After declaring the gospel as the power of God for salvation (vv. 16–17), Paul explains why we need saving: God’s wrath is being revealed against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of people who suppress the truth (v. 18). The problem isn’t ignorance—God has made Himself known. His eternal power and divine nature have been clearly perceived through creation (vv. 19–20). But rather than glorifying God or giving thanks, people turn from Him.
Though they knew God in a general sense, they rejected Him. Their thinking became futile, their hearts darkened, and they exchanged truth for lies (vv. 21–23). Claiming to be wise, they became fools, trading the glory of the immortal God for images of man and animals. This is idolatry—worshiping created things rather than the Creator.
This passage shows how sin begins with failing to honor God. When people reject Him, God gives them over to the sin they desire and the consequences of their rebellion against God. But the gospel is still good news—it rescues us from this cycle and restores us to right worship.
🎯 Theme: When people exchange God’s truth for lies and worshiping creation rather than the Creator, God gives them over to the consequences of their sin as an expression of His holy judgment.
🌀 Reflection: This passage paints a sobering picture of what happens when people reject God. When we stop honoring and thanking Him, our hearts grow dark, and sin takes over. God gives people over to the very things they desire—and the result is spiritual and societal ruin.
💬 Mission Challenge: Share with someone this week one way God has revealed Himself to you—through creation, answered prayer, His Word, or His work in your life. Let that testimony be a bridge to talk about the truth of the gospel.
Paul begins his letter to the Romans by introducing himself as a servant of Christ and laying out the heart of his message—the gospel. This good news (which is what the word “gospel” means) is not a new idea but was promised beforehand through the prophets and fulfilled in Jesus, the Son of God. Paul’s desire is for people from all nations to receive the obedience of faith (v. 5), and he longs to visit Rome to encourage and be encouraged by the church there. Most importantly, Paul boldly declares that the gospel is “the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes” (v. 16). It’s not based on our effort, but on God’s righteousness revealed through faith.
🎯 Theme: The gospel is God’s power to save, and it is received by faith—not works, not status, not strength.
🌀 Reflection: Do you live with the same boldness and confidence in the gospel that Paul expresses here? Are there areas in your life where you need to stop trusting in yourself and instead trust in God’s power to save and sustain?
💬 Mission Challenge: Share the gospel with someone this week—whether it’s your full testimony or a simple word about how Jesus has changed you. Don’t be ashamed (v. 16); be sent.
Shipwrecked, bitten by a viper, and still in chains—but Paul presses on. Even on Malta, the gospel spreads as Paul heals the sick and serves the suffering (vv. 1–10). God was not finished with him yet.
At long last, Paul reaches Rome—not as a free missionary, but as a prisoner. Yet “he lived there two whole years at his own expense, and welcomed all who came to him, proclaiming the kingdom of God… with all boldness and without hindrance” (vv. 30–31). The book ends not with Paul’s death, but with the gospel alive and advancing.
🎯 Theme: The gospel continues to go forth boldly.
🌀 Reflection: How might God use your limitations for His mission? What would it look like to proclaim Jesus “with all boldness and without hindrance” right where you are?
💬 Mission Challenge: This isn’t the end—just the beginning. Reach out to someone today who needs to know the hope of Jesus. The gospel is still going to the ends of the earth—through you.
Paul had warned them not to sail, but they didn’t listen. Now a deadly storm rages. All hope is lost—except Paul still has hope. Why? Because “this very night there stood before me an angel of the God to whom I belong and whom I worship” (v. 23). That makes all the difference.
In the middle of chaos, Paul leads with calm. He reminds them of God’s promise, gives thanks in front of unbelievers, and strengthens the people around him. He may be a prisoner, but he’s the one everyone follows when everything falls apart.
🎯 Theme: Take heart – faith in God steadies us in the storm.
🌀 Reflection: In life’s storms, where do you turn first—fear or faith? What’s one promise of God you can hold onto when everything else feels uncertain?
💬 Mission Challenge: Encourage someone today who feels overwhelmed. Remind them that the same God who stood by Paul in the storm is still present—and still faithful.
Actually, excited is probably an understatement. I’m overjoyed, ecstatic, elated, exhilarated, thrilled, rejoicing, and grateful beyond words to be HOME after 18 days and 19 hours in the hospital and rehab. It has been so sweet to be with Candi and the kiddos and things that feel…normal. Now, I am looking forward to being with my faith family at Christ Community on Sunday.
