Tuesday, May 26, 2026

Trinitarian Benediction

Hear devo: https://bit.ly/4u0oMBh

View devo: https://bit.ly/4dICHp9

11 Finally, brothers and sisters, farewell. Put things in order, listen to my appeal, agree with one another, live in peace; and the God of love and peace will be with you. 12 Greet one another with a holy kiss. All the saints greet you. 13 The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with all of you. (2 Corinthians 13:11-13 NRSV)

Dear Friend, when was the last time you hand wrote a letter to someone dear? I'm old enough to remember the days before email, before having our own home phone and television. I remember, vaguely, how to write cursive, though the ages of typing and keyboarding have affected how steady I hold my pen. I remember writing a local letter to my future bride and looking forward to her sweet replies. I remember being in my first church office with a typewriter and then getting business letters from the Church. The best letter writer was The Reverend Daniel Garcia, who had been my youth pastor when I was in 7th grade. Dan was the Registrar of the Board of Ordained Ministry of the Rio Grande Conference and so as a candidate I would get loads of letters from Dan and I would read and re-read the letters to help me better understand how to formally write letters in Spanish. I especially liked the closing of those letters with abbreviations it took me a few minutes to decipher, and so thankful these were typewritten.

Of all the great letter writers of the world, I have held, thanks to Nellie's asking, one of John Wesley's letters. John Wesley, you will remember, was the founder of Methodism and he lived a LONG time ago. He wrote with a ink pen, more likely a quill type pen, made from a feather, dipped in ancient ink. It was all I could do to hold it and not lose my breath.

And here, the best of the letter writers, the Apostle Paul, who wrote inspired and guided by the Holy Spirit, formation letters to the first churches. Not that the above mentioned writers were not led by the Holy Spirit. But here Paul closes his second letter to the believers in the city of Corinth. It's the Trinitarian benediction that gets us.

The great Trinitarian benediction that closes Paul’s second letter to the Corinthians did not begin as a doctrinal formula. It began as a farewell. It can also be called Theology at the Bottom of the Letter.

Paul has spent thirteen chapters of one of his most personal and painful letters defending his apostleship, confronting serious problems in the community, grieving over broken relationships, and appealing with everything he has for a church in Corinth that has been pulled in dangerous directions. And at the end of it all — after all the argument and the anguish and the love — he closes with three lines that have become the most familiar Trinitarian blessing in the history of Christian worship.

On Trinity Sunday, it is worth noticing that the doctrine of the Trinity did not arrive primarily through philosophical argument or conciliar decree. It arrived the way it does in this letter — woven into the lived experience of the early church, surfacing naturally in the way they prayed and blessed and spoke of God, because the shape of what they had encountered — Father, Son, and Spirit — required nothing less than three to describe.

Three sentences. And in them, a whole theology of what it means to live inside the life of God.

Before the benediction, Paul gives four rapid instructions that are easy to rush past on the way to the famous closing verse: “Put things in order, listen to my appeal, agree with one another, live in peace.”

These are not decorative parting words. They are, in miniature, the shape of the life that Trinitarian faith is meant to produce. A community that puts things in order — that takes responsibility for its own health and integrity. A community that listens — that remains teachable, open to correction, willing to hear a hard word. A community that agrees — not the false peace of suppressed disagreement, but the genuine unity that comes from shared allegiance to the same Lord. A community that lives in peace — the shalom that is not the absence of conflict but the active, costly, Spirit-sustained pursuit of one another’s flourishing.

And then the promise that grounds all four: “the God of love and peace will be with you.”

The God Paul describes here is not a God of abstract principles. He is the God of love and peace — a God whose very character is love, whose presence produces peace, whose company makes communities like the one Paul is describing possible. The Trinity we profess on Trinity Sunday is not a doctrine to be admired from a safe intellectual distance. It is a God whose nature reshapes the communities that receive him.

The closing benediction is so familiar that we can lose the weight of its individual parts. Let us slow down and receive each one.

“The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.” Grace — the utterly unearned, unconditional, initiative-taking love of God that moves toward us before we move toward him. It is the Son who makes grace visible and concrete — who takes on flesh and suffers and dies and rises so that the gap between a holy God and a broken humanity can be closed, not by human effort, but by divine gift. Every good thing we have received from God has arrived through grace. Every morning we wake in right relationship with the Father is a morning purchased by the grace of the Lord Jesus Christ.

“The love of God.” This is the love of the Father — the source from which the Son is eternally sent, the love that so loved the world that it gave its only Son. It is not a love that responds to our loveliness. It is a love that creates loveliness in what it touches. The love of God is not our destination. It is our origin. We were loved before we existed. We were known before we were formed. The Father’s love is the ground we are standing on, whether we know it or not.

“The communion of the Holy Spirit.” Communion — fellowship, participation, shared life. The Spirit is not merely the one who gives us experiences or gifts or power, though he does all of those things. He is the one who draws us into community — with God and with one another. The same Spirit who binds the Father and the Son in eternal love is the Spirit who binds believers together and binds them to God. Every genuine experience of community in the church — every moment when brothers and sisters are truly present to one another, carrying one another’s burdens, bearing with one another’s failures, rejoicing together and mourning together — is an echo of the communion that has always existed at the heart of God.

Grace. Love. Communion. One from each person of the Trinity. And yet inseparable — because the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit are inseparable. The grace comes soaked in love. The love arrives through grace. The communion makes both of them personal and present. This is the God we worship on Trinity Sunday.

Trinity Sunday can feel like the Sunday when theology gets complicated. But this passage from 2 Corinthians reminds us that the Trinity is not primarily a puzzle to think our way through. It is a life to be lived into.

The benediction Paul prays over the Corinthians is not a closing formula. It is an invitation. He is asking that the grace of Christ, the love of the Father, and the communion of the Spirit would take up residence in that fractured, argument-riven, struggling community in Corinth. And if it could take up residence there — in a church with all the problems Paul has just spent thirteen chapters addressing — it can take up residence here, in us, today.

The Trinity is not a doctrine we hold at arm’s length. It is the shape of the God who holds us. Grace reaching down through the Son. Love surrounding us from the Father. Communion binding us to God and to one another through the Spirit. This is the water we are swimming in. This is the name we were baptized into. This is the life we have been given.

Put things in order. Listen. Agree. Live in peace. And the God of love and peace will be with you — Father, Son, and Holy Spirit, all the way to the end.

