Embark on a journey through the scriptures with biblical scholar Kenny Sallee as your guide. With a Master's degree in Theology and a passion for biblical studies, Kenny offers insightful commentary, profound reflections, and enriching discussions. Whether you're a seasoned scholar or a curious seeker, this platform provides a space for deepening your understanding of the Bible and growing in faith. Join us as we explore the timeless truths of God's Word together.

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Verse of the Day for Saturday, May 23, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 23, 2026

Romans 15:2

Building Up Our Neighbor

“Let each one of us please his neighbor for that which is good, to be building him up.”

The Word Before Us

Faith in Christ is never meant to make the heart smaller. When grace takes hold of us, it begins to turn our attention outward. Romans 15:2 speaks into the ordinary places where Christian love is tested: conversations, preferences, patience, decisions, and the way we make room for others. Paul does not call believers to live for applause or to flatter people for approval. He calls us to seek the true good of our neighbor, so that our words and actions become part of God’s work of building another person up.

This is a quiet but demanding kind of love. It asks us to notice what strengthens rather than what merely satisfies us. It asks us to consider how our freedom, opinions, habits, and choices affect those around us. The Christian life is not measured only by what we know, but by whether what we know has made us more patient, more generous, and more willing to serve. In this verse, love becomes practical. It bends toward the neighbor with the desire to help them stand more faithfully before God.

Understanding the Context

The apostle Paul wrote the letter to the Romans to believers living in the heart of the Roman Empire. The church there included both Jewish and Gentile Christians, people with different histories, customs, convictions, and sensitivities. In the chapters leading up to this verse, Paul addresses tensions among believers over matters of conscience. Some felt free in areas where others felt troubled. Some were strong in faith, while others were still tender, uncertain, or easily wounded by practices that seemed spiritually dangerous to them.

Romans 15 continues Paul’s teaching from the previous chapter. He urges those who are strong not to please themselves, but to bear with the weaknesses of others. Then comes this command: “Let each one of us please his neighbor for that which is good, to be building him up.” Paul is not asking Christians to abandon truth or let every desire rule the community. The phrase “for that which is good” matters. The goal is not people-pleasing in the shallow sense, but neighbor-loving in the holy sense. Christian consideration aims at edification, growth, and faithfulness.

The context matters because Paul immediately points to Christ as the pattern. In the following verse, he reminds the church that Christ did not please himself. The self-giving life of Jesus becomes the shape of Christian community. If the Lord bore reproach for our sake, then believers can bear inconvenience, restraint, and patience for the sake of one another. Paul is teaching the church that unity is not preserved by selfish insistence, but by Christlike love that seeks the good of the other.

Living the Verse Today

Romans 15:2 speaks gently to daily life because many of our choices affect someone else. In a family, it may mean choosing words that encourage rather than wound. In a church, it may mean making space for a weaker or newer believer instead of demanding that everyone move at our pace. In friendship, it may mean listening long enough to understand what another person truly needs. In ministry, it may mean asking not, “How can I be noticed?” but, “How can this person be strengthened in Christ?”

This verse also corrects a misunderstanding of freedom. Christian freedom is not permission to disregard the tender conscience of another believer. Freedom becomes beautiful when love guides it. There are times when love may call us to speak clearly, and there are times when love may call us to yield quietly. In both cases, the question is the same: will this help my neighbor move toward what is good? Will this build them up, or will it make their burden heavier?

To live this Scripture is to become attentive to the spiritual weight of ordinary kindness. A word of encouragement, a patient explanation, a restrained opinion, a generous act, or a humble apology may become a beam of support in another person’s life. We may not always see the results, but God sees the love offered in his name. When we seek our neighbor’s good, we participate in the patient work of Christ, who is still building his people into a dwelling place of grace.

Reflection

Who is God placing near me today, and how can my words, choices, or patience help build that person up in Christ?