I find myself a bit overwhelmed as I type this out because there is so much that I want to say. It was the same with praying about and picking the Scripture and music for Sunday; everything seemed right and good and appropriate. Thankfully, there’s just nothing better to sing about than Jesus’s finished work on the cross (Hebrews 10:12), His empty tomb (Luke 24:6-7), and His imminent return (Revelation 22:12, Acts 1:11) — about the living hope we have in Jesus (1 Peter 1:3)!
Concerning that living hope, there is a verse that has been on my heart and mind since I have been sick. It’s the verse I share with people who are going through trials to point them to Jesus, so as I preached to myself, it’s the verse I brought to mind to meditate on and remember. When I got to preach in the rehab unit last Sunday, it’s the verse that I shared with my fellow rehabbers to point them to Jesus. That verse is Nahum 1:7.
The LORD is good, a stronghold in the day of trouble; He knows those who take refuge in Him.
“The LORD is good….” That’s who He is, not a mere adjective to describe His actions or tendencies. He cares for His people (1 Peter 5:7). He blesses those who trust in Him (Jeremiah 17:7). He has steadfast love toward His people (Psalm 103:11, Lamentations 3:22-23) and does good to them (Romans 8:28).
“The LORD [is] a stronghold in the day of trouble….” He is a fortress (Psalm 18:2). He is the protector of His people (Psalm 91:1-2). A fortress is a walled structure designed to protect. The specific type the original language references here is a like a mountain stronghold — not walls built out of bricks or blocks by men but the natural relentless strength God built into the mountains when He created them.
In the day of trouble, we can turn to the Lord and know that He’s got us and we are safe (Psalm 46:1). But here’s how strong our God is: He’s strong enough and big enough to keep us in the palm of His hand (John 10:28-29). And even though He’s so strong that no one could ever pluck us from the palm of His hands, He’s gentle and caring enough that by those same mighty hands, He will lift us up because He cares for us (1 Peter 5:6-7, Isaiah 40:11).
“The LORD…knows those who take refuge in Him.” Now, this is beautiful. If you were to be somewhere in Europe or somewhere where the remains (and sometimes ruins) of castles and fortresses exist, those fortresses would not know if you ran into them for refuge. They aren’t alive. And, as I said, some of them are ruins, meaning their ability to provide fortitude has an expiration date. The Lord is different. Those who put their faith and trust in Him are known by Him (2 Timothy 2:19, John 10:14). This is more than knowing about us or knowing who we are; this is intimate knowledge (Psalm 139:1-4). This is deep knowledge of who a person is. Our God is so good that He not only provides refuge but that the refuge provided in our times of deepest trouble comes with Him knowing who we are and comforting us by His very presence and salvation (Psalm 46:1, Psalm 34:18, Zephaniah 3:17, Isaiah 12:2).
This verse hit hard when we had church in the rehab last Sunday. Some were afraid that they’d never regain movement in their body because of a stroke. Some that their broken back might not heal fully or that another injury might mean paralysis. Others were there as caretakers and feeling inadequate about their ability to comfort their loved one while also feeling totally out of control and incapable to do anything to help. But it was good to know that there is a God who saves (Isaiah 45:21, Titus 3:4-6). There is a God who loved them enough to send His Son to die on their behalf (John 3:16, Romans 5:8) and raise from the dead to offer them new life in Him (Romans 6:4-5, 2 Corinthians 5:17).
It was good news to know that if God can save our souls, healing our bodies is small potatoes (Psalm 103:1-5).
It was good news to know that God never leaves us or forsakes us (Deuteronomy 31:6, Hebrews 13:5) even when we find ourselves more alone than ever before in our lives — that we can take refuge in Him right where we are and know that He knows us, our needs, and how to give us the strength and grace we need (Matthew 6:8, 2 Corinthians 12:9, Isaiah 40:29-31).
And it’s good news for all of us as well. If you have put your trust in God — confessed Jesus as Lord and believed God raised Him from the dead and are saved (Romans 10:9-10), He knows you and cares for you, too (John 10:14, 1 Peter 5:7).
