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The 260 Journey

The 260 Journey
The 260 Journey
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259 episodes

  • The 260 Journey

    Putting the Word of God in a Wheelchair

    18/2/2026 | 5 mins.
    Day 35

    Today’s Reading: Mark 7

    In today’s reading, Jesus makes a statement to religious people that we have to put the spotlight on. Jesus speaks to the Pharisees and Scribes these cutting words about their relationship to the Bible, God’s Word. Let’s read it from The Passion Translation:

    “You abandon God’s commandments just to keep men’s rituals, such as ceremonially washing utensils, cups, and other things.”

    Then he added, “How skillful you’ve become in rejecting God’s law in order to maintain your man-made set of rules. For example, Moses taught us: ‘Honor your father and your mother,’ and, ‘Whoever insults or mistreats his father or mother must be put to death.’

    “But your made-up rules allow a person to say to his parents, ‘I’ve decided to take the support you were counting on from me and make it my holy offering to God, and that will be your blessing instead.’ How convenient! The rules you teach exempt him from providing for his aged parents. Do you really think God will honor your traditions passed down to others, making up these rules that nullify God’s Word? And you’re doing many other things like that.” (Mark 7:8-13)

    The New American Standard Bible says, “Thus invalidating the Word of God by your tradition” (verse 13).

    Wow! Invalidating the Word of God. Nothing could be more horrible.

    Taking something as powerful as God’s Word and making it invalid. That word is so vivid and so appropriate. An invalid is a person who is disabled by an injury, illness, or disease. They cannot do what they were designed to do because of their handicap.

    Jesus told them they had just put the Word of God in a wheelchair. Instead of it walking on its own, they crippled it and did it by their traditions.

    That’s what had happened to these religious people. They studied the Bible and did not do what it said. Instead, they made it confirm their lifestyle.

    E. Paul Hovey said it like this: “Men do not reject the Bible because it contradicts itself, but because it contradicts them.” The Bible contradicted them so they made it say what they wanted it to say, “thus invalidating the Word of God by their tradition.”

    This verse is so important. Jesus was cautioning the religious from interpreting the Bible through their religion. They saw things with their experience instead of letting the Bible interpret the Bible.

    Now before we get really ticked at the Pharisees, this is happening to us today. Consider the last part of Jesus’ statement, “by your tradition.” Let’s take out the word tradition and fill in the blank.

    Ways people can invalidate the Word of God:

    It is invalid . . .

    • by their denomination. They will interpret passages denominationally (such as water baptism).

    • by their soapbox. They will interpret passages from their soapbox (such as political leanings).

    • by conspiracy. They will interpret passages from their conspiracy (such as end times).

    • by experience. They will interpret passages from their experience (such as Jesus visitations).

    • by their pain. God is a horrible Father based on their natural father.

    • by their ethnicity. Seeing passages from a minority standpoint and cause instead of for what they say.

    • by their parents.

    • by their upbringing in church.

    • by their pastor.

    • by their seminary.

    As Søren Kierkegaard said, “The Bible is very easy to understand. But we Christians are a bunch of scheming swindlers. We pretend to be unable to understand it because we know very well that the minute we understand, we are obliged to act accordingly.”

    The story that has always intrigued me is from Jack Deere’s Surprised by the Power of the Spirit. Jack Deere was a seminary professor at Dallas Theological Seminary. Both they and he held to a very strong cessationist theology, which basically says that the gifts of the New Testament are no longer needed or in existence. One of the simplest things that changed Jack Deere was this thought: If I gave a new convert a Bible and put him in a room and told him to read the Bible, I can’t see him coming out saying, “That was such power in the New Testament, too bad we don’t have access to that power today. Too bad the gifts are no longer available for us.” He said that was impossible. He realized that by simply reading the Scriptures, you can’t end up as a cessationist. You end up as a continuationist, someone who believes the spiritual gifts given in the early church continue on today.

    Jack Deere realized that entire generations are being influenced by men’s interpretation of the Bible and theology, and he wanted to be influenced by what the Bible is really saying.

