Tuesday, February 03, 2026

Power & Light Company?

Image from churchoftheephipany.org

View devo: https://bit.ly/3M0cg4L

Hear devo: https://bit.ly/49Wge7G

13 "You are the salt of the earth; but if salt has lost its taste, how can its saltiness be restored? It is no longer good for anything, but is thrown out and trampled under foot. 14 "You are the light of the world. A city built on a hill cannot be hid. 15 No one after lighting a lamp puts it under the bushel basket, but on the lampstand, and it gives light to all in the house. 16 In the same way, let your light shine before others, so that they may see your good works and give glory to your Father in heaven. 17 "Do not think that I have come to abolish the law or the prophets; I have come not to abolish but to fulfill. 18 For truly I tell you, until heaven and earth pass away, not one letter, not one stroke of a letter, will pass from the law until all is accomplished. 19 Therefore, whoever breaks one of the least of these commandments, and teaches others to do the same, will be called least in the kingdom of heaven; but whoever does them and teaches them will be called great in the kingdom of heaven. 20 For I tell you, unless your righteousness exceeds that of the scribes and Pharisees, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven. (Matthew 5:13-20 NRSV)

When Nellie and I went to the Holy Land, one of the things we were required to buy was a headlamp. We were supposed to go into the Hezekiah Tunnel and there is no light in there so the headlamps were required to keep us safe. Unfortunately, heavy rains prior to our arrival kept us out of the tunnel and we came home with unused headlamps. However, I have delightfully discovered that at my age, these babies are pretty for for men and women of a certain age. I've come to believe these should be required by law to anyone over 62 who does anything useful around the house. The brightness of the lamp conquers the things darkness hides!

I also once tried to make carne guisada prior to a trip we were taking with our youth group, believing that carne guisada tacos would be a hit among the youth. So chef here cuts the meat, adds the spices that I knew would give the carne a good taste and let it simmer. When I believed it was done I tasted it and it was the worst thing I had ever made. I had forgotten the salt!

Jesus speaks on two important things in life to better illustrate the importance and role of believers in the kingdom. But here's what's remarkable about today's passage: Jesus doesn't just say He is the light of the world (though He is). He says you are the light of the world. He takes the very identity that belongs to Him and gives it to us—His followers, His church, His disciples.

Salt preserves and flavors. In the ancient world, salt prevented decay and made food worth eating.Carne guisada without salt is no bueno. We are called to preserve what is good, to bring out the flavor of life, to make a difference in a decaying world. But Jesus warns: if salt loses its saltiness, it's worthless. A Christian who doesn't impact the world around them has lost their purpose.

Light reveals and guides. Light exposes what's hidden in darkness. It shows the way forward. It cannot be hidden—a city on a hill is visible for miles. We are meant to shine, to illuminate truth, to guide others toward God. But Jesus warns: don't hide your light under a bowl. Don't keep your faith private and invisible. When we live out these things we are the Power and LIght in company with those who are not yet salt and light themselves.

This isn't about being perfect or preachy. It's about living authentically as Christ's followers so that when people see our lives—our love, our integrity, our service, our joy even in suffering, our hope in the midst of chaos—they ask, "What makes you different?" And the answer points them to Jesus.

Notice what Jesus says: "Let your light shine before others, that they may see your good deeds and glorify your Father in heaven."

This is the Methodist balance we've been learning about—faith that works through love. Our good deeds aren't to earn salvation or draw attention to ourselves. They're to point others to God. They're visible expressions of the invisible grace we've received.

When you:

Love someone difficult to love

Serve without expecting anything in return

Show kindness to a stranger

Stand for justice when it's costly

Forgive when you've been deeply hurt

Live with integrity when no one's watching

Give generously to those in need

Speak truth with grace

You're letting your light shine. And people notice. Not because you're trying to impress them, but because the light of Christ in you can't help but shine through. Jesus goes on to say He didn't come to abolish the Law but to fulfill it. He calls His followers to a righteousness that surpasses the external rule-keeping of the Pharisees. He's talking about heart transformation, not just behavior modification.

The light we shine isn't self-generated moralism. It's the reflected light of Christ living in us. We love because He first loved us. We serve because He served us. We give because He gave everything for us. We shine because He is the Light, and He lives in us.

The question for you today is simple: Is your light shining, or is it hidden?

Are people around you experiencing the saltiness of your faith—the preserving, flavoring, transforming presence of Christ in you?

