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Thursday, June 4, 2026

Verse of the Day for Thursday, June 4, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for June 4, 2026

1 Chronicles 29:11

All Glory Belongs to God

“Yours, Yahweh, is the greatness, the power, the glory, the victory, and the majesty! For all that is in the heavens and in the earth is yours. Yours is the Kingdom, Yahweh, and you are exalted as head above all.”

The Word Before Us

There are moments when prayer must become praise before it becomes anything else. Before we ask, before we explain, before we bring our burdens and needs, the soul sometimes needs to stand still and remember who God is. 1 Chronicles 29:11 lifts our eyes above the concerns of the day and places them on the greatness, power, glory, victory, and majesty of the Lord.

This verse reminds us that everything belongs to God. The heavens are His. The earth is His. The kingdom is His. The authority is His. The praise is His. In a world where so much feels uncertain, temporary, or fragile, David’s prayer gives us a firm place to stand. God is not one power among many. He is exalted as head above all.

Understanding the Context

1 Chronicles 29 comes near the end of King David’s life. David had long desired to build a house for the Lord, but that work would be given to his son Solomon. Even so, David prepared generously for the temple, gathering materials and calling the leaders and people of Israel to offer willingly for the work of God.

The response of the people was joyful. They gave not under pressure, but from willing hearts. David then blessed the Lord before all the assembly, and 1 Chronicles 29:11 is part of that great prayer of praise. David is not congratulating himself. He is not pointing to the wealth, strength, or achievement of Israel. Instead, he turns the whole moment back toward God.

David understood that even what the people gave had first come from the Lord. Their gold, silver, strength, opportunity, and willingness were all gifts from God’s hand. The temple preparations were impressive, but David knew that the glory did not belong to the builders, the king, or the nation. It belonged to Yahweh.

This context matters because the verse teaches us how to hold both blessing and responsibility. David was preparing for a holy work, but he did not confuse stewardship with ownership. Israel could give because God had first given to them. They could serve because God had first strengthened them. They could worship because God had revealed His greatness among them.

Living the Verse Today

This Scripture speaks deeply to daily Christian life because we often forget that we are stewards before we are owners. We may speak of our homes, our money, our time, our abilities, our plans, and our accomplishments as though they belong entirely to us. Yet David’s prayer gently corrects our vision. All that is in heaven and on earth belongs to the Lord.

That truth is not meant to make us feel small in a hopeless way. It is meant to make us humble, grateful, and free. If everything belongs to God, then our lives are held by One who is greater than our fears. If the kingdom is His, then the future does not rest on our strength alone. If He is exalted as head above all, then no earthly trouble, loss, ruler, conflict, or uncertainty is beyond His sovereign care.

This verse also teaches us how to worship in seasons of transition. David was nearing the end of his reign. Solomon would soon take up the work David could not complete. There is tenderness in that moment. David had to release something precious into the hands of another. Yet his prayer is filled with praise, not resentment. He could let go because he knew the work had always belonged to God.

We all face moments when we must release what we cannot control. We may hand over responsibilities, accept changing seasons, watch others carry work we once hoped to finish, or trust God with outcomes we cannot manage. In those moments, 1 Chronicles 29:11 calls us back to worship. The greatness is God’s. The power is God’s. The glory is God’s. The victory is God’s. The majesty is God’s.

To live this verse today is to begin again with surrender. It is to look at what we have and say, “Lord, it came from You.” It is to look at what we face and say, “Lord, it belongs to You.” It is to look at the future and say, “Lord, You are exalted above all.”

When praise becomes the foundation of our trust, our hearts are steadied. We may still carry burdens, make decisions, and walk through uncertainty, but we do so under the rule of the One whose kingdom cannot fail.

Reflection

What part of your life do you need to place again under God’s greatness, power, glory, victory, and majesty today?


My devotional book, The Word Before Us, is now available on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0GX38Z88C.

The Word Before Us is a two-volume collection of Verse of the Day reflections written to help readers slow down, listen carefully to Scripture, and discover the grace, hope, and wisdom of Christ for daily life.

Each entry opens God’s Word with warmth, reverence, and practical insight, offering a brief reflection on the meaning and context of the verse while inviting readers to live its truth with faithfulness and humility.

Written in a pastoral and accessible style, The Word Before Us is for anyone who desires to begin the day rooted in Scripture and attentive to the voice of God.


