Saved by Grace
WEEKLY CHRISTIAN BIBLE STUDY AND DEVOTIONAL FROM GOD’S WORD, FOR THE NEWLY SAVED AND MORE SEASONED BELIEVER, AND FOR OTHERS SEEKING TRUTH. OUR PRAYER IS TO ENCOURAGE YOU AND STRENGTHEN YOUR FAITH IN GOD’S INFINITE MERCY, LOVE AND GRACE, AND IN THE GOSPEL OF THE DEATH, BURIAL AND RESURRECTION OF HIS SON JESUS CHRIST, THAT ALL WHO SEEK HIM HAVE ETERNAL, ABUNDANT LIFE.
Saturday, March 21, 2026
The Just Ruler Has Wisdom, Empathy, and Discernment
Saturday, March 14, 2026
In the Beginning: The Word
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| Photo by Esther Monzo-Nebot 2021 |
No matter how often I read through the Bible, I always find myself especially drawn to the opening verse of the Book of John:
John 1:1 In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was with God, and the Word was God.
The Greek for “Word” is “logos,” meaning the Word of God, or principle of divine reason and creative order. In John’s Gospel, the Word is Jesus Christ, the second Person of the Trinity, incarnate. We know that Jesus is the Word, for that is revealed as His Name when He appears in Revelation 19:13 as King of Kings and Lord of Lords.
In simplest terms, Jesus Christ was present since before the beginning of time, in the company of God the Father and God the Holy Spirit, and He Himself is equally God.
To me, John 1:1 is the most deeply profound sentence ever written. It refers to our Lord Jesus Christ, God in the flesh, and also to His spoken word communicated through the Bible. It is reminiscent of the very first verse in the Bible:
Genesis 1:1 In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth.
These two verses together identify the Word as being God Who created everything (Psalm 90:2). God is eternal, self-existent, not created, present in eternity past since before the beginning of time. The Hebrew word used in Genesis 1:1 is Elohim, which is a plural noun referring to the Trinity. From John 1:1, we know that Jesus, God the Son, was present in the beginning, with God the Father and God the Holy Spirit. The Word was God, because Jesus the Son is equally God with God the Father and God the Holy Spirit.
It is fascinating to consider why Jesus Christ is called the Word. In the beginning of creation, “God said, Let there be light: and there was light (Genesis 1:3). “God said” repeats throughout the account of creation of heaven, earth, and all its inhabitants. God, Jesus Christ the Word, spoke everything into existence.
As we are made in God’s image (Genesis 1:26-27), the spoken word is also of crucial importance to our existence. Thought involves words. What we think governs our speech, and what we say determines our actions and their outcomes.
God has in these last days spoken to us through His Word, and has directed us to hear Him, as God the Father’s voice commanded during the Transfiguration of His Son (Matthew 17:5). Jesus is the Word speaking from God the Father to us, first through the prophets (Hebrews 1:1), then through Himself during His earthly ministry (Hebrews 1:2), and now through His written Word. Jesus Christ the Word also speaks to God the Father for us as He sits at His right hand, interceding for us in prayer (Hebrews 1:3; Romans 8:34).
The very instructions for each of our lives, and the instructions from which God will create our heavenly bodies, are composed of words. King David referred poetically to the directions for how our body parts are formed being recorded in God’s book long before we are even born (Psalm 139:16).
Millennia after this was written, scientists discovered that our genetic code is composed of 4 “letters,” or base pairs in our DNA, making up “words,” or genes, on our chromosomes, that control all our biological characteristics.
Words are not only essential for thought, communication with God through prayer, and even our very biology, but also for our salvation. Being saved requires hearing or reading the words of the Gospel (Romans 10:14), then calling on the Name of the Lord (Acts 2:21; Romans 10:13) and confessing that He is God and rose from the dead:
Romans 10:9 That if thou shalt confess with thy mouth the Lord Jesus, and shalt believe in thine heart that God hath raised him from the dead, thou shalt be saved. 10 For with the heart man believeth unto righteousness; and with the mouth confession is made unto salvation.
Once we are saved by believing that Jesus Christ died on the cross to pay for our sins, was buried, and rose again on the third day (1 Corinthians 15:1-4), proving His divinity, and we speak these words in our heart and aloud, Jesus will use His words to tell God the Father that we are His own, granting us eternal life. Alternatively, if anyone uses words to deny Jesus, He will deny that person before His Father, leading to condemnation (Matthew 10:32).
Having confessed verbally that Jesus is Son of God, our Lord and Savior, we become His ambassadors, representing Heaven (2 Corinthians 5:20). Like any earthly diplomat, we represent our Leader through our words as well as our behavior. Jesus Himself warned us not to speak any idle words (Matthew 12:36), for life and death are in the power of the tongue (Proverbs 18:21). James warned us to control our tongue, for our words have the power to build others up or to tear them down (James 3: 1-13).
