Tuesday - February 14, 2023

Kris Baker

SCRIPTURE


James 2:12-13


Speak and act as those who are going to be judged by the law that gives freedom, because judgment without mercy will be shown to anyone who has not been merciful. Mercy triumphs over judgment.


WORDS OF HOPE


What’s love got to do with it? Valentine’s Day, that is. Today is a wash of pink and red, chocolate and flowers, teddy bears and hearts, romantic dinners and declarations of abiding love. Why do we set a single day aside for these things? (Chocolate and dinner are good every day!) And, If we love someone so deeply, shouldn’t we show that love daily? Why do we celebrate love on February 14th, Valentine’s Day?


Today is actually Saint Valentine’s Day. The designation as a Saint’s day suggests that February 14th is a significant day to the church. As is the case with many saints in the early church, details about their life and work are sketchy. Over time, the lives of several different men by the name Valentine have been mixed up and confused. Through the centuries, the stories about the good works associated the figure Saint Valentine have become a combination of recorded facts, assumptions, and folklore.


Valentine was likely a clergyman of the Christian church during the third century. He eventually was held under house arrest in Rome for spreading the word of Jesus. Valentine began talking of his faith with the judge, Asterius. Skeptical, but willing to give Valentine and his faith a chance, Judge Asterius asked Valentine to cure his daughter of her blindness, promising that if Valentine could indeed perform such “a miracle” Asterius would do whatever Valentine asked. Valentine laid hands on the young girl and prayed. The darkness faded. Her sight was restored. Since Asterius told Valentine he would do what Valentine asked if the girl was made to see, Valentine said he must destroy the idols around his home, fast for three days, and be baptized in the name of Jesus. Asterius was more than happy to comply. Not only was he baptized, but so were dozens of his family members.


Valentine was again arrested in Rome for continuing to share his Christianity. This time, he was brought before Emperor Claudius II. The emperor seemed to sympathize with Valentine until he tried to convert Claudius to Christianity. Claudius was not as open-minded as was Asterius; thus, Valentine was sentenced to death. Legend says that on the night before he was executed, Valentine wrote a letter to that daughter of Asterius. He signed it, “from your Valentine.” He was martyred on February 14, 269.


From this story comes our modern-day tradition of sending cards signed in the same way. The interesting thing is that nowhere in this story is the relationship between Valentine and Asterius’s daughter ever described as a romantic love. Valentine believed that his faith in the


power of Jesus was enough to heal the girl’s eyes. The love story here is not between him and the girl. It is between Valentine and Jesus. Valentine was so committed to his love of Jesus that he continued to share it with the world. Even with those who did not want to hear it. If the accounts are true, it was Valentine’s love of Jesus that ultimately cost him his life.


We celebrate our love and the feast day of Saint Valentine by giving flowers and candy. Valentine gave his life for his love.


As you go about your Saint Valentine’s Day today, keep these words close to your heart. “Follow God's example; therefore, as dearly loved children and walk in the way of love, just as Christ loved us and gave himself up for us as a fragrant offering and sacrifice to God.” (Ephesians 5:1)


This is the love we need to celebrate…today and always. And if you have a companion on this journey, may this love be magnified both in your hearts and the hearts of all those you meet on the path.


PRAYER


Come down, O Love divine,

seek thou this soul of mine,

and visit it with thine own ardor glowing;

O Comforter, draw near,

within my heart appear,

and kindle it, thy holy flame bestowing.”


Text by Bianco da Siena (1350-1399), translated by Richard Frederick Littledale (1867)


