No Condemnation

 

“So now there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”

Romans 8:1


 

NO CONDEMNATION

Recently, I read a story about a young boy named Michael who was shooting rocks with his slingshot. He could never hit his target. As he returned to his grandma’s backyard, he spotted her pet duck. On impulse, he took aim and let the stone fly. It struck the duck right between the eyes, and the duck died.

Michael panicked and quickly hid the duck in the woodpile. When he looked up, he saw his sister, Emma, watching. She had seen everything but said nothing.

After lunch that day, Grandma asked Emma to help with the dishes. Emma replied, “Michael told me he wanted to help in the kitchen today. Didn’t you, Michael?”

Then she leaned over and whispered, “Remember the duck.”

So Michael did the dishes.

What choice did he have?

For the next several weeks, he found himself at the sink again and again. Sometimes it was his turn, but many times it was because Emma would simply whisper, “Remember the duck,” whenever he protested.

Finally, tired of carrying the burden and being controlled by his secret, Michael decided that any punishment would be better than another day of washing dishes. He went to Grandma and confessed that he had killed her duck.

“I know, Michael,” Grandma said as she gave him a big hug. “I was standing at the window and saw the whole thing. Because I love you, I forgave you. I was just wondering how long you were going to let Emma make a slave out of you.”

Listen closely: In a similar way…

One of the greatest struggles you will face as a believer is seeing yourself the way God sees you. Too often, you define yourself by your failures, mistakes, and regrets, while God defines you by your relationship with His Son.

Lean into what God’s Word says about you in Romans 8:1:

“So now there is no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus.”

Do not miss that.

Because of God’s amazing grace, your sins have been forgiven through the finished work of Jesus Christ on the Cross. When God looks at you, He doesn’t see your past or your mistakes—He sees the righteousness of His Son because you are in Christ.

It is important not to confuse condemnation with conviction.

  • Condemnation comes from the enemy (Satan) and tells you that you are guilty, worthless, and beyond hope. It pushes you away from God through shame and fear.
  • Conviction comes from the Holy Spirit. It is full of grace. It lovingly points out sin, not to condemn you, but to lead you to repentance, restoration, and a closer walk with Christ.

As God’s child, you can rest in His amazing grace, knowing that you are fully seen, fully loved, completely forgiven, and eternally accepted.

Instead of living under the weight of condemnation—“remember the duck”—you are called to walk in the freedom that Christ has already secured for you.

Embrace God’s grace today!

 

Love God. Love People. Live Sent.

Be Worth Being.

Kevin


 

Kevin Burrell has worked in professional baseball as both a player and MLB scout for the past 45 years, and currently serves as an area scouting supervisor. Kevin was drafted in the 1st round of the 1981 free agent amateur draft (25th selection overall), and played ten years of professional baseball with four different organizations. He and his wife, Valerie, live in Sharpsburg, Ga.

Digging Deeper: Mutual Respect

 

“You shall not commit adultery”

Exodus 20:14 (NLT)



MUTUAL RESPECT

 

My meeting Deanna was somewhat coincidental. We had worked together at a Super Target for a few years, but because we attended different high schools and worked in different departments, we didn’t spend much time together. I remember seeing her one day, and a friend said, “She’s cute, huh?” to which I replied, “Yes, she is.”

The Target where we worked was a popular viewing spot for the City of Woodstock’s annual fireworks show, which always made for a very busy evening. One year, I was scheduled to work the late shift. Usually, once the fireworks began around 9:00 p.m., the crowds would clear out and the rest of the evening would be smooth sailing.

Except that year.

A pop-up shower delayed the fireworks by nearly 45 minutes. The late start meant traffic lingered much longer than usual, and when I clocked out at 10:00 p.m., the parking lot was… well, a parking lot. No cars could get in or out.

I noticed Deanna standing outside, also wondering what to do about the traffic, so we struck up a conversation. The conversation lasted until traffic finally cleared. Then it continued at Taco Mac. When Taco Mac closed, it carried on at Waffle House. Now, 17 years into our marriage, the conversation is still going.

We’re like any other couple. We’ve experienced ups and downs and everything in between. One thing that hasn’t changed is that she is, without question, my very best friend. What began as an attraction grew into a friendship, and that friendship became a marriage.