Watch for my upcoming devotional book, The Word Before Us, a two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections that will soon be available from Amazon. Each entry opens the Scriptures with warmth, reverence, and practical insight, helping readers understand the context of God’s Word and apply its truth to daily life. Written in a pastoral and accessible style, these devotionals invite readers to slow down, listen for the voice of God in Scripture, and walk more faithfully 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 Saturday, May 23, 2026: Written on the Heart

Experience the story: click the image above to listen

The Daily Devotional

Saturday, May 23, 2026

Written on the Heart

“I will put my Spirit within you, and cause you to walk in my statutes. You will keep my ordinances, and do them.”Ezekiel 36:27

Reflection

May 23rd stands at a meaningful threshold. Shavuot draws to a close, remembering the gift of God’s law, while the Church stands on the Eve of Pentecost, waiting for the gift of the Holy Spirit. It is a day that invites us to look backward and forward at the same time. We remember the God who speaks, commands, teaches, and guides. We also wait upon the God who breathes life into weary people and makes obedience more than duty. He makes it the fruit of a heart made new.

Ezekiel spoke to a people who knew the pain of brokenness. Israel had carried the law of God, but the law had not always been carried in their hearts. They had known the commandments, recited the promises, and inherited the story, yet their lives had often wandered from the Lord who loved them. Into that failure, God did not merely say, “Try harder.” He promised something deeper. “I will put my Spirit within you.” God’s answer to human weakness was not only instruction from the outside, but renewal from the inside.

That is why this verse speaks so beautifully at the meeting place of Shavuot and Pentecost. God’s law is not a burden meant to crush the soul. It is a gift meant to reveal the holy shape of life with God. It teaches us how to love God, how to honor our neighbor, how to walk with humility, and how to remember that freedom without faithfulness soon becomes another kind of bondage. Yet the law alone can show us the path without giving us the strength to walk it. The Spirit of God comes as the breath of holy life within us, shaping our desires, steadying our steps, and teaching us to walk in God’s ways.

I think of a person learning to drive through an unfamiliar city. The road signs matter. Stop signs, speed limits, lane markers, and direction signs are not enemies of freedom. They protect life. They make the journey possible. Without them, every intersection would become a place of danger and confusion. But signs alone do not drive the car. The driver still needs attention, wisdom, patience, and the ability to respond. A person may know what every sign means and still need calm hands on the wheel.

So it is with the life of faith. God’s law gives us holy direction. It tells us where love must slow down, where mercy must yield, where justice must not be ignored, and where truth must remain steady. But the Spirit helps us live what God has spoken. The Spirit does not erase God’s commandments. The Spirit writes them more deeply upon us, not as cold rules on stone, but as living truth within hearts made tender by grace.

This matters because human history is often marked by struggle. May 23rd, like many dates on the calendar, carries memories of capture, conflict, violence, rebuilding, and reconciliation. The world keeps reminding us that human beings can wound one another deeply. Nations clash. Communities divide. Families fracture. Promises are broken. Fear can harden into cruelty, and disappointment can become bitterness. Yet God continues to speak into such a world. He gathers scattered people. He rebuilds ruined places. He breathes life where hope seems thin.

On the Eve of Pentecost, we are reminded that God does not abandon his people to their own strength. The disciples waited in Jerusalem with memories, questions, fears, and promises. They had heard Jesus teach. They had seen his death and resurrection. They had been told to wait for power from on high. They stood between what they had received and what God was about to pour out. That is often where faith lives: between memory and expectation, between what God has already done and what we still need him to do.

The practical challenge for us today is simple but searching: do not treat God’s word as something merely to admire, quote, or preserve. Ask the Lord to make it alive in you. Choose one command of Christ, one word of Scripture, one holy instruction, and prayerfully practice it today. Forgive someone. Tell the truth gently. Refuse bitterness. Serve without needing applause. Make peace where you can. Listen before answering. Let the Spirit turn God’s word from something you believe into something you embody.

God gives his law as a gift, and God gives his Spirit as the life that enables us to walk in that gift. We do not stand on this threshold empty-handed. We carry the memory of God’s faithfulness, and we wait with hope for fresh breath from heaven. The same Lord who spoke at Sinai, promised renewal through Ezekiel, and poured out the Spirit at Pentecost is still speaking, gathering, rebuilding, and breathing life into his people today.

Prayer

Gracious and holy God, we thank you for the gift of your word, for the law that teaches us the shape of love, and for the Spirit who gives us strength to walk in your ways. As we stand between remembrance and expectation, between Shavuot and Pentecost, soften our hearts and renew our minds. Write your truth within us, not only as words we know, but as grace we live. Where history and our own lives bear the marks of struggle, conflict, or weariness, breathe your life again. Gather what has been scattered, rebuild what has been broken, and lead us forward with courage, humility, and love; through Jesus Christ our Lord. 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.