In the beginning was the Word! His words created all that exists. His Word saves us! May we allow His Word to govern our heart, thoughts and actions, and share it with others so they too can be saved!
© 2022 Laurie Collett
Reposted from the archives
Saturday, March 7, 2026
Unexpected Answer
Have you ever been praying about a particular matter, or
asked God a direct question, and then been stunned when the answer He gives
seems to be way out in left field?Of course, not all voices we hear come from God, and
sometimes we can erroneously convince ourselves that the desires of our flesh
or the temptings of the devil are divine in origin. Any prompting we hear that
does not align with God’s Word cannot be from Him (Psalm 119:105).
But if we have prepared our heart to communicate with Him (Proverbs
2:2), asked for Holy Spirit guidance to discern His true voice, and
allowed time in our prayer room to be still and know that He is God (Psalm
46:10) rather than just rattling off our shopping list of requests, we
can look forward to hearing His true will (John 10:4,27; Isaiah 30:21).
Shortly after I was saved in the year 2000, my husband Richard
and I took a flight to another city for a dance competition. Shortly before landing,
the pilot announced that we were honored to be transporting a young soldier
deployed to Afghanistan, on the first leg of his long journey. I silently prayed for his safety, when I was shocked to hear God telling me to give him
the Bible I had in my carry-on bag.
But he was seated toward the front of the plane and we were
at the back, so he disembarked long before we did. However, once we were in the
terminal, I spotted him a considerable distance away, and without so much as a
word to Richard, I took off running until I caught up with him. He looked as
surprised as I was when I offered him the Bible, told him I was praying for him,
and hoped that the Bible would be a blessing to him and those he met overseas.
He took the Bible, thanked me, and we went our separate
ways. I had a lot of explaining to do when I finally met up with Richard, but
he seemed to understand even though he was not yet saved by trusting in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus Christ (1 Corinthians 15:1-4) as the only Way to Heaven (John 14:6). Now I look forward to
meeting the soldier in Heaven and hearing what transpired from my gift, for God’s
Word will not return to Him empty! (Isaiah 55:11)
Very recently, I had a similar, quite unexpected, answer to
prayer. A ministry that Richard and I had undertaken several months previously
had been unfruitful and confronted by spiritual warfare. My question to God was, “Why did You bring us here for things to
turn out like this?”
“To prepare you for something else,” was His answer. My
natural response was, “For what?” To which He replied, “To start a new church!”
This was not at all what I had expected, and when I told Richard
about it, he seemed skeptical, given our age and lack of formal training in
ministry. But God is not the author of confusion, but of peace (1
Corinthians 14:33), which came when we had multiple confirmations from
reading His Word, hearing it taught and preached, and from Godly counsel.
Our daily Scripture reading, devotionals, and Bible studies all pointed us in the direction of following what initially seemed to be a surprising request from God. When cleaning out an old file drawer, I found a devotional I had printed out 25 years ago, shortly after being saved. It was an encouragement to follow God’s will for your life without fear (1 John 4:18), even when it takes you in an unexpected direction and requires stepping out of your comfort zone.
In our own strength we can do nothing (John 15:5),
but with God, all things are possible (Matthew 19:26), for His
strength is made perfect in our weakness (2 Corinthians 12:9).
We then had lunch with a dear, Godly friend who is a
missionary. After catching up a bit, but not mentioning our new direction, we
were shocked to hear him say, “You two need to open a new church!”
In a Thanksgiving sermon we heard shortly thereafter, the
preacher suddenly went off script and started talking about how God can lead
people to start a church. Even if that church is small and meets in someone’s
home, he said, it’s still a church, for where two or three are gathered in His
Name, He is in the midst (Matthew 18:20).
Praise God that He makes His will known (Numbers 12:6;
Ephesians 1:9), speaking to His children through His Word, Godly
counsel, and other ways! Faced with so many confirmations, it was clear that we
needed to follow His directive or suffer the consequences of disobedience.
Several months have passed since I first received this
unexpected answer from God. Despite many challenges, setbacks, and obstacles, He
has blessed us by providing an interim pastor, giving us a space to meet
rent-free, and getting the paperwork approved for nonprofit incorporation!
Our first service at New Life Bible Church Tampa is
scheduled for March 22! We truly covet your prayers for God’s continued
guidance and leadership, that this ministry would be fruitful in reaching souls
for Him. If any of you are in the Tampa area and looking for a church home, we would be honored and blessed by your visit. May we honor Jesus Christ in all that is said and done and work
together in unity and harmony to share His Word and His love with one another,
in the local community, and globally through missions!
Copyright 2026 Laurie Collett
Saturday, February 28, 2026
Bad News, Good News: How Can We Be Saved and Know For Sure We’re Going to Heaven?