I know I’ve said it at least a dozen times, but y’all, that’s good news! And it’s that good news — the good news of our great God and Savior Jesus Christ that we’re singing, reading, and preaching about Sunday.
So if you’re weary, hurting, searching, or could just use some good news — come. Not just to attend a church service, but to come to Jesus. He is the refuge we come to and the risen King who is our living hope. We’ll gather to worship Him, read and sing of His cross and resurrection, and have John remind us from God’s Word the good news — the gospel — of Jesus.
13 He has delivered us from the domain of darkness and transferred us to the kingdom of his beloved Son, 14 in whom we have redemption, the forgiveness of sins. 15 He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation. 16 For by him all things were created, in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities—all things were created through him and for him. 17 And he is before all things, and in him all things hold together. 18 And he is the head of the body, the church. He is the beginning, the firstborn from the dead, that in everything he might be preeminent. 19 For in him all the fullness of God was pleased to dwell, 20 and through him to reconcile to himself all things, whether on earth or in heaven, making peace by the blood of his cross.
3 Blessed be the God and Father of our Lord Jesus Christ! According to his great mercy, he has caused us to be born again to a living hope through the resurrection of Jesus Christ from the dead, 4 to an inheritance that is imperishable, undefiled, and unfading, kept in heaven for you, 5 who by God’s power are being guarded through faith for a salvation ready to be revealed in the last time.
Standing before King Agrippa and all the pomp of Roman power, Paul doesn’t defend his life—he declares the gospel. With courage and clarity, he shares his story of seeing the risen Christ and the mission he received “to open their eyes, so that they may turn from darkness to light… and receive forgiveness of sins” (v. 18).
Even when Festus mocks him and Agrippa shrugs off the message, Paul presses on: “Whether short or long… I would to God… all… might become such as I am—except for these chains” (v. 29). He knows it’s not about his freedom—it’s about their salvation.
🎯 Theme: Almost persuaded isn’t enough – Paul wants everyone to be saved.
🌀 Reflection: Are you prepared to share your story like Paul? Who in your life needs to hear what Jesus has done for you?
💬 Mission Challenge: Ask God to give you boldness today. Look for an opportunity to speak about Jesus—even if it’s just a sentence or two. The gospel doesn’t need a stage—it just needs a willing voice.
Political pressure, religious rage, and unjust accusations swirl around Paul—yet he stands firm, appealing to Caesar rather than being handed over to those who sought his death (v. 11). Festus wants to appease the Jews, but God is working a greater plan. Paul may be in chains, but the gospel is not.
Even King Agrippa and Bernice arrive with pomp and power, but it’s Paul, the prisoner, who carries eternal authority as a witness to Christ. Behind the politics and pretense, God is fulfilling His promise—Paul will testify in Rome (Acts 23:11).
🎯 Theme: Paul refused to back down and appealed to Caesar.
🌀 Reflection: Are you trusting God’s purpose even when life feels unfair or uncertain? Do you see difficulty as a platform for witness?
💬 Mission Challenge: Pray for someone who is facing injustice or difficulty today—and encourage them with God’s promises. Stand with them, and remind them that the gospel never stops moving forward.
5:1 Therefore, since we have been justified by faith, we have peace with God through our Lord Jesus Christ. 2 Through him we have also obtained access by faith into this grace in which we stand, and we rejoice in hope of the glory of God. 3 Not only that, but we rejoice in our sufferings, knowing that suffering produces endurance, 4 and endurance produces character, and character produces hope, 5 and hope does not put us to shame, because God’s love has been poured into our hearts through the Holy Spirit who has been given to us.
📖 Revelation 3:7–13We’re back!After a few months off, The King is Coming returns in 2026 with one of the most encouraging letters in Revelation — Jesus’s message to the faithful church in Philadelphia. In a world filled with opposition and weakness, Jesus opens a door no one can shut.In this episode, Keith Harris and Jamie Harrison explore:✔️ Jesus’s identity as the Holy One, the True One — God Himself✔️ What the “key of David” means and how Jesus alone opens and shuts✔️ The debated phrase “I will keep you from the hour of trial” — and how to read it biblically✔️ Why “little power” doesn’t disqualify faithfulness✔️ How being kept through the trial glorifies Christ’s strength in us✔️ What it means to be a pillar in God’s presence foreverThis church had no rebuke — only encouragement. And Jesus’s call still stands today: “Hold fast what you have, so that no one may seize your crown.” (Revelation 3:11, ESV)🔗 Missed earlier episodes in the series? You can click here to catch up and listen from the beginning.✍️ If you’d like to see a written version of this podcast, complete with footnotes and cross-references, you can find it here.
