Morning, February 5
Trust in Him at all times, O people; pour out your hearts before Him. God is our refuge. Selah  — Psalm 62:8
Dawn 2 Dusk
Leaning Hard on the God Who Listens

Some days it feels easy to trust God; other days, your heart feels like a tangled knot of fears, decisions, and disappointments. Psalm 62 reminds us that God is not just mildly interested in us—He is a strong refuge who calls us to bring our whole selves, not our polished selves. He does not ask for formal, scripted prayers, but for hearts that come honestly, especially when life is confusing or painful. Today is an invitation to stop pretending we’re “fine” and actually lean our full weight on the God who is strong enough to carry us.

Trusting Him at All Times

Psalm 62:8 says, “Trust in Him at all times, O people; pour out your hearts before Him. God is our refuge. Selah.” Notice that “at all times” leaves no exceptions. Not only the crisis moments, but the boring afternoons, the small annoyances, the uncertain medical tests, the tight budgets, the parenting struggles, the spiritual dryness. Trust is not just a feeling you hope will show up; it is a decision to lean your weight on God’s character when you cannot make sense of your circumstances.

Scripture consistently calls us to this whole-life trust. Proverbs 3:5–6 urges us to trust the Lord with all our hearts and not lean on our own understanding. Jeremiah 17 compares the one who trusts in the Lord to a tree planted by water, green and fruitful even in drought. That is what God offers you today—not a guarantee of easy circumstances, but a rooted, hidden strength in Him when everything around you feels dry. Trust says, “Lord, I don’t see what You’re doing, but I choose to stand on who You are.”

Pouring Out, Not Holding Back

“Pour out your hearts before Him” is a vivid picture. It is not a careful drip of information to keep control of the conversation with God. It is emptying the contents of your heart—the confusion, the anger, the regret, the questions, the joys, the hopes—into His presence. Think of Hannah in 1 Samuel 1, so raw in her grief that Eli thought she was drunk; yet God called that act faith and answered her cry.

The New Testament echoes this freedom. We are told to cast all our anxieties on Him because He cares for us, and to bring everything to Him in prayer instead of being consumed by worry (1 Peter 5; Philippians 4). Hebrews says we have a High Priest who sympathizes with our weaknesses and calls us to draw near to the throne of grace with confidence. You do not have to sanitize your emotions before you pray. God already knows what is there; pouring out your heart is how you stop carrying what you were never meant to carry alone.

Living Today in the Refuge of God

“God is our refuge” is not poetry to admire; it is a place to live. A refuge is where you run first, not last. Many of us instinctively run to distraction, to people, to our own plans, or to scrolling our phones when life feels heavy. Living in God as refuge means that when fear or pressure hits today, your first reflex becomes turning to Him: “Father, here it is. I’m bringing this to You.” That is a learned habit of the heart, but it starts with one choice at a time.

Because of Christ’s death and resurrection, that refuge is wide open to you. Jesus invites the weary and burdened to come to Him for rest, not to prove their strength (Matthew 11:28). God is “a very present help in trouble,” not a distant observer (Psalm 46:1). So, very practically, you can pause this morning and name your specific fears, temptations, and decisions, handing each one to Him. Then, as the day unfolds, keep short accounts: quick, honest prayers instead of silent, simmering worries. This is how trust moves from a verse you admire to a life you actually live.

Lord, thank You that You are our refuge and that You listen when we pour out our hearts. Today, move me to run to You first, to trust You at all times, and to obey You as I rest in Your care. In Jesus’ name, amen.

Morning with A.W. Tozer
Words of Spirit and Life

The Bible is unique among books, which means simply that no book has been produced just like it.

The Bible is not a book of history, though it contains much history, and all it does contain is authentic. It is not a book of science, though all its pronouncements upon the facts usually falling into the category of science are accurate and trustworthy. It is not a book of biography, though its biographical sketches are easily the most inspiring in the world. It is not a book of philosophy, though it is the sum of all that is deep and sound philosophy. It is not a book of astronomy, though its references to the sun and the stars rate among the loftiest sayings ever recorded. It is not a book of psychology, though its knowledge of the workings of the human mind astonishes the reader and lays bare his soul. It is not strictly a book of theology, though it is the source of all the true theology this fallen world will ever know.

What, then, is the Bible? It is the Book of Life. "The words that I speak unto you," said our Lord, "they are spirit, and they are life."

