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  • Can You Go to Church and Miss Jesus? | 1 Corinthians 11:17-22
    2026/04/03

    Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.

    Our shout-out today goes to Aaron Dunn from Millington, NJ. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you.

    Our text today is 1 Corinthians 11:17-22.

    But in the following instructions I do not commend you, because when you come together it is not for the better but for the worse. For, in the first place, when you come together as a church, I hear that there are divisions among you. And I believe it in part, for there must be factions among you in order that those who are genuine among you may be recognized. When you come together, it is not the Lord's supper that you eat. For in eating, each one goes ahead with his own meal. One goes hungry, another gets drunk. What! Do you not have houses to eat and drink in? Or do you despise the church of God and humiliate those who have nothing? What shall I say to you? Shall I commend you in this? No, I will not. — 1 Corinthians 11:17-22

    Paul now shifts to corruption in worship.

    Up to this point, he has addressed structure, symbols, and design. Now he confronts something more troubling — selfishness.

    The Corinthians were gathering—but their gatherings were doing harm, not good. Instead of unity, there was division. Instead of reverence, there was disregard. Instead of waiting for one another, some rushed ahead while others were left humiliated and hungry.

    Paul's words are sharp. Essentially he says: "I do not commend you."

    You see, it is possible to go to church and grieve worship.

    The issue was not that the church met or lacked structure. The issue in this text was that they treated the Lord's Supper as a private party for the elite rather than a shared proclamation for all believers. The meal meant to display unity instead exposed inequality.

    This is why Paul says, "It is not the Lord's Supper that you eat."

    They were eating bread and drinking wine—but they were not honoring the Lord.

    Worship had become self-focused rather than God-focused. And when worship turns inward, it stops looking upward.

    Paul reminds them that the church does not gather to satisfy appetites, assert status, or showcase freedom. The church gathers to proclaim Christ's sacrifice and to embody his self-giving love.

    Besides, at the cross, no one is elevated. No one is excluded. No one is overlooked. But the Corinthians were establishing social divisions at the very meal meant to erase them.

    Paul's warning still speaks.

    When worship centers on preference, presentation, convenience, or entitlement, it ceases to be worship at all.

    True worship begins before we ever walk into the room. It is a settled decision to turn our attention away from ourselves and toward Christ—to come ready to listen, ready to repent, ready to remember his sacrifice, and ready to love the people around us.

    So the next time you gather with the church, practice this discipline: consciously turn your mind away from what you like or dislike, away from the atmosphere or execution, and fix your attention on Christ alone. Let him be the focus.

    Anything less may look religious—but it does not look like Jesus.

    DO THIS:

    Before you gather for worship, pause and intentionally turn your attention toward Christ. Ask God to help you lay aside preferences, distractions, and expectations so you can come ready to listen, repent, remember Christ's sacrifice, and love the people around you.

    ASK THIS:

    1. What typically captures my attention when I enter worship—and why?
    2. Where might I be more focused on experience, presentation, or preference than on Christ himself?
    3. How does remembering Christ's sacrifice reshape the way I view the people gathered around me?

    PRAY THIS:

    Lord Jesus, forgive me when I come to worship focused on myself rather than on you. Train my heart to fix its attention on your sacrifice, your presence, and your people. Help me enter worship with humility, gratitude, and love so that my worship truly honors you. Amen.

    PLAY THIS:

    "Jesus Paid It All (Worthy of The Price)"

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    5 分
  • The 5 Moments Everyone Gets Wrong About the Cross
    2026/04/03

    We don't reject the cross—we misunderstand it, and that changes everything.

    Summary

    Many people are familiar with the cross, but few truly understand what happened in its defining moments. Each event—from Jesus' cry of abandonment to the tearing of the veil—reveals something deeper about sin, judgment, and access to God. These are not emotional details; they are theological realities that explain what Jesus actually accomplished. When you see the cross clearly, it stops being symbolic and starts confronting everything about you.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions

    1. Why do you think it's possible to be familiar with the cross but still misunderstand it?
    2. What does Jesus quoting Psalm 22 reveal about his cry on the cross?
    3. How does the darkness at noon help us understand the judgment Jesus was bearing?
    4. Why is it significant that the temple veil was torn from top to bottom?
    5. What does the tearing of the veil mean for our access to God today?
    6. Why does the statement "I thirst" matter more than it seems at first glance?
    7. What does "It is finished" actually declare about sin and salvation?
    8. How does the cross confront the idea that we can earn or fix our own salvation?
    9. Which of these five moments challenges your understanding of the cross the most?
    10. What does it look like to move from understanding the cross intellectually to responding to it personally?