I’m home from the hospital after several weeks (18 days and 19 hours) and so glad and thankful!
Being with Candice, Keri, and Xander again has been absolutely wonderful. It’s not just about being back at our house; it’s about being with them. They are my home. Sharing meals, watching movies, hearing them laugh—just being with them—reminds me of what I’m working toward in recovery. I don’t want them to have to be my babysitters and caretakers; I’m ready to get back to being husband, daddy, son, brother, Uncle Keith – full and whole.
And this past Sunday, I got to be back with my Christ Community family. What a gift. I was overwhelmed—in the best way possible. There were tears, but they were tears of joy. So many encouraged me with their words, their hugs, and especially their voices. When I was too overcome to sing during “Nothing Without You,” I heard my sisters Nikki and Shonna lifting their voices and carrying the song—and carrying me with it. And when our church gathered around to pray for me and others longing for healing, James 5:13–15 came to life. John anointed me with oil, the church prayed, and I was deeply moved by the tangible presence of God’s people doing what His Word calls us to do.
If you haven’t already, I’d encourage you to look back at the two previous writings I shared from the hospital. They were part of my processing in real time, and I hope they encourage you:
Now that I’m home and healing (and awaiting more doctor appointments), I want to walk through the passage that held me through the hardest nights. Romans 5:1–5 has been like an anchor for me. These verses walk us through what it means to have peace with God, to stand in grace, and to find real, lasting hope—even when life hurts. This passage has met me where I’ve been—sometimes flat on my back, sometimes inching forward with shaky steps, but always needing the kind of hope that doesn’t put us to shame. It’s not theoretical to me anymore—it’s lived truth. And I want to walk through it with you, verse by verse, to see again what I’ve been reminded of: that Jesus is our peace, Jesus gives us access to grace, Jesus brings joy even in our suffering, and Jesus is our unshakable hope.
Jesus is Our Peace (v. 1)
Verse 1 starts with the word “Therefore”, signaling that this is building on what came before in Romans 3-4. Paul had previously shown that no one is justified — made right with God — by good works or keeping the Law but only by faith in Jesus (Romans 3:28, 4:5). Romans 5:1 shows the result of being justified and saved by grace through faith in Jesus: peace with God.
This isn’t merely some inner calm or warm fuzzy feeling. It’s not circumstantial peace. This is peace that “surpasses all understanding” (Philippians 4:7) — a settled reality that, for those who are saved, the war we waged against God in our sin is over. We once lived as enemies of God (Romans 5:10), alienated and hostile in mind (Colossians 1:21). But now, through Christ, the conflict is resolved in Him. There is no more wrath for those who are in Christ (Romans 5:9). The gavel has fallen. The verdict is in. And the Judge is also the Savior who made peace by the blood of His cross (Colossians 1:20).
The peace we see here in v. 1 is peace through our Lord Jesus Christ. It doesn’t come through human effort, morality, or religion. It is through a Person — Jesus — who took our punishment upon Himself (Isaiah 53:5), died in our place (Romans 4:25), and rose again to give us life and right standing before God (Romans 4:24-25).
Coming home from the hospital reminded me how vital this peace truly is. While my body is still healing and I’m learning new limits and routines, I have peace that’s not dependent on my strength or stability—peace that holds even when I feel weak or uncertain. When you’re going through trials, peace with God means everything. This peace has sustained me through days I couldn’t lift my arms or stand without help, through nights of tears and questions. But it never left. It never failed. No, He never left or failed. This is not pointing to my circumstances but a reality that extends to all of the trials of this life. This peace with God means your soul is safe no matter the circumstances affecting your body or earthly life. Jesus has made a way for us to come to the Father, not out of fear, but as beloved children (John 14:6, Romans 8:15). We get the peace that a child feels when they, terrified in the middle of the night, run and are embraced in the arms of their parents. Knowing Jesus has made a way for us to run to the Father is about the truest idea of peace there is.