PRAYER: Triune God — Father who loves, Son who graces, Spirit who communes — let the shape of your inner life become the shape of ours, so that the communities we belong to bear the unmistakable mark of the God we worship. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Choose one of Paul’s four closing instructions — put something in order, listen to an appeal, seek agreement, or pursue peace — and do it this week as a concrete act of living the Trinity you believe.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. “The grace of the Lord Jesus Christ, the love of God, and the communion of the Holy Spirit be with all of you.” 2 Corinthians 13:13 (NRSV)

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Monday, May 25, 2026

Always with Us!

View devo: https://bit.ly/4nPBIZ1

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

16 Now the eleven disciples went to Galilee, to the mountain to which Jesus had directed them. 17 When they saw him, they worshiped him; but some doubted. 18 And Jesus came and said to them, "All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. 19 Go therefore 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 that I have commanded you. And remember, I am with you always, to the end of the age." (Matthew 28:16-20 NIV)

Five verses. One mountain. The risen Christ standing before eleven disciples — some worshiping, some still doubting — and speaking the words that have shaped the church’s identity and mission for two thousand years.

On Trinity Sunday, the church pauses to worship the God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — the God whose inner life is community, whose very nature is love given and love returned. And this passage, the Great Commission, is not merely a mission statement. It is a Trinitarian declaration. Every sentence in these five verses is shaped by who God is: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — one name, three persons, the whole life of God poured into the church’s calling.

Let us hear it slowly.

Matthew’s honesty here is one of the most quietly remarkable things in the entire Gospel. These are the eleven — the ones who had followed Jesus for three years, who had seen the empty tomb, who had heard the resurrection reports. And when they see the risen Christ on the mountain, they worship him. But some doubted.

Matthew does not explain or excuse or resolve the doubt. He simply records it, and then records that Jesus came to them anyway. He did not wait until they had sorted out their uncertainty. He did not require a clean faith before he issued the commission. He came to the worshipers and the doubters alike — and spoke the same words to all of them.

This is Trinity Sunday grace. The God who is Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — whose inner life is perfect, eternal, untroubled love — meets us in our imperfect, uncertain, still-working-it-out faith and commissions us from exactly there. The doubt in the room on that mountain does not disqualify the commission. It simply means the commission is given to human beings, which is what it has always been.

Jesus opens with a claim that reframes everything that follows: “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me.”

This is not modesty. This is the risen, ascended Lord declaring the scope of his reign. Every authority — in heaven and on earth, visible and invisible, present and future — has been given to the Son by the Father. The commission that follows rests entirely on this foundation. We do not go in our own authority or on our own initiative. We go because the one who sends us holds all authority, and he has chosen to accomplish his purposes in the world through the witness of his people.

Then the Trinitarian heart of the passage: “Baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit.”

Notice: one name, not three names. The Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit share a single name because they share a single being — three persons, one God, the eternal community of love into which every believer is baptized. When we are baptized, we are not initiated into an institution. We are immersed into the life of God himself — welcomed into the communion that has existed from before the foundation of the world, the love that flows eternally between Father, Son, and Spirit, the name above every name.

And the commission runs to all nations. Not one people, not one culture, not one language or background or social class. The God whose own life is a community of three sends his people to gather a community from every people. The mission has the shape of its sender: expansive, inclusive, refusing to stay within any boundary human beings would draw around it.

The commission closes not with a demand but a promise. And it is the promise that makes the demand possible.

“And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

The word surely carries the weight of an oath. This is not a casual reassurance. It is a solemn, binding, unbreakable promise from the one who holds all authority in heaven and on earth. He will not send his people into the world and then turn his attention elsewhere. He goes with them. He is present — not occasionally, not when circumstances are favorable, not when faith is strong and doubt is quiet. Always. To the very end of the age.

This is where Trinity Sunday and the Great Commission converge most beautifully. The presence Jesus promises is not an abstract theological idea. It is the presence of the Spirit — the same Spirit poured out at Pentecost, the same Spirit who hovered over the waters at creation, the same Spirit who renews the face of the ground. The Father sends the Son. The Son commissions the church. The Spirit goes with the church into the world. Three persons, one mission, one unbroken presence accompanying every disciple who has ever taken a step in the name of the Father, the Son, and the Holy Spirit.

You are not alone in the going. The one who holds all authority goes with you. Trinity Sunday is the day to let that truth settle into the bones: the God who is community sends you into the world in community with himself. Every step of the mission is taken in the company of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit.

Five verses. And in them, everything the church needs to know about who sends us, why we go, what we carry, and who accompanies us.

All authority belongs to the one who commissions us — so we go with confidence, not in our own strength but in his. We baptize into one name — the name of the God who is himself a community of love, into whose life every new disciple is welcomed. We teach everything he commanded — not a portion, not the comfortable parts, but the whole of the life he called us to. And we go with the promise that he is with us always — not sometimes, not when we feel it, but always, to the very end.

The doctrine of the Trinity is not a puzzle to be solved on Trinity Sunday and put back on the shelf. It is the shape of the God who sends us, the name into which we are baptized, and the community we carry in our chest wherever we go. Go — in his name. All of it.

PRAYER: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit — one God, one name, one unbroken presence — go with us into this week as you promised, and make us faithful witnesses of the love that has always existed at the heart of who you are. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Take one step this week in the name of the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit — a conversation, an act of service, a word of witness — trusting that the one who holds all authority is the one who goes with you.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! Remember what the Lord said, "Surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Thursday, May 21, 2026

God Shall Renew the Face of the Earth

Hear devo: https://bit.ly/3RTjJ83

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

24 O Lord, how manifold are your works! In wisdom you have made them all; the earth is full of your creatures. 25 Yonder is the sea, great and wide, creeping things innumerable are there, living things both small and great. 26 There go the ships, and Leviathan that you formed to sport in it. 27 These all look to you to give them their food in due season; 28 when you give to them, they gather it up; when you open your hand, they are filled with good things. 29 When you hide your face, they are dismayed; when you take away their breath, they die and return to their dust. 30 When you send forth your spirit, they are created; and you renew the face of the ground. 31 May the glory of the Lord endure forever; may the Lord rejoice in his works— 32 who looks on the earth and it trembles, who touches the mountains and they smoke. 33 I will sing to the Lord as long as I live; I will sing praise to my God while I have being. 34 May my meditation be pleasing to him, for I rejoice in the Lord. Bless the Lord, O my soul. Praise the Lord! (Psalm 104:24-34, 35b NRSV))

One of my favorite prayers is the Walk to Emmaus' Holy Spirit prayer which reads, "Come, Holy Spirit, fill the hearts of your faithful and kindle in us the fire of your love. Send forth your Spirit and we shall be created. And you shall renew the face of the earth. O God, who by the light of the Holy Spirit did instruct the hearts of the faithful, grant that by the same Holy Spirit we may truly be wise and ever enjoy your consolations. Through Christ our Lord. Amen." When I learned it and every time that I repeated it, I was always blessed by the line that says, "Send forth your Spirit and we shall be created. And you shall renew the face of the earth." This is the psalm from where that prayer comes from.

