faithfully. The heavens are not merely above us; they are bearing witness. The expanse is not merely space; it is handiwork. And every discovery, when received with reverence, can become a doorway into praise.

Today, may we look at creation with thankful hearts. May we receive scientific wonder not as an end in itself, but as a reminder that God’s works are vast, beautiful, and worthy of awe. And may our smallness beneath the heavens become not a cause for fear, but a reason for worship.

Prayer

Creator God, open our eyes to the wonder of your handiwork. Teach us to see your glory in the heavens above, in the earth beneath our feet, and in the quiet discoveries that awaken awe within us. Give us humble hearts before the vastness of creation and grateful spirits for the gift of each day. Help us not to rush past your beauty, but to pause, notice, and praise. May every glimpse of the world you have made draw us closer to you, deepen our trust, and renew our hope. 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.