Epiphany reminds us that Christ was revealed to the world. Now He wants to be revealed through you. Not to make you famous, but to make Him known. Not to build your reputation, but to bring glory to your Father in heaven.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, You are the Light of the world, and You have called me to shine Your light in the darkness. Forgive me for the times I've hidden my faith, played it safe, and kept my lamp under a bowl. Help me live so authentically, love so genuinely, and serve so sacrificially that people see You in me. Let my good deeds point others to You. Make me salt that preserves and flavors this world. Make me light that cannot be hidden. Shine through me today. In Your name, Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Today, do one visible act of kindness or service that will make someone ask, "Why did you do that?" When they ask, let your light shine—give God the glory.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. Be the Power and Light in the company of others!

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Monday, February 02, 2026

How Is It With Your Soul?

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View devo: https://bit.ly/4qavhza

Hear devo: https://bit.ly/3NJT5g6

They devoted themselves to the apostles' teaching and fellowship, to the breaking of bread and the prayers. (Acts 2:42 NRSV)

Dr. Robert Tuttle is an awesome man; noted professor and author and firm believer in Christ Jesus. He served on the faculty of Asbury Theological Seminary on their Orlando, Florida campus. I had the pleasure of knowing him when I served on their board of directors and so once a year I had the chance to visit him and get to know him better. Nellie also befriended him and he handed her a copy of his outline and rough draft of one of his books set to be published. What an honor! Sadly, now he's battling advanced Alzheimer's and requires 24/7 care. His son, Eric started a GoFundMe to help offset medical expenses for his treatment. But one of Dr. Tuttle's favorite questions was to ask everyone, "How is it with you soul?" I caught on and the next time we met I beat him to it, and he did a sudden move back and grabbed his chin and looked up and then said, "That a good question. Such a good question. Thank you for asking me that.." and proceeded to tell me how it was with his soul. That question came straight from the man himself, The Rev. John Wesley, founder of Methodism.

John Wesley lived in a time of extremes. On one side were those who emphasized works-based religion—following rules, performing rituals, doing good deeds to earn God's favor. This is legalism: the belief that our works save us, that we can earn our way to Heaven through righteous living. It is still around and going stronger than ever, dear friends!

On the other side were those who said that since we're saved by grace through faith alone, our works don't matter at all. If salvation is a gift, they argued, then how we live makes no difference. This is antinomianism: faith without works, belief without behavior, grace without transformation. And? Venture a guess as to what has happened to this side? Yes, you're right; still around and still as strong as in Wesley's day.

But guess what? Wesley rejected both extremes. He called the Methodist way "faith that works by love." It's a beautiful balance that honors both Scripture and experience:

We are saved by grace alone, through faith alone—our works cannot earn salvation But true faith always produces works of love—genuine faith transforms how we live We work not to be saved, but because we are saved—love compels us to serve. Wesley understood something profound: the kind of faith that saves is the kind of faith that changes us. It's not a dead, intellectual agreement with doctrine. It's a living, breathing, active trust in Christ that transforms our hearts and our hands.

Think of it this way: If someone says they love you but never shows it—never spends time with you, never helps when you're in need, never sacrifices for you—would you believe their words? Love isn't just words; it's action. Love does.

The same is true of faith. Faith isn't just mental assent to theological propositions. Faith is a living relationship with Christ that produces the fruit of love in our lives. As Wesley said, we are saved by faith alone, but the faith that saves is never alone—it's always accompanied by love and good works.

Wesley warned against falling into either ditch on the road to Heaven:

Ditch #1: Works Without Faith (Legalism) This is the exhausting treadmill of trying to earn God's approval through religious performance. It's checking off boxes, following rules, doing good deeds to rack up points with God. It leads to:

Pride when we succeed ("Look how good I am!")

Despair when we fail ("I'll never be good enough")

Comparison with others ("At least I'm better than them")

Missing the joy of relationship with God

The problem? We're trusting in ourselves instead of Christ. We're trying to be our own savior. And it never works because we can never be good enough on our own.

Ditch #2: Faith Without Works (Antinomianism) This is the lazy assumption that because we're saved by grace, how we live doesn't matter. "I've said the sinner's prayer, so I'm going to Heaven no matter what I do." It leads to:

Spiritual complacency ("I'm fine just as I am")

Unchanged lives that don't reflect Christ

No growth in holiness or love

A mockery of the grace that saved us

The problem? This isn't the faith the Bible talks about. True faith transforms us. If there's no change, no fruit, no works of love, then James asks the hard question: "Can such faith save?" His answer is clear: No, because it's not real faith—it's dead faith, empty profession without genuine trust.

Wesley's path walks right down the middle of the road:

We are saved by grace through faith in Christ—this is our foundation. We contribute nothing to our salvation. Christ did it all. We simply receive the gift by faith. True faith produces transformation—the Holy Spirit comes to live in us, changing our desires, renewing our minds, empowering us to live differently. We're not just forgiven; we're being made new.