Psalm 104 is one of the great creation psalms — a wide-angle, full-color meditation on the world God made and sustains. It moves from the heavens to the sea to the mountains to the smallest living thing, and through all of it runs a single, insistent thread: every creature, every living thing, every breath drawn anywhere in the created order comes from the same source.

It is a Pentecost psalm because at its center is one of the most quietly astonishing lines in all of Scripture: “When you send your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the ground.”

The Spirit who hovered over the waters in Genesis 1. The Spirit poured out in wind and fire in Acts 2. The Spirit who renews the face of the earth. Creation and Pentecost, it turns out, are the same story — told twice, deepened the second time, not finished yet.

The psalmist paints a picture of absolute, moment-by-moment dependence. Every creature — sea monster and sparrow, ship and whale, the vast and the small — looks to God for its food at the proper time. When he opens his hand, they are satisfied. When he hides his face, they are terrified. When he takes away their breath, they die.

This is not a picture of a clockmaker God who wound the world up and stepped back. This is the picture of a God who is actively, personally, continuously involved in the sustaining of every living thing. The breath in your lungs right now is not something you generate or own. It is something being given, moment by moment, by the one who formed you.

We rarely think about breathing. It happens below consciousness, below effort, below intention. But the psalmist invites us to let it rise to the surface for a moment — to notice the breath, to feel its dependence, and to recognize in it the signature of the God who gives and sustains all life.

On Pentecost Sunday, this image of God opening his hand takes on its fullest meaning. The Spirit poured out at Pentecost is the same generous, open-handed giving that sustains every creature. Only now it is not physical breath being given. It is the very life of God, poured into human lives without reservation, without limit, without the possibility of it running out. The open hand of God on Pentecost is the open hand of God at creation — giving life, giving breath, giving himself.

The hinge verse of the entire psalm is verse 30: “When you send your Spirit, they are created, and you renew the face of the ground.”

The Hebrew word for Spirit here is ruach — the same word for breath, for wind, for the Spirit of God that hovered over the waters at the beginning. Creation was not a single event that happened once and was finished. It is an ongoing act, continuously sustained by the breath of God. Every spring that comes after winter. Every creature born. Every dry and barren place that receives rain and greens again. The renewal of the face of the earth is the Spirit’s work, perpetually, without ceasing.

When Peter stood in the streets of Jerusalem on Pentecost morning and announced that the Spirit had been poured out on all flesh, he was announcing something that Psalm 104 had been describing all along — only now applied to the inner landscape of human lives. The same Spirit who renews the face of the ground renews the face of the soul. The same breath that brings dead things back to life in the natural world brings dead things back to life in the human heart.

Pentecost is a creation event. A new creation event. The wind that blew through the upper room was the same wind that moved over the waters in the beginning, and it was doing the same thing it has always done: bringing life where there was none, bringing order where there was chaos, renewing the face of something that had grown dry.

The Spirit has not stopped doing this. He is still being sent. The face of the earth — and the face of the human soul — is still being renewed.

The psalm ends where it began — in praise. Not because all the questions are answered or all the hard things are resolved, but because the psalmist has seen clearly, for a moment, who holds everything together. And the only fitting response to that seeing is song.

“I will sing to the Lord all my life; I will sing praise to my God as long as I live.”

On Pentecost Sunday, we are invited into that same clarity. The Spirit who sustains every living thing is the Spirit who has been poured out on us. The breath in our lungs is a gift from the same open hand that opened over Jerusalem and filled the upper room. The renewal of the face of the ground is the same renewal available to the driest places in our interior lives.

We are not running on our own power. We never were. The God who opens his hand to satisfy every living creature has opened his hand over us — and what he has poured out is himself. Breathe it in. Praise him for it. And let the life he has given flow outward, the way spring always does, into the world that is waiting to be renewed.

PRAYER: Send your Spirit, Lord — into every dry and waiting place in us and in the world around us — and renew the face of the ground. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord. OUR CALL TO ACTION: Take one slow, deliberate breath today — notice it as a gift from the open hand of God — and ask the Spirit who renews the face of the earth to renew one dry place in your life or someone else’s this week.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. May Your Spirit create us for service and renew the face of the earth to know you and love you!

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Wednesday, May 20, 2026

The Spirit That Will Not Stay in the Tent

Hear devo: https://open.spotify.com/episode/08GhwZjUOU0FPKhYh8plCv

View devo: https://bit.ly/49JDRj7

24 So Moses went out and told the people the words of the Lord; and he gathered seventy elders of the people, and placed them all around the tent. 25 Then the Lord came down in the cloud and spoke to him, and took some of the spirit that was on him and put it on the seventy elders; and when the spirit rested upon them, they prophesied. But they did not do so again. 26 Two men remained in the camp, one named Eldad, and the other named Medad, and the spirit rested on them; they were among those registered, but they had not gone out to the tent, and so they prophesied in the camp. 27 And a young man ran and told Moses, "Eldad and Medad are prophesying in the camp." 28 And Joshua son of Nun, the assistant of Moses, one of his chosen men, said, "My lord Moses, stop them!" 29 But Moses said to him, "Are you jealous for my sake? Would that all the Lord's people were prophets, and that the Lord would put his spirit on them!"30 And Moses and the elders of Israel returned to the camp. (Numbers 11:24-30 NIV)

I was a Boy Scout in Kingsville in a troop that went camping. My first camping experience that involved a tent was on an abandoned airfield in the Naval Air Station in Kingsville. The scout masters were truly pros in the setup and assignments of tasks, etc. The tents were the kind whose flaps formed a hallway with a roof when joined with another, thus a long hallway and several sleeping quarters. I thought it was cool! One of the facial scars that I carried for many years came from that trip when I was assigned to cut the wood for that weekend. It's all good. I was set to go on a second camping trip to Mathis, Texas, where a good time awaited us. Unfortunately I got pneumonia and in those days things were different and I had to spend two weeks in the hospital in Corpus Christi until I was well. I missed the trip and more so when my friend shared what I missed.