Jesus Gives Us Access to Grace (v. 2a)
Paul builds on the peace we now have with God by saying that through Jesus, we have access to grace — and not just a momentary taste, but a continual standing in it. This is the grace of God that justifies us (Romans 3:24), the grace of God that saves (Ephesians 2:8), and the grace of God that sustains us (2 Corinthians 12:10).
It’s grace, so it’s not something we’ve earned, and it’s not something we could ever keep on our own. This grace is a place we stand because Jesus holds us there.
That word “access” in v. 2 is rich in meaning. It describes being brought into the presence of royalty by someone with the right to do so. That’s what Jesus has done for us. He doesn’t just bring us peace with God — He brings us into the throne room of grace (Hebrews 4:16). And because of Him, we don’t stand in fear or shame but in favor, the favor Jesus earned and deserves, welcomed and secure in relationship with God (Romans 5:1-2, Ephesians 1:6, Hebrews 4:16).
I think about this truth often now that I’m home and trying to rebuild strength. There were weeks I couldn’t physically stand—I had to be lifted, guided, even fed. Yet even then, I never stopped standing in grace. Not once. Not when I was flat on my back, not when I was wheeled down hallways to therapy, not when I cried out to God in pain and weakness. His grace held me. His grace still holds me.
This is where the theology meets real life—especially when you’re walking through suffering. Grace is not a place we earn; it’s what we receive because of Jesus – because of what He earned. My standing in grace isn’t special or unique to me; everyone who has been saved by Jesus is still standing in His grace (2 Corinthians 12:9-10, 1 Peter 5:10, Romans 8:18). This is part of the beauty of being in Christ. If you are in Christ, your position with God is not fragile. It’s not based on your performance or dependent on your condition. Jesus has secured it and sustains it by His grace (John 10:28-29, Philippians 1:6, Romans 8:38-39).
Jesus Brings Joy Even in Our Suffering (vv. 2b-4)
This section of Romans 5:1-5 is where people get caught up because Paul says something pretty shocking: not only do we rejoice in our hope — we rejoice in our sufferings.
Yup, read that again. We are supposed to rejoice in our hope. But we are also supposed to rejoice in our sufferings.
If you think that sounds strange, and can even be offensive if taken out of the context of Romans 5 (which is something we need to be especially careful with here). Paul denying the reality of pain. Paul knew pain deeply. He knew beatings, imprisonment, sickness, shipwrecks, rejection, and weakness (2 Corinthians 11:24–28). What the Spirit through Paul is doing here is showing us that, in Christ, even our pain has a purpose. We rejoice in our sufferings not because it feels good but because we know what God can and is doing through it.
Let’s break it down.
First, we rejoice in the “hope of the glory of God”. This is the secure promise that one day we will see Jesus face-to-face and be fully transformed into His likeness (1 John 3:2, Colossians 3:4). That’s not a vague wish — it’s a guaranteed future secured by the finished work of Jesus. It gives us eternal perspective and lifts our heads to look forward beyond our present troubles (2 Corinthians 4:17-18, Romans 8:18).
Paul goes further. He says we can also rejoice now, in the middle of our trials. Why? Because suffering shapes us:
“suffering produces endurance” — the Spirit works in us to give the strength to persevere, holding us when things are hard
“endurance produces character” — a tested, refined faith that isn’t superficial but rooted in Christ and who He is making us to be
“character produces hope” — again, a hope not based on circumstances or fickle, earthly, hypothetical hope but built on who Jesus is, what He’s done, and all He’s promised
Over the last few weeks in the hospital, I’ve seen this unfold in ways I couldn’t have expected. Lying in a hospital bed with no ability to move, no answers, and nothing but time and pain forced me to lean into Jesus like never before. I found that suffering is a classroom—not one I signed up for, but one in which the Spirit was a very present teacher. He reminded me that I wasn’t alone (Psalm 139:7–10, Isaiah 41:10, Matthew 28:20), that He had not abandoned me, and that He was working something in me I could never have built on my own (Romans 8:28, James 1:2–4). He’s shown me how He gives strength when I am beyond weak (2 Corinthians 12:9-10, Isaiah 40:29-31), producing something in me I couldn’t manufacture on my own (Romans 5:3-5).