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| Image generated by AI |
As the Lord has opened the door to a new ministry for my
husband and me (more on that to follow!), He let me know that it would be
important to write out a salvation message in my own words to use in this
ministry and elsewhere as He leads. So here it is:
Bad news: We're all sinners, deserving eternal punishment in hell (Romans 3:23; 6:23). Our good works don't outweigh our sin (Isaiah 64:6), because if we've broken any part of the law, we are guilty of breaking all of it (James 2:10). If we've told a little white lie, stolen a stick of gum, or even looked at someone with lust or lashed out at them in anger, we have broken the law (Matthew 5:21-23;27-28). Perfectly holy, just God cannot allow a sinner into Heaven on their own merit.
GOOD NEWS (The Gospel): God gave Jesus, His perfectly holy, sinless Son, to pay the price for all our sins by dying on the cross (Romans 3:25; Hebrews 2:10; 1John 2:2; 4:10). Then He rose from the dead on the third day, so that all who trust Him will live forever with Him in Heaven (John 3:16; 1 Corinthians 15:1-4). We are saved by believing this (faith) through God's grace, or undeserved blessing, not by any works we can do. Eternal life is a freely given gift -- we can't earn it (Ephesians 2:8-9).
So what can we do to be saved? Believe the Good News in your heart. Realize
we are sinners and ask God to forgive us, and He will. Thank Jesus for dying
for us to pay our sin debt and rising from the dead, so that all who trust Him
will live forever. Ask Him to be Lord of your life. Pray a prayer something
like this:
Lord Jesus, I know I'm a sinner who deserves to
go to hell. I'm sorry for my sins and I need Your help to keep from sinning. I
don't want to go to hell -- I want to live forever in Heaven with You. I thank
you for dying on the cross for me and rising again from the dead. I believe
with all my heart that You did this for me. Please save me now and give me the
gift of eternal life. I don't deserve it and I can't earn it, but now I want to
devote my life to serving You and telling others about You. Please guide, lead
and protect me in all that I do. Thank You Lord Jesus!
What's next? If you sincerely
prayed this prayer, you have a new life! You are a new creation in Jesus Christ
(2 Corinthians 5:17), and His Holy Spirit has entered your heart (2
Corinthians 1:22) to guide, comfort, and teach you (John 14:16-18).
Commit your life to Him by studying and obeying His Word (2 Timothy 2:15;
James 1:22; Romans 2:13), praying to Him (1
Thessalonians 5:17), getting baptized (Matthew 28:19),
joining a Bible-based church (Hebrews 10:25) and telling others
about how He has changed your life and about how they can be saved (2
Timothy 4:2; 1 Peter 3:15).
If you have just now trusted Jesus Christ as your Lord and
Savior, please leave a comment and we will rejoice with you that you are now a
born-again child of God (John 3:3-8), pray for you (Galatians 6:2),
and help you in any way we can! May you grow in His grace, in faith, in love, and
in Godly wisdom as His ambassador! Let His light shine through you!
Saturday, February 21, 2026
The Wise Ruler Serves His Family, People, and Lord
God’s judgment for these sins included the death of the child who was conceived in adultery (2 Samuel 12:14-23), ongoing family feuds in the house of David, and continued wars. Because of this blood on David’s hands, God did not allow him to build His temple, although He commanded Him to provide all the needed materials (1 Chronicles 28).
Saturday, February 14, 2026
Cisterns of Living Water
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| Photo by hüsamettin_alpaslan 2011 |
Saturday, February 7, 2026
God’s Love: Infinite, Unconditional, Eternal
As many prepare to celebrate Valentine’s Day, we think
about romantic love, and the joy of committing our lives to our beloved and
anticipating the same in return. But true love is not reserved for one day a
year, but should be in our hearts continually, regardless of the circumstances.
Many couples began their marriage by promising to love one another for better
or for worse, in sickness and in health, for richer or poorer, until parted by death.
Most of us believe that we love our spouse, children, and
family deeply, as they do us. We hope that should the need arise, we would
sacrifice anything for their good – even our life if circumstances demanded it.
But we pray to God that we would never have to find out whether our love or
theirs would meet that standard.
In contrast, God’s love is infinite, which means He can’t
love us any more than He already does, nor could He love us any less. What a
relief to know that we don’t need to work at earning His love, for we are saved
by His grace through our faith (Ephesians 3:8-9) in the death,
burial and resurrection of His son (1 Corinthians 15:1-4) as the
only Way to Heaven (John 14:6).
And similarly, we don’t need to walk on eggshells for fear
of losing His love when we sin, for if we confess our sins, He forgives us (1
John 1:9). Infinity plus anything, or infinity minus anything, is still
infinity.