Love compels us to serve—out of gratitude for what Christ has done, out of love for God and neighbor, we joyfully serve. Not to earn anything, but to express everything we've already received.

Works are the evidence of genuine faith—they don't save us, but they show that we're saved. They're the fruit that proves the tree is alive and healthy.

As Wesley famously said: "Do all the good you can, by all the means you can, in all the ways you can, in all the places you can, at all the times you can, to all the people you can, as long as ever you can." Not to earn salvation, but because we're saved. Not out of obligation, but out of love.

This is why Methodists have always emphasized both personal piety and social holiness. We study Scripture and pray—not to earn favor, but to deepen relationship. We serve the poor, visit the sick, fight for justice—not to rack up points, but because love demands action. We pursue holiness—not to become acceptable to God, but because we're already accepted and being transformed.

Our faith is alive because it works through love. It prays and it serves. It worships and it works. It believes and it acts. It receives grace and it gives grace away.

So examine your own heart today:

Are you trying to earn God's love through works? Rest in grace. You're already loved, already accepted, already saved through faith in Christ.

Are you claiming faith but living unchanged? Let that faith come alive. Let the love of Christ compel you to serve. Let the grace you've received overflow into works of love.

The Methodist way is neither legalism nor license—it's faith that works by love. It's receiving God's grace with empty hands, then using those same hands to serve others. It's trusting in Christ alone for salvation, then living a life that reflects His love to the world.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, thank You that I am saved by grace through faith alone—never by my works, always by Your finished work on the cross. But thank You also that true faith transforms me, that Your love compels me to serve, that Your Spirit empowers me to live differently. Save me from both the pride of legalism and the laziness of empty faith. Give me a living, active, working faith—faith that loves, faith that serves, faith that changes the world because it has first changed me. In Your name, Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: This week, put your faith into action. Choose one specific act of love—visit someone lonely, serve at a food bank, help a neighbor in need, give generously to someone struggling. Do it not to earn God's favor, but to express the love you've already received.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! Part of your purpose is to reach others.

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Friday, January 30, 2026

Salvation by Grace Alone

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Hear devo: https://bit.ly/4t3KZ21

View devo: https://bit.ly/45D5sRd

8 For by grace you have been saved through faith, and this is not your own doing; it is the gift of God— 9 not the result of works, so that no one may boast. (Ephesians 2:8-9 NRSV)

Dear Friend, as we pray today, please pray for the family of Mrs. Bekie Blanco Abrio, a faithful servant of the Lord Jesus Christ, daughter of a Methodist pastor and mother and sister to many other Methodist pastors. She died unexpectedly on Tuesday. The Rev. Bequi Flores is her daughter and Bequi is the pastor of Karnes City and a Presiding Elder as well. Prayers of comfort for the Abrio and Blanco famililes. Bekie's husband died not too many years ago. Also, prayers for this old man as I preach on February 8, 2026 at the Pilgrim Presbyterian Church at 11 a.m. Pray the Lord give me a word or two to share with this faithful community.

I knew of a young lady at a Methodist university working towards her undergraduate degree in hopes of becoming a nun in the Catholic Church. She was an active high school student in her local Catholic church and sent often after school to help clean the church and prepare the church for worship. One afternoon while at the church her priest grabbed her and kissed her. She immediately placed the blame on herself and all the weight of that "sin." She believed deeply that the only way God could forgive her was for her to become a nun and serve God the rest of her life in that way. Works is that belief that says one must prove oneself worthy by outward deeds and actions that show God and others of their genuine desire to serve God in that way. Upon death it is believed they will be found worthy and allowed into Heaven.

My heart breaks for that young woman. She carried a burden that was never hers to carry. She believed a lie that has imprisoned countless souls throughout history: that we must earn God's forgiveness, that we must prove ourselves worthy, that our salvation depends on our performance.

But here's the liberating truth that sits at the very foundation of Methodist theology and all of Christian faith: Salvation is by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone.

You cannot earn it. You cannot buy it. You cannot work for it. You cannot deserve it.

It is a gift.

Grace is God's unmerited favor—love and forgiveness freely given to those who don't deserve it and could never earn it. It's God reaching down to us when we could never reach up to Him. It's God saying, "I love you, not because of what you've done, but because of who I am."

That young woman believed she had to become a nun to pay for a sin that wasn't even hers. She thought years of service, sacrifice, and dedication would somehow balance the scales and make her acceptable to God. But grace doesn't work that way.

Grace says: You are already accepted. You are already loved. You are already forgiven—if you will simply receive it.