In today's passage, Moses took his troop camping. But it starts gong before the upper room. And long before the wind and the fire and the tongues of flame. Long before Peter stood up to quote the prophet Joel — thousands of years before any of it — a tired leader standing in the wilderness made a wish that sounded almost too large to be practical.

Moses had been carrying the weight of Israel alone and it was crushing him. The people were complaining again, quarreling over food, and Moses had cried out to God with the exhaustion of a man at the end of himself. So God told him to gather seventy elders, bring them to the tent of meeting, and the Spirit that rested on Moses would be distributed among them, so that he would not have to carry the burden alone.

It happened. The Spirit came. The seventy elders prophesied. But then something unexpected happened — and it is the unexpected part that makes this passage a Pentecost text for the ages.

Two men, Eldad and Medad, had stayed behind in the camp. They were on the list. They were authorized. But they were not at the tent. And the Spirit found them there anyway — in the camp, among the ordinary people, nowhere near the official meeting — and they prophesied.

Joshua wanted them stopped. And Moses said something that would echo through a thousand years of history until Joel picked it up, and then Peter carried it to the streets of Jerusalem on the morning of Pentecost.

“I wish that all the Lord’s people were prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit on them.”

Pentecost Sunday is the day we celebrate that the wish came true.

The detail about Eldad and Medad is not an administrative footnote. It is the theological heart of the whole passage.

The official ceremony happened at the tent of meeting. That is where Moses gathered the elders. That is where God came down in the cloud. That is where the Spirit was formally, visibly distributed among the seventy. Everything was orderly, authorized, accounted for. And then the Spirit went somewhere it was not officially supposed to go.

The camp. The ordinary space. The place where the rest of the people were going about their day. The Spirit rested on Eldad and Medad, who were not standing in the right place at the right time following the right procedure — and they prophesied.

This is one of the most quietly radical moments in the entire Old Testament. It is the Spirit insisting that he will not be confined to the tent. He will not be managed by the ceremony. He will not limit himself to the people who show up in the officially designated location at the officially designated hour. He goes where he will. He rests on whom he will. And the only thing that seems to qualify Eldad and Medad is that they were on the list — they belonged to the people of God — and the Spirit found them anyway.

We should let this unsettle our categories a little, in the best possible way. The Spirit of God has never been the exclusive property of the formally trained, the institutionally recognized, or the people who show up in the right room. He rested on a shepherd boy named David. He came upon Deborah, a judge in a culture that did not commonly elevate women to leadership. He found Amos, a fig farmer, and sent him to prophesy to kings. He is not constrained by our structures, however good and useful those structures may be.

On Pentecost morning, the Spirit came to the upper room — but he did not stay there. He spilled out into the streets, onto the crowd, across fifteen regions of the known world simultaneously. He has been refusing to stay at the tent ever since.

Joshua’s reaction to Eldad and Medad is entirely understandable, which is exactly what makes it worth examining.

“Moses, my lord, stop them!”

Joshua is not a villain in this story. He is Moses’s trusted aide, fiercely loyal, protective of the authority and order that keeps the community functioning. His instinct, when the Spirit moves outside the established channels, is to shut it down. Contain it. Make sure it goes through the proper process.

Moses’s response cuts through the instinct with a question that is almost gentle: “Are you jealous for my sake?” In other words: is your concern really about God’s people, or is it about protecting a particular arrangement of power and access? Is this about faithfulness, or is it about control?

The church has asked Joshua’s question in every generation. Stop them. Make sure the Spirit only moves in authorized ways, through authorized people, in authorized places. And in every generation, the Spirit has had a way of showing up in the camp — among the unexpected, the overlooked, the people who were not standing in the right location at the right moment — and doing something that leaves the Joshuas of the world scrambling to catch up.

This is not an argument against order or structure or accountability in the community of faith. Moses did not abolish the tent of meeting after Eldad and Medad prophesied. But it is a caution against the particular kind of spiritual jealousy that mistakes our management of the Spirit for the Spirit himself. The wind blows where it will, Jesus told Nicodemus. You hear its sound, but you do not know where it comes from or where it is going.

Pentecost is an invitation to open hands rather than closed fists — to hold our structures and arrangements loosely enough that when the Spirit moves in unexpected directions, we are more inclined to follow than to stop.

Moses’s wish is the hinge on which this entire passage turns: “I wish that all the Lord’s people were prophets and that the Lord would put his Spirit on them.”

It is the wish of a man who is tired of being the only one. Who has felt the loneliness of carrying the weight of a whole people on two human shoulders. Who has glimpsed, in the prophesying of the seventy and in the unauthorized exuberance of Eldad and Medad, what it might look like if the Spirit were not concentrated in one person but distributed across an entire community.

Joel saw it coming. Eight centuries after Moses, he wrote: “I will pour out my Spirit on all people. Your sons and daughters will prophesy, your old men will dream dreams, your young men will see visions. Even on my servants, both men and women, I will pour out my Spirit in those days.” Not on the elite. Not on the official prophets only. On all. Sons and daughters. Old and young. Servants and free.

And on the morning of Pentecost, Peter stood up in the streets of Jerusalem and said: this is that. What Moses wished for. What Joel saw from a distance. What the whole long arc of Israel’s story had been straining toward. Today it happened. The Spirit has been poured out on all flesh. The wish is no longer a wish. It is a fact.

Every believer is now what only Moses and the prophets and a handful of others were in the old covenant: a person in whom the Spirit of the living God dwells. Every person who calls on the name of the Lord has access to the same Spirit who hovered over the waters at creation, who breathed life into Adam, who came upon Moses in the burning bush. Not a trickle. Not a temporary anointing for a specific task. A permanent, inexhaustible, personal indwelling.

Moses wished it. Joel prophesied it. Jesus promised it. Pentecost delivered it. And the Spirit that refused to stay at the tent is still moving — into camps and kitchens and hospital rooms and offices and every ordinary place where the people of God are simply going about their day — resting on them, moving through them, making prophets out of the most unlikely people in the most unexpected places.

This passage from Numbers gives us two things to carry into Pentecost Sunday and the week ahead.

How do we apply this? First, a liberating reminder of where the Spirit works. He is not confined to the tent. He is not limited to the Sunday service or the official ministry or the credentialed few. He goes into the camp. He finds people in the ordinary spaces of their ordinary days and rests on them there. You do not have to be in a special location or a heightened spiritual state for the Spirit to move through you. You just have to belong to the people of God — and the Spirit knows where you are.