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 Thursday, June 4, 2026: The Word Is Not Chained

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The Daily Devotional

Thursday, June 4, 2026

The Word Is Not Chained

“…in which I suffer hardship to the point of chains as a criminal. But God’s word isn’t chained. ”2 Timothy 2:9

Reflection

There are days on the calendar that seem to carry more weight than others. June 4 is one of those days that can call us to remember how often history is written in places of pressure: on beaches where soldiers waited under fire, on battlefields where courage was tested, in city streets where voices cried out for dignity, in voting chambers where justice slowly moved forward, and in public squares where truth came at a cost. Some moments reveal bravery. Some reveal cruelty. Some reveal the long and difficult struggle for human dignity. Yet above all these moments stands the quiet and unshaken confidence of Scripture: God’s truth is not chained.

Paul wrote those words from a place of confinement. He was not writing from comfort, ease, or public honor. He was suffering hardship “to the point of chains as a criminal.” The messenger was bound, but the message was not. His body could be guarded. His movements could be restricted. His reputation could be attacked. His future could be uncertain. But the gospel of Jesus Christ could not be locked behind prison doors.

That is a holy and strengthening truth. The powers of this world can limit many things. They can silence a voice for a season. They can close a door. They can place barriers in the path of the faithful. They can make courage costly. But they cannot imprison the living Word of God. The Word moves through memory, through witness, through prayer, through acts of mercy, through quiet endurance, and through lives shaped by Christ.

There is an image from ordinary life that helps us understand this. Think of a small seed caught in a crack in the sidewalk. No one planted it there carefully. No gardener prepared the soil. There is no soft bed of earth, no fence to protect it, no sign announcing its importance. It rests in a hard place, surrounded by concrete. Yet somehow, with a little dust, a little moisture, and the mystery of life within it, that seed begins to grow. Before long, a small green shoot pushes upward through the crack. It does not look powerful. It does not make noise. It simply lives.

That little plant becomes a sermon without words. The concrete can press against it, but it cannot explain away the life inside it. The crack may be narrow, the place may be unlikely, but life still finds a way upward. In a similar way, God’s Word often bears fruit in places that seem hard, barren, and restricted. A whispered prayer beside a hospital bed. A Bible verse remembered by someone in grief. A word of forgiveness spoken in a strained family. A small act of honesty in a difficult workplace. A letter of encouragement sent to someone who feels forgotten. These things may seem small, but the Word of God is often carried forward through such quiet faithfulness.

Paul’s confidence was not in his own strength. He knew weakness. He knew suffering. He knew what it was to be misunderstood and opposed. But he also knew Christ. He knew that the gospel did not depend on the comfort of the messenger. It rested on the faithfulness of God. That is why he could sit in chains and still speak with hope. He was bound, but the Word was free.

This speaks to us today because we all know something about limitations. Not all chains are made of iron. Some are made of fear, grief, illness, regret, loneliness, discouragement, or circumstances we cannot change. We may feel restricted by age, health, finances, past wounds, strained relationships, or uncertainty about the future. We may wonder whether our small witness matters in a noisy and troubled world.

Yet 2 Timothy 2:9 reminds us that God is not hindered by what hinders us. The Lord can use a tired voice, a wounded heart, a quiet prayer, and a faithful life. We do not have to control the whole story in order to bear witness within the part entrusted to us. We do not have to be loud to be faithful. We do not have to be free from hardship for God’s Word to work through us.

Today’s invitation is simple but searching: bear witness where you are. Speak truth with gentleness. Refuse despair when darkness seems loud. Encourage someone whose strength is wearing thin. Pray for those whose voices are silenced by oppression, fear, or suffering. Choose integrity when compromise would be easier. Let the Word of God take root in the hard places of your life, and trust that He can bring forth life even through the cracks.

June 4 reminds us that courage often appears under pressure. But Scripture reminds us of something even deeper: the power of God’s Word does not depend on favorable conditions. Chains may bind bodies. Fear may silence crowds. Hardship may press against the faithful. But God’s Word remains free. It bears witness to Christ. It sustains hope when strength is failing. It calls God’s people to courageous faithfulness, not because we are strong in ourselves, but because the Lord who speaks is faithful, present, and unchained.

Prayer

Gracious and faithful God, strengthen us when we are weary and give us courage when truth becomes costly. Teach us to speak with grace, humility, and love, and help us to bear witness in the quiet places of daily life. We remember before You those whose voices have been silenced, those who suffer for conscience and faith, and those who long for dignity, justice, and peace. Let Your Word take root in us, even in hard places, and remind us that no chain, fear, hardship, or power of this world can bind the living truth of Christ. 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.