When we try to earn our salvation through works, several destructive things happen:

We never know if we've done enough. How many good deeds balance out one sin? How many years of service erase one mistake? The answer is: it's impossible. We can never do enough, be enough, or give enough to earn Heaven. We carry unbearable burdens. Like that young woman carrying guilt and shame for something done to her, we pile weights on our shoulders that were never meant to be carried. We exhaust ourselves trying to prove our worth. We miss the point entirely. Salvation isn't about our strength—it's about God's grace. It's not about our goodness—it's about Christ's righteousness. It's not about our performance—it's about God's love. We rob God of glory. If we could earn our salvation, we could boast about it. We could take credit. But Paul says clearly: salvation is "not the result of works, so that no one may boast." God alone gets the glory for our salvation because God alone accomplished it. Here's what we must understand: Jesus already did the work. On the cross, He paid the price for every sin—past, present, and future. He took the punishment we deserved. He bridged the gap between holy God and sinful humanity. He opened the way to Heaven.

And then He rose from the dead, proving that His sacrifice was sufficient, that sin and death were defeated, that salvation was complete.

When Jesus said "It is finished" on the cross, He meant it. The work of salvation was done. Completely. Fully. Forever.

We don't add to it. We can't add to it. We simply receive it by faith.

Now, let me be clear about something important: the Methodist understanding of salvation by grace does not eliminate the importance of good works. John Wesley was emphatic about this. But here's the critical distinction:

We are saved by grace through faith, not by works But we are saved for good works, as expressions of our gratitude and love Works don't earn our salvation; they are the fruit of our salvation We don't serve God to become His children; we serve God because we are His children It's like this: a tree doesn't produce fruit to become a tree—it produces fruit because it is a tree. In the same way, we don't do good works to become saved—we do good works because we are saved, because grace has transformed us, because love compels us to serve.

When that young woman finally understood grace—that she didn't have to earn God's forgiveness, that she was already loved, already accepted, already forgiven through Christ—it set her free. Not free to sin, but free to serve God out of love rather than fear, out of gratitude rather than guilt, out of joy rather than obligation.

That's what grace does. It liberates us from the impossible burden of trying to be good enough for God. It frees us to rest in what Christ has already done. And from that place of rest and security, we joyfully serve, not to earn salvation, but because we've already received it.

Your Invitation Today

Maybe you've been trying to earn God's love. Maybe you're exhausted from trying to be good enough. Maybe you're carrying guilt and shame, believing you have to somehow pay for your sins through years of service or sacrifice.

Hear this good news today: You can't earn it, and you don't have to.

Jesus already paid it all. The gift of salvation is yours—not because you deserve it, but because God loves you. Not because you've worked for it, but because Christ died for you. Not because you're perfect, but because His grace is sufficient.

All you have to do is receive it. Believe that Jesus died for your sins and rose again. Trust in Him, not in yourself. Accept the gift that's freely offered.

And then—from that place of grace, from that foundation of unconditional love—live a life of grateful service. Not to earn God's favor (you already have it), but to express your love for the One who first loved you.

PRAYER: Gracious Father, thank You for the gift of salvation that we could never earn and don't deserve. Forgive us for the times we've tried to prove our worth through works, for the burdens we've carried that were never ours to bear. Help us to rest in the finished work of Jesus Christ. Let us receive Your grace with humble gratitude, and let that grace transform us from the inside out. May ous service flow from love, not from fear; from gratitude, not from guilt; from the security of being Your beloved children, not from trying to earn Your approval. Thank You that salvation is Your gift, freely given, completely sufficient, eternally secure. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: If you've been trying to earn God's love through your efforts, stop striving and start resting. This week, write down this simple truth where you'll see it daily: "I am saved by grace alone, through faith alone, in Christ alone." Let it sink deep into your heart and set you free.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. Be a blessing to everyone!

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Thursday, January 29, 2026

Scriptural Holiness (Heart and Life)

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Hear devo: https://bit.ly/4t1Obex

View devo: https://bit.ly/3NDuhX7

Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. (Matthew 5:48 NIV)

My freedom to roam almost all of Kingsville on my bike or walking with friends, especially after school, allowed for some wonderful experiences and treats. One of our favorite hot Kingsville summer treats was to visit the Dr. Pepper Bottling Company plant building around three p.m. The DP bottling company was a concrete building with a huge picture window where one could see the finished product of cold Dr. Peppers and cold red soda. Our hope was to be there for red day when after peering into the window longinly, one of the employees would grab enough bottles to take them to us, and already opened! Nothing beat our drinking quite quickly the cold drink and setting it down near the door and then running or riding our way on to our next adventure. This outing taught me several things. Pursue your desire. Get to the place where that desire can be best fulfilled. Be patient. Be attentive. Wait. Enjoy. Give thanks!

