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Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Verse of the Day for Tuesday, May 26, 2026

 

Verse of the Day for May 26, 2026

John 3:17

Sent to Save

“For God didn’t send his Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world should be saved through him.”

The Word Before Us

There are times when people imagine God’s first movement toward the world as anger, distance, or rejection. John 3:17 gently corrects that fear. The heart of this verse is not a careless denial of sin or judgment, but a gracious revelation of God’s saving purpose in Christ. The Son was not sent into the world as a cold accusation against the broken, the ashamed, or the lost. He was sent as the gift of God’s mercy, carrying light into darkness and life into places where hope had grown thin.

This verse invites us to look at Jesus rightly. He does not come to excuse evil, but neither does he come merely to crush the sinner beneath the weight of guilt. He comes to save. In him, God draws near to rescue, restore, forgive, and make whole. For the weary conscience and the fearful heart, this is good news indeed.

Understanding the Context

The Gospel of John presents this teaching during Jesus’ nighttime conversation with Nicodemus, a Pharisee and a ruler of the Jews. Nicodemus came to Jesus with questions, recognizing that the signs Jesus performed pointed to God’s presence with him. Jesus responded by speaking of the need to be born anew, of the work of the Spirit, and of the Son of Man being lifted up so that whoever believes in him may have eternal life.

John 3:17 follows closely after the well-known declaration of God’s love in John 3:16. Together, these verses reveal the purpose of the Father in sending the Son. God’s love is not abstract or sentimental. It takes action. It enters the world in the person of Jesus Christ. The world, in John’s Gospel, often means humanity in its estrangement, darkness, confusion, and rebellion. Yet it is precisely this world that God loves and seeks to save.

The context matters because it keeps us from reducing the gospel to either condemnation without mercy or comfort without truth. Jesus speaks plainly about light and darkness, belief and unbelief, life and judgment. But the sending of the Son is first announced as God’s saving mission. Judgment is not the reason Christ came into the world; salvation is. Those who come to the light discover that God’s mercy is not weak, and God’s holiness is not cruel. Both meet in Christ, who reveals the Father’s heart.

Living the Verse Today

John 3:17 speaks tenderly to those who carry shame. Many people live as though God is always waiting to expose them, reject them, or remind them of every failure. But the gospel begins with the announcement that God sent his Son so that the world should be saved through him. That does not mean our sin is small. It means God’s mercy in Christ is greater. The proper response is not hiding, but coming into the light where grace can heal what guilt has wounded.

This verse also shapes how we look at others. If Christ came not to judge the world, but to save the world, then the people around us are not merely problems to be corrected or failures to be measured. They are people for whom Christ came. We can speak truth without contempt. We can call sin what it is without forgetting mercy. We can bear witness to Jesus with humility, knowing that we ourselves stand only by grace.

In daily life, this Scripture invites us to trust the saving purpose of God when we pray, repent, forgive, and serve. When we stumble, we may return to Christ without despair. When we see brokenness in the world, we need not surrender to cynicism. God has already shown us his heart by sending his Son. Salvation is not an afterthought. It is the very mission of Christ. To live under this truth is to walk with reverent confidence, grateful that the Savior has come not to abandon the world, but to redeem it through himself.

Reflection

Where do I most need to stop hiding from God’s mercy and trust more deeply that Christ was sent not to condemn me, but to save me?


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, May 26, 2026: Does Anyone Know You Are a Christian?

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The Daily Devotional

Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Does Anyone Know You Are a Christian?

“If you love me, keep my commandments.… One who has my commandments and keeps them, that person is one who loves me. One who loves me will be loved by my Father, and I will love him, and will reveal myself to him.” John 14:15, 21

Reflection

There is something deeply human about wanting someone to tell us a great truth. When life becomes confusing, when disappointment weighs heavily, when our best efforts seem to fall short, we look for a word that will steady us. We want something wise enough to make sense of failure, strong enough to carry us through sorrow, and simple enough to remember when the day becomes difficult.

It is not hard to imagine a weary soul, like poor Charlie Brown, going to someone for counsel and asking for a great truth about life. He is the kind of character who seems to carry the burdens of ordinary humanity—trying, failing, hoping, being disappointed, and still getting up again. Yet sometimes the advice we receive is small, practical, and almost comically ordinary. It may help us rinse a glass or avoid a bug in the dark, but it does not quite answer the deeper question of the heart.

