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September 5, 2025

The Difficult Words of God

Derrick Scott III   |   Read Psalm 139:13-18

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Lectionary Week
September 1–7, 2025
Scripture Overview

While God’s words may sometimes be difficult to hear, God speaks with deep honesty that is important for God’s followers to hear if they seek to grow. Jeremiah brings another warning of impending judgment. If the people will not turn to the Lord, God will break the nation and reshape it, just as a potter breaks down and reshapes clay on a wheel. The psalmist praises God for God’s intimate knowledge of each one of us. Even from the moment of conception, God knows us and has a plan for our lives. Philemon is often overlooked, but it packs a punch. A text that some have used in the past to justify slavery teaches a very different message. Paul warns Philemon not to enslave Onesimus again but to receive him back as a brother. Secular power structures have no place in God’s kingdom. In Luke, Jesus uses striking examples to teach us that the life of faith cannot be lived well with half-hearted commitment.

Questions and Suggestions for Reflection

• Read Jeremiah 18:1-11. How does the image of the potter point to the Creator’s intentions of loving and shaping us?
• Read Psalm 139:1-6, 13-18. God knows you better than you know yourself, yet God has given you the ability to make your own decisions. How do you respond to God?
• Read Philemon 1:1-21. Holy pressure can encourage someone to do the right thing, but where is the balance between not enough and too much holy pressure? What examples of holy pressure do you see in the world today?
• Read Luke 14:25-33. What cost have you paid to follow Jesus? How has God uniquely moved in you to produce radical change?

Respond by posting a prayer.

Psalm 139:13-18

13 You are the one who created my innermost parts; you knit me together while I was still in my mother’s womb. 14 I give thanks to you that I was marvelously set apart. Your works are wonderful—I know that very well. 15 My bones weren’t hidden from you when I was being put together in a secret place, when I was being woven together in the deep parts of the earth. 16 Your eyes saw my embryo, and on your scroll every day was written that was being formed for me, before any one of them had yet happened. 17 God, your plans are incomprehensible to me! Their total number is countless! 18 If I tried to count them—they outnumber grains of sand! If I came to the very end—I’d still be with you.

Unless otherwise indicated, scripture quotations are from the Common English Bible. Copyright © 2011 Common English Bible. Used by permission.

Today’s psalm echoes the words spoken in Jeremiah 1:4-10. The psalmist speaks of a God who creates our “innermost parts” and weaves us together in the deep parts of the earth. God sees us and loves us before we do anything. God has been hands-on in creating us. The word...

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God, remind me that your words are not detached from your knowledge and love of me. Amen.


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