13 Wednesday May 2026
Paul stands in Athens, surrounded by altars to every known god, and finds his starting point in an altar to the unknown one. The honest agnostic is closer to faith than the person who thinks he has God figured out. Seeking is not the opposite of believing; it is believing’s truest form. Some laughed, some wanted to hear more; this is how the gospel always divides a room.
14 Thursday May 2026
The community must choose someone to fill a vacant place; this is both practical and mysterious. They pray, they cast lots, they trust that God works through human decision-making. Matthias disappears from the story almost immediately, which tells us something important. Faithfulness does not require fame; it requires showing up.
15 Friday May 2026
“Do not be afraid; go on speaking and do not be silent.” This is the word that comes in the night, when discouragement whispers louder than hope. God does not promise the absence of opposition; God promises presence within it. Paul stays eighteen months; sometimes perseverance, not brilliance, is the sermon.
16 Saturday May 2026
Apollos speaks with passion but with incomplete understanding; Priscilla and Aquila quietly take him aside. Correction offered in private, with gentleness, is one of the rarest gifts in the church. The mature community does not humiliate its teachers; it deepens them. Eloquence without humility is noise; eloquence shaped by listening becomes proclamation.
17 Sunday May 2026
He was lifted up, and a cloud took him from their sight. The ascension is not God’s departure; it is the end of one kind of presence and the beginning of another. The angels ask why they stand looking up; faith is not nostalgia for a vanished Christ. The church begins when we stop staring at the sky and turn to face the world.
18 Monday May 2026
They had been baptized but had not heard of the Holy Spirit. There are stages of faith, and the church must be patient with all of them. The Spirit is not a reward for the advanced; it is the breath that sustains every beginning. Paul does not scold their ignorance; he simply lays hands on what is incomplete.
19 Tuesday May 2026
Paul speaks as one who knows he will not pass this way again. Every honest farewell contains a kind of theology. He has not shrunk from declaring the whole purpose of God, which means he has also declared its difficulty. The tears of the Ephesian elders are the truest commentary on his words.