Music For the Soul
A Dark Chamber in Every Heart

He hath made me to dwell in dark places, as those that have been long dead, - Lamentations 3:6

Every man is a mystery to himself as to his fellows. With reverence, we may say of each other as we say of God - " Clouds and darkness are round about Him." After all the manifestations of a life, we remain enigmas to one another, mysteries to ourselves; for every man is no fixed somewhat, but a growing personality, with dormant possibilities of good and evil lying in him, which up to the very last moment of life may flame up in altogether unexpected and astonishing developments, so as that we have all to feel that after all self-examination there lie awful possibilities within us which we have not fathomed; and after all our knowledge of one another we yet do see but the surface, and each soul dwells alone.

There is in every heart a dark chamber. There are very, very few of us that dare tell all our thoughts and show our inmost selves to the dearest ones. The most silvery lake that lies sleeping amidst beauty, itself the very fairest spot of all, when drained off shows ugly ooze and filthy mud, and all manner of creeping abominations in the slime. I wonder what we should see if our hearts were, so to speak, drained off, and the very bottom layer of everything brought into the light? Do you think you would like it? Do you think you could stand it?

Well, then, go to God and ask Him to keep you from the unconscious sins. Go to Him and ask Him to root out of you the mischiefs that you do not know are there, and live humbly and self-distrustfully, and feel that your only strength is: " Hold Thou me up, and I shall be safe." "Hast thou seen what they do in the dark?"

Trust Christ! and so thy soul shall no longer be like "the sea that cannot rest," full of turbulent wishes, full of passionate desires that come to nothing, full of endless moanings, like the homeless ocean that is ever working and never flings up any product of its work but yeasty foam and broken weeds, - but thine heart shall become translucent and still, like some land-locked lake, where no winds rave nor tempests ruffle; and on its calm surface there shall be mirrored the clear shining of the unclouded blue, and the perpetual light of the sun that never goes down.

Spurgeon: Morning and Evening

1 John 4:14  The Father sent the Son to be the Saviour of the world.

It is a sweet thought that Jesus Christ did not come forth without his Father's permission, authority, consent, and assistance. He was sent of the Father, that he might be the Saviour of men. We are too apt to forget that, while there are distinctions as to the persons in the Trinity, there are no distinctions of honor. We too frequently ascribe the honor of our salvation, or at least the depths of its benevolence, more to Jesus Christ than we do the Father. This is a very great mistake. What if Jesus came? Did not his Father send him? If he spake wondrously, did not his Father pour grace into his lips, that he might be an able minister of the new covenant? He who knoweth the Father, and the Son, and the Holy Ghost as he should know them, never setteth one before another in his love; he sees them at Bethlehem, at Gethsemane, and on Calvary, all equally engaged in the work of salvation. O Christian, hast thou put thy confidence in the Man Christ Jesus? Hast thou placed thy reliance solely on him? And art thou united with him? Then believe that thou art united unto the God of heaven. Since to the Man Christ Jesus thou art brother, and holdest closest fellowship, thou art linked thereby with God the Eternal, and "the Ancient of days" is thy Father and thy friend. Didst thou ever consider the depth of love in the heart of Jehovah, when God the Father equipped his Son for the great enterprise of mercy? If not, be this thy day's meditation. The Father sent him! Contemplate that subject. Think how Jesus works what the Father wills. In the wounds of the dying Saviour see the love of the great I AM. Let every thought of Jesus be also connected with the Eternal, ever-blessed God, for "It pleased the Lord to bruise him; he hath put him to grief."

Spurgeon: Faith’s Checkbook
Justice Satisfied

- Exodus 12:13

My own sight of the precious blood is for my comfort; but it is the LORD’s sight of it which secures my safety. Even when I am unable to behold it, the LORD looks at it and passes over me because of it. If I am not so much at ease as I ought to be, because my faith is dim, yet I am equally safe because the LORD’s eye is not dim, and He sees the blood of the great Sacrifice with steady gaze. What a joy is this!

The LORD sees the deep inner meaning, the infinite fullness of all that is meant by the death of His dear Son. He sees it with restful memory of justice satisfied and all His matchless attributes glorified. He beheld creation in its progress and said, "It is very good"; but what does He say of redemption in its completeness? What does He say of the obedience even unto death of His well-beloved Son? None can tell His delight in Jesus, His rest in the sweet savor which Jesus presented when He offered Himself without spot unto God.

Now rest we in calm security. We have God’s sacrifice and God’s Word to create in us a sense of perfect security. He will, He must, pass over us, because He spared not our glorious Substitute. Justice joins hands with love to provide everlasting salvation for all the blood-besprinkled.

The Believer’s Daily Remembrancer
Precious Blood

The blood of Jesus is the price of our redemption, the object of our faith, the ground of our peace, the subject of our meditation, and our constant plea at the throne of grace.

