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 9, 2026

Verse of the Day for Saturday, May 9, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 9, 2026

Romans 8:1–2

Free in the Spirit of Life

“There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus, who don’t walk according to the flesh, but according to the Spirit. For the law of the Spirit of life in Christ Jesus made me free from the law of sin and of death.”

The Word Before Us

There are words in Scripture that feel like a door opening after a long night, and Romans 8:1–2 is one of them. After the heavy struggle with sin, weakness, guilt, and human inability described in the previous chapter, Paul begins Romans 8 with a declaration of grace: “There is therefore now no condemnation to those who are in Christ Jesus.”

This does not mean that sin is harmless, or that repentance no longer matters. It means that those who belong to Christ are no longer standing before God under the sentence of death. The burden of condemnation has been lifted because Christ has done what we could not do for ourselves. In him, the believer is not defined by past failure, inward struggle, or spiritual weakness. The believer is held by the mercy of God and made alive by the Spirit.

Understanding the Context

The apostle Paul is writing to the Christians in Rome, a community made up of both Jewish and Gentile believers. Throughout the letter, Paul carefully explains the gospel: all have sinned, no one is justified by works of the law, and righteousness comes through faith in Jesus Christ. By the time he reaches Romans 8, he has already shown that humanity cannot rescue itself by moral effort, religious heritage, or good intentions.

Romans 7 describes the painful struggle of knowing what is good but lacking the power to fully carry it out. Paul speaks honestly about the conflict between the desire to obey God and the weakness of the flesh. That struggle could leave a tender conscience feeling hopeless, as though failure has the final word.

But Romans 8 answers that despair with the good news of life in the Spirit. Paul is not excusing sin; he is proclaiming deliverance. The “therefore” at the beginning of Romans 8:1 points back to all that God has done in Christ. Because of Jesus’ death and resurrection, those who are in him are no longer condemned. Because the Spirit has been given, believers are no longer left to face sin and death in their own strength.

The context matters because this verse is not a shallow reassurance. It is not telling us to ignore guilt or pretend that sin does not wound the soul. It is telling us that Christ has entered the deepest place of human need and broken the power that once held us captive. The law could reveal sin, but it could not give life. The Spirit of life in Christ Jesus sets us free.

Living the Verse Today

Romans 8:1–2 speaks tenderly to the believer who carries old shame, repeated failure, or the fear that God is still holding them at a distance. Many Christians believe in forgiveness in a general way, yet still live as though condemnation is waiting just behind every mistake. They pray, but with hesitation. They repent, but without peace. They serve, but with the hidden fear that they are never quite acceptable to God.

Paul’s words call us back to the foundation of the gospel. In Christ, condemnation is not our master. The accusing voice may still speak, memory may still sting, and repentance may still be necessary, but the verdict has changed. The believer’s life is now rooted in grace, not fear.

This freedom does not lead us away from holiness. It leads us toward it. When we know we are not condemned, we can come honestly before God. We can confess without hiding. We can pray without pretending. We can obey not as people trying to earn mercy, but as people who have already received it.

The “Spirit of life” also reminds us that Christian freedom is more than release from guilt. It is the beginning of a new way of living. The Holy Spirit forms in us what we could never produce by ourselves: love, patience, endurance, repentance, courage, and hope. We still walk through weakness, but we do not walk alone. The same God who forgives also renews.

Today, Romans 8:1–2 invites us to lay down the sentence we keep pronouncing over ourselves. Christ has not set us free so that we may return to chains of shame. He has set us free to walk by the Spirit, trusting that the life he gives is stronger than the sin and death from which he has delivered us.

Reflection

Where in my life do I still live as though I am condemned, and how is God inviting me to receive the freedom and life given in Christ Jesus?


