Verse & Vision | June 3, 2026

Blessed are those who mourn. Not those who have mourned and recovered. Not those who are handling their grief well. Those who mourn – present tense, ongoing, unresolved. The word Jesus uses, *penthountes*, is one of the strongest words for grief in the Greek language. The kind that sits in the body and will not be reasoned away. And the comfort He promises shares its root with *parakletos*, the word He uses in John 14 for the Holy Spirit. The mourner is not promised a quick end to grief. They are promised they will not be in it alone.

The Double Portion: What Shame Is Really Pointing You Toward | Daily Bread

This morning someone very close to me said something that stopped me mid-morning and opened a conversation about one of the most misunderstood experiences in both human psychology and the Christian faith: shame. I considered what shame actually is, what it’s actually for, and why God never intended for us to make it our home.

If you are dealing with shame over your past behavior or choices, make no mistake. Shame is not meant to be wallowed in. It is meant to point us toward conviction and guide us forward into righteousness. It is a signal, not a sentence. A starting line, not a finish line.

God wants to restore you, just as He promises to do for Israel. The question is not whether He is willing. The question is whether you will allow Him to work in your life, or whether you will let shame block the blessing He is already holding out to you.