This week, we’ve focused on the Lord’s commandment not to commit adultery, and I’ve tried to approach it from a positive perspective: building a marriage strong enough to withstand the temptation to look elsewhere.

One key component of lasting marriages is mutual respect. As I searched for practical examples of what respect looks like, I came across a list of reader-submitted advice for newlyweds. One of my favorite entries was this:

Five Rules for Marriage

  1. Fight fair. No name-calling, no condescension, and no cursing. When emotions begin to take over, pause the argument and give yourselves time to cool down.
  2. No Rolodex. Don’t file away past hurts and injustices in a mental Rolodex to use as ammunition in future arguments. Deal with the hurt now, while it can still be made right.
  3. Choose compromises you can both live with. Whether the decision is big or small, make sure the outcome is something both of you can genuinely live with—because you’re both going to have to.
  4. Create a safe place for vulnerability. Whether you’re sitting on the couch, lying in bed, or even soaking in the tub, find a place where you can communicate openly and honestly, even when the conversation is difficult or emotional.
  5. Remember your future together. You’re going to live with this person tomorrow, next week, next year, and hopefully into retirement. Don’t let anger, indifference, or taking one another for granted rob you of the future you’re building together.

I don’t know who originally wrote those five rules, but I think they contain practical, relatable, and timeless wisdom. Choosing emotional intentionality and mutual respect—even during moments of conflict—strengthens a marriage. And a strong marriage helps keep our hearts focused on the path of purity and holiness the Lord has called us to walk.


Lee Wilson and his wife, Deanna, have been NorthStar Church members since 2010. They are parents to Everett, Henry and Roselyn. Lee is passionate about sports (Go Braves, Go Dawgs) and has the pleasure to serve on the worship team as a bassist.

 

Digging Deeper: Deep Friendship

 

“You shall not commit adultery”

Exodus 20:14 (NLT)



DEEP FRIENDSHIP

 

Looking this week at the commandment, “You shall not commit adultery,” prompted a deeper dive into what long-lasting marriages typically have that helps prevent infidelity—of either the body or the heart—from ever beginning to creep in.

First, for the believer, marriage is a lifelong union between two people (Genesis 2:24) and is intended to be a permanent relationship (Matthew 19:6). It requires sacrificial love (Ephesians 5:22–33) and comes with stern warnings against defiling or dishonoring the marriage covenant (Hebrews 13:4). Relationships rooted in faith have a greater chance of enduring and thriving, with secular marriages experiencing a 30–50 percent higher rate of separation. Faith must come first.

After that, one common theme among strong and lasting marriages is a deep friendship between spouses. Deep friendship has been described as “an unconditional bond where you feel entirely seen, accepted, and safe.” I believe that level of trust can exist only between two people who intentionally make time to build a deep bond. It is built brick by brick through daily conversations, shared hobbies, and consistent check-ins.

I love family traditions, and we work hard to build them into our daily and weekly routines with our kids. We do pizza and a movie every Friday, have donut mornings on the weekends, and enjoy all sorts of little traditions together. For Deanna and me, when the kids are in school, we have a built-in weekday off together, so we go out for lunch and then grab an afternoon coffee before picking the kids up from the bus.

Coffee is a powerful currency in our house. We often share an afternoon iced coffee together and occasionally split a pastry. It’s a moment to decompress between work and the rest of the day’s responsibilities—getting the kids to the ballfield, band room, or basketball court while also making sure dinner and homework get done.

It isn’t about the coffee; it’s about the intentional conversation that happens because of it. Our friendship grows stronger every time we spend time talking with purpose. Those moments become opportunities for reflection, planning, encouragement, and simply enjoying one another’s company.

We also make it a point to have a date night at least once a month. We often try to catch a concert or a comedy show and make an evening of it, especially if we’ve already arranged for a babysitter. One thing that always amazes me is that whenever we get away from the house, the responsibilities of parenting, and the pressures of everyday life, I’m reminded why we liked each other in the first place. I often turn to Deanna and say, “This is so much fun. I remember why we enjoy doing this together.”

