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Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, July 7, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for July 7, 2026

Psalm 18:30

A Shield for Those Who Take Refuge

“As for God, his way is perfect. Yahweh’s word is tried. He is a shield to all those who take refuge in him.”

The Word Before Us

There is a quiet strength in knowing that God’s way is perfect, especially when our own way feels uncertain. Psalm 18:30 gives us a word of confidence for days when life feels confusing, when endurance is needed, and when the heart longs for a safe place to rest.

David does not say that every path feels easy, or that every season is quickly understood. He says that God’s way is perfect. That is a deeper confession. It means the Lord’s wisdom is not flawed by fear, haste, confusion, selfishness, or limited understanding. His word has been tried and proven faithful. His care is not fragile. He is a shield for those who take refuge in him.

Understanding the Context

This passage comes from Psalm 18, a song of David written in thanksgiving after the Lord delivered him from his enemies and from the hand of Saul. The psalm is filled with strong images of distress, rescue, strength, refuge, battle, and praise. David remembers times when death seemed near, when enemies surrounded him, and when his own strength was not enough. Yet he also remembers that the Lord heard his cry and delivered him.

Psalm 18:30 stands as a confession drawn from experience. David had not merely heard that God was faithful; he had lived through seasons where God’s faithfulness became his refuge. He had learned that human strength can fail, earthly protection can be uncertain, and circumstances can shift quickly. But the Lord remained true.

When David says, “Yahweh’s word is tried,” he is saying that God’s word has been tested and found trustworthy. The promises of God are not unproven hopes. They are like refined metal, purified and dependable. David’s life had passed through danger, exile, grief, fear, and waiting, but God’s word did not fail him.

The final line brings the verse close to the heart: “He is a shield to all those who take refuge in him.” A shield is not distant from the person it protects. It is held close. It receives the blow. It stands between danger and the vulnerable one. David praises God not as an idea, but as the living refuge of those who trust him.

Living the Verse Today

Psalm 18:30 speaks to daily Christian life because we often need to be reminded that God’s way remains perfect even when our way feels unclear. There are seasons when we cannot see the road ahead. We may be carrying grief, waiting for healing, facing decisions, enduring disappointment, or trying to remain faithful when our strength feels thin. In those moments, the heart may want quick answers, visible proof, or immediate relief. This verse calls us to something deeper: refuge.

Taking refuge in God does not mean pretending that life is painless. David’s own song came from trouble. Refuge is needed because danger, sorrow, weariness, and fear are real. Faith does not deny those realities. Faith brings them to the Lord and says, “You are my shield. Your way is perfect, even when I do not understand it. Your word is trustworthy, even when I am trembling.”

This verse also speaks to hope. If God’s way is perfect, then our hope is not resting on chance. If his word is tried, then his promises are not fragile. If he is a shield, then we are not left uncovered in the storm. The Lord may not remove every hardship as quickly as we wish, but he does not abandon those who take refuge in him.

For those walking through grief, this verse offers steady comfort. Grief can make the world feel unsafe. It can make familiar things seem changed, and it can leave the heart exposed. Yet God remains a shield, not only against outward trouble, but also against despair, bitterness, and the lie that sorrow has the final word. In Christ, we see the fullness of God’s faithfulness. Jesus entered suffering, bore sin and death, and rose again, showing that the Father’s way, though sometimes hidden from our immediate sight, leads toward life.

For those who are enduring, Psalm 18:30 invites patient trust. God’s perfect way may include waiting, strengthening, correcting, sustaining, or leading us by steps we would not have chosen. His perfection does not always mean ease. It means holiness, wisdom, faithfulness, and love. The Lord knows how to guide his people without wasting their tears or abandoning their souls.

To live this verse today is to move closer to God rather than farther from him. It is to test our fears against his word. It is to let prayer become shelter. It is to remember that refuge is not found in controlling every outcome, but in entrusting ourselves to the One whose way is perfect.

Reflection

Where do I need to take refuge in the Lord today, trusting that his way is perfect and his word remains faithful even when I cannot see the whole path ahead?