My biggest treat came on that Sunday when I invited Jesus into my heart. That was only the starting point of all my life's adventures. I presented myself to the Lord for His forgiveness, I received it and I started my journey of being made perfect in love in this life, also known as sanctification. Sanctification is a fancy word for the daily journey we take with Jesus in hopes of being made more perfect in love because Jesus walks with us. It does not mean I am flawless; it means I have been accepted and I am in the process of being transformed in my character and conduct. It means that every moment I spend in reading God's word, I am being blessed in wonderful and amazing ways!

One of Methodism's values is scriptural holiness. That means our time spent in study of God's word blesses us with the direction we should take towards getting to where God wants us to be. Just as those childhood trips to the Dr. Pepper plant required pursuit, patience, and attentiveness, so does our journey toward holiness. We had to show up at the right place, at the right time, with expectant hearts. We had to peer through the window, longing for what was on the other side. And when that gift was given—cold, refreshing, freely offered—we received it with joy and gratitude.

Scriptural holiness works the same way. We must pursue it intentionally. We must position ourselves where God can meet us—in His Word, in prayer, in worship, in community. We must peer into Scripture with longing hearts, waiting for God to open the treasures within. And when He does—when His truth refreshes our souls like that cold drink on a hot Texas day—we receive it, we give thanks, and we move forward transformed.

When Jesus says, "Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect," He's not setting an impossible standard that crushes us under the weight of our failures. He's inviting us into a process—sanctification—where we are continually being made more like Him in love.

This is the beauty of Methodism's emphasis on scriptural holiness. It's not about being flawless; it's about being faithful. It's not about never making mistakes; it's about allowing God's Word to transform our hearts and lives day by day. It's about:

Heart transformation: Letting God's love drive out fear, bitterness, and selfishness Life transformation: Allowing Scripture to guide our choices, our words, our relationships Continual growth: Understanding that sanctification is a journey, not a destination we reach in this life Every time we open the Bible, we peer through that window into God's perfect love. Every time we apply its truth, we drink deeply of the refreshment it offers. Every time we allow it to convict, correct, and guide us, we are being made more perfect in love.

Scriptural holiness means we don't just read the Bible when we're in trouble or when we need an inspirational quote. We pursue it like those kids pursued their favorite treat—with intentionality, with expectation, with joy. We show up daily at the place where God can meet us. We position ourselves before His Word with humble, hungry hearts.

And here's the beautiful truth: God always shows up. He always opens the door. He always offers the gift. His Word never returns void. Every time we engage with Scripture, the Holy Spirit is at work, transforming us from the inside out, making us more like Jesus in our character and conduct.

This is what it means to spread scriptural holiness across the land—John Wesley's mission for Methodism. Not just head knowledge of the Bible, but heart and life transformation through the Bible. Not just studying Scripture, but being shaped by Scripture. Not just knowing what God's Word says, but becoming what God's Word calls us to be.

The journey toward perfect love started the moment you invited Jesus into your heart. But it doesn't end there—it's only beginning. Every day is a new opportunity to be made more holy, more loving, more like Christ. Every encounter with Scripture is another refreshing drink on a hot day, another step forward in your transformation.

So pursue holiness with the same eagerness you once pursued childhood treats. Position yourself daily in God's Word. Be patient with the process. Be attentive to what God is teaching you. Wait expectantly for His Spirit to work. Enjoy the journey. And always, always give thanks.

PRAYER: Gracious and Holy God, thank You for accepting me just as I am, yet loving me too much to leave me this way. As I open Your Word today and every day, transform my heart and my life. Make me more perfect in love—not flawless, but faithful; not without struggle, but always growing. Give me a hunger for Scripture that drives me to pursue You daily. Shape my character, guide my conduct, and let my life reflect Your holiness. Help me to be patient with myself on this journey, knowing that You who began this good work in me will be faithful to complete it. May scriptural holiness be more than a Methodist value—may it be my daily reality. In Jesus' name, Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: This week, commit to reading one chapter of Scripture every morning before you check your phone. Let God's Word be the first voice you hear each day, shaping your heart and guiding your steps toward perfect love.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. Present yourself as holy in a way that invites others.

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Wednesday, January 28, 2026

Your Name Shall Be...