Second, an invitation to open hands. When the Spirit moves in unexpected directions — through unexpected people, in unexpected places, in ways that our structures did not plan for — the question Moses asked Joshua is worth asking ourselves: are we jealous for our own sake? Or are we willing to follow where the Spirit leads, even when it means the camp gets the glory instead of the tent?

Moses wished that all the Lord’s people were prophets. On Pentecost Sunday, we celebrate that his wish came true. You are among those on whom the Spirit has been poured. The question is simply this: are you living like it?

PRAYER: Lord, we thank you that the Spirit you poured out at Pentecost refuses to stay at the tent — pour him out afresh on all of us today, in our camps and our kitchens and our ordinary places, so that Moses’s wish goes on coming true through our lives. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Ask the Spirit this week to show you one place in your ordinary daily life — your workplace, your neighborhood, your home — where he is already moving, and then make yourself available to him there, trusting that the Spirit who found Eldad and Medad in the camp can find and use you exactly where you are.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! As Numbers 11:29 said, "I wish that all the Lord's People were prophets and that the Lord would put His Spirit on them!" Amen!

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Tuesday, May 19, 2026

The Birthday of the Church!

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1 When the day of Pentecost had come, they were all together in one place. 2 And suddenly from heaven there came a sound like the rush of a violent wind, and it filled the entire house where they were sitting. 3 Divided tongues, as of fire, appeared among them, and a tongue rested on each of them. 4 All of them were filled with the Holy Spirit and began to speak in other languages, as the Spirit gave them ability. 5 Now there were devout Jews from every nation under heaven living in Jerusalem. 6 And at this sound the crowd gathered and was bewildered, because each one heard them speaking in the native language of each. 7 Amazed and astonished, they asked, "Are not all these who are speaking Galileans? 8 And how is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language? 9 Parthians, Medes, Elamites, and residents of Mesopotamia, Judea and Cappadocia, Pontus and Asia, 10 Phrygia and Pamphylia, Egypt and the parts of Libya belonging to Cyrene, and visitors from Rome, both Jews and proselytes, 11 Cretans and Arabs—in our own languages we hear them speaking about God's deeds of power." 12 All were amazed and perplexed, saying to one another, "What does this mean?" 13 But others sneered and said, "They are filled with new wine." 14 But Peter, standing with the eleven, raised his voice and addressed them, "Men of Judea and all who live in Jerusalem, let this be known to you, and listen to what I say. 15 Indeed, these are not drunk, as you suppose, for it is only nine o'clock in the morning. 16 No, this is what was spoken through the prophet Joel: 17 "In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh, and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, and your young men shall see visions, and your old men shall dream dreams. 18 Even upon my slaves, both men and women, in those days I will pour out my Spirit; and they shall prophesy. 19 And I will show portents in the heaven above and signs on the earth below, blood, and fire, and smoky mist. 20 The sun shall be turned to darkness and the moon to blood, before the coming of the Lord's great and glorious day. 21 Then everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.' (Acts 2:1-21 NRSV)

I love the connection people feel when you speak their language. I love being bilingual and knowing some phrases in other languages for the connection one feels. It's usually a smile or a surprised look then a big smile. And if you think about it, God's biggest smile is when we connect with Him and lead others to connections with Him. I don't have the space to list all the connections I've made, but I am sure you have your own. At the very least I pray that you're open to the idea of enjoying others connect through language. My fondest was working at the company where my Dad worked for a summer with a fine gentleman named Charlie Kucera, a Czech son of Texas. Charlie taught me how to say a greeting in Czech. At various cafes and restaurants it has made people smile and reflect. The biggest connection was at a General Conference where at an elevator I saw a delegate from the Czech Republic and greeted him. He relied with a joyous loud exclamation and then a barrage of other Czech words I did not know. He knew enough English to let me know he was happy and excited to hear and be greeted in his language after being away from his home for many days. He gave me pamphlets and brochures so I could distribute to Czech people in Texas.

We have read in today's passage God's Great Connection with humanity. First the background:

For fifty days they had been waiting. Easter was behind them — the empty tomb, the resurrection appearances, the forty days of the risen Christ walking and eating and teaching among them, and then the Ascension, the cloud, and the angels asking why they were still staring at the sky. They had returned to Jerusalem as they were told. They had gone to the upper room. They had prayed, constantly, together.

And then the morning of Pentecost arrived. And nothing was ever the same again.

What Luke describes in the opening verses of Acts 2 is not a quiet spiritual experience. It is an event — sudden, loud, visible, and impossible to ignore. Wind that filled the whole house. Fire that divided and rested on each of them, one by one. Languages pouring out of Galilean fishermen that pilgrims from across the known world could hear in their own mother tongue. The crowd that gathered was not drawn by a compelling worship service. They were drawn by the sound.

Pentecost was the day the promise came. The Spirit that Jesus had breathed and prayed and spoken about throughout his ministry arrived in fullness — and the church, that small, praying, unlikely community of one hundred and twenty, was never the same again. Neither was the world.

Luke reaches for two of the most ancient symbols in all of Scripture to describe what happened: wind and fire.

Wind — the same Hebrew word, ruach, that moves across the face of the waters in Genesis 1, bringing order out of chaos. The same breath that God breathes into the dust of Adam, and the man becomes a living soul. The same wind that blows through the valley of dry bones in Ezekiel’s vision, and the bones come together and stand up as a vast living army. When the Spirit comes as wind in Acts 2, Luke is signaling that what is happening is not a minor religious experience. It is a new creation event. God is breathing life into a new humanity.

Fire — the pillar of fire that led Israel through the wilderness at night. The fire on Sinai when God gave the law. The refiner’s fire that purifies silver. And now, divided tongues of flame resting — not on the altar, not on the high priest alone, but on each one of them. Every person in that room. The fire of God’s presence, which had once dwelt in a tent and then in a temple, was now coming to rest on human beings, one by one, making each of them a temple of the living God.

Together, wind and fire signal that something irreversible has happened. The presence of God, once mediated through institutions and intermediaries, has become intimate and personal and universal. What was poured out that morning was poured out on all — and it has not been poured back.

The miracle of languages is at the heart of what Pentecost means, and it is worth pausing here because we can too easily let it become background detail.

Jerusalem at Pentecost was crowded with pilgrims from across the known world — Luke gives us the list, and it spans the compass of the earth: Parthians and Medes, Egyptians and Romans, Cretans and Arabs, people from fifteen different regions all gathered in one city. And suddenly, out of a group of Galileans — whose accent, whose education, whose social standing marked them as provincial and ordinary — comes the gospel in every language at once.