We can’t begin to wrap our heads around the concept of how
much God loves us. God Himself is Love (1 John 4:8). He loved us
so much that He gave Jesus, His only begotten Son, to suffer and die in our place (John 3:16) so that those who trust Him would live forever.
Jesus Christ, the sinless Lamb of God, loved us so much
that He willingly died for us on the cross to pay the sin debt we could not
begin to repay. He loved His earthly mother Mary so much that in the midst of
His agony, He arranged for His beloved disciple John to take care of her for
the rest of her life (John 19:26-27). He loved those who
crucified Him so much that He asked His Father to forgive them (Luke 23:34).
On the cross, Jesus was covered in blood, oozing wounds,
sweat and tears, devoid of physical beauty, His human body brutally disfigured beyond
recognition (Isaiah 53:2). Not the lovely, frilly sentimentality of a
Valentine, but the gut-wrenching, all-consuming fire of self-sacrificing love
that knows no bounds.
His death satisfied the demands of God the Father, Who is
perfectly holy and just, while His resurrection allowed all who trust Him to
live forever with Him in Heaven. How can we begin to comprehend that God
Himself, Creator of all, Love incarnate, loved us, regardless of how much or
even whether we loved Him? (1 John 4:9)
God has loved each of us since before the beginning of
time. He has loved us even while we were His enemies and children of the devil
(Romans 5:8). But once we are saved, we become God’s children and
friends, and God then loves us as members of His own family (Matthew 12:
49-50).
Because God is Love, His love enters our heart along with
the Holy Spirit at the moment of salvation (1 John 4: 16). His
love in our heart replaces not only hate, but also fear that keeps us from
sharing His love and His Word with others. We love him, because he first loved
us (1 John 4:17-19).
As humans, we experience different kinds of love. We may
say “I love chocolate!” but that means a craving, preference or desire – not
actual love. There are three Greek words for love. “Eros” means physical
or sexual attraction. “Phileo” means brotherly love, or love that we
have for our family, friends and like-minded people. Generally this type of
love means that we have expectations of the ones we love – we treat them well,
and we hope they treat us well in return.
But the Biblical word for God’s love is “agape,”
which means self-sacrificing love.
The apostle Peter boasted that he would follow Christ even
to the death, but when Jesus was arrested and crucified, Peter denied Him three
times. But Jesus, because of His infinite love, not only forgave him but gave
Peter three opportunities to express his love to Christ once He rose again.
Three times He asked Peter, “Do you love me?” using the word “agape,” or
self-sacrificing love. But each time Peter replied, he used the word “phileo,”
or brotherly love (John 21:15-17).
Jesus told Peter that if he indeed loved Him, he should
feed His sheep. If we love Christ, we can show it and please Him by sharing His
love and His Word with others.
God loves us unconditionally, not in exchange for anything
we could give us, because He needs nothing from us (Psalm 50:10).
He loves us even when we sin or rebel against Him. His mercy spares us from the
punishment our sins deserve, and His grace gives us blessings we don’t deserve
(Romans 5:20-21)
Not only does God love us infinitely and unconditionally – He
loves us eternally. He has loved us since before the beginning of time, when He
conceived a special and perfect plan for each of us who would become His
children (Ephesians 2:10; Jeremiah 29:11).
He loves us throughout our lifetime, saving us through His
mercy while we were still sinners, and allowing us to sit in heavenly places
with Him once we are saved. God will love us forever, “that in the ages to
come he might shew the exceeding riches of his grace in his kindness toward us
through Christ Jesus (Ephesians 2: 4-7).
The love of Christ, shown to us in His mercy and grace,
lasts forever. Each of the 26 verses of Psalm 136 ends with “for
his mercy endureth for ever.” It’s as if God really wants to emphasize that
He will love us throughout eternity!
Once we are born again, God gives us eternal life in Heaven
and promises to give us glorified bodies at the Rapture, so that we will live
with Him and experience His perfect love, joy and peace forever. Once we are
truly saved by making a heart decision to follow Christ, we can never lose our
salvation nor God’s love (Romans 8:39).
In 1 Corinthians 13, known as the “love
chapter,” the apostle Paul describes the attributes of perfect, divine love. It
is patient, kind, long-suffering. It is not envious, rude, proud, self-serving,
or easily provoked. It “rejoices in the truth; bears all things, believes
all things, hopes all things, endures all things. Love never fails.”
Paul goes on to say that of faith, hope, love, the greatest
of these is love. Why? Because in Heaven, we will no longer need faith, for our
faith will have become sight. We will no longer need hope, for our hope of the
Rapture, glorified bodies, and eternal life with Jesus Christ and our loved ones
in Him will have been realized.
But love? Praise God, we will experience His infinite,
unconditional love throughout eternity!
Laurie Collett






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