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Hear devo https://bit.ly/4k71czt:

View devo: https://bit.ly/3NGB0PW

1 When Abram was ninety-nine years old, the LORD appeared to him and said, “I am God Almighty ; walk before me faithfully and be blameless. 2 Then I will make my covenant between me and you and will greatly increase your numbers.” 3 Abram fell facedown, and God said to him, 4 “As for me, this is my covenant with you: You will be the father of many nations. 5 No longer will you be called Abram ; your name will be Abraham, for I have made you a father of many nations.(Genesis 17:1-5 NIV)

Dear Friend, what does your name mean? Is it a family name? Were you named for a relative? Are you one of the famous juniors running around? More importantly, what have you made your name to mean? My name is Eradio Valverde, Jr. I was named for my father, Eradio Valverde. Neither he nor I have a middle name. He was named by my grandma and when I asked her where the name come from, she could not remember. My grandfather said it was a Native American/Indian name, but he did not know what the name meant. I became aware that in the Valley of Texas there were a couple of Eradios. Imagine my joy when I did insurance enrolling several years ago in San Benito schools, that the SB High School choir director was named Eradio Martinez. Interesting because my grandmother's maiden name was Martinez. As a child my Dad was called Lalo by my mother's family and when I came along I became Lalito. At home by my parents and siblings I was Junior. I have even heard of some women named Eradia. And Eradio in some different forms of spelling is a popular surname in some countries. I have tried to make my name mean trustworthy, sincere, dedicated to God and God's service. Today we want to explore where the name Methodist comes from. But let's begin with name changes in the Bible, where for God's purposes, God took it upon Himself to re-name those for whom He had special jobs and interest.

In the Bible there are numerous name changes. Their given names became God-given names with important meanings behind the change. The first is the one I read. Abram who is known as the Father of the Faith, at age 99 is visited by God and God gives him a covenant promising Abram that he would have many descendants, and he would be the father of many nations and gives him a new name Abraham which means, as God says, "For I have made you a father of many nations." And as we know the rest of the story, Abraham and Sarah, whose name was also changed, were the parents of many nations with children as numerous as the stars in the heavens. Other OT name changes are Jacob to Israel because he fought against God and prevailed as found in Genesis 32:24–28. There are others in the OT; then we came to the gospels where the most famous is Simon to Peter, and Saul to Paul.

We come to John and Charles Wesley. The two were Oxford University grads and when John returned for further post-graduate studies, he finds that Charles and other like-minded students had formed a club to express their faith as Christians. The first name they gave themselves was The Holy Club. They had also established a daily routine of study and service. As this routine became known among fellow students, they came up with their own names. The Holy Club always got an early start on the day, usually 4 or 5 am. Upon awakening the first hour was dedicated to prayer. A solid hour on their knees in earnest prayer. The second hour up was spent in reading the Bible, and the New Testament in Greek. Another solid hour of soul-searching and God-seeking Bible study. The third hour the club would meet together for more prayer, Bible study and singing. Then the group would make their way to breakfast, they would attend classes for their academic pursuits, then lunch together though on Wednesdays and Fridays they would fast. After lunch or after afternoon classes they would devote themselves to holy service or Acts of Mercy; they would visit prisoners in Oxford jails; they would visit the sick, both in hospitals and at homes; they would teach poor children, they would feed and cloth the poor; and other acts of mercy that were based on Jesus' teachings in Matthew 25. They would celebrate Communion often and seek to perfect their lives in God's service.

And here came the names from the other students: "Bible Moths"; for the Holy Club members carried their Bibles everywhere and were known to spend much time in Bible study. They were also called "Holy Rollers", for the "enthusiasm" was also well known. "The Godly Club" meant to ridicule their devotion to God in a mean way. "Enthusiasts" meant to mock their excitement and joy in all things God. “Supererogation Men” to mock their acts of service as a means of earning their salvation. “Sacramentarians” because they took Communion often, while the Anglican Church only a few times a year. Finally, one guy yelled to John Wesley that they were a bunch of "Methodists!" And guess what? Wesley said that he liked that name and adopted it as their official name. Are you, if you call yourself a "Methodist" guilty of halfway or full-way imitating the originals?

The name "Methodist" wasn't chosen by Wesley—it was given by God through the mockery of others. And it stuck because it was true. They WERE methodical. They WERE disciplined. They WERE serious about their faith.

PRAYER: Lord, help me to live worthy of the name I bear—both my given name and the name "Christian" or "Methodist." Give me the discipline of the early Holy Club, the devotion of Abraham, and the faithfulness of Peter. May my life make my name mean something beautiful for Your kingdom. And this I pray in Christ Jesus' strong name, Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: (And this is a long one!). Don't just read this and move on. Take these concrete steps starting TODAY:

1)Tomorrow morning, set your alarm 30 minutes earlier. Spend that first half-hour in prayer before you check your phone, before coffee, before anything else. Give God your first and best, not your leftovers. Open your Bible every day this week. Not just a verse on social media—actually open it. Read one chapter from the Gospels daily. Let God speak to you through His Word.

2)Find your "Holy Club." Text or call two fellow believers this week and ask them to meet regularly for prayer, study, and accountability. Don't go it alone.