DEVOTION AUTHOR



Kris Baker, Order of St. Francis and St. Clare



Need More Inspiration? Read our Daily Devotions

By Donald (Luke) Day January 6, 2026
SCRIPTURE Matthew 6:25-27 Therefore, I tell you, do not worry about your life, what you will eat or drink; or about your body, what you will wear. Is not life more important than food, and the body more important than clothes? Look at the birds of the air; they do not sow or reap or store away in barns, and yet your heavenly Father feeds them. Are you not much more valuable than they? Who of you by worrying can add a single hour to his life? WORDS OF HOPE Happy New Year! Who’s ready to do a little house cleaning? When I was young, each church revival service would include my pastor's admonition that we must "clean out every closet in our life and let God's Spirit fill all of our life". To a little boy, it was very dramatic; however, it took teenage years and older experience for that to really have potent meaning. If we are honest, we all have areas of our life in which God does not rule. The entrances to those "closets" are blocked by old junk which we have piled up there for the purpose of keeping those areas private and off-limits from outside change. They're our personal places of unforgiveness, greed, dishonesty, etc. (you can fill in the etc. yourself). We all know that the Holy One is a God of absolute perfection, purity of goodness, forgiveness, love and kindness. And that God wants our lives to manifest as much purity of motive and action as possible for us to achieve. Now, there is the rub... "for us to achieve". Even with our best efforts, by ourselves we usually fail to fling open those closet doors and let the goodness and forgiving light of Christ Jesus flood those spaces of living. It requires divine help and forgiveness for us to unstack and remove the piles of junk (excuses, delays, distractions, etc.) which have blocked God out of those life areas. With the help of divine power, you can pitch out a lot of garbage which is not worthy of a garage sale and thus open wide all aspects of your life to God's presence. The Holy One can work only in areas of life which we make available for the divine living presence! We need to regularly seek out those closeted areas and pray that God's presence will "fill every nook and cranny" of our life! And a brand New Year is the perfect place to start. PRAYER Throughout 2026, may the Living Presence of Christ Jesus fill every nook and cranny of my being to grow me to be a more effective and faithful servant of yours. DEVOTION AUTHOR Donald (Luke) Day Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Dan Peeler January 5, 2026
SCRIPTURE Joshua 1.9 Have I not commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Do not be afraid; do not be discouraged, for the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go. WORDS OF HOPE Today’s Scripture reading wraps up the first chapter of the Book of Joshua and references the transition of the leadership of the ancient Hebrew people after the death of Moses. Joshua had been Moses’ assistant, confidant, and communicator of the commandments throughout most of their wilderness wanderings. He was now given the honor and task of leading them into the Promised Land. Today we interpret the Promised Land in many ways. In Christianity, the Promised Land is spiritually and metaphorically symbolic of divine promises fulfilled. In Judaism and Islam, it is seen as the same divine fulfillment, except literally, and the land they are talking about is the same land. Therein lies the conflict as God-ordained ancestral homes become geopolitical conflict. That was the problem facing Joshua as he was about to step into a much-coveted territory that would begin a 3,000-year long dispute that has yet to see a viable settlement. He had to be strong and brave, without fear, and had to guard against discouragement. To be confident that his God would be with him throughout his journeys and military confrontations within this new homeland he had been promised. How much of the Book of Joshua is fact and how much of it is retro-fitting God’s will into a conflict over territory we can’t ever know, but the Book does teach us that even in what may seem to be an impossible situation we can be encouraged to aspire for the same strength, bravery, courage, and drive that Joshua demonstrated in this book about wars within ourselves and with others. This is Twelfth Night, the last night of Christmastide, and we stand thankful for the gifts of God during the now completed year. As we stand at the beginning of another New Year, as fresh as Joshua was as he received the mantle of Moses, we must remember that eternal promise made to him is the same one made to us today: “the Lord your God will be with you wherever you go.” 2026 is our current Promised Land from God. The rest is up to us. PRAYER God of Promises, thank you for the opportunities, challenges, lessons, and learnings, trials and triumphs of the exciting year before us. May we always carry the assurance that you will be with us wherever we go. Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Dan Peeler Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Charlie C Rose January 2, 2026
SCRIPTURE  Proverbs 22:6 Start children off on the way they should go, and even when they are old they will not turn from it. WORDS OF HOPE On this Friday, January 2nd, the celebrations are still not over for a lot of us since it begins a holiday weekend. But, the holidays are not always a happy time for so many people, but over the years, I have been blessed with the ability to put the bad memories behind me and gravitate toward the things that have warmed the holidays of my life. It’s a New Year, but still Christmastide, and although none of my grandparents are still alive, there are so many “Santa Claus – time” things they did that stick out in my mind. Today we have things like Pinterest to look at all the visuals of what some people call “Vintage Christmas” where we can relive some of our generic favorite memories. But my memories are specific. My maternal grandmother created so many indelible holiday memories, certainly without knowing it. She probably didn’t realize that making granny’s popcorn balls would be a memory that would literally stick with me forever. One year I think she might’ve been behind schedule when she asked all the grandkids to butter up their hands and help her make popcorn balls, which we had enjoyed almost every year when she was alive. It’s amazing what those 15 or 20 minutes did for me as we had been given the honor to help make her famous holiday treat. We felt important, useful! In fact, none of us realizes what a simple smile or friendly gesture does for someone this time of year. We don’t really know what’s going on in somebody else’s world. But my grandmother’s lesson is one that I became very conscious of at this time of my life when I see Sunday school kids I taught years ago, all grown up and out of college, some of them with children of their own. Those kids are the same age their parents were when I had the privilege of being a small part of their lives. I am fortunate to still know many of those kids of yesteryear and hear them reminisce about the good times we had together. My grandmother would never know the warmth she created in my childhood would be my favorite holiday memories today. She taught me, without words, that each of us could be the creators of happy times now that will be the treasures of someone’s future. In this New Year, what is something you or I can do that might forever enhance or change someone else’s life? If we live our lives with Jesus’ love model as our guide, it’s usually not something that we’ll think about ahead of time. That was my grandmother’s way. She loved us. I’m sure sharing those buttery popcorn treat moments we treasure now were her own reward. And she was truly creating many future Happy New Years for the ones she loved. PRAYER May each of us today be someone’s happiest holiday memory tomorrow. Amen. DEVOTION AUTHOR Charlie C. Rose Order of St Francis and St. Clare