    One of the liveliest debates I had in seminary was with a great theology teacher whom I highly respected. He said that those that know Greek can read the Bible better than those who don’t. I countered, “So just to be clear, are you saying an unsaved Greek scholar has a better chance of understanding the Scriptures than I do, who is in my fourth semester of Greek and who loves Jesus?" He said, “Absolutely.” Nothing could be further from the truth. He was influenced by his Greek and ancient language.

    Make a commitment not to allow your “traditions” to put your faith in a wheelchair.
  • The 260 Journey

    Limiting Jesus

    17/2/2026 | 5 mins.
    Day 34

    Today’s Reading: Mark 6

    No one would disagree that Jesus had all the potential to heal anyone, anywhere, anytime. Can you imagine having the person who could heal you, your child, your family, or your marriage right in your town and nothing happens?

    How is that possible?

    By limiting Jesus.

    We have only two times in the Gospels that Jesus was shocked and both have to deal with the issue of faith.

    The words wonder or marveled in the gospels mean to be shocked. The first time it occurs is in Matthew when He was shocked at the great faith of a Roman centurion for a servant who was paralyzed. The centurion said to Jesus, “Just say the word and my servant will be healed” (Matthew 8:8). The centurion’s faith shocked Jesus:

    When Jesus heard this, He marveled and said to those who were following, “Truly I say to you, I have not found such great faith with anyone in Israel.” (Matthew 8:10)

    The second time Jesus was shocked is in today’s reading in Mark 6. But this is a different kind of shock. This is a shock that happens in a negative way in his hometown. Let’s read it together:

    He could do no miracle there except that He laid His hands on a few sick people and healed them. And He wondered at their unbelief. (Mark 6:5-6)

    The unbelief was not from a Roman pagan but from the people who saw Jesus as a boy and grew up with Him. The people who knew Him best trusted Him least. The people who were around Him most, missed who He was and received only a few things when the potential for everything was in their little town.

    When Jesus was shocked, it was either no faith or great faith and this incident was no faith, unbelief. What makes this story crazy is what it’s on the heels of.

    In chapter 5 He had just raised a dead girl, set a demoniac free of some 5,400 demons, and healed a woman who had suffered from an incurable condition for twelve years. Then in chapter 6, He went into Nazareth, His hometown, and “could do no miracle” except for healing a few sick people. And here is what’s insane—all these miracles were within walking distance. They happened around Capernaum, and then Jesus walked to Nazareth. The people of Nazareth had Jesus but not His miracles.

    Can that happen? You have Jesus but nothing miraculous?

    Nazareth was located in the hills of Galilee and had a population of around two hundred people. So the presence of Jesus could literally have changed this town.

    How did they limit Jesus?

    How can we stop Jesus from doing what He does best—changing lives? We see in Mark 6 that it is through unbelief. What is unbelief?

    Unbelief cannot be little faith. The disciples had that, got rebuked, but still had Jesus calm the sea in Mark 4.

    What is the difference between unbelief and little faith?

    It seems that little faith is seeing our bad and big circumstances as bigger than Jesus. I think unbelief is different; it is doubting the one’s character who can bring the miracle.

    When Jesus taught the people, they challenged who He is because of their limited knowledge:

    When the sabbath came, He began to teach in the synagogue; and the many listeners were astonished, saying, “Where did this man get these things, and what is this wisdom given to Him, and such miracles as these performed by His hands? Is not this the carpenter, the son of Mary, and brother of James and Joses and Judas and Simon? Are not His sisters here with us?” (Mark 6:2-3)

    Little faith—what Jesus sometimes labeled as doubt—is when you question what you believe, or if you believe it, or why you believe it.

    That’s okay. God is still there. Miracles can still happen with doubt present and questions swirling in your mind. But nothing happens when there is unbelief.

    Unbelief is the refusal to believe. There is no doubt, there are no questions. You have come to your conclusion.

    The people of Nazareth had unbelief: Jesus was the carpenter’s son, Mary’s boy. Nothing more. They left no room to be wrong. They decided that they already knew, and what they knew couldn’t be wrong. Well, the Nazareth people were not just wrong, they were limited, and therefore Jesus was limited. This was the carpenter’s son and also God’s Son. He made things out of wood and made a universe out of nothing. He came from a virgin’s womb but also came down from heaven as Immanuel.