Whether we’re drinking an afternoon coffee, going to a Braves game, or seeing Metallica live, we genuinely have fun together, and every one of those moments strengthens our friendship. The bond built through laughter, joy, and shared experiences is often what carries us through the hardships, trials, and disappointments that inevitably come.

Your intentionality with your spouse matters, and it is one of the greatest safeguards against marital tension. Have the coffee. Go on the date. Share the smile.

 


Lee Wilson and his wife, Deanna, have been NorthStar Church members since 2010. They are parents to Everett, Henry and Roselyn. Lee is passionate about sports (Go Braves, Go Dawgs) and has the pleasure to serve on the worship team as a bassist.

 

Digging Deeper: It Was Only a Dream

 

“You shall not commit adultery”

Exodus 20:14 (NLT)



IT WAS ONLY A DREAM

 

“Lee… Hey, Lee.”

I woke up. It was roughly three in the morning. Delirious, I looked at Deanna and asked what was wrong. She had woken me from a dead sleep, and at the time she was several months pregnant, prompting a little concern on my end.

“I just had a dream… that you were cheating on me,” she said.

Puzzled and still very delirious, I replied, “Uh… okay… are you alright?”

She said how real the dream had felt and that she needed me to tell her I wasn’t, in fact, cheating on her. I was baffled but simply said, “Deanna, I haven’t and won’t ever cheat on you.” She said, “Okay,” and I hugged her, and we went back to sleep.

When morning came, we both shared a laugh about the absurdity of that overnight conversation, feeling it had been brought about by exhaustion and perhaps even made worse by hormonal fluctuations. Yet, that was more than ten years ago, and she still remembers how the dream made her feel.

The severity of infidelity is such that even a dream can prompt a series of painful thoughts and unbearable emotions. In our series on the Commandments, we visited God’s Word on the subject, and He is anything but ambiguous.

After commanding the Israelites not to commit adultery, God also established the penalty for violating that command in Leviticus 20 and Deuteronomy 22—execution. In Deuteronomy, adultery is included in a series of capital offenses accompanied by the phrase, “So you shall purge the evil from Israel.”

Jesus teaches that adultery doesn’t have to involve physical contact. It can begin as simply as looking at another person with “lustful intent” (Matthew 5:28). He also identifies sexual immorality as the only biblical ground for divorce (Matthew 19:9).

The point is simple: adultery is incredibly serious. Approximately 15–20 percent of marriages in the U.S. experience infidelity at some point, and unless serious and immediate action is taken, it often destroys the relationship. I had two friends experience this during high school when their parents were unfaithful, and even as a teenager, the effects were impossible to miss.

As Jesus warns, adultery isn’t limited to physical touch; it can begin with a single lingering glance. That’s why it’s up to us to strengthen our marriages, guard our hearts, and build relationships on a strong foundation of faith. So, how do we do that?

Plenty of statistical research exists on this, but successful long-term marriages typically share three common characteristics: deep friendship, mutual respect, and active commitment. I read that as saying one thing: it takes hard work!

Nothing worth pursuing in life comes without challenges along the way, but the reward far outweighs the cost. Marriages that last more than ten years—often considered long-term—are associated with greater life satisfaction, less conflict, and a stronger sense of self-worth, according to one study. The physical, emotional, and psychological benefits are undeniable.

Let’s work today to keep those painful thoughts and feelings confined to weary dreams and far away from reality.


Lee Wilson and his wife, Deanna, have been NorthStar Church members since 2010. They are parents to Everett, Henry and Roselyn. Lee is passionate about sports (Go Braves, Go Dawgs) and has the pleasure to serve on the worship team as a bassist.

 

Digging Deeper – Deal with Conflict Quickly

 

“Come to terms quickly with your accuser while you are going with him to court, lest your accuser hand you over to the judge, and the judge to the guard, and you be put in prison.”

Matthew 5:25 (ESV)


 

DEAL WITH CONFLICT QUICKLY

 

Jesus concludes this section in Matthew with a simple but powerful command: deal with conflict quickly.

Most people know from experience that conflict rarely gets better when ignored. Hurt feelings do not usually disappear on their own. Misunderstandings often grow larger with time. That is why Jesus urges immediate action.

