Thoughts for All Saints’ Day

Jesus’ words in Luke 6:20–31 turn the world on its head. Blessed are you who are poor, for yours is the Kingdom of God. They’re part of what we call the Beatitudes, and they paint a picture of a kingdom that honours humility, mercy, and love over wealth, power, and pride. On All Saints’ Day, we remember the holy ones who’ve lived out this upside-down way of life, those who’ve loved in ways the world rarely notices, and who’ve trusted God’s promises even when life was hard.

Jesus blesses those who hunger, who weep, who are excluded and insulted because of him. It’s not that pain or poverty are good in themselves, but that God’s presence transforms them. The saints remind us that faith doesn’t shield us from suffering, it gives us eyes to see beyond it. They knew that joy doesn’t come from having everything, but from belonging to God. They believed that kindness and forgiveness weren’t optional extras, they were the shape of holiness itself.

When Jesus says, Love your enemies, do good to those who hate you, bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you, he’s not offering pious advice; he’s describing how heaven looks when it breaks into earth. The saints, both famous and forgotten, have taken those words seriously. They’ve broken cycles of vengeance with compassion. They’ve turned the other cheek not in weakness, but in strength. They’ve lived the Golden Rule – Do to others as you would have them do to you.

All Saints’ Day isn’t just about remembering those who’ve gone before, it’s about hearing the call to join them. Holiness isn’t reserved for the perfect, it’s the daily choice to live with grace in a graceless world. As we give thanks for the communion of saints, we’re reminded that we, too, are part of that communion: ordinary people, blessed and broken, learning to love as Jesus loves.

Rejoice in that day and leap for joy, because great is your reward in heaven. May those words lift us, inspire us, and remind us that the Kingdom of God is already among us, hidden in mercy, revealed in love, and alive in every saint who dares to follow Christ’s way.

Following the Ancient Way

The Bible tells a timeless story of the human spirit’s journey toward God. It begins in Eden, where humankind walked in harmony with its Creator, and continues through exile, covenant, and redemption. Though that first closeness was broken by disobedience, God’s love never withdrew. A promise of restoration was planted even in the soil of the Fall, it grew through the live of the prophets, and bloomed in the life of Jesus Christ.

Throughout Scripture, God’s people stand at crossroads, choosing between faith and fear, obedience, and rebellion. The Israelites faced the Red Sea, Elijah stood before the prophets of Baal, and Jeremiah cried, Stand at the crossroads and look; ask for the ancient paths, ask where the good way is, and walk in it, and you will find rest for your souls. (Jeremiah 6:16). Yet time and again, the people said, We will not walk in it. Their refusal led to exile, a symbol of spiritual disconnection that echoes every time we turn away from God’s ways.

But grace always waits at the crossroads. Jesus came as the “good way” made flesh, calling us to follow him through the narrow gate that leads to life. He invites the weary and burdened to come and find rest, not just as a feeling, but as a deep peace rooted in restored relationship. The early church learned this truth anew when they chose inclusion over exclusion, grace over law, love over fear.

Our journey of faith still unfolds in daily choices; to listen or ignore, to trust or resist, to walk in the ancient paths of mercy and truth. Each moment of prayer, forgiveness, and quiet obedience is another step toward home. God’s word remains a lamp to our feet and a light to our path, guiding us when the road is unclear.

At every crossroads, he still whispers, this is the way; walk in it. And when we do, we find what Jeremiah promised, rest for our souls.

God’s Promise of Renewal

There’s a moment in Jeremiah when the tone shifts from lament to hope, from exile to promise. In Chapter 31:27-34, God speaks of planting again, people and animals, life and laughter. It’s a turning point in Israel’s story, but it’s also something deeper: a vision of renewal that stretches across time, reaching right into the heart of biblical prophecy.

The days are coming, declares the Lord, when I will make a new covenant… I will put my law in their minds and write it on their hearts. This isn’t about tablets of stone or broken promises; it’s about intimacy. God is moving closer, rewriting the relationship not in ink or ritual, but in love. It’s the same longing that runs through the prophets, the hope that one day humanity won’t just follow God, but know God, in the marrow of our being.