3)Perform one act of mercy this week. Visit someone who's sick or lonely. Volunteer at a food bank. Tutor a struggling student. Give generously to someone in need. Do something tangible for "the least of these."

4)Fast one meal this week. Use that time to pray instead of eat. Let your hunger remind you of your deeper hunger for God.

5)Write down what you want your name to mean. Put it where you'll see it every day. Let it convict you, challenge you, inspire you.

This isn't about legalism or earning God's love—that's already yours through Christ. This is about responding to that love with wholehearted devotion. This is about making your faith intentional, methodical, transformative.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! The early Methodists changed the world because they let God change them first.Now go. Live it. Be the Methodist—the Christian—the disciple—you were called to be.

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Tuesday, January 27, 2026

The World is My Parish

Image from artofholiness.org

Hear devo: https://bit.ly/4bQIQjR

View devo:https://bit.ly/4kbqhZV

18 Then Jesus came to them and said, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Therefore go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, 20 and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.” (Matthew 28:18-20 NIV)

In June 1742, The Reverend John Wesley, founder of the Methodist movement, returned to his hometown of Epworth, and offered to assist the curate of the church there, the same church where his ather, The Rev. Samuel Wesley, had been the rector for many years. The then curate refused to allow Wesley to preach or offer prayers and then preached a sermon agains the "enthusiasm" found in some corners of the Anglican Church, which Welsey knew was directed to him and his followers who showed more enthusiasm than the regular Anglicans. A number of out-of-town guests really wanted to hear Wesley preach, so he went outside and on his father's tomb, which was private property owned by the Wesleys and thus could not prevent him from preaching there, he proceeded to preach there. John Wesley preached more than once on that tombstone and it is believed he preached there at least three additional nights there.

John Wesley underwent a transformation called his Aldersgate Experience. He had struggled with doubt and felt he was without faith. One of his friends, Moravian leader Peter Bohler told him, "Preach fiath till you have it; and then, because you have it, you will preach faith." That event, that many have called a maturity into faith, occurred in London at a place called Aldersgate on May 24, 1738, as he wrote, ""In the evening I went very unwillingly to a society in Aldersgate Street, where one was reading Luther's preface to the Epistle to the Romans. About a quarter before nine, while he was describing the change which God works in the heart through faith in Christ, I felt my heart strangely warmed. I felt I did trust in Christ, Christ alone, for salvation; and an assurance was given me that He had taken away my sins, even mine, and saved me from the law of sin and death." It was from this point on that many considered his preaching and leadership too enthusiatic. For those of us who consider the Wesleyan heriage our own and the Methodist way our way; ours is a global view of winning the world for Jesus.

When church doors closed to Wesley, he found his pulpit in the open air. When proper religion rejected his passion, he took the gospel to coal miners, factory workers, and common people who had never darkened a church door. Critics called it unseemly. Wesley called it obedience.

In 1739, when accused of irregularity for preaching outside his assigned parish boundaries, Wesley wrote in his journal words that would define his ministry: "I look upon all the world as my parish." He explained that wherever he was, he considered it both his right and duty to declare the glad tidings of salvation to all who would hear.

This wasn't arrogance. It was the heartbeat of the Great Commission lived out. Jesus had commanded His followers to make disciples of all nations, not just the respectable ones, not just those who fit comfortably within established church walls. Wesley understood that a heart strangely warmed by grace cannot be contained by convention or geography.

Wesley traveled an estimated 250,000 miles on horseback, preaching over 40,000 sermons in his lifetime. He rose at 4 a.m. for prayer and study, organized his followers into small accountability groups called "classes" and "bands," established schools, orphanages, and medical dispensaries. He trained lay preachers when ordained clergy wouldn't go where the people were. He published books and pamphlets to spread scriptural holiness across the land.

The world became his parish because God's love knows no boundaries. The Great Commission doesn't respect our comfort zones, our preferences for propriety, or our carefully drawn parish lines. It sends us out—to the margins, to the overlooked, to those the religious establishment has written off as too poor, too sinful, too common to matter.

Today, the United Methodist Church and other Wesleyan traditions span the globe, with millions of members across every continent. What began with one man's strangely warmed heart and his willingness to preach on his father's tombstone has become a worldwide movement. But the work isn't finished.

The world is still our parish. There are still people outside the walls who need to hear that they matter to God, that grace is available to them, that transformation is possible. There are still coal miners and factory workers, still marginalized and overlooked souls, still hearts waiting to be strangely warmed.

The question isn't whether we have permission from every religious authority. The question is whether we have received our commission from the ultimate Authority—the One who said, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me... therefore go."

Wesley didn't wait for ideal circumstances. He preached faith until he had it, and then because he had it, he preached faith everywhere. He was called enthusiastic as an insult but wore it as a badge of honor. The word "enthusiast" comes from Greek roots meaning "God within"—and what could be more appropriate for those whose hearts have been strangely warmed?