The context of His illustration involves two people on their way to court. Jesus’ point is not merely about legal disputes. He is teaching a larger spiritual principle: Address problems before they become bigger problems. Pursue peace before division becomes permanent. Seek reconciliation before bitterness takes deeper root.

Many people assume that time heals all wounds. While time can help bring perspective, time alone rarely heals relational wounds. In fact, unresolved conflict often becomes more painful the longer it is ignored.

The writer of Hebrews warns us:

“Look after each other so that none of you fails to receive the grace of God. Watch out that no poisonous root of bitterness grows up to trouble you, corrupting many.” (Hebrews 12:15, NLT)

Notice that bitterness never affects only one person. Like a poisonous root, it spreads. It impacts marriages, friendships, families, churches, and even future generations. What begins as a small offense can eventually become a major division.

The Apostle Paul also gives this instruction:

“And don’t sin by letting anger control you. Don’t let the sun go down while you are still angry, for anger gives a foothold to the devil.” (Ephesians 4:26–27, NLT)

Paul understood what Jesus was teaching. Anger that lingers creates opportunities for greater damage. The longer we hold onto it, the more influence it gains over our thoughts, attitudes, and actions. Peacemaking is not passive. It requires intentional effort, humility, courage, and grace.

There were two brothers who farmed neighboring properties. For years, they worked side by side and enjoyed a close relationship. Then a disagreement arose over a piece of land. Harsh words were exchanged, and eventually they stopped speaking altogether. Months passed. The distance between them grew. What started as a relatively small disagreement became a deep divide.

One day, a traveling carpenter stopped by and asked for work. One brother pointed toward the creek separating the properties and said, “I never want to see my brother again. Build me a fence.”

The carpenter agreed.

When the work was finished, the farmer was shocked. Instead of building a fence, the carpenter had built a bridge. As the farmer stood there staring at the bridge, he saw his brother walking toward him from the other side. Both men met in the middle, embraced, and restored a relationship that pride had nearly destroyed.

Every day we choose whether to build fences or bridges. Jesus calls His followers to be bridge builders.

The gospel itself is the greatest example of reconciliation. Our sin created a separation between us and God. Yet instead of abandoning us, God sent His Son to build a bridge through the cross. Jesus reconciled us to God at great personal cost.

Because we have received reconciliation, we are called to pursue reconciliation.

Because Jesus reconciled us to God, we can pursue reconciliation with others.

Have you been building a fence or a bridge in a difficult relationship? What step can you take this week to pursue peace?


Steve Roach serves as the Pastor of Spiritual Growth at NorthStar Church. He and his wife, Amy, live in Acworth and have three girls, Olivia, Sydney, and Hayley and one son, Colton.  He enjoys watching sports and spending time with his family.

Digging Deeper – The Grace We’ve Received is the Grace We Extend

 

“Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven you.”

Ephesians 4:32 (NLT)


 

THE GRACE WE’VE RECEIVED IS THE GRACE WE EXTEND

 

One of the clearest signs that the gospel has transformed our hearts is our willingness to forgive others. Jesus knew that every one of us would be hurt by people. We will be disappointed, betrayed, overlooked, criticized, and misunderstood. Living in a broken world guarantees broken relationships. The question is not whether we will be hurt. The question is how we will respond when we are.

Many people believe forgiveness is primarily about the person who wronged them. But Scripture teaches that forgiveness begins with remembering what God has done for us.

The Apostle Paul tells us to forgive “just as God, through Christ, has forgiven you.” In other words, our forgiveness of others flows from God’s forgiveness of us.

This is exactly what Jesus taught in the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant in Matthew 18:21–35. A servant was forgiven an enormous debt he could never repay. Yet, after receiving mercy, he refused to show mercy to someone who owed him far less. Jesus’ point was clear: People who have truly experienced God’s grace should become people who extend God’s grace.

Forgiveness does not mean pretending the hurt never happened. It does not mean excusing sin or ignoring wrongdoing. Forgiveness means releasing our right to seek revenge and placing justice in God’s hands.

Romans 12:19 (NLT) says:

“Dear friends, never take revenge. Leave that to the righteous anger of God.”