In exile, Israel had learned what it meant to lose everything familiar. Yet out of that loss came revelation. God wasn’t confined to the temple, nor limited by geography or history. The new covenant Jeremiah spoke of finds its fullness in Jesus, who took the scattered fragments of humanity and wove them into something whole. Through him, forgiveness isn’t a theory but a pulse, alive in every act of grace, every whispered prayer of return.

When we fail, when the world feels exiled from its better self, this prophecy breathes again. It tells us that restoration isn’t about going back, it’s about being made new. God’s word, written not on scrolls but on hearts, continues to shape us quietly, faithfully, from the inside out – until knowing him becomes as natural as breathing.

I will be their God, and they will be my people. That promise still holds, tender and unbroken.

Stop Taking Things Personally

Constantly taking things personally can be very destructive to our mental health and wellbeing. When you get too attached to how others think or feel about you, it can cause anxiety and hurt feelings. This makes it hard to talk to people and resolve conflicts.

When you don’t tie your self-worth to what others think, you can think more clearly and communicate better. This helps you handle tough conversations and maintain healthy relationships. When you’re not trying to be right or be liked, you can listen better and respond with kindness. This helps calm down tense situations and creates a positive atmosphere. Think of feedback as a chance to learn and grow, not as a personal attack. This helps you become more resilient and open to new ideas.

Additionally, from a faith perspective, when you start to see yourself through God’s eyes rather than through the eyes of others, everything changes. You remember that you’re already loved, already chosen, already enough. As the psalmist wrote, I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made (Psalm 139:14). When your confidence rests in that truth, other people’s opinions lose their power. You can listen without fear, speak without pride, and forgive without resentment. Each moment becomes an opportunity to reflect Christ’s gentleness and strength, trusting that your worth is secure in him, not in what anyone else says or thinks.

So, try to avoid getting caught up in drama and negativity. Focus on your own thoughts, feelings, and actions. This helps you live a more authentic and happy life, free from others’ expectations.

A New Way of Living

Paul’s words in Romans 12:1–2 are like a doorway into a new way of living: Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, in view of God’s mercy, to offer your bodies as a living sacrifice, holy and pleasing to God – this is your true and proper worship. Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you’ll be able to test and approve what God’s will is – his good, pleasing and perfect will.

Here Paul doesn’t speak of worship as an event, a song, or a moment in church. He calls it a life. Worship isn’t confined to Sunday; it’s the offering of ourselves – our bodies, our choices, our energy, our time – to God every day. And notice how he begins: in view of God’s mercy. We don’t give ourselves to earn God’s love, but because we’ve already received it. Our sacrifice flows from gratitude, not fear.

Paul also recognises that we’re always being shaped by something. The world presses its patterns onto us: self-centredness, consumerism, the chase for success and approval. Left unchecked, these moulds quietly define how we think and live. But Paul says there’s another way. Transformation comes as our minds are renewed – through Scripture, prayer, fellowship, and the Spirit’s gentle work. This is no quick fix. It’s a lifelong reshaping, like clay in the hands of a patient potter.

The promise is beautiful. As our minds are renewed, we begin to discern God’s will, not as a riddle to be solved but as a life that tastes of goodness, delight, and perfection. God’s will isn’t meant to crush us but to set us free, to align us with the one who knows us best.

So today, what might it look like for you to offer yourself as a living sacrifice? Perhaps it’s an act of kindness unseen by others, a choice for integrity when compromise would be easier, or a few quiet minutes of prayer instead of another scroll through your phone. Each moment offered to God becomes worship. Each small surrender allows the Spirit to renew you. And step by step, you find yourself walking in the rhythm of God’s good and perfect will.

Seeds of the Kingdom

When Jesus told the Parable of the Sower in Matthew 13, he spoke of seeds that fell on rocky ground, sprang up quickly, and then withered for lack of moisture. TENDER PLANTS can look promising, yet without hidden strength they don’t last when the heat of trial comes. Jesus explained that these are people who receive the word with joy, but in times of testing they fall away. Faith isn’t proven by enthusiasm alone. What matters is whether God’s word sinks deeply into us, shaping our habits, convictions, and choices.

Jesus added, Consider carefully how you listen. Whoever has will be given more. To move beyond the fragility of tender plants, we need patient, careful listening. The heart is like soil; it must be open and prepared, or even the brightest new growth will quickly fade.