The world is still our parish. The fields are still white unto harvest. And Jesus is still with us, to the very end of the age.

PRAYER: Lord, warm our hearts as You warmed Wesley's. Give us his passion, his boldness, his willingness to go where You send us regardless of opposition or inconvenience. Help us see the world as our parish and every person as someone precious to You. Send us out with the authority of Christ and the assurance of Your presence, now and to the end of the age. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: This week, step outside your comfortable parish boundaries. Identify one person or place where God is calling you to share His love—perhaps a coworker who seems isolated, a neighbor you've never spoken to, a part of town you typically avoid, or an online community that needs grace and truth. Then take one concrete step: have that conversation, offer that help, show up in that place. Don't wait for permission or perfect conditions.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. The world is your parish—go and make it count.

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Monday, January 26, 2026

A Better Way to Live!

Image from interruptingthesilence.org

Hear the devo: https://bit.ly/3NAoqlj

View devo: https://bit.ly/3LNsqOO

1 Now when Jesus saw the crowds, he went up on a mountainside and sat down. His disciples came to him, and he began to teach them. 2 He said: 3 “Blessed are the poor in spirit, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 4 Blessed are those who mourn, for they will be comforted. 5 Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth. 6 Blessed are those who hunger and thirst for righteousness, for they will be filled. 7 Blessed are the merciful, for they will be shown mercy. 8 Blessed are the pure in heart, for they will see God. 9 Blessed are the peacemakers, for they will be called children of God. 10 Blessed are those who are persecuted because of righteousness, for theirs is the kingdom of heaven. 11 “Blessed are you when people insult you, persecute you and falsely say all kinds of evil against you because of me. 12 Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you. (Matthew 5:1-12 NIV)

Dear Friend, I trust that this finds you well and warm! It's 32 here in Seguin and icy, so we're staying home! Please pray for those whose lives are on the streets and without the protection of a home.

In the 1980s, a book was written by Tony Campolo, a writer, preacher and professor of sociology. The book's name is Who Changed the Price Tags? It challenges readers to "change" a "messed up" value system where, metaphorically, the price tags on life's priorities have been switched. He shares a story where thieve break into a department store, not to steal items, but to switch the price tags, which creates havoc on shoppers. The emphasis is for believers to livs a life based on God's criteria rather than pursuing mundane, material goals. Another book The Upside-Down Kingdom by Donald B. Kraybill. emphasizing how Jesus’ vision of God’s kingdom reverses worldly values—power, success, wealth, and status.

In our family, Nellie and I have four daughters that love to read and they exchange and give each other books that they like. What I found interesting is that some of my girls like to go to the last chapter, read it, and then start the book. They want to know how the story ends. I applied it to this passage and went to the last verse to read how the story Jesus is sharing, ends. Here is that very: "Rejoice and be glad, because great is your reward in Heaven, for in the same way they persecuted the prophets who were before you." This is where Jesus is leading us; to a place where we can be joyful and grateful because we know now that our reward will soon be great and in the special place, Heaven. The troubles and woes of today cannot measure to the greatest joy coming.

The Beatitudes reveal a kingdom that turns earthly values upside down. During Epiphany, when we celebrate Christ revealed to the world, these words show us just how radical that revelation truly is.

The world says: Be strong, self-sufficient, victorious. Jesus says: Blessed are the poor in spirit, those who mourn, the meek. The world chases power and comfort. Jesus pronounces blessing on the merciful, the peacemakers, the persecuted.

This isn't positive thinking or self-help spirituality. Jesus is describing the character of those who truly belong to His kingdom—people who recognize their desperate need for God, who grieve over sin, who approach life with humility rather than aggression. These aren't just nice virtues to admire; they're the DNA of kingdom citizenship.

Notice that most of these blessings are present tense: "theirs is the kingdom of heaven." We don't wait until heaven to experience God's favor. Even in our mourning, meekness, and hunger for righteousness, we possess something the world cannot touch—the very presence and approval of God.

The Beatitudes end with persecution, a sobering reminder that living as salt and light often comes at a cost. Yet even here, Jesus calls us to rejoice. Why? Because we're in good company with the prophets, and because our reward is secure in heaven.

This Epiphany season, let Christ's revelation reshape your understanding of what it means to be blessed.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, turn our hearts toward Your kingdom values. Help us find our blessing not in earthly success but in knowing and following You. Shape us into people who embody Your upside-down kingdom. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Choose one beatitude that challenges you most and ask God to cultivate that quality in your life this week.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! Go win the world for Jesus by showing the world the better way to live!

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.