When we refuse to forgive, bitterness often becomes our constant companion. We replay conversations. We relive offenses. We carry wounds long after the event has passed. Meanwhile, the person who hurt us may have moved on entirely. Forgiveness does not change the past, but it can free us from allowing the past to control our future.

Corrie ten Boom survived the horrors of a Nazi concentration camp during World War II. Years after the war, she was speaking at a church when she recognized a former prison guard who had been involved in the suffering of countless prisoners, including members of her own family. After the service, the man approached her and asked for forgiveness, explaining that he had become a Christian. Corrie later wrote that every emotion within her resisted forgiving him. She prayed silently, asking God for help. Then she extended her hand and offered forgiveness.

She later said that, in that moment, she experienced God’s grace in a deeper way than ever before. Forgiveness did not erase the pain of the past, but it demonstrated the power of the gospel in the present.

The gospel reminds us that we owed a debt we could never pay. Yet Jesus willingly paid it for us through His death and resurrection. Because we have received mercy, we can extend mercy. Because we have been forgiven, we can forgive.

Is there someone you are struggling to forgive? How does remembering God’s forgiveness toward you help you forgive others? Are you holding on to a desire for revenge or justice that needs to be surrendered to God? What step could you take today toward extending grace to someone who has hurt you?

 


Steve Roach serves as the Pastor of Spiritual Growth at NorthStar Church. He and his wife, Amy, live in Acworth and have three girls, Olivia, Sydney, and Hayley and one son, Colton.  He enjoys watching sports and spending time with his family.

The Power of Community

 

“Jesus took Peter and James and John, and He became anguished and distressed. He told them, “My soul is crushed with grief to the point of death. Stay here and keep watch with Me.”

Matthew 26:37-38


 

THE POWER OF COMMUNITY

We live in a culture that celebrates self-sufficiency. We say, “I’ve got this,” “I’m strong,” and “I don’t need anyone.” However, Scripture and life itself prove the opposite. When the storms hit, when grief crushes your soul, when temptation feels overwhelming, or when doubt and despair close in, trying to stand alone is a recipe for failure. It’s not a matter of if—but when.

In the Garden of Gethsemane, on the eve of His crucifixion, Jesus faced the greatest trial of His earthly life. The weight of humanity’s sin, the agony of the cross, and the separation from God the Father pressed down on Him until His soul was overwhelmed with sorrow.

In that moment of raw vulnerability, the Son of God did not go it alone. He intentionally brought Peter, James, and John—His inner circle of disciples—close to Him. He asked them to stay, watch, and stand with Him, yet they fell asleep. The lesson is that even Jesus sought community at His lowest point.

Do not miss that!

Jesus, who was perfect and never sinned, still sought the presence of trusted friends in His darkest hour. How much more do we, who are weak and flawed, need the same?

Without trusted, meaningful relationships, we become easy prey for the enemy. Isolation breeds discouragement, distorted thinking, hidden sin, and eventual collapse. When life gets hard (and it will), lone rangers fall.

God designed you for community. You are stronger together. The same Jesus who invited His closest friends into His pain also calls you to build deep, honest, trusted relationships with people who will:

• Pray with you.

• Speak truth to you.

• Hold you accountable when you’re tempted to compromise.

• Encourage you when you feel like giving up.

These aren’t casual acquaintances. They are brothers and sisters in Christ who love you enough to walk with you through “Gethsemane seasons.”

Listen closely: Don’t wait until crisis hits to build your inner circle. Start now. Invest in a few trusted believers who are committed to following Jesus.

Be vulnerable. Share your struggles. Ask hard questions. Offer the same support in return. Join or form a small group. Find a trusted accountability partner. Make time for authentic relationships, not just surface-level church attendance.

If Jesus prioritized community in His greatest hour of distress, we have no excuse to live an isolated life.

 

Love God. Love People. Live Sent.

Be Worth Being.

Kevin


 

Kevin Burrell has worked in professional baseball as both a player and MLB scout for the past 45 years, and currently serves as an area scouting supervisor. Kevin was drafted in the 1st round of the 1981 free agent amateur draft (25th selection overall), and played ten years of professional baseball with four different organizations. He and his wife, Valerie, live in Sharpsburg, Ga.