Jesus, however, gives us a truth that is both simple and searching: “If you love me, keep my commandments.”

That sentence is not complicated, but it reaches into every corner of life. It does not allow faith to remain only a feeling, a memory, a Sunday habit, or a religious label. Jesus connects love with obedience. He does not say, “If you love me, speak warmly about me.” He does not say, “If you love me, attend worship now and then.” He says, “If you love me, keep my commandments.”

That raises a quiet but serious question: Does anyone know you are a Christian by the way you live?

Not by how loudly you claim it. Not by how quickly you can quote Scripture. Not by what church you attend, what songs you know, or what Christian words you use. Can someone see the love of Christ taking shape in your actions?

Jesus is not calling us to a showy religion. He is not asking us to perform righteousness so others will admire us. He is calling us to a recognizable life—a life marked by humility, honesty, compassion, patience, forgiveness, generosity, and love. A Christian life is not perfect, but it should bear the family resemblance of Christ.

This becomes especially clear in the ordinary moments, the moments that may not seem spiritual at all. Suppose a person has an opportunity to lie in order to get ahead. Maybe the lie would help win a game, close a deal, avoid embarrassment, or gain an advantage. No one might notice. The cost of telling the truth might be inconvenient. Yet in that small moment, the heart is revealed. Does love for Christ shape the decision, or does self-interest take over?

It is often in such moments that our witness becomes clearest. The world may not listen to every sermon, but it watches how Christians act when honesty costs something. It watches how we speak when we are frustrated. It watches how we treat people who cannot benefit us. It watches what we do when no one is applauding.

Jesus’ commandments are not hidden from us. They can be summed up in love: love the Lord your God with all your heart, soul, mind, and strength, and love your neighbor as yourself. But love is not merely a warm feeling. Love tells the truth. Love keeps its word. Love refuses cruelty. Love forgives. Love serves. Love protects the vulnerable. Love restrains anger. Love chooses mercy when retaliation would be easier.

There is an old story about a farmer who raised sheep. His neighbor had large dogs that often frightened the sheep and sometimes harmed the lambs. The farmer could have responded with bitterness. He could have taken revenge, started a feud, or dragged his neighbor into court. Instead, after prayerful thought, he chose another way. When new lambs were born, he gave one to each of the neighbor’s children as a pet. The children loved the lambs. Their father, now seeing the lambs through his children’s affection, could no longer allow the dogs to run loose. The dogs were tied up, the sheep were safe, and the two farmers became friends.

That is not weakness. That is wisdom shaped by love. It is a picture of what can happen when Christ’s commandment becomes visible in daily life. Kindness accomplished what anger could not. Love opened a door that retaliation might have closed forever.

This does not mean every conflict will end neatly. It does not mean kindness will always be appreciated. It does not mean Christians should ignore injustice or allow harm to continue. But it does mean that followers of Jesus are called to ask a different question: What action would reveal Christ here?

Perhaps today that question belongs in your home, in a conversation with someone you love. Perhaps it belongs at work, where honesty, patience, or humility is being tested. Perhaps it belongs in traffic, online, in a disagreement, or in the way you treat someone who is difficult to love. The question is simple enough to carry into the day: Would anyone know I belong to Christ by the way I acted today?

This is not meant to condemn us. We all fall short. We all have moments when our words are sharper than they should be, when our patience wears thin, when we protect our pride more than we reflect our Savior. But Jesus’ words invite us back to the center. Obedience is not how we earn God’s love. It is how we respond to the love already given to us in Christ.

The Christian life is not something we pick up on Sunday morning and leave at the church door. It is a daily walk with Jesus. It is love made visible in ordinary places. It is faith becoming flesh in our choices, our words, our honesty, our mercy, and our care for our neighbor.

Jesus says, “If you love me, keep my commandments.” May our lives answer, not only with our lips, but with our actions.

Prayer

Lord Jesus, teach us to love You not only in word, but in the way we live each day. Shape our hearts so that our faith becomes visible through honesty, kindness, patience, mercy, and love for our neighbor. Forgive us for the times we have left our faith at the church door or hidden it behind selfishness, fear, pride, or indifference. Help us to follow Your commandments with grateful hearts, not to earn Your love, but because we have already received it. May those around us see something of Your grace in our words, our choices, and our actions today. 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.