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Sunday, May 24, 2026

Verse of the Day for Sunday, May 24, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 24, 2026

Romans 12:10

Tender Love and Honoring Grace

“In love of the brothers be tenderly affectionate one to another; in honor preferring one another.”

The Word Before Us

Christian love is not meant to remain a beautiful idea tucked away in our thoughts. It is meant to become visible in the way we speak, listen, serve, forgive, and make room for one another. Romans 12:10 draws us into that holy and practical kind of love. It calls believers to more than politeness, more than shared opinions, and more than belonging to the same congregation. It calls us to tenderness shaped by Christ and honor freely given to others.

There is something deeply searching about this verse because it touches the ordinary places where faith is tested. It is one thing to speak about love in broad terms. It is another to be tenderly affectionate toward the people God has placed beside us, especially when they are tired, difficult, wounded, different from us, or easy to overlook. Paul reminds us that the life of grace is not lived in isolation. We belong to Christ, and because we belong to Christ, we are learning how to belong to one another with humility and care.

Understanding the Context

The apostle Paul is writing to the Christians in Rome, a church made up of both Jewish and Gentile believers. Earlier in the letter, Paul carefully explains the mercy of God revealed through Jesus Christ. He speaks of sin, grace, justification, life in the Spirit, and God’s faithful purposes. Then, in Romans 12, he turns toward the shape of daily discipleship. Because believers have received God’s mercy, they are called to present their bodies as living sacrifices and to be transformed by the renewing of their minds.

Romans 12:10 belongs to a larger section describing sincere Christian love. Paul is not giving disconnected religious advice. He is showing what renewed life looks like within the body of Christ. Love must be genuine. Evil must be rejected. Goodness must be held tightly. Believers are to serve with zeal, rejoice in hope, endure trouble, continue in prayer, share with the saints, and practice hospitality. In that setting, this verse becomes a window into the heart of Christian community. The church is not simply an organization or gathering place. It is a family formed by the mercy of God.

The phrase “in love of the brothers” points to the affectionate bond believers are meant to share as members of God’s household. Paul then adds the call to prefer one another in honor. This does not mean pretending others are perfect or denying truth. It means refusing the self-centered way of life that always seeks the first place, the loudest voice, or the highest recognition. In Christ, honor is not something we grasp for ourselves. It is something we gladly give.

Living the Verse Today

Romans 12:10 invites us to examine the quality of our love. Do we treat fellow believers as burdens to manage, rivals to outshine, or brothers and sisters to cherish? Do we honor others only when they honor us first, or are we willing to take the first step in kindness, patience, and respect? This verse brings discipleship down into the quiet spaces of daily life: the conversation after church, the phone call we have been avoiding, the family member who needs patience, the coworker who is easily dismissed, or the person whose faithful service often goes unnoticed.

To be tenderly affectionate does not mean becoming sentimental or ignoring boundaries. It means allowing the love of Christ to soften what pride has hardened. It means seeing people not merely by their faults, usefulness, or agreement with us, but as those for whom Christ gave himself. Tenderness listens before judging. It notices pain before offering correction. It speaks truth without cruelty. It remembers that every person standing before us carries a story we do not fully know.

To prefer one another in honor is also a quiet act of spiritual freedom. We do not need to compete for worth when our worth is secure in Christ. We do not need to make ourselves larger by making others smaller. In the kingdom of God, honor grows as it is given away. A church, a home, or a friendship marked by this kind of love becomes a place where people can breathe, heal, and grow. Such love may not always be noticed by the world, but it reflects the heart of the Savior who came not to be served, but to serve.

Reflection

Where is God inviting me to show tender affection and freely given honor to someone I might otherwise overlook, resist, or take for granted?


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 Sunday, May 24, 2026: The Spirit Still Gives Voice to Fearful Disciples

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The Daily Devotional

Sunday, May 24, 2026

The Spirit Still Gives Voice to Fearful Disciples

“Suddenly there came from the sky a sound like the rushing of a mighty wind, and it filled all the house where they were sitting.”Acts 2:2

Reflection

Pentecost began with waiting. Before there was preaching, there was prayer. Before there were crowds from many nations hearing the mighty works of God in their own languages, there was a gathered group of disciples who had been told by the risen Christ to remain in Jerusalem until they were clothed with power from on high. They had seen the Lord crucified. They had seen him risen. They had received his promise. Yet they were still ordinary people, carrying memories of fear, failure, confusion, and uncertainty.