Digging Deeper – If God Brings Someone to Mind, My Next Step is Clear

 

“So if you are offering your gift at the altar and there remember that your brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and go. First be reconciled to your brother, and then come and offer your gift.”

Matthew 5:23-24 (ESV)


 

IF GOD BRINGS SOMEONE TO MIND, MY NEXT STEP IS CLEAR

These verses contain some of the most surprising words Jesus ever spoke.

Imagine standing at the altar in the temple, preparing to offer a sacrifice to God. For a Jewish person, this was one of the most sacred acts of worship possible. Yet Jesus says that if you remember a broken relationship while worshiping, stop what you’re doing. Leave the gift. Leave the altar. Go pursue reconciliation.

Jesus is teaching us something important about God’s priorities.

God cares deeply about worship, but He also cares deeply about relationships. In fact, Jesus teaches that pursuing reconciliation is so important that it should not be delayed. The Pharisees were experts at religious activity, but many neglected the condition of their relationships. Jesus refuses to separate the two.

Notice the action words in these verses: remember, leave, go, first be reconciled, then come and offer. None of these words suggest delay. None of them suggest waiting until the timing feels better. Jesus calls for immediate action.

Sometimes during a sermon, a Bible study, or even during our personal devotional time, a particular person comes to mind. We remember a conversation that went badly. We remember a relationship that has been strained. We remember someone we hurt or someone we need to forgive. Often, we try to push those thoughts away. Yet Jesus says those moments may be the Holy Spirit prompting us to take a step toward peace.

Romans 12:18 (NLT) says, “Do all that you can to live in peace with everyone.” Notice that Paul does not say we are responsible for the other person’s response. We cannot control how others react. We cannot force reconciliation. But we can take responsibility for our part. We can make the call. We can send the text. We can ask for forgiveness. We can extend grace.

There was once a man who carried bitterness toward a former friend for nearly ten years. Every time he saw that person’s name or heard someone mention it, anger rose inside him. One Sunday during church, he felt strongly impressed that he needed to reach out. He resisted at first, convincing himself that too much time had passed. Finally, he made the call.

The conversation lasted less than thirty minutes. Both men apologized. Both admitted they had allowed pride to keep them apart. Years of tension disappeared in a single conversation. Later, he said, “The hardest part wasn’t the phone call. The hardest part was waiting ten years to make it.”

How many broken relationships linger because someone is waiting for the other person to make the first move? Jesus calls His followers to take the initiative.

After all, that is exactly what God did for us. Romans 5:8 tells us that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us. God did not wait for us to move toward Him. He moved toward us first. Because Jesus pursued reconciliation with us, we can pursue reconciliation with others.

Has God brought a specific person to mind while reading this devotion? Is there a phone call, text message, conversation, or apology that needs to happen? What step of reconciliation can you take today?

 


Steve Roach serves as the Pastor of Spiritual Growth at NorthStar Church. He and his wife, Amy, live in Acworth and have three girls, Olivia, Sydney, and Hayley and one son, Colton.  He enjoys watching sports and spending time with his family.

Digging Deeper – Every Person Bears God’s Image

 

“So God created human beings in his own image. In the image of God he created them; male and female he created them.”

Genesis 1:27 (NLT)


 

EVERY PERSON BEARS GOD’S IMAGE

The reason murder is wrong is that every human being is created in the image of God. That truth gives every person dignity, worth, and value. Whether rich or poor, young or old, successful or struggling, every human life matters because every human life reflects something about its Creator.

This is why Jesus takes anger and contempt so seriously. When we harbor hatred toward another person, we are directing that hatred toward someone made in God’s image. When we insult, belittle, mock, or demean another person, we fail to recognize the value God has placed on them.

James addresses this issue directly when he writes about our tongue: “Sometimes it praises our Lord and Father, and sometimes it curses those who have been made in the image of God. And so blessing and cursing come pouring out of the same mouth. Surely, my brothers and sisters, this is not right!” (James 3:9–10, NLT)

James reminds us that it is inconsistent to worship God on Sunday while tearing down people made in His image on Monday. God values people, and He calls His followers to do the same.

This truth affects far more than physical violence. It impacts how we speak, how we treat people, how we engage online, how we respond to those who disagree with us, and even how we think about those who have hurt us. Jesus is teaching us that the sixth commandment is ultimately about valuing people the way God values people.

