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Tuesday, June 2, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, June 2, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for June 2, 2026

Hebrews 9:28

Waiting for His Appearing

“So Christ also, having been offered once to bear the sins of many, will appear a second time, without sin, to those who are eagerly waiting for him for salvation.”

The Word Before Us

Hebrews 9:28 brings us to the center of Christian hope. It speaks of Christ’s finished sacrifice, His promised return, and the salvation that will be fully revealed when He appears again. The verse looks backward to the cross and forward to the day when the Lord will come for those who are eagerly waiting for Him.

This is not a fearful waiting for those who belong to Christ. It is a holy longing shaped by trust. The One who came once to bear sin will come again, not to repeat His sacrifice, but to bring His saving work to its fullness. The believer lives between these two appearances of Christ: His first coming in humility and His promised return in glory.

Understanding the Context

Hebrews was written to believers who needed encouragement to remain faithful to Christ. They were being reminded that Jesus is greater than every former priest, sacrifice, covenant sign, and earthly sanctuary. The writer of Hebrews carefully shows that the sacrifices offered under the old covenant had to be repeated again and again, but Christ offered Himself once for all.

In Hebrews 9, the writer compares the ministry of the earthly high priest with the perfect priestly work of Jesus. Under the old covenant, the high priest entered the holy place with the blood of another sacrifice. Christ, however, entered into the heavenly sanctuary by His own sacrifice. He did not merely cover sin for a season; He bore the sins of many through His death on the cross.

This verse gathers that truth into a promise. Christ has been offered once to bear sin. His sacrifice does not need to be repeated. Nothing is lacking in what He has done. The cross is not unfinished business. It is the completed work of the Savior who gave Himself for sinners.

Yet the verse also points ahead. Christ “will appear a second time.” His first appearing dealt with sin through His suffering and death. His second appearing will not be to bear sin again, but to bring salvation to those who are waiting for Him. This does not mean believers are only partly saved now. Rather, it reminds us that the salvation begun in us will one day be fully revealed. Faith will become sight. Hope will be fulfilled. The people of God will see the Savior for whom they have waited.

Living the Verse Today

This Scripture teaches us to live with confidence in what Christ has already done and hope for what He has promised to do. Many people carry the weight of guilt, regret, or fear, wondering whether they have done enough, prayed enough, suffered enough, or changed enough to be accepted by God. Hebrews 9:28 turns our eyes away from our own efforts and places them firmly on Christ.

He was offered once to bear the sins of many. That means our hope does not rest on the strength of our feelings, the perfection of our obedience, or the record of our past. Our hope rests on Jesus Christ, who gave Himself for us. When we confess our sins and trust in Him, we are not clinging to a fragile possibility. We are resting in the finished sacrifice of the Son of God.

This verse also gives shape to Christian endurance. We are people who wait, but our waiting is not empty. We wait for the One who has already proven His love at the cross. We wait for the One who has conquered sin and death. We wait for the One who will appear again, not as a stranger, but as Savior.

There are seasons when waiting is difficult. Grief can make the future feel distant. Pain can make hope feel quiet. Weariness can make the heart wonder how long the road will be. Yet Hebrews reminds us that history is moving toward Christ’s appearing. The sorrows of this life are real, but they are not final. The Savior who came once in mercy will come again in glory.

To eagerly wait for Christ is not to abandon this life or withdraw from daily responsibilities. It is to live faithfully while keeping our hearts turned toward Him. We love our neighbors, carry our burdens, serve where we are placed, and trust that the Lord who saved us will complete what He has begun.

Reflection

As you wait for Christ’s appearing, where do you most need to rest today in the finished work of His sacrifice and the certainty of His promised return?


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 Tuesday, June 2, 2026: The Burdens We Were Never Meant to Carry

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, June 2, 2026

The Burdens We Were Never Meant to Carry

“Casting all your worries on him, because he cares for you.”1 Peter 5:7

Reflection

Peter’s letter was written to early believers who knew hardship, pressure, and persecution. They were trying to remain faithful in a world that often misunderstood them, resisted them, and at times openly opposed them. Their faith was not being lived out in comfort or ease. It was being tested in the ordinary strain of daily life and in the painful realities of suffering.