    But they chose not to believe.

    After viewing the works in a renowned art museum, a man said to the guard, “I don’t see any great value in this artwork.”

    “Sir,” the guard answered, “the paintings are not what’s on trial here. The visitors are.”

    That’s so true. If you look at a Rembrandt or a Monet, and you say, “I don’t see anything good about that,” it simply shows your ignorance concerning art.

    That’s the Nazareth problem. The people said, “We don’t see anything special about Jesus. He’s just the carpenter, and we know His mother, brothers, and sisters.”

    Jesus wasn’t on trial in Nazareth. The Nazarites were and they failed. Let’s be careful not to make the same mistake. Always remember He is much more that you can ever imagine.

    Let’s not limit Jesus in our churches, in our cities, or in our homes.

    Let Jesus, be Jesus!
  • The 260 Journey

    The Man Who Lived in a Cemetery

    16/2/2026 | 4 mins.
    Day 33

    Today’s Reading: Mark 5

    Wow, today’s reading is filled with action, miracles, and healing. It’s nonstop from verse 1 to verse 43. Mark 5 starts with a town demoniac who lived in a graveyard and acts as the welcoming committee for Jesus and the disciples and ends in a house where a dead twelve-year-old girl’s body is laid out and a bunch of laughing people who think Jesus is out of His mind. In this chapter, Jesus casts out a legion of demons, heals a woman of a twelve-year disease that doctors had no cure for, and raises from the dead a young girl whose body would soon be in a coffin for her burial. Go Jesus!

    Let’s pause and consider the first miracle of the man who lived in a cemetery. Read that section with me, will you?

    When [Jesus] got out of the boat, immediately a man from the tombs with an unclean spirit met Him, and he had his dwelling among the tombs. And no one was able to bind him anymore, even with a chain; because he had often been bound with shackles and chains, and the chains had been torn apart by him and the shackles broken in pieces, and no one was strong enough to subdue him. Constantly, night and day, he was screaming among the tombs and in the mountains, and gashing himself with stones. Seeing Jesus from a distance, he ran up and bowed down before Him. (Mark 5:2-6)

    I have had people ask me, “Can a Christian be demon possessed?” The answer to that question is based on your definition of a Christian. 

    Paul tells us in Colossians 3:3 that when you become a Christian, “your life is hidden with Christ in God.” That means demons can’t find you to live in you. They can’t find the door to enter your soul and spirit; your life is hidden in Christ. That is my definition of a believer in relation to the demonic world.

    The man was demon possessed, and the demon in this man had a name or a descriptive name: Legion.

    He was asking him, “What is your name?” And he said to Him, “My name is Legion; for we are many.” (Mark 5:9)

    Legion. This is not really a name but a description of what was going on internally in this man and the magnitude of the dark forces in his soul.

    Legion was the term given for a battalion or squadron in the Roman army. It usually had 5,400 soldiers and 120 horsemen. This man was possessed by an army.

    But something huge happened to start this man’s healing, something that gives us hope for people no matter how messed up they are. It’s all in verse 6: “Seeing Jesus from a distance, he ran up and bowed down before him.”

    A man with 5,400 demons still has the ability to get to Jesus. He is able to run to Him and bow before Him. No matter how much demonic control is going on, we can see that God doesn’t let the demons control a life who wants help and freedom.

    Look what happens next. The Message says it like this:

    Everyone wanted to see what had happened. They came up to Jesus and saw the madman sitting there wearing decent clothes and making sense, no longer a walking madhouse of a man. (Mark 5:14-15)

    Why would Satan launch that kind of attack against this man?

    He would be a mouthpiece of God.
    He isn’t just delivered.
    He is about to be a preacher.

    If Satan does not stop this man, ten cities are about to be changed.

    But Jesus said no. “Go home to your friends,” he told him, “and tell them what wonderful things God has done for you; and how merciful he has been.”

    So the man started off to visit the Ten Towns of that region and began to tell everyone about the great things Jesus had done for him; and they were awestruck by his story. (Mark 5:19-20, TLB)

    A. W. Tozer said, “I’m not afraid of the devil. The devil can handle me—he’s got judo I never heard of. But he can’t handle the One to whom I’m joined; he can’t handle the One to whom I’m united; he can’t handle the One [who lives in me].”