The crowd’s question cuts to the heart of it: “How is it that we hear, each of us, in our own native language?” Not a trade language. Not a lingua franca that everyone had learned to get by. Their own native language — the language of home, of childhood, of the words their mothers had used to sing them to sleep. The most intimate register of human speech.

This is not an accident of the narrative. It is the entire point. The Spirit does not meet people at the level of formal religion, dressed in the language of the educated and the powerful. The Spirit meets people where they actually are — in the mother tongue of their deepest identity. The gospel has always been, from the very first morning of the church’s life, a word that crosses every barrier of language and culture and background to find the person in their own particular humanness and say: this is for you.

Some in the crowd were amazed. Some were perplexed. Some sneered. That has also been the pattern ever since. The Spirit’s work divides rooms. It does not leave people indifferent. And the question the bewildered crowd asked — “What does this mean?” — is the question that Peter’s sermon, and the whole of the book of Acts, and the whole of the church’s witness ever since, has been answering.

Peter stands up — this same Peter who had denied Christ three times by a charcoal fire not seven weeks earlier — and raises his voice over the crowd. And the first thing he does is reach back to the prophet Joel.

“In the last days it will be, God declares, that I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh.”

All flesh. Not the priests. Not the prophets. Not the spiritually elite or the theologically trained or the culturally respectable. All flesh. Sons and daughters. Young men and old men. Slaves, both men and women. The Spirit of God, which in the old covenant had come upon specific people for specific tasks, was now being poured out without reservation on every person who would receive it.

Peter is telling the crowd: what you are witnessing is not a breakdown of order. It is the fulfillment of the oldest hopes of Israel. This is what the prophets saw from a distance. This is what the festivals and the rituals and the temple were always pointing toward. The age of the Spirit has arrived. And it has arrived for everyone.

And then the passage closes with a line that is at once the simplest and the most far-reaching promise in the entire text: “Then everyone who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved.”

Everyone. The invitation of Pentecost is as wide as the word everyone and as personal as your own name spoken in your own mother tongue. The Spirit has been poured out. The door is open. And it has been open ever since that morning in Jerusalem when the wind came and the fire rested and the church found its voice.

Pentecost is not history to be admired from a distance. It is the event that defines what the church is and what every believer has access to right now.

The wind is still blowing. The Spirit poured out on all flesh has not been gathered back. The presence of God that came to rest on each of those one hundred and twenty people in the upper room is the same presence available to every person who calls on the name of the Lord today — in their own language, in their own circumstances, in the mother tongue of their deepest need.

The question the crowd asked is still worth asking: What does this mean? It means that you are not navigating your life in your own strength. It means that the same Spirit who raised Jesus from the dead, who blew through that upper room, who gave Galilean fishermen the words of every language under heaven, is the Spirit who lives in you. And the life he came to give — the rivers of living water, flowing from within — is not something you have to manufacture. It is something you have already been given. Receive it. Live from it. Let it flow.

PRAYER: Come, Holy Spirit — wind and fire and living water — pour yourself out afresh on all of us today, so that the world around us hears the good news of Jesus in the language of our lives. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Ask the Holy Spirit this morning to make you aware of one person in your world whose native language of need you can speak into today — through a word, a text, an act of care — as a living sign that the Spirit poured out at Pentecost is still moving.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me. "I will pour out my Spirit upon all flesh."

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

Thursday, May 14, 2026

Held by the Healer: Finding God’s Peace in the Middle of the Unknown

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“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” — Philippians 4:6–7 (NIV)

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The Room Where Uncertainty Lives

You know the room. It may be a doctor’s waiting room with chairs that are too firm and a television no one is really watching. It may be the room at home where you lie awake at 3 a.m., running through the same fears on an endless loop. It may be the room inside your own mind where the test results, the diagnosis, the unanswered questions take up more space than you know how to manage.

Uncertainty about our health — our own or someone we love — has a particular quality of weight to it. It is not just the fear of what might be wrong. It is the helplessness of not knowing, the exhaustion of waiting, the way it can quietly crowd out everything else until the uncertainty is all you can see.

If you are in that room right now, this devotional is written for you. Not with easy answers or tidy reassurances, but with the word of a God who has been meeting people in exactly that room for thousands of years — and who has never once left without leaving something behind. His presence. His peace. His promise that the one who holds the universe also holds you.

Let us open the Scripture together and hear what he has to say.

He Knows What Your Body Needs

“Lord my God, I called to you for help, and you healed me.” — Psalm 30:2 (NIV)

David wrote Psalm 30 from the far side of a serious illness — looking back at a time when he had been close to death and crying out to God with everything he had. What strikes us, reading it now, is not the happy ending but the rawness of the middle: he called to God for help. He did not compose himself first. He did not clean up his fear before bringing it to God. He cried out, exactly as he was, from exactly where he was.

And God heard him.

The God of Scripture is not a God who requires us to be well before he will attend to us. He is the God who bends toward our weakness, who inclines his ear toward the cry of the sick and the frightened. Jesus, during his ministry on earth, moved consistently toward those whose bodies had failed them — the leper who was untouchable, the woman who had bled for twelve years and spent everything she had trying to get better, the man who had lain by the pool for thirty-eight years. He did not wait for them to come to him in strength. He came to them in their weakness.

He is the same yesterday, today, and forever. He knows what your body is carrying right now — the diagnosis, the treatment, the side effects, the exhaustion, the fear underneath all of it. And he is not standing at a distance, observing. He is near. He is the Lord who heals.

That does not mean he heals in the way or on the timetable we would choose. But it means that healing — in all its forms, physical and emotional and spiritual — flows from the nature of who he is. He is a healer by nature. And your need has his full attention.

He Carries You When You Cannot Walk

“He gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak. Even youths grow tired and weary, and young men stumble and fall; but those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength. They will soar on wings like eagles; they will run and not grow weary, they will walk and not be faint.” — Isaiah 40:29–31 (NIV)

Isaiah wrote these words to a people who were exhausted. Not lazily tired — exhausted in the way that only comes from a long and grinding season of difficulty, from carrying more than they were built to carry for longer than they thought they could bear. He addresses them with a word that acknowledges the reality of their depletion before he offers the promise of renewal: even youths grow tired and weary. Even the strongest stumble and fall. Weariness is not a failure of faith. It is a human condition.

And into that condition, God speaks his promise: those who hope in the Lord will renew their strength.