By Jonathon McClellan January 1, 2026
SCRIPTURE  2 Corinthians 4.16-18 Therefore, we do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So, we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen, since what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal. WORDS OF HOPE A Poem for the New Year We are Eternal My steps in the sand go very deep. And forgive my defiance, But you are not my god to Tell me otherwise. If a house fly lives for two days, Assuming it dies naturally, Then assuming I die naturally, It is as though millennia are passing. And time, Being relative, No longer matters. Though I see that it matters to you. In this known universe, Countless “trees” seem young and old. But the “forests” are really continuums. See the forest from the trees. How many organisms live and die in Milliseconds? How many stars live and die in Millions of years? Don’t ask, “How long is eternity?” Eternity is how many steps Can be taken in a perfect circle. If you can perceive Your agedness, Then tell me, How does a fly measure time? PRAYER From John 17.3 Now this is eternal life: that they know you, the only true God, and Jesus Christ whom you have sent. Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Jonathon McClellan Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Dan Peeler December 31, 2025
SCRIPTURE Revelation 21.1-2 Then I saw a new heaven and a new earth, for the first heaven and the first earth had passed away, and the sea was no more. And I saw the holy city, the new Jerusalem, coming down out of heaven from God, prepared as a bride adorned for her husband. WORDS OF HOPE Today’s Scripture reading is from the Book of Revelation. It’s been called by several longer titles such as the Revelation of Jesus Christ to Saint John the Divine and incorrectly referred to simply as Revelations (plural). The “John” referred to is undoubtedly not the Gospel writer John who wrote the gospel of Love. Most of the book is about the bad guys being defeated and punished by a variety of angry angels and monstrous composite animals. However, the creators of these daily lectionary readings showed mercy in choosing this New Years’ Eve passage. They skipped to the happy ending. This is apocryphal literature, which was almost always directed to the persecuted masses, and spends a lot of time picturing their oppressors suffering a lot, and finally ends with the victims being much richer and more privileged than their rulers ever were. Revelation is specifically directed to the early Christian churches who, along with the Jews of the first century, had suffered through many years of prejudice, ethnic hatred, Totalitarian rule, and an emperor who was literally worshipped as a god. This idea of their world having “passed away” and replaced by an idyllic new world was standard prophetic language used by Isaiah, the Apostle Paul, and even Jesus on occasion to award their depressed audiences with a glimmer of hope. Isn’t that the way a large percentage of people feel this New Year’s Eve? But, I’ve had similar feelings on this occasion in previous years; regrets for failures, big and small, for things I have done, but usually for things I never got around to doing. Add to that the dissatisfaction with the government, the decrease in civility in our interactions with our neighbors; you know the list. The first century Christians’ lists were much longer. In the days Jesus walked among us, God was thought of as an anthropomorphic deity who sat on a throne above the clouds. Jesus preached that this wasn’t the case, that the Spirit of God was always among us available to guide and inspire us, to forgive us for our shortcomings and teach us to forgive others and ourselves. God would not be seated on a throne descending from above in a golden cloud city. Jesus made that concept archaic. God was beside them then and is beside us now. That knowledge gives us hope for every New Year. PRAYER Forever-present God, thank you on this New Years’ Eve when we can reflect on the state we have made of the world and our lives. May this ending of an old year remind us that there is never an ending to your love and guidance for us as we precede with hope to a better new one. Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Dan Peeler Order of St. Francis and St. Clare
By Carole Anne Sarah December 30, 2025
SCRIPTURE John 15:12 (NIV) My command is this: love each other as I have loved you.  WORDS OF HOPE It’s almost a New Year and time to get back to the basics. Jesus talked about love many times. He lived his life, coming from a place of love and he died for all of us, because he loved. In this scripture, he is saying, I command you to love each other like that! I admit, I am a bit daunted when I face this challenge. As I see it, that leaves no room for me to pick and choose which, among his children, we will love. It leaves no room for us to mete out little bits of love. This is full out, love, as we have never loved before. We cannot count the cost. We cannot just love with our hearts. We have to love with our whole beings. That's a bit overwhelming, but God has provided the miracle of the Holy Spirit to make up for our human weakness. There is no limit to what God can do through us if we let ourselves be challenged beyond limits. I know that I have seen God transform lives, and give hope where there was no hope. I believe God can use committed people who trust him, to create change in our families, our communities and our world. It can happen if we love as Jesus Loves. PRAYER Beloved God, God of Amazing Love, I read your word, and I feel excited and challenged. I feel small when I consider what big things are needed. But I know you, God. I know you will make me brave when I am afraid. I know you will put people in my path who need your love. Help me to do what is needed rather than what I think I can do. Help me to love bigger than I know how to love. Help me to love as you love. I give myself to you. Amen DEVOTION AUTHOR Carole Anne Sarah
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