Other seed fell on good soil. It grew, flourished, and produced a harvest a hundred times more than was sown. The FERTILE SOIL represents those who hear the word, retain it, and by persevering produce a crop. It’s not a matter of hearing once and moving on, but of treasuring the word daily, returning to it repeatedly, letting it nourish every part of life.

The promise of abundant harvest is full of hope. When the gospel finds a ready heart, its impact overflows beyond the individual. A fertile life blesses others: kindness spreads, forgiveness softens hard places, generosity inspires, and hope multiplies. The fruit isn’t ours to boast of, it’s the Spirit’s work in us. Our role is to keep the soil of our lives soft and receptive, through prayer, humility, and obedience.

The contrast between shallow ground and DEEP ROOTS is striking. Roots are unseen, hidden beneath the surface, yet they enable a tree to withstand storms and bear fruit. In the same way, Jesus calls us not only to hear his word but to let it go deep. Roots grow as we practise what we hear, when the word moves from our ears into our hands and feet.

Jesus linked this with light, No one lights a lamp and hides it in a jar or puts it under a bed (Luke 8:16). A life rooted in the word inevitably shines. Deep roots produce visible witness, just as strong trees give shade and fruit.

So, the Parable of the Sower asks, what kind of soil am I offering today?

Tender plants will wither, but fertile soil, with deep roots will bear fruit that lasts.

Lord Jesus, you scatter your word like seed across every field of life. Sometimes my heart is hard, sometimes distracted, sometimes shallow. Yet you never give up sowing. Make my heart fertile soil, open to your Spirit’s work. Send roots deep into your love, so that when trials come I may stand firm, and may my life shine with your light, bearing fruit that blesses others and glorifies you. Amen.

Tears That Rebuild Foundations

The Book of Nehemiah opens (Nehemiah 1:1-11) not with walls being rebuilt, but with a heart breaking. When Nehemiah hears that Jerusalem’s walls are in ruins and its people are in disgrace, he doesn’t shrug it off as someone else’s problem. He sits down, weeps, fasts, and turns his whole being towards God. His prayer isn’t polished or detached, it’s raw with grief and yet rooted in deep trust. He confesses his nation’s sins, even naming himself and his family as part of the failure. And then he clings to God’s promise, if the people return, God will gather them back.

There’s something beautiful and searching in that. Nehemiah shows us that before restoration comes prayer, before building comes brokenness, before action comes humility. He doesn’t just mourn what’s been lost, he dares to believe that God’s covenant love hasn’t run dry. The ruins of Jerusalem might speak of shame and defeat, but Nehemiah’s prayer leans into a greater word: hope.

When we look at the world, or at parts of our own lives, and see what feels like ruins; relationships fractured, communities divided, faith worn thin. It’s tempting to despair. Yet Nehemiah reminds us that God listens to those who cry out, that his mercy is bigger than our failures, and that even scattered stones can be gathered into something strong again. As Paul later wrote, when I am weak, then I am strong (2 Corinthians 12:10), for God’s strength is revealed in our dependence.

So let Nehemiah’s first response be ours too: not a rush to fix, but a turning to God with tears, confession, and trust. For in prayer, the rebuilding begins.

See also: Ezra & Nehemiah

Into His Courts with Praise

There are psalms that whisper comfort, psalms that lament in the shadows, and psalms that roar with joy. Psalm 100 is one of the latter, a jubilant summons to lift our voices in praise. It doesn’t speak of quiet meditation or hushed reverence, but of gladness, song, and overflowing thanksgiving. It’s as if the psalmist is saying: Come on, everyone, join the choir, join the dance, lift up your hearts.

We’re reminded to worship the Lord with gladness because he made us and we belong to him. That’s where our joy takes root. We’re not lost wanderers in an indifferent universe, but cherished sheep under a faithful shepherd’s care. To know that we’re his is to discover both identity and home.

The psalm beckons us further: Enter his gates with thanksgiving and his courts with praise. In the temple days, pilgrims would come streaming into Jerusalem, hearts and voices full of song. Today, the invitation is just as real. Every time we draw near, whether through prayer at the kitchen table, hymns in church, or even a whispered ‘thank you’ on a morning run, we step into God’s courts. Gratitude is our ticket of entry, praise the language of belonging.