Into that setting, Peter speaks a quiet yet powerful word: “casting all your worries on him, because he cares for you.” This is not a sentimental phrase meant to decorate a difficult day. It is a holy invitation. The Creator of the universe, the One who made the heavens and the earth, cares deeply about the fears that trouble His children. He cares about the grief that lingers beneath the surface. He cares about the stress that tightens the chest, the guilt that keeps returning, the questions that will not settle, and the burdens that feel too heavy to name.

A few years ago, I watched an elderly rancher unloading sacks of grain from the back of his truck. Each bag was heavy, likely fifty pounds or more. A young helper stood nearby and offered to carry them, but the rancher waved him off. He had done this kind of work all his life. He knew how to lift, how to balance the weight, how to step carefully from the truck bed to the ground. Or at least he thought he did.

One sack came down. Then another. Then another.

But age has a way of telling the truth, even when pride has not yet admitted it. As he reached for the next bag, his knees buckled beneath him. The weight shifted, his footing failed, and he staggered to the ground. Only then did he let the young helper come near. With a half-embarrassed grin and a little irritation in his voice, he muttered, “Guess I forgot I wasn’t thirty anymore.”

There was something both humorous and tender in that moment, but also something deeply human. We often do the same thing with the unseen burdens of life. We carry fear as though strength means never admitting we are afraid. We carry grief as though sorrow must be handled privately. We carry stress as though exhaustion is proof of responsibility. We carry guilt as though forgiveness is for other people. We carry the needs of family, church, work, memory, regret, and tomorrow until our souls begin to buckle beneath the weight.

And still, help is near.

Peter does not say, “Manage your worries better.” He does not say, “Pretend they are not heavy.” He does not say, “Carry them until you become strong enough to bear them without trembling.” He says to cast them on God. That word carries movement. It suggests release. It is not the careful placing of one small concern into God’s hands while we keep the rest clutched tightly to our chest. It is the act of throwing the burden off ourselves and entrusting it to the One who is able to bear it.

This does not mean that every difficulty disappears the moment we pray. It does not mean grief evaporates, bills pay themselves, relationships heal instantly, or memories stop aching overnight. Casting our worries on God is not an escape from life. It is a surrender within life. It is the faithful confession that we are not God, that we were never made to carry everything alone, and that our burdens are safest in the hands of the One who cares for us.

And these are not distant hands. These are the hands of Christ, pierced for us. The One who invites us to release our anxieties is the One who bore the weight of sin, sorrow, and suffering on the cross. He knows what heaviness is. He knows what grief feels like. He knows the frailty of human flesh and the anguish of a troubled soul. When we cast our worries on Him, we are not throwing them into empty space. We are releasing them into mercy.

So today, it may be worth asking with honesty: What burden have I been carrying alone? Is it fear about the future? Sorrow over someone I love? Weariness from responsibilities that never seem to end? Guilt over something already confessed but not yet released? A quiet anxiety that follows me from morning into night?

Name it before God. Speak it aloud. Write it down. Hold nothing back in prayer. Then, by faith, release it into His care. You may need to do this more than once. Some burdens are so familiar that we pick them back up without realizing it. But each time they return to your hands, the invitation remains the same: cast them on Him.

Grace is not only a theological concept. It is the living truth that God sees you, knows your worries, and is already reaching to take them from your hands. You do not need to wait until you buckle beneath the weight. The Lord cares for you now. His shoulders are broad enough to bear what yours were never meant to carry alone.

Prayer

Loving and merciful God, we come before You with the burdens we have tried to carry in our own strength. We confess that we often hold tightly to worry, fear, grief, guilt, and stress, even when You invite us to release them into Your care. Teach us to trust Your compassion more deeply. Help us to name what is heavy, to bring it honestly before You, and to cast it into the faithful hands of Christ. Remind us that we are not alone, that we are seen, and that Your grace is strong enough for every weight we bear. Give us peace for this day, courage for the next step, and faith to rest in the truth that You care for us. 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.