    No one is unsavable. No one is unchangeable. No one is too far gone. No one has too many problems. Not with Jesus around! Even if they have 5,400 addictions, they can be freed because of Jesus, who can command that stronghold to flee.

    If you know someone who is far from God, who is really messed up, who is so out there that you have no idea if they would ever come back to their senses, let this story put faith in you.
  • The 260 Journey

    Two Storms Stories

    13/2/2026 | 4 mins.
    Day 32

    Today’s Reading: Mark 4

    I want to tell you two stories about storms, Jesus, and a bunch of guys (the twelve disciples) in a boat. Both storms had winds and fear. But their endings were different.

    We encounter the first storm in today’s reading. Let’s read about it together:

    On that day, when evening came, He said to them, “Let us go over to the other side.” Leaving the crowd, they took Him along with them in the boat, just as He was; and other boats were with Him. And there arose a fierce gale of wind, and the waves were breaking over the boat so much that the boat was already filling up. Jesus Himself was in the stern, asleep on the cushion; and they woke Him and said to Him, “Teacher, do You not care that we are perishing?” (Mark 4:35-41)

    “Do you not care?” is a huge indictment on God’s character, and it plays into this “no faith” issue. So keep these two phrases in mind: Do You not care and Do you have no faith.

    Let’s continue reading:

    He got up and rebuked the wind and said to the sea, “Hush, be still.” And the wind died down and it became perfectly calm. And He said to them, “Why are you afraid? Do you still have no faith?” They became very much afraid and said to one another, “Who then is this, that even the wind and the sea obey Him?” (Mark 4:39-41)

    Their “no faith” was revealed in this statement, “Who is this man?”

    Faith is connected to knowing who this Man is. Think of the important progression.

    A storm arises, as it does in life, and fear comes—fear of tomorrow, fear of going to the doctor or waiting for a call from the doctor, fear of being single, fear of not being pregnant, fear of getting laid off. These are all called storms. If storms produce fear and distrust, then we have a faith issue. When storms drive us to fear, faith has been punctured and is leaking somewhere.

    This storm ends with a question mark. It ends with questioning Who
    God is.

    Faith is a journey, and that’s what these disciples were on. They ended their first Jesus boat ride with, “Who is this Man?” The question mark.

    If storms produce fear, then we have a faith problem. And if we have a faith problem, then it’s a God issue. What does that mean?

    Knowing God increases faith. Always remember that if you want faith to increase, find out more about the character of God. As someone once said, “Feed your faith and your fears will starve to death.”

    Faith is based on who God is. That’s how you increase in faith. The disciples did not get an increase of faith from the last storm, just more questions.

    Now let’s dip back into Matthew for our second storm story:

    He made the disciples get into the boat and go ahead of Him to the other side, while He sent the crowds away. After He had sent the crowds away, He went up on the mountain by Himself to pray; and when it was evening, He was there alone. But the boat was already a long distance from the land, battered by the waves; for the wind was contrary. And in the fourth watch of the night He came to them, walking on the sea. When the disciples saw Him walking on the sea, they were terrified, and said, “It is a ghost!” And they cried out in fear. But immediately Jesus spoke to them, saying, “Take courage, it is I; do not be afraid.”

    When they got into the boat, the wind stopped. And those who were in the boat worshiped Him, saying, “You are certainly God’s Son!” (Matthew 14:22-33)

    They worshiped him. They recognized who Jesus was: “You are certainly God’s Son!”

    Remember our first boat story ended with a question. This one still ended with worship.

    If storms make me a better worshiper, then so be it. I would just rather do it with music on Sunday. But that does not always happen. God wants your and my tests to end with praise not questions.

    Andráe Crouch put it this way: “If I’d never had a problem, I wouldn’t know God could solve them.”

    There is a difference between praise and worship. Praise means telling others about how good God is; telling others what God has done. Worship means telling God Who He is.