From the moment of conception in the womb to the final moments of life, every person bears God’s image and possesses God-given worth. That includes the difficult neighbor, the coworker who frustrates you, the family member who hurt you, and the stranger who cut you off in traffic.

A museum visitor accidentally brushed against a painting and caused a small tear in the canvas. The visitor immediately panicked because he knew the artwork was worth millions of dollars. What made the painting valuable was not the canvas or the paint itself. Those things merely cost a few dollars. What made the painting valuable was that it had been created by a famous artist. Its value came from the artist who created it.

In a much greater way, our value comes from our Creator. Every person is valuable because every person bears the image of God. When we remember who created people, it changes how we treat them.

The next time you find yourself becoming frustrated with someone, pause and remember: This person is an image bearer of God. They may not act like it. They may not deserve your kindness. But neither did we deserve God’s grace, and yet He extended it to us through Christ.

The gospel reminds us that Jesus died not only for people who are easy to love but also for people who are difficult to love. As followers of Jesus, we are called to see people through the lens of God’s grace rather than through the lens of our frustration.

Who in your life is most difficult for you to view as an image bearer of God? How would your relationships change if you intentionally viewed every person as someone created in God’s image?


Steve Roach serves as the Pastor of Spiritual Growth at NorthStar Church. He and his wife, Amy, live in Acworth and have three girls, Olivia, Sydney, and Hayley and one son, Colton.  He enjoys watching sports and spending time with his family.

Digging Deeper – Beware of Anger Taking Root

 

“But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother will be liable to judgment.”

Matthew 5:22 (ESV)


 

BEWARE OF ANGER TAKING ROOT

Most people read the sixth commandment, “You must not murder” (Exodus 20:13, NLT), and quickly conclude that they are doing pretty well. After all, most of us have never taken another person’s life. Yet Jesus takes this commandment much deeper than our actions and points directly to our hearts.

In Matthew 5, Jesus confronts the self-righteous thinking of the Pharisees. They believed they were righteous because they had avoided the outward act of murder. Jesus shows them—and us—that murder begins long before a weapon is ever picked up. Murder begins in the heart. Anger, bitterness, resentment, and contempt are the roots from which destructive actions grow.

Jesus teaches that God is concerned not only with what our hands do but also with what our hearts desire. A person can appear calm and respectable on the outside while carrying deep hostility on the inside. We may never physically harm someone, yet we can replay offenses in our minds, nurse old wounds, and secretly wish harm on those who have hurt us. Jesus says these attitudes matter because they reveal the true condition of our hearts.

The Apostle Paul echoes this truth in Ephesians 4:31–32 (NLT): “Get rid of all bitterness, rage, anger, harsh words, and slander, as well as all types of evil behavior. Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God, through Christ, has forgiven you.” Notice that Paul doesn’t simply tell us to suppress anger. He tells us to remove it and replace it with kindness, compassion, and forgiveness. Why? Because bitterness grows if left untreated. Anger rarely stays contained. It spreads into our words, our attitudes, our relationships, and eventually into our spiritual lives.

A man carried a small notebook in his pocket. Every time someone offended him, he wrote down the person’s name along with what they had done. Years later, the notebook was full. The man remembered every offense, every slight, and every insult. He had become an expert at keeping a record of wrongs.

One day, a friend asked him, “How heavy is that notebook?”

The man laughed and said, “Almost nothing.”

His friend replied, “Then why does carrying it seem to weigh down your entire life?”

The notebook was small, but the bitterness it represented had become a crushing burden.

Many of us carry notebooks like that in our hearts. We replay conversations, remember hurts, and hold onto resentment. Yet Jesus invites us to lay those burdens down. The gospel reminds us that we have been forgiven far more than we will ever be asked to forgive. Because Christ has extended grace to us, we can extend grace to others.

Is there any anger, bitterness, or resentment taking root in your heart? Is there someone you need to forgive today?


Steve Roach serves as the Pastor of Spiritual Growth at NorthStar Church. He and his wife, Amy, live in Acworth and have three girls, Olivia, Sydney, and Hayley and one son, Colton.  He enjoys watching sports and spending time with his family.