It satisfied Divine justice, and speaks peace to the humble sinner’s heart. It overcomes Satan, and cleanseth from all sin.

It purges the conscience from dead works, and leads us to joy in God. We build on it as our foundation, flee to it as our refuge, look to it as the cure for sin, and sing of it as the joy of our heart. It has made a perfect, a satisfactory, an infinite atonement; and no sinner can perish who relies upon it, washes in it, and pleads it before God. It is indeed precious blood! It is invaluable!

Whenever you feel guilt on your conscience, fears rising in your mind, or a gloom come over your spirit; look to, meditate upon, make use of, the precious blood of Jesus. It made peace, it gives peace, and it secures peace. It cleanses, heals, and sanctifies; and we could not live happy one day without it. The blood of Jesus Christ cleanseth us from all sin. To this alone we must look as the foundation of our hope, and ground of our peace.

Dear dying Lamb! Thy precious blood

Shall never lose its power,

Till all the ransom’d church of God

Be saved to sin no more.

Bible League: Living His Word
“Let not your hearts be troubled. Believe in God; believe also in me.”
— John 14:1 ESV

We say we believe in God, but do we really? To believe in God and Jesus is part and parcel of the Christian life. As Christians, of course, we say we believe in them. It’s expected of us. It’s what Christians are supposed to believe. The question is how far does that belief go? Does it exercise any real power over our lives? Does it change the way we live, or is it nothing more than the rote belief in a creed we were taught?

There’s a way you can tell—by the state of your heart. Is your heart troubled? If so, then your belief in God and Jesus probably needs an upgrade. True belief is a source of great comfort. Jesus said, “Peace I leave with you; my peace I give to you. Not as the world gives do I give to you. Let not your hearts be troubled, neither let them be afraid.” (John 14:27). True belief leads to peace in the very core of your being. It keeps you calm and collected under difficult circumstances.

There are times, of course, when the trials, troubles, and persecutions of life get the better of us. It happens to every Christian. It even happened to the great people of faith in the Bible. All you have to do is read a few of their stories, or a few of David’s psalms, to realize that it happened to them. Satan loves to spring trouble on us and try to rob us of our peace. He tries to stampede us into doing things born of fear and worry, rather than faith.

If that happens to you, then take Jesus’ words in our verse for today to heart. He commands us to “let not your hearts be troubled” and he commands us to “believe in God; believe also in me.”

Today, then, don’t let Satan rob you! Believe in God and Jesus. Don’t let your heart be troubled.

Daily Light on the Daily Path
John 10:10  "The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I came that they may have life, and have it abundantly.

Genesis 2:17  but from the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat from it you will surely die."

Genesis 3:6  When the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was desirable to make one wise, she took from its fruit and ate; and she gave also to her husband with her, and he ate.

Romans 6:23  For the wages of sin is death, but the free gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord.

Romans 5:17  For if by the transgression of the one, death reigned through the one, much more those who receive the abundance of grace and of the gift of righteousness will reign in life through the One, Jesus Christ.

1 Corinthians 15:21,22  For since by a man came death, by a man also came the resurrection of the dead. • For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all will be made alive.

2 Timothy 1:10  but now has been revealed by the appearing of our Savior Christ Jesus, who abolished death and brought life and immortality to light through the gospel,

1 John 5:11,12  And the testimony is this, that God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son. • He who has the Son has the life; he who does not have the Son of God does not have the life.

John 3:17  "For God did not send the Son into the world to judge the world, but that the world might be saved through Him.

New American Standard Bible Copyright © 1960, 1962, 1963, 1968, 1971, 1972, 1973, 1975, 1977, 1995 by The Lockman Foundation, La Habra, Calif. All rights reserved. For Permission to Quote Information visit http://www.lockman.org.

Tyndale Life Application Daily Devotion
You have taught children and infants
        to tell of your strength,
silencing your enemies
        and all who oppose you.
Insight
Children are able to trust and praise God without doubts or reservations. As we get older, many of us find this more and more difficult to do.
Challenge
Ask God to give you childlike faith, removing any barriers to having a closer walk with him. Get in touch with this childlike quality in yourself so that you can be more expressive.

Devotional Hours Within the Bible
The Brazen Serpent

Numbers 21:1-9

“They began to murmur against God and Moses. “Why have you brought us out of Egypt to die here in the wilderness?” they complained. “There is no bread! There is no water! And we detest this wretched manna!” Numbers 21:5

When the time came at last for the people to go into the land of promise, they found the way blocked. The Edomites refused to allow them to go through their country, which was the direct route, and they were compelled to make a long detour, going around the land of Edom instead of across it. Besides being long, this way was also very hard, being through sandy wastelands. The people got discouraged, and hence the murmuring .