    If you know Who He is then you can know what He can do. And no storm has enough power to stand up to that.
  • The 260 Journey

    Jesus Pulls a Webster

    12/2/2026 | 5 mins.
    Day 31

    Today’s Reading: Mark 3

    When you want to know the definition of a word, you look in the one trusted place that settles all doubt—the dictionary. When you think of the dictionary, you think of one name—Webster. But do you know who this Webster is?

    Noah Webster was a devout Christian. His word speller was grounded in Scripture, and his first lesson began, “Be not anxious for your life, what ye shall eat, or what ye shall drink; nor for your body, what ye shall put on; for your heavenly Father knoweth that ye have need of these things.”

    His 1828 American dictionary contained the greatest number of Biblical definitions given in any reference volume. Webster considered education “useless without the Bible.” He claimed to have learned twenty different languages in finding definitions for which a particular word was used. From the preface to the 1828 edition of Webster’s American Dictionary of the English language:

    In my view, the Christian religion is the most important and one of the first things in which all children, under a free government ought to be instructed. No truth is more evident to my mind than that the Christian religion must be the basis of any government intended to secure the rights and privileges of a free people.

    In fact, Noah Webster wrote the first paraphrase of the Bible called the common Bible in 1833. Webster molded the King James Version to correct grammar, replaced words that were no longer used, and did away with words and phrases that could be seen as offensive.

    When you are looking up a word, read the whole definition. You may just stumble into something amazing about the what it means and where it came from.

    That happened to me. Noah Webster redefined the word enthusiasm for me. Here is his second definition for the word: “belief in special revelations from the Holy Spirit.” The noun enthusiasm comes from the Greek word enthousiasmos, from enthous, meaning “possessed by a God, inspired.”

    The famous 1828 version said: “special divine communications from the Supreme Being, or familiar intercourse with him.”

    Special revelations from the Holy Spirit!

    Seriously? That’s incredible.

    That redefined enthusiasm for how I think about the word. I get enthusiastic to preach, to go to church, to be a dad and a husband. I get inspired by God and receive special communications from Him to do these things.

    Redefinitions were needed when Jesus came to earth. Jesus went all Noah Webster from the outset of His ministry and brought an adjustment to a very important concept in today’s reading of Mark 3.

    In Mark 3:32, a crowd was sitting around Him. They told Him, “Behold, Your mother and Your brothers are outside looking for You.”

    Here are the words Jesus wanted to redefine: “Answering them, He said, “Who are My mother and my brothers?” Looking about at those who were sitting around Him, He said, “Behold My mother and My brothers!” (verses 33-34).

    Here comes the redefinition: “For whoever does the will of God, he is My brother and sister and mother” (verse 35).

    Did you see how He redefined terms?

    “Who is My mother?” And, “Who is my brother?”

    When Jesus came, He redefined things by putting them in their true light. He did that on the sermon on the mount when He redefined adultery. It’s not just in the bed but in the head (see Matthew 5:27-28).

    Jesus asks these questions: Who is my real family? Who is related to me?

    We hear all the time that blood is thicker than water. But Jesus took it even further by saying that spirit is thicker than blood.

    Jesus redefined blood relationships for us. He said the ones whom we are closest to are not the ones who have the same father and mother but the ones who “do the will of God.”

    Remember this important thing: whose definition really counts?

    In Renaissance, Os Guinness wrote something that made me think redefinitions and how the crowd wants us to be stuck and not look up how Jesus defines something: “For the followers of Jesus, the voice of the people must never be taken as the voice of God.”

    We live under the pressure that numbers (the crowd) are truth and they tell the truth and they make the truth. And so we give numbers and majority huge value. We are counting opinions instead of weighing them.

    It tells you externals but never the heart of something. They can tell you what men spend on Valentine’s Day cards but never if he loves his wife as Christ loves the church.

    They can tell you about church membership and frequency of attendance but never gauge those who are on fire in their love for God.

    One hundred million tweets and “likes” still never add up to truth, wisdom, or what is right and good. The bandwagon is replacing the Bible—popularity rather than principle—horizontal pressure over vertical authority.

    “Thus says the Lord” should always trump 51 percent. That’s something to get enthusiastic about. That’s something to redefine. That’s what Jesus did.

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