Only a fool would revel in the difficulties or try to enjoy the pain and suffering. No, this is rejoicing in the loving hands of God that lift us up out of the mire and difficulty (Psalm 40:1-3, 1 Peter 5:6-7) and hold us safe and secure in Him (John 10:28-29, Romans 8:38-39). It is rejoicing in knowing that we can look to the horizon and see the beauty of eternity with Jesus (Revelation 21:3-4), knowing that every speedbump and tribulation is something that can draw us closer to Jesus and make us more like Him (2 Corinthians 4:16-18; Romans 8:17-18, 29). Let me be clear: this isn’t the result of grit—it’s the fruit of grace. Joy in suffering is not natural, but it is supernatural. It’s a gift from God to His people who are held fast by Jesus.
Jesus is Our Unshakable Hope (v. 5)
After walking us through the path of suffering, endurance, and character, Paul arrives at the bold and beautiful conclusion of that paragraph: hope does not put us to shame.
In a world of letdowns, empty promises, and fragile dreams, that’s a stunning calm. But Paul isn’t talking about generic, hypothetical optimism. He’s talking about Jesus — and He’s unshakable.
Why doesn’t this hope disappoint? Because it’s grounded in the love of God, not in the shifting sand of circumstances. Paul says that God’s love has been poured into our hearts. That verb there translated “poured” isn’t a trickle — it’s a flood. Through the Holy Spirit, given to every believer, God pours out His love — not just toward us, but into us. The very presence of God’s Spirit is assurance that we belong to Him (Ephesians 1:13-14), and that His love for us is not distant but deeply personal and present. His Spirit is inside those He saves – not some concept or ethereal force but a Person, God within us.
In Jesus, you’re not holding onto hope, white knuckling it and hoping everything might work out okay. In Christ, hope is holding onto you (Hebrews 6:19-20), secured by the Spirit (Ephesians 1:13-14) and sealed in the love of God (Romans 8:38-39). When your strength fails, He doesn’t (Isaiah 40:28-31). When your feelings falter, His love doesn’t (Lamentations 3:22-23, 2 Timothy 2:13). Even when you don’t feel hopeful, you can trust that the Spirit is at work in you, reminding you who you are and Whose you are (Romans 8:16, Galatians 4:6).
I’ve needed that reminder every day this month. There were moments when I wondered what the future held.
I was reminded of David Miller who suffered from muscular atrophy from his teenage years and lost the use of every muscle in his body until he was bound in a wheelchair. I think of his testimony about the aftermath of his son being paralyzed in a wreck. He told me that he sat by his son’s hospital bed — in his own wheelchair, a wheelchair identical to the one his son would have to use — and sang the hymns of the faith, quoted Scripture over his son (as he couldn’t hold a Bible), and thanked God for giving him decades to live in a wheelchair like that so that he could help his son.
A month in the hospital can’t compare to lives like theirs. Yet God showed me that, if He could handle their trials and give them endurance, character, and hope, He can handle any and every trial that His children will go through. God’s goodness, protection, and care aren’t limited to Spurgeon or Miller, though; think of all the people He carried through trials in the Bible.
Job was carried through Satan attacking his family, health, and sanity (Job 1–2).
Joseph was carried through betrayal, slavery, and prison to save his family and many others (Genesis 37, 39–50).
Moses was carried through forty years in the wilderness with a complaining people (Exodus 3–Numbers 20).
Hannah was carried through years of barrenness and deep grief (1 Samuel 1–2).
David was carried through hiding in caves and fleeing for his life before becoming king (1 Samuel 18–31).
Elijah was carried through exhaustion, fear, and depression under a broom tree (1 Kings 19).
Jeremiah was carried through persecution and tears while faithfully proclaiming God’s Word (Jeremiah 20, Lamentations 3).
Hananiah, Mishael, and Azariah (a.k.a. Shadrach, Meshach, and Abednego) were carried through the fiery furnace and came out without even smelling like smoke (Daniel 3).
Daniel was carried through the lion’s den with unshakable faith, not receiving so much as a nibble from hungry lions (Daniel 6).
Mary was carried through scandal, fear, and wonder as she bore the Son of God (Luke 1–2).
Peter was carried through the shame of denying his Savior and restored by Jesus Himself (Luke 22:54–62, John 21:15–19).
