Friday - May 15, 2026
SCRIPTURE
Micah 6:8
God has told you, O mortal, what is good,
and what does the Lord require of you
but to do justice and to love kindness
and to walk humbly with your God?
WORDS OF HOPE
Faith, Love, and Boundaries
I had a conversation with a woman who came to see me about anxiety but was really asking questions of theology. She believed that to be Christian meant that you must be nice to everyone, no matter how they behaved. She believed that being Christian meant never speaking up for yourself or others, never disagreeing or offering a different opinion, and overlooking other’s bad behavior.
The most insipid, diminutive, ridiculous representation of what it means to follow Jesus can be found in three words: Always be nice.
The world is not always a nice place. People can be selfish and cruel. Injustice and brutality are as real as poverty and homelessness.
Loving Jesus is about following Christ’s example of loving God and others and living out what the prophet Micah described as God’s requirement: “To do justice, love kindness, and walk humbly with God.”
A life that reflects the principled character and leadership of Jesus demonstrates it through gratitude and compassion, humility and service, generosity and self-sacrifice, integrity and—when called for—righteous indignation. Justice must at times be fought for and such struggle demands action. Jesus overturned tables and showed up at the Temple with a whip! (Matthew 21:12-13)
The Apostle Paul described the fruit of the spirit as love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, goodness, faithfulness, gentleness, and self-control. (Galatians 5:22-23) That does not imply a milquetoast existence of passive timidity, nor does it mean never speaking up or speaking out. Paul’s own powerful witness reflects the passion and courage of an abiding faith in God’s desire for justice and righteousness.
Life demands boundaries. Relationships require guard rails. Not all behavior is acceptable. Just as loving parents confront and correct their children when they stray, it is a loving act to intervene in addiction, confront harmful actions, and speak truth to abuse of power.
There is a reason a shepherd carries a staff with a crook. It is not only to lean on, but to correct and defend.
PRAYER
Save us, O God, from puny faith, feeble living, and pathetic discipleship that bears no resemblance to the courageous passion of Jesus. May we demonstrate love with boundaries that we might contain our whims and call out true harm. May it be so. Amen.
DEVOTION AUTHOR
Rev. Dr. Gary Kindley
Pastoral Psychotherapist
drgk.org
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