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 7, 2026: Remembered with Thanksgiving

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, July 7, 2026

Remembered with Thanksgiving

“I thank my God whenever I remember you,”Philippians 1:3

Reflection

There are certain dates that remain tender on the calendar long after life has changed. A birthday is one of them. It arrives each year carrying memories, love, gratitude, and sometimes a fresh ache of absence. July 7th would have been my late wife Barbara’s 72nd earthly birthday, and days like this invite the heart to pause. They remind us that love does not simply end because a loved one has passed from our sight. The years continue, the calendar turns, but the gift of a life once shared remains woven into the soul.

Philippians 1:3 gives us a simple and beautiful way to hold such remembrance before God: “I thank my God whenever I remember you.” The Apostle Paul wrote these words to believers in Philippi, people who had shared in his life, his ministry, his struggles, and his joy in Christ. His memory of them was not empty nostalgia. It was gratitude. He did not merely remember them with longing; he remembered them before God. That is one of the gifts of Christian remembrance. Memory becomes prayer. Grief becomes thanksgiving. Love becomes worship.

When we remember someone dear to us on the day of their birth, we may feel more than one thing at once. We may smile at a familiar phrase they used, a place they loved, a meal they prepared, a look they gave, or a kindness they showed. We may also feel the silence of the chair where they once sat, the quietness of the day without their voice, or the ache of wanting one more conversation. Faith does not require us to choose between sorrow and gratitude. In Christ, both can be brought honestly before the Lord. We can say, “Lord, I miss them,” and also say, “Lord, thank You for them.”

Barbara’s 72nd earthly birthday becomes such a day of holy remembrance. It is a day to thank God for the gift of her life, for the love shared, for the memories carried, and for the ways her presence continues to shape the heart. Those we have loved leave more behind than photographs and possessions. They leave patterns of kindness, lessons learned, words remembered, prayers prayed, sacrifices made, and moments that still speak after many years. Their influence becomes part of the story God has written in us.

There is something deeply ordinary, yet quietly sacred, about finding an old photograph. Perhaps it is tucked inside a book, resting in a drawer, or discovered in a box that has not been opened in a long time. At first, it is only paper and ink. But then the face looks back at us, and suddenly a whole season of life opens again. We remember where we were, what was happening, how the room felt, what the day meant. A photograph does not bring the person back into the room in the way we long for, but it does bear witness that love was real, that life was shared, and that God allowed us to walk a portion of the road together.

In the same way, memory can become a window of grace. It is not meant to trap us in the past, but to help us give thanks for what God has entrusted to us. When we offer our remembrance to the Lord, the ache does not necessarily vanish, but it is held by Someone stronger than we are. The God who gave us the capacity to love also understands the sorrow that comes when love is separated by death. Scripture tells us that the Lord is near to the brokenhearted, and the hope of Christ assures us that death does not have the final word.

So on a day like this, the invitation is simple and holy: remember with thanksgiving. Speak the name of the one you love. Tell one story. Look at one picture. Light a candle. Visit a meaningful place. Prepare a favorite meal. Share a memory with someone who will receive it kindly. Or do one act of kindness in their honor. Let remembrance move outward into love. Let gratitude become something living.

For those who are grieving, this may also be a day to be gentle with the heart. There is no need to pretend that the day is easy. Christian hope is not denial. It is trust. It brings sorrow into the presence of the God who comforts, redeems, and holds every tear. It allows us to grieve honestly while still believing that every life held in God’s mercy is never forgotten by Him.

To remember loved ones in Christ is not merely to look backward. It is to receive their memory as a sacred gift, to give thanks for the love that was shared, and to trust that God’s mercy is greater than death. On this July 7th, we remember Barbara with thanksgiving. We honor the love that remains. We entrust our sorrow and gratitude to the Lord, who gathers every tear, preserves every holy memory, and teaches us to live today with deeper tenderness, faith, and hope.

Prayer

Gracious and loving God, today we thank You for Barbara’s life and for all loved ones whose earthly birthdays we remember with tender hearts. We thank You for the love shared, the memories preserved, the lessons learned, and the ways their lives continue to bless us even in their absence. Comfort all who grieve today, especially those who feel both gratitude and sorrow rising together. Sanctify our memories with Your grace, steady our hearts with the hope of Christ, and help us honor those we love by living with kindness, faithfulness, humility, and love. Teach us to remember without despair, to grieve without losing hope, and to trust that Your mercy is greater than death. 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.