May 13th, 26: 2 Samuel 24, 1st Chronicles 21, 1 Thessalonians 2: Daily Bible in a Year cover art

May 13th, 26: 2 Samuel 24, 1st Chronicles 21, 1 Thessalonians 2: Daily Bible in a Year

May 13th, 26: 2 Samuel 24, 1st Chronicles 21, 1 Thessalonians 2: Daily Bible in a Year

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Click here for the DRB Daily Sign Up form!TODAY'S SCRIPTURE: 2 Samuel 24, 1st Chronicles 21, 1 Thessalonians 2Click HERE to give! One Year Bible Podcast: Join Hunter and Heather Barnes on the Daily Radio Bible, a daily Bible‑in‑a‑year podcast with 20‑minute Scripture readings, Christ‑centered devotion, and guided prayer.This daily Bible reading and devotional invites you to live as a citizen of Jesus' kingdom, reconciled, renewed, and deeply loved. TODAY'S EPISODE: TODAY'S DEVOTION: Reading today's scriptures, we encounter a real tension — a contradiction, actually — in the telling of David's census in 2nd Samuel and 1st Chronicles. On the one hand, we read that God incites David to count the people, while on the other, it's Satan who prompts this act. Some might see this and grow uneasy, wondering if the Bible's trustworthiness is at stake. But the authority and inspiration of Scripture do not rest on it being a flaw-free reference manual. The Bible is doing something deeper, more profound; it is not, first and foremost, a technical record or a divine encyclopedia. The very presence of these apparent contradictions is a signpost that the Bible should be read on its own terms. If we try to explain away every factual inconsistency, we risk missing the greater narrative: the Bible is inviting us into God's living story, a relationship with the God who is love, mercy, and truth. These differing accounts are not weak links to be repaired, but rather an invitation to mature faith — a faith that can sit honestly with the complexity and humanity of God's Word. God's people have always recognized the scriptures as authoritative, not because every detail is seamless, but because the stories, the poems, the letters, and the teachings draw us into the divine life. They reveal what it means to belong to God, to live under his mercy, and to join his story of love. In both accounts of David's census, we are ultimately pointed toward God's mercy. The authors have their own reasons for telling the story as they do, reasons shaped by the needs of their particular communities. Yet together, these voices lead us to the same truth: it is God's mercy that triumphs. Christ is our authority. He authorizes the Bible to tell his story — a story that forms us as a people beloved by God. So read the Bible honestly, unafraid of its tensions and contradictions. Trust the Spirit to use every word, every story — even the complicated ones — to form you in the likeness of Jesus. Let Scripture draw you deeper into love, not into fearful denial or brittle certainty. God's Word is not just information; it is invitation — into community, into relationship, into love. That's my prayer for my own soul. That's the prayer I have for my family, for my wife and daughters and son. And that's the prayer I have for you. May it be so. TODAY'S DEVOTION: Reading today's scriptures, we encounter a real tension — a contradiction, actually — in the telling of David's census in 2nd Samuel and 1st Chronicles. On the one hand, we read that God incites David to count the people, while on the other, it's Satan who prompts this act. Some might see this and grow uneasy, wondering if the Bible's trustworthiness is at stake. But the authority and inspiration of Scripture do not rest on it being a flaw-free reference manual. The Bible is doing something deeper, more profound; it is not, first and foremost, a technical record or a divine encyclopedia. The very presence of these apparent contradictions is a signpost that the Bible should be read on its own terms. If we try to explain away every factual inconsistency, we risk missing the greater narrative: the Bible is inviting us into God's living story, a relationship with the God who is love, mercy, and truth. These differing accounts are not weak links to be repaired, but rather an invitation to mature faith — a faith that can sit honestly with the complexity and humanity of God's Word. God's people have always recognized the scriptures as authoritative, not because every detail is seamless, but because the stories, the poems, the letters, and the teachings draw us into the divine life. They reveal what it means to belong to God, to live under his mercy, and to join his story of love. In both accounts of David's census, we are ultimately pointed toward God's mercy. The authors have their own reasons for telling the story as they do, reasons shaped by the needs of their particular communities. Yet together, these voices lead us to the same truth: it is God's mercy that triumphs. Christ is our authority. He authorizes the Bible to tell his story — a story that forms us as a people beloved by God. So read the Bible honestly, unafraid of its tensions and contradictions. Trust the Spirit to use every word, every story — even the complicated ones — to form you in the likeness of Jesus. Let Scripture draw you deeper into love, not into fearful denial or brittle certainty. ...
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