Then, on the Day of Pentecost, the promise of Jesus was fulfilled. The Holy Spirit came upon the disciples with the sound of a mighty rushing wind and with divided tongues as of fire. The Spirit did not come simply to comfort them in private, though comfort surely came. The Spirit came to give them voice. The Spirit came to send them outward. The Spirit came to turn fearful disciples into public witnesses.

Acts 2 tells us that devout Jews from many nations were gathered in Jerusalem. They came from different places, with different languages, different customs, and different stories. Yet when the Spirit filled the disciples, the good news of God’s mighty works crossed those barriers. People heard the gospel in words they could understand. Pentecost was not a celebration of confusion, noise, or spiritual excitement for its own sake. It was a miracle of faithful witness. God gave voice to those who had been silent, and he gave understanding to those who had come from far away.

That is still the work of the Holy Spirit.

There are many kinds of silence. Some silence comes from wisdom and patience. But other silence comes from fear. We may be afraid of saying the wrong thing. We may fear rejection, misunderstanding, embarrassment, or conflict. We may feel that our words are too small, our faith too imperfect, or our lives too ordinary to bear witness to Christ. Like the first disciples, we may gather behind the closed doors of hesitation, hoping to be faithful but unsure how to begin.

Yet Pentecost reminds us that the Church’s witness has never depended on human confidence alone. The disciples did not manufacture courage by willpower. They did not create unity through clever planning. They did not overcome the barriers of language, culture, fear, and distance by their own strength. The Holy Spirit came upon them, taught them, led them, united them, and gave them power to serve God as a royal priesthood and to preach the Gospel to all nations.

Consider the simple moment of someone standing in a crowded grocery store when an elderly person becomes confused at the checkout counter. The line grows restless. People sigh. The cashier is trying to help but does not know what to say. Then someone steps forward quietly and kindly. Perhaps they speak the person’s language. Perhaps they do not. But they use patience, gestures, a gentle tone, and a few simple words to bridge the gap. The whole atmosphere changes. What had been frustration becomes compassion. What had been embarrassment becomes dignity. One person’s willingness to speak and serve creates space for grace.

That is not the same as Pentecost, but it gives us a small picture of Pentecost-shaped living. The Spirit often works through ordinary believers in ordinary places. A kitchen table. A hospital room. A workplace. A phone call. A checkout line. A dusty road. A neighbor’s porch. The voice the Spirit gives may not always sound like a sermon. Sometimes it sounds like an apology. Sometimes it sounds like forgiveness. Sometimes it sounds like encouragement spoken to someone who has forgotten their worth. Sometimes it sounds like truth spoken gently when silence would be easier.

Psalm 104 reminds us that all creation depends on the breath of God. “You send out your Spirit: they are created. You renew the face of the ground.” The Spirit who gave life to creation also renews the Church. The Spirit who hovered over the waters now moves through weary hearts. The Spirit who filled the disciples still renews fearful people and makes them witnesses of Christ.

In John 7, Jesus speaks of living water flowing from within those who believe in him. John tells us that Jesus was speaking of the Spirit. This means the Spirit’s work is not merely external power placed upon reluctant people. The Spirit becomes a living presence within them, flowing outward in words and actions that bring life. The thirsty receive living water, and then, by grace, their lives become channels of that water for others.

Today, the question of Pentecost is not only what happened long ago in Jerusalem. The question is where the Spirit is giving us voice now. Where have we remained silent because of fear? Where have we allowed shame, weariness, uncertainty, or past failure to keep us from speaking Christ’s love? Who near us needs a word of grace, hope, repentance, forgiveness, or life?

The challenge for this day is simple but not easy: ask the Holy Spirit for courage to speak one faithful word. Not a forced word. Not a proud word. Not a noisy word. A Spirit-shaped word. A word that serves. A word that builds up. A word that points beyond ourselves to Jesus Christ.

Pentecost tells us that God can use hesitant disciples. He can use imperfect voices. He can cross distances we cannot cross and open understanding where we see only barriers. The Spirit still comes to teach, lead, unite, empower, and send. The Church’s witness continues because the promise of Christ is true. The Holy Spirit still gives voice to fearful disciples.

Prayer

Holy and gracious God, on this Day of Pentecost, fill us again with your Holy Spirit. Where fear has made us silent, give us courage. Where weariness has weakened our witness, renew us with your living breath. Unite us in the confession of one faith, and teach us to hear one another with humility and love. Make us faithful servants in the places where you have planted us, and empower us as your royal priesthood to speak the love of Christ with grace, truth, and compassion. May our words and our lives bear witness to the Gospel, 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.