It certainly seemed a most unnecessary piece of journeying. A glance at the map will show us that from Kadesh-barnea over into Canaan was only a short distance, while the route the people had to take led them by a long and circuitous course. What made all this harder, was that it was made necessary by the unbrotherliness of a brother. Edom would not allow Israel to pass through his country. Moses asked this favor courteously, offering to pay for everything the people used but the king refused, and in a very surly fashion, too, to permit them to pass through his country on any terms or conditions whatever.

Very often in the experiences of life, this same thing happens; brothers are disobliging to brothers, refusing to be kind, and thus make their burdens heavier. There are many who constantly make life harder for others by their selfishness. This is not right. Life is hard enough at the best, for most people and it should be our desire and effort to bear one another’s burdens, certainly never make burdens for others.

It is not surprising that the people “were much discouraged because of the way.” “The Arabah was a stony, sandy, almost barren plain, and subject to sandstorms. It was not, however, merely the heat and drought and ruggedness of the route which depressed them but the fact that they were marching directly away from Canaan, and knew not how they were ever to reach it.” We cannot blame the Israelites for feeling discouraged because of the way. Yet we may say frankly, that they should not have given away to the depressing feeling. Nothing was gained by this. It did not make the way any smoother. It caused no flower to grow in the path. It spread no shelter over their heads to ward off the sun’s fierce heat. It did not shorten the long road. It did not soften the hearts of the unbrotherly Edomites and make them relent. It only made the people themselves less fit for the hard journey, less brave, less able to bear the strain!

When we find ourselves in hard conditions which we cannot ameliorate, the best way always is to face them with courage and energy. They have got to be mastered, unless we mean to consent to be beaten; and there is no use wasting time and strength in fretting over them. Beaten, defeated we never should consent to be; and therefore the only right thing to do, is to stand like a rock. Only those who overcome win the prizes of life. These prizes lie always beyond battle lines.

In the letters to the seven churches, in the Book of Revelation, only those who overcome reach the rewards and blessings of spiritual life. We need ever to be strong if we would be victorious. Discouragement does not nerve us with strength; it only makes us weak and less able to be overcomers. A discouraged man never can be a hero. The moment we allow ourselves to let discouragement into our hearts we have opened our fortress gates to a traitor who will betray us!

Besides, there never is any real need for discouragement. At least, there would not be if we could see things as God sees them. He never allows any of His children to be tried above that which they are able to bear. The troubles are hard but the grace is always sufficient.

The thing we think we cannot master we can conquer with God’s help. Nothing is impossible to one who is working with God. The difficulty or the hardship that looks to us unconquerable, we can put under our feet if we meet it in Christ’s name.

We should learn to sing in the most disheartening conditions, in the dreariest ways of life. We should be absolutely undiscourageable. There will always be experiences in which we seem to fail. Jesus appeared to fail when He was arrested and led to His cross. But it was not real failure. The resurrection on Easter morning was the end of what seemed utter defeat on Good Friday. There is no need, therefore, in any experience for yielding to discouragement. The way may be very hard for us but if we are God’s children nothing can go really wrong with us, unless we fall into sin.

We see in this story to what discouragement led. “The people spoke against God, and against Moses.” At first the discouragement was only a depressed feeling but it grew until it became bitterness, bitterness against Moses and against God. Perhaps we have not thought of discouragement as a sin, or as leading to such sins as we find growing here as its ripe fruit. We think of it as a quite harmless mood, a mood into which it is quite natural and very easy to fall. Some people seem even to enjoy it, as if it were a luxury. They would rather be murmuring than singing, complaining than rejoicing.

They begin early in the morning. They did not sleep well last night, they tell you at breakfast. They heard the clock strike every hour. The weather is wretched, too warm or too cold, too wet or too dry. The breakfast is not palatable. The oatmeal is not cooked well. The cream is garlicky. The eggs are boiled too hard. The coffee is too weak or too strong. All day, this monotone of murmuring goes on now about things, now about people. Nothing ever goes quite right. There is a modifying “but” to every sentence of approval that is spoken. The clearest sky is spoiled by a speck of cloud which they find somewhere. Nothing that either God or man does, is altogether satisfactory.

People who live in this way, do not imagine that they are sinning. They think of themselves as deserving of compassion. They do not dream of their incessant complaining as being grievous wickedness before God! But so it is. It was to punish such murmuring as thousands of Christians engage in continually, that God sent the fiery serpents. The evil all came, too, from yielding to the feeling of discouragement. Discouragement is sin. It is temptation yielded to. Here we see its baleful ripe fruit!