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    7 分
  • Has Culture Replaced God's Design in the Church? | 1 Corinthians 11:13-16
    2026/04/02
    Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day. Our shout-out today goes to Roger Oliver from Bishop, GA. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you. Our text today is 1 Corinthians 11:13-16. Judge for yourselves: is it proper for a wife to pray to God with her head uncovered? Does not nature itself teach you that if a man wears long hair it is a disgrace for him, but if a woman has long hair, it is her glory? For her hair is given to her for a covering. If anyone is inclined to be contentious, we have no such practice, nor do the churches of God. — 1 Corinthians 11:13-16 Paul now presses the issue home. After explaining God's design, Paul calls the church to exercise discernment. "Judge for yourselves." — 1 Corinthians 11:13 This is not Paul retreating from authority. It is Paul inviting thoughtful submission. God's design is not arbitrary. It can be recognized, received, and honored. Some of the Corinthians were not merely adjusting personal style—they were adapting worship in ways that mirrored the idolatrous culture around them. In Corinth, a married woman removing her covering and letting her hair down signaled availability. It publicly communicated independence from her husband and disregard for covenant faithfulness. What some framed as "freedom" was actually "cultural assimilation"—borrowing cultural cues from a culture shaped by sexual immorality and idol worship. With that context in view, Paul's appeal becomes sharper. He appeals to what he calls "nature." He is pointing to what was widely understood and publicly recognizable within the prevailing customs and the established order of the time. Hair functioned as a visible signal. It communicated distinction, honor, and identity. Paul's concern remains consistent: worship is not the place to blend custom with his design, creating confusion for worshipers. When we read texts like this today, many students of the Bible bristle. We get a little concerned about arguments from nature that seem to be based in culture norms—as do I. But Paul is not suggesting that cultural norms determine truth or patterns of worship. His logic is that worship should not contradict what God has embedded in his created order and affirmed through shared practice among God's people. Paul then widens the lens. "We have no such practice, nor do the churches of God." — 1 Corinthians 11:16 This is not one man's opinion or one church's preference. God's people across locations shared a common pattern in worship. Worship is not endlessly customizable. The church does not invent its own norms based on preference or cultural pressure. God sets the pattern for his church. When believers resist that pattern, Paul says the issue is not freedom—it is contention. And it's this line today that, for me, was key in this text: "If anyone is inclined to be contentious…" — 1 Corinthians 11:16 That line exposes the issue. Contentiousness is not a biblical conviction. It is resistance rooted in self, not submission rooted in trust of God. Paul is not interested in winning arguments. He is guarding unity and clarity in worship. The call of Paul is simple: Will we receive God's design for his church—or keep debating it until it conforms to our culture and common will? Faithful worship requires humility. It requires trusting that God knows what honors him—and what forms his people. And this is my concern for the church today: that in our desire to appear thoughtful, relevant, or progressive, we may slowly replace submission with contention and God's design with our own. When the church receives God's pattern together, worship becomes a clear testimony—not of our preferences, but of his wisdom. DO THIS: Notice where you feel resistance to God's design for worship or order. Ask whether that resistance flows from trust in God—or from a desire to retain control. ASK THIS: Where am I tempted to argue with God rather than submit to him?How do I respond when Scripture challenges my assumptions?What would it look like to trust God's wisdom even when I do not fully understand it? PRAY THIS: God, give me a humble heart. Help me receive your design with trust instead of contention. Shape my worship, my attitudes, and my obedience so that they honor you and build up your church. Amen. PLAY THIS: "Be Thou My Vision"
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    7 分
  • Why Jesus Had to Die This Way
    2026/04/02

    You can't have a God of mercy without a God of justice—and the cross is where both are satisfied.

