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I am using readings from the 49 Week Bible Challenge as the basis for these devotions. I encourage you to join me in this discipline. Today’s readings are John 15:13-27; Genesis 44; Psalm 35; Proverbs 18.
Psalm 35:26-28
Let them be put to shame and disappointed altogether
who rejoice at my calamity!
Let them be clothed with shame and dishonor
who magnify themselves against me!27 Let those who delight in my righteousness
shout for joy and be glad
and say evermore,
“Great is the Lord,
who delights in the welfare of his servant!”
28 Then my tongue shall tell of your righteousness
and of your praise all the day long.
John 15:18-20
[Jesus says,] “If the world hates you, know that it has hated me before it hated you. 19 If you were of the world, the world would love you as its own; but because you are not of the world, but I chose you out of the world, therefore the world hates you. 20 Remember the word that I said to you: ‘A servant is not greater than his master.’ If they persecuted me, they will also persecute you. If they kept my word, they will also keep yours.

The film Martin Luther: Heretic has a scene where Luther is teaching a class at university. He is teaching them about forgiveness, and salvation by grace through faith. The dialogue goes:
Student: Man can do nothing about his sinfulness?
Luther: Yes God is to do everything
Student: Then I may do as I please. I can sin as much as I want. It makes no difference.
Luther: Yes you may do as you please. Now tell me what pleases you. Imagine it: no more laws no more punishments. What do you do? Drink yourself senseless? Make faces at the Duke? Spend the rest of the week in a whore house? You say to me you may do as you please. I say to you, what you do comes from what you are what you are in your heart.
Many people in the world want nothing to do with pleasing God. They’re charting their own course. They do it their way. They decide for themselves what is good and evil. They are anything but people living under the reign and rule of Jesus. I would rather not admit it, but they hate Jesus and those who do wish to please him.
Thankfully, however, there have been those through the ages who have sought to live faithfully under Jesus’ reign and rule. They realize this is not a heavy burden, but a delightful life of faith and a belief that Jesus’ love renders him the greatest good anyone could desire.
We all serve some god or another: worldly pursuits of fame and fortune, sexual exploits, or self righteous moralism. Those who look to Jesus as the highest good will discover that he “delights in the welfare of his servant.” We tell of his righteousness, and praise him all the day long. That is truly pleasing to me.

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