Punishment followed. The Lord sent fiery serpents among the people, and the serpents bit them. Of course, God does not always send fiery serpents when He hears any of His children murmuring. If He did, serpents would be rather numerous. Yet murmuring is no less a sin with us than it was in the wilderness, and murmuring always brings penalty in some form. It is sin, and sin is like a fiery serpent. Its fangs leave poison in the blood. Its venom proves fatal if there is no antidote found!

Discouragement has penalties of its own. It lowers the tone of the life in every way. It poisons the blood. The eye is less clear. The brain is less vigorous. The heart pulses less normally. The discouraged man is sick. He has lost his enthusiasm. His courage is gone, and he is timid and fearful. He is no more the force he was in the world.

He is not the same man in his home. His wife misses the brightness and boyishness that used to make his presence such a fountain of gladness. She wonders what is wrong, and thinks he is not going to live long. His children miss the playfulness that used to make them watch so eagerly for his home-coming in the evening. They were sure then of a royal time in romp and frolic. Now he comes in wearily and without any of the old-time gladness. He is too tired now to play with them. He is even disagreeable sometimes, showing impatience and irritability. He is not the same man anywhere he used to be.

He is not the same in business. Things are running down in his office or store or shop. Unless there is a change, the end will be disastrous. In his Christian life, too, a similar tendency is apparent. The old-time enthusiasm is gone. He is no longer the joyous, optimistic Christian he was. He has given up many of his church activities. His voice is not heard in the meetings. He is missed from the services. He is no longer the force he once was in good works.

He is a discouraged man, and his discouragement has robbed him of the things that formerly made him a blessing in the community.

The many deaths from the bites of the serpents, alarmed the Israelites, and they came to Moses with confession. Penitence wakes people up to a consciousness of their guilt. A great many people go on in evil ways, never thinking of the wickedness they are committing, until they find themselves suffering the evils of their sins, enduring the penalties of broken law. Then they begin to cry for forgiveness.

Moses became the intercessor for the people, asking the Lord to take away the serpents. It is a good thing when one has gone astray, falling into sin, or when one has trouble to have a friend to whom to go, who will listen to the confession or to the burden of sorrow, and then go to God in supplication. We need human helpers, and never can be thankful enough for them. But we have a greater Intercessor than any human friend could be. “If any man sins we have an Advocate with the Father.” Jesus Christ is our Advocate. He is human, and thus can enter into our experiences. He is Divine, and thus can reach up to God for us. We should seek always to have Christ as our Mediator.

It was a strange method of cure, that the Lord provided a bronze serpent, set up on a pole. Then everyone who was bitten, when he looked at the image of the serpent, was healed. This was the way God answered the prayer of Moses for the people’s forgiveness. He did not take away the serpents but he provided a cure for their bite. They must lift up their eyes and look towards the serpent on the pole, thus exercising their faith. This illustrates the way of salvation. God did not take sin out of the world but he sent Jesus Christ to be a Savior of sinners.

Jesus made use of this strange incident in the wilderness, as an illustration of the salvation which He had brought into the world. He said: “As Moses lifted up the serpent in the wilderness, even so must the Son of man be lifted up; that whoever believes may in Him have eternal life.” As the serpent was lifted up so high that it could be seen from every part of the camp, so Christ was lifted up on the cross, that from any part of the world, where a sinner becomes conscious of guilt, the Redeemer can be seen.

We can imagine the bitten people, in the agonies of death, when told about the serpent on the pole and how they could be healed, turning their feeble eyes towards the wonderful image, and at once feeling a thrill of life in their veins. So whenever a dying sinner turns his eyes towards Christ on His cross he feels instantly in his soul the arresting of the tides of sin and the beginnings of life eternal.

Bible in a Year
Old Testament Reading
Exodus 37, 38


Exodus 37 -- Ark, Table, Lampstand, Altar of Incense

  NIV   NLT   ESV   NAS   GWT   KJV   ASV   ERV   DRB


Exodus 38 -- Altar of Burnt Offering, Basin, Courtyard Completed; Costs Totaled

  NIV   NLT   ESV   NAS   GWT   KJV   ASV   ERV   DRB


New Testament Reading
Matthew 23:23-39


Matthew 23 -- Woes Pronounced on Pharisees; Lament over Jerusalem

  NIV   NLT   ESV   NAS   GWT   KJV   ASV   ERV   DRB


Reading Plan Courtesy of Christian Classics Etherial Library.
Evening February 4
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