The word translated hope here carries the sense of waiting expectantly — not passive resignation, but the active, forward-leaning posture of someone who is certain that what they are waiting for is coming. It is the posture of the patient in the waiting room who knows the doctor will come. The hope is not wishful thinking. It is confidence in the character of the one who has made the promise.

When your strength is depleted by illness or by the anxiety of waiting for answers, God does not ask you to manufacture more of your own. He offers his. The strength that renews the weary is not a self-improvement program. It is a gift from the one who gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak.

You do not have to soar today. You do not have to run. Sometimes the promise is simply this: you will walk and not faint. You will make it through this day. And the God who holds you is strong enough to carry what you cannot, for as long as it takes, all the way through to the other side.

His Peace Stands Guard When Your Mind Will Not Rest

“Do not be anxious about anything, but in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. And the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.” — Philippians 4:6–7 (NIV)

Paul wrote these words from prison. Not from a comfortable study or a season of spiritual retreat, but from a cell, under arrest, uncertain about his own future. When he tells us not to be anxious, he is not speaking from a position of ease. He is speaking from a position of practiced trust — the kind that has been tested in exactly the circumstances that produce anxiety, and has held.

The instruction is not “stop feeling anxious,” as though anxiety were simply a switch we can turn off by trying harder. It is a redirection: in every situation, by prayer and petition, with thanksgiving, present your requests to God. Bring the anxiety with you into prayer. Name the fear. Lay the diagnosis on the table before him. Tell him about the test results and the sleepless nights and the questions that have no answers yet. He already knows — but there is something that happens in the act of bringing it to him, consciously and deliberately, that shifts the weight.

And then the promise: the peace of God, which transcends all understanding, will guard your hearts and your minds in Christ Jesus.

Guard. The word is a military term — a sentinel standing watch, posted at the gate, keeping out what should not enter. The peace of God is not a feeling that descends when the circumstances improve. It is a presence that stands at the door of your heart and mind even when the circumstances have not changed at all. It makes no human sense. It transcends understanding. It is available to you right now, in the middle of the uncertainty, before the results come back, before the treatment is over, before any of the things you are waiting for have arrived.

You can have the peace of God in the waiting room. In the 3 a.m. darkness. In the middle of the hardest season your body has ever put you through. Not because the hard thing is not happening, but because the one who guards your heart is greater than the thing that frightens you.

He Has Not Forgotten You

“Can a mother forget the baby at her breast and have no compassion on the child she has borne? Though she may forget, I will not forget you! See, I have engraved you on the palms of my hands.”— Isaiah 49:15–16 (NIV)

In the long and frightening waiting seasons, one of the most persistent lies is this: God has forgotten me. He is busy with the world. My situation is too small, or too ordinary, or too complicated. He has moved on. I am alone in this.

Isaiah 49 speaks directly into that lie with one of the most intimate images in all of Scripture. God takes the most powerful human image of devoted, unbreakable love — a mother nursing her infant — and says: even if that were to fail, I will not forget you. And then he adds something extraordinary: I have engraved you on the palms of my hands.

Engraved. Not written in pencil. Not entered in a database. Engraved — permanently, irreversibly, carried on his very person. Your name. Your face. Your diagnosis. Your fear. Your specific, unrepeatable story is engraved on the hands of the God who made the world.

Those hands, the New Testament tells us, are the hands of Jesus — and they bear the marks of the nails. The one who carried your name on his hands went all the way to the cross and through the resurrection carrying it. You were not forgotten then. You are not forgotten now. You will not be forgotten in whatever is coming next.

The uncertainty about your health does not separate you from the knowledge of God. It does not move you out of his sight or off his hands. You are seen. You are known. You are held by the one who engraved your name before you ever had a name to give.

Application

Four anchors from the Scripture for the days ahead.

When your body is struggling — remember that the Lord who healed in Galilee is the same Lord who bends toward your weakness today. He is a healer by nature, and your need has his full attention.

When your strength runs out — remember that he gives strength to the weary and increases the power of the weak. You do not have to soar. You just have to hope in him, and let his strength carry what yours cannot.

When your mind will not rest — remember that the peace of God stands guard. Bring the anxiety to him in prayer, name it, lay it down, and let the sentinel take up his post at the door of your heart. The peace that transcends understanding is available to you right now.

When you feel forgotten — remember the palms of his hands. You are engraved there. Permanently. Irreversibly. The God who went to the cross and back has never once let go of you, and he is not starting now.

You are not alone in this room. The Healer is here. The Sustainer is here. The one who guards your heart and has engraved your name on his hands is here. And he will be here tomorrow, and the day after, and all the way through to the other side.

Closing Prayer Lord and Healer, we bring you every fear, every unanswered question, and every weary place in our bodies and our hearts, trusting that your peace stands guard, your strength renews, and our names are forever engraved on your hands. You know us by name and by need; to You we entrust all that You trusting in You for your healing and peace; in Christ Jesus' strong name we pray, Amen.

Today

Write down the one fear or uncertainty you have been carrying alone, bring it to God in prayer by name today, and leave it in his hands — trusting that the peace which transcends understanding is already on its way to guard your heart.

“The Lord is close to the brokenhearted and saves those who are crushed in spirit.” Psalm 34:18 (NIV)

I love you and I pray for you! You matter to God and God wants you whole. You matter to me, and I pray for your wholeness.

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

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Wednesday, May 13, 2026

Stop Looking Up!

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6 Then they gathered around him and asked him, “Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?” 7 He said to them: “It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority. 8 But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.” 9 After he said this, he was taken up before their very eyes, and a cloud hid him from their sight. 10 They were looking intently up into the sky as he was going, when suddenly two men dressed in white stood beside them. 11 “Men of Galilee,” they said, “why do you stand here looking into the sky? This same Jesus, who has been taken from you into heaven, will come back in the same way you have seen him go into heaven.” 12 Then the apostles returned to Jerusalem from the hill called the Mount of Olives, a Sabbath day’s walk from the city. 13 When they arrived, they went upstairs to the room where they were staying. Those present were Peter, John, James and Andrew; Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew; James son of Alphaeus and Simon the Zealot, and Judas son of James. 14 They all joined together constantly in prayer, along with the women and Mary the mother of Jesus, and with his brothers. (Acts 1:6-14 NIV)

Have you ever been so fixed on what you were waiting for that you forgot what you were supposed to be doing? That happens to me just by walkiing into another room. What did I come in here for?

