Wednesday, August 6, 2025

Seeing Jesus for Who He Is: Habakkuk’s Vision and Freedom in John 8

Habakkuk 1-3; John 8


TODAY'S DEVOTION:

Who are you? That was the question on everyone’s lips in John 8. The religious leaders, confused and threatened by Jesus, kept demanding an answer. Who could he possibly be? Why did his words stir up so much fear—and so much hope? Sometimes, just like those early listeners, our own hearts are not ready to truly hear Jesus’s answer. We find ourselves blinded by lies—lies that feed our fears, that swell our pride, that paint God with the colors of our own anxieties. These lies keep us from seeing Jesus for who he really is, and they keep us from the healing he longs to give.

So what does God do when we are lost in that darkness? He comes. He doesn’t shame us or turn away—he steps into our confusion and brokenness with love. In Jesus, God shows us the way of love: self-giving, radically forgiving, co-suffering love. Jesus said, “When you have lifted up the Son of Man on the cross, then you will know that I am he.” If we want to see who Jesus is, we have only to look at the cross. There, we see what the woman caught in adultery saw: the one who stoops down, enters into the dust of our lives, and writes something new—a story not of condemnation, but of mercy and life.

At the cross, we see the one who takes away the sin of the world, who includes us in the love he shares with the Father. We see love; that is who he is.

That’s the prayer of my heart today: that I would truly hear and see Jesus answer that old question, “Who are you?”—and that I would recognize Love lifted up for the world. This is my prayer for myself, for my family, for my wife and my daughters and my son. And that’s my prayer for you, too.

May it be so.

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