    Summary
    We want forgiveness, but we resist the idea of judgment—yet God is perfectly just, which means every sin must be dealt with. The cross was not symbolic or optional; it was necessary because someone had to pay for sin. Jesus didn't die generally—he died specifically, as a substitute, taking the full weight of justice so mercy could be offered. The cross reveals both the seriousness of sin and the depth of God's provision to deal with it completely.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions

    1. Why do people tend to prefer the idea of mercy over justice when it comes to God?
    2. How does God's perfect justice challenge the way we think about sin?
    3. Why must every sin be paid for rather than ignored?
    4. What does it mean that "someone always pays" for sin?
    5. How does substitution help us understand what Jesus accomplished on the cross?
    6. Why do we often rename sin instead of calling it what it is?
    7. What does the cross reveal about how serious sin actually is?
    8. How do justice and mercy come together without compromising each other at the cross?
    9. Why is "It is finished" such a powerful declaration of what Jesus accomplished?
    10. What does it look like practically to stop managing sin and bring it fully to the cross?

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    6 分
  • Are Different Roles for Men and Women Still Biblical? | 1 Corinthians 11:7-12
    2026/04/01
    Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day. Our shout-out today goes to David Legget from Somerset, KY. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you. Our text today is 1 Corinthians 11:7-12. For a man ought not to cover his head, since he is the image and glory of God, but woman is the glory of man.For man was not made from woman, but woman from man. Neither was man created for woman, but woman for man. That is why a wife ought to have a symbol of authority on her head, because of the angels. Nevertheless, in the Lord woman is not independent of man nor man of woman; for as woman was made from man, so man is now born of woman. And all things are from God. — 1 Corinthians 11:7-12 Paul now addresses the tension readers feel but rarely express. If men and women are equal before God, why does Scripture speak about different roles at all? That tension has not materialized in a vacuum. Modern Western history—shaped by movements like women's suffrage, the temperance movement, and subsequently waves of feminism—has pushed back against real abuses and injustices of women. But in reacting to oppression outside the church, many have come to view any talk of distinction or authority inside the church as innately suspect. Paul's answer is very specific here. He begins with the biological creation of humanity. Man and woman were both made in the image of God. That truth is settled in Genesis before sin ever entered the picture. Equality of worth is never in question. But Paul also affirms a design distinction. Man and woman are not interchangeable. They were created with different roles that together reflect God's design and glory. Paul appeals to creation order—progenitor order—not to establish superiority, but to ground responsibility and mutual dependence. This is where confusion often arises. The difference between the genders is often mistaken for a deficiency in women, and Paul rejects that logical fallacy. He says that woman is the glory of man, not as a statement of inferiority, but as a statement of relational origin and purpose. Just as man reflects God's glory as his image-bearer, woman reflects the glory of God's design for shared life, partnership, and mutual dependence. Then Paul adds an important safeguard. "Nevertheless, in the Lord woman is not independent of man nor man of woman." — 1 Corinthians 11:11 Any reading of this passage that elevates one gender at the expense of the other is already wrong. Interdependence is the point. Men and women need one another. Leadership exercised without humility, accountability, and partnership distorts God's design. Submission divorced from dignity, agency, and honor misrepresents God's character. Paul even grounds this in biology and providence. Though woman was formed from man (the progenitor) in creation, every man since has come through a woman. No one stands alone. No one boasts. And Paul closes the section with the ultimate correction: "All things are from God." — 1 Corinthians 11:12 Authority does not originate with men. Glory does not terminate with women. Everything flows from God and returns to God. Different roles do not diminish value. They magnify God's wisdom. The problem is not difference. The problem is pride—either demanding dominance or rejecting design. Paul calls the church to something better. A vision shaped by Christ. Mutual honor that reflects his humility. Shared dependence that mirrors his body. God-centered glory that points not to ourselves—but back to him. DO THIS: Examine where cultural narratives about equality, power, or independence may be shaping your view of men and women more than Scripture. Ask God to realign your thinking with his Christ-shaped design for mutual honor and shared dependence. ASK THIS: Where do I confuse sameness with equality?How does Paul's emphasis on interdependence help me see roles as a gift rather than a threat?What would Christlike, mutual honor look like in my relationships and in the life of the church? PRAY THIS: God, thank you for creating men and women with equal worth and distinct roles. Guard me from pride that demands dominance or resists your design. Shape my heart to reflect the humility of Christ, so that my life brings glory back to you. Amen. PLAY THIS: "All Glory Be to Christ"
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    7 分
  • What Jesus Actually Endured On The Cross
    2026/04/01