Paul was carried through imprisonments, beatings, and shipwrecks for the sake of the gospel (2 Corinthians 11:24–28, Acts 27).
Our God is not just the God of our mountaintop faith—He’s the God who meets us in the valley, walks with us through the fire, and floods our hearts with His love even when we feel empty. Doubts creep in. Trials come and go and sometimes never go away on earth, but God keeps pouring out His love. He does it because He is good and He is God and He is faithful. His hope doesn’t put us to shame.
Wrapping Up
Romans 5:1-5 isn’t a feel-better-formula or some kind of positive thinking strategy — it’s a gospel-soaked promise from the living God. It is real peace, real grace, real joy, real hope—and every bit of it comes through Jesus.
If you’re reading this and you’ve never trusted in Jesus for salvation—if you don’t know what it’s like to have peace with God or hope that holds firm even when life falls apart—hear this clearly: you don’t have to stay where you are. Jesus invites you to come to Him. His Word says, “If you confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord and believe in your heart that God raised Him from the dead, you will be saved” (Romans 10:9).
This isn’t about fixing yourself or cleaning yourself up first — it’s about trusting the One who already paid the price to redeem you. The Bible promises that “everyone who calls on the name of the Lord will be saved” (Romans 10:13). That invitation is for you.
Come to Jesus. Lay down your burdens. Trust in His finished work on the cross. Let Him pour His love into your heart by His Spirit and anchor your life in a hope that never puts you to shame.
And if you already belong to Jesus, but you find yourself weary or hurting, don’t forget what the Holy Spirit has taught you in Romans 5.
You have peace with God — He’s not against you.
You stand in grace — you are held and sustained by him.
Your suffering is not pointless — He is producing endurance, character, and a hope that is alive because He is alive.
You may feel weak (or very well be weak), but the Spirit of God lives in you.
Your circumstances may shift, but Jesus never will.
So, hold on, and more than that — let hope, let Jesus hold you. You are seen. You are loved. And in Christ, you are not alone and never forsaken (Hebrews 13:5, Romans 8:38–39).
Thank you for reading. While I hope my story and testimony will help others who are struggling or going through trials, I know that the Word of God offers better and lasting hope — for “faith comes from hearing and hearing from the Word of Christ” (Romans 10:17). If you are struggling or going through trying times, look at the many, many cross-references; click on them and let God’s Word encourage and comfort you. And may you encounter the God of the Bible, our great God and Savior Jesus Christ, in your time of need.
Paul stood before the Sanhedrin with integrity and a clear conscience. When struck unjustly, he spoke boldly yet submitted to God’s Word (v. 5). In a moment of Spirit-led strategy, he used the council’s own division to protect himself (v. 6). Though surrounded by chaos, Paul wasn’t alone—the Lord stood by him that night and said, “Take courage… you must testify also in Rome” (v. 11).
God’s providence moved quietly but powerfully—from a listening nephew to a Roman escort of 470 soldiers. The road ahead was difficult, but God was guiding every step.
🎯 Theme: Take courage – Jesus promises we will testify for Him.
🌀 Reflection: When life feels uncertain or dangerous, are you looking for the quiet ways God is still at work? What would it look like to take courage today?
💬 Mission Challenge: Encourage someone this week with the words from Acts 23:11. Reach out to someone facing a hard road and remind them: Jesus stands by His people.
Paul stood before the Sanhedrin with integrity and a clear conscience. When struck unjustly, he spoke boldly yet submitted to God’s Word (v. 5). In a moment of Spirit-led strategy, he used the council’s own division to protect himself (v. 6). Though surrounded by chaos, Paul wasn’t alone—the Lord stood by him that night and said, “Take courage… you must testify also in Rome” (v. 11).
God’s providence moved quietly but powerfully—from a listening nephew to a Roman escort of 470 soldiers. The road ahead was difficult, but God was guiding every step.
🎯 Theme: Take courage – Jesus promises we will testify for Him.
🌀 Reflection: When life feels uncertain or dangerous, are you looking for the quiet ways God is still at work? What would it look like to take courage today?
💬 Mission Challenge: Encourage someone this week with the words from Acts 23:11. Reach out to someone facing a hard road and remind them: Jesus stands by His people.