Personal Study

Each week, we publish prompts with daily Bible readings from the Old and New Testaments. These questions are designed to open up a deeper level of thought or conversation about what we read in the Bible. Work through them on your own, with others, or make them a part of your devotional life.


Fifth Week of Lent

Mar 22 - 28

Exodus, Gospel of Mark

“Worthy of the task.” Often, the scope of a task can overshadow our ability to do it. Most Biblical characters can relate. Many of them are less than ideal candidates for the Lord’s work. There is Moses, a disgraced and inarticulate shepherd who believes he is well beneath the task of leading God’s people out of Egypt. Even Jesus’ own disciples don’t exactly look the part, either. After his death, which he had foretold, they are unwilling to believe he has risen again, though he had prophesied about that, too.

Unbelief clings to the myth that God sees what we see. By this measure, only the special get called. And so, when God calls the ordinary person to do his glorious work, we reason that there must be some mistake; we presume to know better than God himself. We insist that God send someone else. We refuse to believe that the risen Lord is right in front of us. Against this God’s anger is kindled.

It is true that we aren’t worthy, but Jesus is. His glory is shown at the gory cross of humiliation. For us, he has passed through insults and death and damnation to rise again. And the revelation of his glory through the unworthy continues. His people are liberated from the darkness of Egypt. He brings his feuding and unbelieving disciples into the ministry of his Gospel, sending them out into the world to bear his news of salvation to all people.

It shouldn’t surprise us, then, that while we struggle on this earth, our Lord chooses the weak to serve him and demonstrate his greatness. The one crucified has risen, and he blesses his church. The one humiliated as a pretend king sits at the right hand of the Father. So, let us, the unworthy, labor in earthly weakness, live by faith, and glorify our Lord.

Holy Week

Mar 29 - April 4

Exodus, Book of Hebrews

The great kingdom of Egypt is on the brink of collapse: their water contaminated, crops destroyed, livestock dead, wealth handed over, and the firstborn in every home struck down. Clearly, this Israelite God is a problem for Pharaoh. Even his own aides protest. Would he honestly sacrifice his nation for slaves?

His stubbornness isn’t a matter of mere politics, but of the heart. The question isn’t whether he allows the Israelites to leave; it is whether letting them go subjects him to their God. He would be forced into concession, and Pharaoh concedes to no one.

These final days of Lent are a good time to consider the tyrant that lives in our own hearts, the hardened slavemaster who bows to no one, violently subjecting us to the darkness of our basest desires and most wicked ambitions.

This week, as we follow our Savior to the cross, we will see how the truly righteous king laid down his life for slaves to sin. In witnessing Jesus’ unmatched sacrifice yet again, we have a prime opportunity to confess our sins and submit to the grace and mercy of the true God. This king is different. He shatters our stony hearts and offers a crown of life.

The liberation is at hand.

But our exodus has only begun. Next week, when Easter dawns, we will get a glimpse of the ending: the triumph over death and the new land to which our LORD is leading us, the land not only free from the dark chains of sin, but full of the light of his righteousness.