That is exactly where we find the disciples in this passage. They have just spent forty days with the risen Jesus — eating with him, listening to him, watching him open the Scriptures and speak about the kingdom of God. And when the moment of the Ascension arrives, when the cloud takes him from their sight, they stand on the hillside and stare. Just… stare. Necks craned upward, eyes fixed on the last place they saw him, frozen in place.

It takes two angels to break the spell. And the question they ask is one that echoes down through every generation of the church: “Why do you stand here looking into the sky?”

It is a question worth sitting with today. Because the church, in every age, has a version of this problem. And this passage has a bracing, clarifying, ultimately hopeful answer to it.

When the disciples gather around Jesus before the Ascension, they bring him the question that has been burning in them for three years: “Lord, are you at this time going to restore the kingdom to Israel?”

It is an understandable question — even a faithful one, rooted in the deep hope of the Hebrew prophets. But it is still the wrong question. It is focused on timing and on a national story, when Jesus is about to commission them for a global one. They are thinking about a calendar. He is about to hand them a calling.

His answer does two things at once. He closes the door on the when: “It is not for you to know the times or dates the Father has set by his own authority.” The schedule is not theirs to manage. And then he opens a door they were not expecting: “But you will receive power when the Holy Spirit comes on you; and you will be my witnesses in Jerusalem, and in all Judea and Samaria, and to the ends of the earth.”

Notice the word but. Not a calendar — a commission. Not a timeline — a territory. And the territory is breathtaking in its scope: starting where they are standing, rippling outward through Judea and across the hostile territory of Samaria, running all the way to the edges of the known world. The kingdom Jesus is building is not smaller than their hopes. It is vastly, unimaginably larger.

And the power to participate in it is not something they can generate. It is something that will be given — the Holy Spirit, coming upon them, equipping them for a mission they cannot accomplish on their own. Their part is not to figure out the plan. Their part is to be witnesses. To be people whose lives and words point, consistently and credibly, to the risen Christ.

That commission has not expired. It was not issued to eleven people on a hillside in first-century Palestine and then retired. It is the standing commission of the church in every generation. You will be my witnesses — where you are, in the circles where you live and work and belong, and outward from there to wherever the Spirit leads.

And then he was gone. Luke describes it simply: he was taken up, and a cloud hid him from their sight.

The cloud is not incidental. Throughout Scripture, the cloud is the sign of the divine presence — the pillar of cloud in the wilderness, the glory-cloud that filled the tabernacle and the temple. When the cloud takes Jesus, it is not an ending. It is an enthronement. The risen Christ is not disappearing into absence. He is being received into the fullness of the Father’s glory, taking his place at the right hand of power, beginning his reign as the ascended Lord over all things.

But the disciples do not see it that way. Not yet. They see the last place he was, and they keep looking at it. Luke says they were looking intently — the word suggests a fixed, concentrated, unbroken gaze. They are doing what grief does to us: holding the eye on the place where something was, hoping it will come back.

And into that frozen moment, two men in white appear — and ask the question that is almost gentle in its plainness: “Why do you stand here looking into the sky?”

It is not a rebuke, exactly. It is more like the kind of thing a wise friend says when you are stuck and you need someone to name it out loud. He is gone — but not in the way you think. He will return — but that return is a promise to live toward, not a cloud to stare at while the mission waits. The angels free them from the upward gaze so they can turn back toward the city, back toward the work, back toward the upper room where something is about to happen that will change everything.

There is a version of the upward gaze that the church still practices. It shows up when our focus on what God will do someday becomes a substitute for doing what he has already told us to do today. When thinking about the return of Christ crowds out the witness to Christ. When waiting becomes an excuse for standing still.

The angels’ question is still being asked: Why are you standing here? You have a commission. You have a promise. Go back to the city.

What happens next is the quiet center of the whole passage, and it is easy to rush past it in our hurry to get to Pentecost.

They returned to Jerusalem. They went to the upper room. And they prayed — constantly, together, all of them.

Look at the names Luke gives us: Peter and John and James and Andrew, Philip and Thomas, Bartholomew and Matthew, James son of Alphaeus and Simon the Zealot, Judas son of James. The women. Mary the mother of Jesus. His brothers. One hundred and twenty people in all, Luke will tell us in the next verse.

This is not an impressive roster by the world’s measure. There is no wealth, no political influence, no military power in that list. There is a fisherman with a history of failure under pressure. A doubter. A former revolutionary. A handful of women who had no legal standing in the public square. A mother whose son had been executed as a criminal. Brothers who had not believed in him during his ministry.

And to these people, the mission of the risen Christ to the ends of the earth is about to be entrusted.

But notice what they do before any of that happens. They do not strategize. They do not organize. They do not write a mission statement or form a committee. They pray. Constantly. Together. They make themselves available to the one who promised to come, in the only posture that makes any sense when you are waiting for something only God can provide.

This is where every great movement of God begins — not with a plan, but with a people on their knees. The upper room is not the waiting room before the real work starts. The upper room is where the real work starts. Availability before activity. Prayer before power. Presence before proclamation.

The same Spirit who came upon that praying community is the Spirit who equips the church in every generation. And the same posture that positioned them to receive him — humble, together, persistent in prayer — is the posture that positions us.

Application

Three gifts from this passage for the life we are living right now.

First, a reoriented question. The disciples came to Jesus asking about timing. He sent them away with a commission. Whenever we find ourselves preoccupied with the when of God’s plans — when will things change, when will this season end, when will the kingdom finally come — this passage gently redirects us. You have a witness to bear. You have a territory. Start where you are standing and work outward from there.

Second, a corrected gaze. The upward stare is not where the work is. The work is in the city, among the people, in the ordinary places where witness is needed. The return of Christ is real and it is coming — but it is a promise that frees us for engagement, not a spectacle that paralyzes us in place.

Third, a right beginning. They returned and they prayed. Before the wind and the fire of Pentecost, before the three thousand converts and the explosive growth of the early church, there was a room full of ordinary, unlikely people making themselves available to God in prayer. That is still the beginning. That is always the beginning.

PRAYER: Lord Jesus, turn our gaze from the sky to the streets, fill us with the Spirit you promised, and make us faithful witnesses — starting right where we are. Amen.

Have a great and blessed day in the Lord! OUR CALL TO ACTION: Identify one person in your Jerusalem — your neighborhood, your workplace, your family — and pray for one opportunity this week to be a witness to them, not with a rehearsed argument, but with the honest, unhurried story of what the risen Christ has done in your life.

I love you and I thank God for you! You matter to God and you matter to me! “You will be my witnesses — to the ends of the earth.” Acts 1:8

Pastor Eradio Valverde, Jr.

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