The psalm closes with the surest anchor of all, For the Lord is good and his love endures for ever; his faithfulness continues through all generations. What steadies us in changing times is God’s unchanging character. His goodness isn’t fickle, his love doesn’t run dry, his faithfulness doesn’t skip a generation. What our grandparents knew, what we know, what our children and grandchildren will know, the same God holds us all.

The challenge is simple yet searching, do we let thanksgiving set the rhythm of our lives? Or do we allow complaint, worry, or weariness to be louder? Psalm 100 invites us to practice joy, to live gratefully, and to trust the love that will never let us go.

The Uplook of Faith

I lift my eyes to the hills, the psalmist begins, and in those words you can almost feel the ache of the soul searching for help. The hills might have looked beautiful, but they were also places of danger, full of shadows and uncertainty. And yet the psalm doesn’t linger on the fear, it pivots quickly to truth: my help comes from the Lord, the Maker of heaven and earth. In that shift lies the heart of faith, the quiet courage to trust that the Creator who set the stars in their place is the same one who watches over every step you take. Psalm 121.

This psalm is a song of journey, perhaps sung by pilgrims making their way to Jerusalem, weary and vulnerable on the road. They would remind one another that the God who never slumbers or sleeps is not distracted, not indifferent, but awake to every danger, every stumble, every long night of the soul. He is your shade at your right hand, says the psalmist, the intimate picture of protection so close you can almost feel his presence like a cool shadow on a burning day.

And then comes the promise, repeated with gentle insistence: the Lord will keep you. Not once, not sometimes, but always. He will keep your life. He will keep your coming and your going, both now and for evermore. It’s a promise that stretches across the whole landscape of time, enfolding both the small ordinary steps and the heavy unknowns with the same faithful care.

When you read these words, let them breathe hope into the places where your strength feels thin. Remember that the God who made heaven and earth doesn’t grow weary, and he hasn’t lost sight of you. Whatever road lies ahead, whether steep with challenge or shaded with uncertainty, he is the keeper of your soul, and his watch is constant, tender, and unending.

Christian Love Without Boundaries

Probably no story from the lips of Jesus is more familiar than the Good Samaritan, yet its beauty can blind us to its sting. Jesus told it in reply to a lawyer who asked, “Who is my neighbour?” The lawyer wanted to limit responsibility, to justify avoiding certain people. Instead of argument, Jesus gave a story that left no room for debate.

He took the man, and us, to the dangerous Jericho Road, showing someone beaten and left for dead. A priest and a Levite passed by, men expected to help but who chose not to. Then came the shock: the rescuer was a Samaritan, one despised by Jews. The Samaritan saw, had compassion, and acted. His mercy broke through centuries of hatred. Luke 10:25-37

That hatred stretched back to the Assyrian invasion of the northern kingdom in 720 BC, when those left behind intermarried with foreigners. To strict Jews this was unforgivable, and when the exiles later returned from Babylon the Samaritans were rejected as corrupt. A rival temple on Mount Gerizim deepened the division, and by Jesus’ day the hostility between Jew and Samaritan was centuries old and bitter.

The Samaritan’s compassion mirrors God’s love in Christ. Humanity lies broken by sin, and Jesus stoops to lift us, binding our wounds and restoring life. That’s the deeper meaning: the Son of God came near, not with words only, but with saving action.

To hear the story afresh, picture a young man attacked in a city street. A respected leader drives past, a minister hurries on, afraid. Then someone society might scorn, a refugee, or a young Muslim woman, stops, tends his wounds, calls for help, and waits with him. That’s the parable alive today: love that crosses boundaries of race, religion, and status, showing mercy simply because someone is in need.

Jesus ends with the simple command: “Go and do likewise.” He makes it plain, love doesn’t draw boundaries or ask, “Who is my neighbour?” It doesn’t make excuses. Yet we can’t imitate the Samaritan by sheer effort. We need the love of God within us, transforming us until mercy flows naturally from our hearts.

The parable is both challenge and gift. It tells us that every wounded soul is our neighbour, and that God himself has first been neighbour to us. Having received his compassion, we’re called to let it shape our lives, so that at any turn in the road we may meet need with love.