The Bible texts are from the 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 9, 2026: When God Speaks in Silence

Experience the story: click the image above to listen
 

The Daily Devotional

Saturday, May 9, 2026

When God Speaks in Silence

“And after the earthquake a fire, but the LORD was not in the fire; and after the fire a sound of sheer silence.” — 1 Kings 19:12

Reflection

Elijah had seen the fire fall. On Mount Carmel, he had stood before the people of Israel and the prophets of Baal, and God had answered with unmistakable power. It was one of those moments when heaven seemed to break through the clouds, when there could be no doubt that the Lord was God. Yet not long afterward, Elijah was running for his life. Jezebel had threatened him, fear had overtaken him, and the prophet who had just witnessed a great spiritual victory found himself exhausted, discouraged, and alone.

That is one of the most tender truths in 1 Kings 19. Elijah was not faithless. He was weary. He was not rejecting God. He was overwhelmed. He had given everything he had, and now his body, mind, and spirit were emptied out. So he went into the wilderness, and eventually he came to a cave, where he waited before the Lord.

Many of us know something about that cave. It may not be carved into a mountain, but we have hidden there in our own way. We have sat in the quiet after a crisis, after a disappointment, after a season of giving more than we thought we had to give. We have wondered why yesterday’s victory did not protect us from today’s fear. We have asked God for direction, comfort, assurance, or simply some sign that we have not been forgotten.

Then the Lord passes by. There is a great wind, strong enough to split mountains and break rocks. But the Lord is not in the wind. Then there is an earthquake. But the Lord is not in the earthquake. Then there is fire. But the Lord is not in the fire. After all the sound and force and trembling, there comes “a sound of sheer silence.”

That is where Elijah hears God.

We often expect God to speak in ways we cannot miss. We look for the dramatic answer, the unmistakable sign, the sudden breakthrough, the voice that rises above every other voice. And sometimes God does speak through powerful moments. Scripture does not deny that. But this passage reminds us that God is not limited to what is loud, urgent, or spectacular. Sometimes the Lord waits until the noise has passed, until the earth has stopped shaking, until the fire has burned itself out, and then speaks into the stillness.

One evening while camping along the rugged Northern California coast, I wandered down to the edge of a bluff overlooking the ocean. The campfire crackled behind me, but out there, all I could hear was the rhythmic hush of the waves and the occasional cry of a gull. Fog rolled gently over the cliffs, wrapping everything in a silvery quiet. I stood there for a long time, listening—not for words, but for presence. And in that vast, peaceful silence, I felt it: God was near. Not in thunder or wind, but in that still, sacred moment where creation whispered His name.

There are times when the soul needs that kind of quiet. Not because God is absent from the noise of life, but because we often cannot recognize His presence while our hearts are crowded. We carry so many voices within us: fear, hurry, regret, worry, anger, expectation, obligation. We ask God to speak, but we keep surrounding ourselves with noise. We strain to hear Him, yet we rarely become still enough to listen.

Waiting to hear from God is not passive. It is an act of trust. It means bringing ourselves before the Lord without demanding that He speak on our schedule or in our preferred manner. It means allowing God to be God, even when His silence unsettles us. It means learning that divine quiet is not always divine absence. Sometimes silence is the holy space where God begins to quiet us enough to receive what He has already been giving.

Perhaps today you are waiting for an answer. Perhaps you have prayed, asked, searched, and listened, but all you seem to hear is silence. Elijah’s story offers gentle encouragement: do not assume God is absent because He has not come in the way you expected. The wind may pass. The ground may shake. The fire may burn. But after all of that, there may still be a sacred silence where the Lord draws near.

So step away from the noise, even briefly. Turn off the devices. Sit by a window. Walk outside. Breathe deeply. Open your hands. Say, “Speak, Lord, for your servant is listening.” Then wait—not anxiously, but faithfully. You may not hear a sentence. You may not receive an immediate answer. But you may become aware, in a way deeper than words, that God is near.

And sometimes, that is the word we need most.

Prayer

Holy and patient God, meet us in the quiet places where our hearts are finally still enough to listen. When we are weary like Elijah, afraid after the struggle, or discouraged after giving all we had, remind us that You are not absent simply because You are not loud. Teach us to step away from the noise that crowds our souls and to wait before You with open hands and trusting hearts. Help us recognize Your presence in silence, Your mercy in stillness, and Your guidance in ways we may not have expected. Speak to us as You will, Lord, and make us ready to hear. Amen.


Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA

The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.