    We've softened the cross into something symbolic, but crucifixion was a brutal, suffocating death that required constant, agonizing effort just to breathe. Jesus didn't passively endure it—he actively chose every moment of suffering, refusing relief and remaining on the cross when he could have ended it. His death was not an accident or a tragedy; it was a deliberate payment for sin, completed in full. The cross confronts us with a hard truth: this wasn't just something done to Jesus—it was something our sin required.

    Reflection & Small Group Discussion Questions

    1. How does understanding the physical reality of crucifixion change your view of the cross?
    2. Why do you think modern Christianity tends to soften or sanitize the brutality of Jesus' death?
    3. What does it mean that Jesus "chose" to remain on the cross?
    4. How does the phrase "he was held there by love" deepen your understanding of the gospel?
    5. Why is it important to recognize that the cross was not just caused by others—but by our own sin?
    6. What is the significance of Jesus saying "It is finished" instead of "I am finished"?
    7. How does the cost of the cross shape the way we understand forgiveness and grace?
    8. What happens when we try to embrace the benefits of the cross without reflecting on its cost?
    9. In what ways can believers become too familiar with the cross and lose its weight?
    10. What is one practical way you can slow down this week and reflect on what Jesus endured for you?

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    6 分
  • Are Head Coverings Still Biblical Today? | 1 Corinthians 11:4-6
    2026/03/31
    Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day. Our shout-out today goes to Darwyn Sprick from Sioux Falls, SD. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you. Our text today is 1 Corinthians 11:4-6. Every man who prays or prophesies with his head covered dishonors his head, but every wife who prays or prophesies with her head uncovered dishonors her head, since it is the same as if her head were shaven. For if a wife will not cover her head, then she should cut her hair short. But since it is disgraceful for a wife to cut off her hair or shave her head, let her cover her head. — 1 Corinthians 11:4-6 At this point, many readers want to dismiss the text. Head coverings feel ancient and culturally irrelevant to us today. But Paul is not focused on fabric in isolation. He is concerned with what head coverings signified in that culture and what their use—or misuse—communicated about honor, authority, and God's design in worship. In Corinth, head coverings were widely understood, visible symbols. They publicly communicated honor, relational order, and the distinction between men and women in the gathered church. When those symbols were ignored or intentionally reversed, the issue was not style—it was the message being communicated. Paul's concern is not that people failed to meet social expectations. His concern is that worship was beginning to teach something false about God's design. This is where we often miss the point. Every church uses symbols. Some are formal. Some are informal. Some are intentional. Some are unexamined. Bowing in prayer communicates reverence toward the God we call upon. Standing for worship communicates honor toward the God we sing to. Quiet reflection during the Lord's Supper communicates surrender to the Christ who gave himself for us. None of these actions or symbols save us. But all of them teach—both us and those around us—because visible practices shape how we understand the God we revere, honor, and submit to. That is why Paul treats this issue seriously. Worship is not merely expression; it is formation. What we repeatedly see and do in the gathered church trains our hearts and instructs others. So Paul presses the question beneath the symbol: Are the visible practices of the church reinforcing what Scripture teaches—or quietly contradicting it? This is not a call to return to ancient customs for their own sake. It is a call to ensure that what we practice in worship clearly reflects what God has revealed. God cares not only that he is revered, honored, and submitted to in worship, but that the way this happens does not confuse or mislead others. Here, the issue of Christian freedom surfaces again. Believers may have freedom in many areas, but love sometimes calls us to limit that freedom for the spiritual good of others. Paul is calling the church to handle worship carefully, because visible practices can either clarify the truth or create confusion—and confusion can hinder growth in Christ. Therefore, order here matters. So are head coverings still biblical today? Paul's answer isn't a simple yes-or-no about whether we wear fabric on our heads. It's a deeper call to examine whether our visible worship practices still communicate God's truth about honor, order, and design. The question is not whether we replicate Corinth's symbols, but whether our symbols—whatever they are—faithfully point to what God has revealed. DO THIS: Pay attention to the visible practices of your church's worship—especially those related to gender, authority, and order. Ask whether they clearly communicate God's design or quietly reflect cultural pressure instead. ASK THIS: If someone asked me, "Are head coverings still biblical today?", how would I answer based on Scripture rather than assumption?What visible practices in my church are teaching theology—intentionally or unintentionally?Where might Christian freedom need to be limited for the sake of clarity, love, and witness? PRAY THIS: God, give me wisdom to discern what worship is teaching—both to my heart and to others. Help our church honor your design clearly, lovingly, and faithfully, even when culture pushes in a different direction. Amen. PLAY THIS: "Be Thou My Vision"
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    6 分
  • Is God's Design for the Church Oppressive to Women? | 1 Corinthians 11:2-3
    2026/03/30
    Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day. Our shout-out today goes to Rob Jassey from Double Springs, AL. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you. Our text today is 1 Corinthians 11:2-3. Now I commend you because you remember me in everything and maintain the traditions even as I delivered them to you. But I want you to understand that the head of every man is Christ, the head of a wife is her husband, and the head of Christ is God. — 1 Corinthians 11:2-3 Paul moves from imitation to instruction. After establishing who is worth following, he now explains how God has designed his church to function. And he begins with something many people resist. Order. And Paul's answer to the question in front of us is clear: God's design for the church is not oppressive to women—it is meant to protect dignity, honor difference, and display the self-giving love of Christ. Paul commends the Corinthians for remembering and receiving what was handed down. Christianity is not self-designed spirituality. It is a received faith. Then Paul lays out an order that immediately confronts all our modern assumptions. Christ → Husband → Wife. This is where the modern church gets a little unsettled. So let's be clear... Paul is not teaching that all women submit to all men, or that authority follows gender in every context. He is describing God's order within specific, God-ordained environments—marriage and the gathered church—where responsibility and sacrificial love are clearly defined. In other words, Paul is not assigning greater value to husbands than to wives, or to men than to women. He is describing order, not worth. Headship, flowing from this order, is not about superiority. It is about sacrificial love expressed through accountability to God's design. Paul makes that unmistakably clear by grounding human relationships in divine reality. "The head of Christ is God." — 1 Corinthians 11:3 This is the controlling phrase in the text. It clarifies that Jesus is fully equal with the Father in nature, glory, and worth. Yet within the Godhead, there is willing submission and perfect unity. Order does not diminish value; it displays harmony. If order exists within the Trinity, then order within the church cannot automatically be labeled as oppressive or outdated. The problem is never God's design. The problem is what sinful people have done with God's design and order. Because many have been wounded by authoritarian abuse, they often misdirect their concern toward passages like this—missing Paul's intent and dismissing God's order as outdated, oppressive, or merely cultural rather than timeless and good. Paul is not endorsing authoritarianism. He is describing a pattern meant to reflect God's glory. God's order is good because God is good. When God's order is rejected, confusion follows. When God's order is abused, people are wounded. But when order is shaped by Christ, it produces clarity and allows people, marriages, and the church to flourish. We do not get to vote on God's design. We receive it as God's instruction. And as men and women, husbands and wives, we are called to trust that God's design—when lived out in Christlike, sacrificial love—produces what is truly good. When God's order is understood through Christ—never apart from him—it becomes something to trust, not fear. DO THIS: Examine how you instinctively respond to authority and structure in the church. Ask whether your reactions are shaped more by personal experience and culture—or by Christ himself. ASK THIS: Where do I resist God's order because of cultural assumptions?How does Jesus' submission to the Father reshape my understanding of authority?What would it look like to trust God's design even when it challenges me? PRAY THIS: God, help me see your order as good and wise. Heal places where authority has been abused, and shape my heart to trust your design as an expression of your love and glory. Amen. PLAY THIS: "Holy, Holy, Holy"
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    7 分