ALTAR AUDIT, Part 16: The Altar of Betrayal

Read Matthew 26:14–16

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“Even my best friend, the one I trusted completely, the one who shared my food, has turned against me.” (Psalm 41:9 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A cracked stone altar sits in an open architectural space overlooking a distant city skyline, under muted gray skies, symbolizing fracture, exposure, and the hidden structures behind what appears stable.
Image: AI-generated using Adobe Firefly and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “ALTAR AUDIT: A New Lenten Devotion Series” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 16: The Altar of Betrayal. Not all decisions are made out in the open. Some take shape quietly, in conversations that never make the record, in tensions that linger just beneath the surface. By the time something finally happens, the conditions have already been set.

Holy Week is full of those moments. Judas’ act of betrayal is one of them—and it changes everything.

We know this story, or at least we think we do…

Judas becomes the easy answer—the betrayer, the villain, the one who sold Jesus for silver. But the Gospels do not begin there, and if we begin there, we have already stepped away from what the text is actually doing. “Judas” is not a strange or cursed name. It is Judah, a common name, a shared identity. Over time, the Church has taken that name and turned it into a symbol of ultimate betrayal. Not just a person remembered, but a category created—a warning label. That move is not neutral. It creates distance. It allows us to point and say, “That is not us,” without ever asking how close the story actually comes.

The Gospels do not present a group of disciples who all understood Jesus while one stood apart. They show a community wrestling, misunderstanding, arguing, and resisting. They debated who would be greatest. They pushed back when Jesus spoke of suffering. They followed, yes, but not always with clarity and not always with courage. Judas is not introduced as the outsider. Judas is one of them.

And then the text tells us something both simple and unsettling. Judas went to the religious leaders. No summons. No recorded coercion. No dramatic recruitment. He went. And yet, the deeper question remains: how did he know where to go? By this point, the Gospels are clear that the leadership had already begun considering how to remove Jesus. Not publicly, not recklessly, but deliberately and quietly. The system was already in motion.

So we hold both truths at once: Judas went to them, and the system was already waiting to receive him.

No one had to explicitly tell Judas. He already knew exactly where to go.

This is how power often works. It does not always issue commands; it creates conditions. It signals what will be rewarded and makes certain actions thinkable long before they are taken. It maintains distance while leaving the door open.Someone close enough to see both sides—close enough to feel the tension—steps through it.

One person crosses the threshold. And it only takes one.

From that moment, everything begins to move. Access is granted. Timing is set. The arrest becomes possible. Once the machinery turns, others are caught in its wake. Peter, who swore loyalty, denies. The others scatter. Leaders justify. Authorities comply. The crowd follows. The chain of unintended consequences unfolds, pulling even the strongest voices into actions they never imagined they would take.

Judas is not the whole problem. Judas is the turning point.

Because it is easier to isolate betrayal in one person than to recognize the conditions that made it possible. It is easier to name a villain than to examine the system. It is easier to condemn Judas than to ask how often we have participated in quieter versions of the same thing. Systems still reward what they will not openly request. Truth still becomes inconvenient. Insiders still know exactly where to go when following Christ begins to cost too much.

We do not need silver. We only need a moment where allegiance becomes negotiable.

And here is the hardest truth of all. By turning Judas into a caricature, we have not protected the story—we have distorted it. We have made betrayal something distant, something obvious, something we would never do. In doing so, we have avoided seeing how close it actually is.

Judas betrayed Jesus.

But when we reduce him to less than human, when we refuse to see ourselves in the same circle, and when we pretend we would have stood firm while others faltered, we betray them both.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Betrayal begins long before the act—when following Christ becomes something we are willing to negotiate.

PRAYER
God, search us where we are most certain of ourselves. Reveal where our allegiance has become conditional, where comfort has replaced courage, and where we have chosen distance over truth. Give us the grace to remain faithful when it costs us, and the honesty to see ourselves clearly in the story. Amen.


]Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 15: The Altar of Control

Read Mark 12:13–17

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“If we allow him to go on like this, soon everyone will believe in him. Then the Roman army will come and destroy both our Temple and our nation.” (John 11:48 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A large stone altar sits centered in a modern open courtyard, split by a deep crack running through its middle. The surrounding architecture is symmetrical and still, with a distant city skyline blurred in gray light. Overlaid text reads “ALTAR AUDIT: A New Lenten Devotion Series” and “The Altar of Control,” with “Life-Giving Water Devotions” at the bottom. The atmosphere is cold and controlled, suggesting fractured trust beneath structured systems.
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Control” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 15: The Altar of Control. It begins like so many conversations do—with a question that seems reasonable enough on the surface. There is no raised voice, no visible confrontation, just a moment offered in public, shaped carefully, placed precisely where it will be heard.

But something is off.

The tone is measured. The setting is controlled. The words are familiar. And yet beneath it all, there is a sense that the answer matters less than what the answer will produce.

Jesus is standing in that space when the question comes: “Is it right to pay taxes to Caesar or not?”

It sounds simple. It is anything but.

Say yes, and you are aligned with empire. Say no, and you are marked as a threat to it. Either way, the outcome has already been calculated. The question is not seeking truth. It is seeking control.

This is where the altar reveals itself.

The altar of control is built when truth is no longer the goal—only outcome.

The brilliance of the trap is how normal it sounds. It does not announce itself as manipulation. It presents as discernment. It uses language that feels faithful, responsible, even necessary. But underneath, the aim is not understanding—it is positioning, exposure, and leverage.

Not every question is asked in good faith.

And Jesus refuses to answer on those terms.

“Give to Caesar what belongs to Caesar, and give to God what belongs to God.”

This is not an endorsement of empire. It is not a command to compliance. It is a refusal to be trapped inside a false framework. The question assumes divided loyalties that can be neatly sorted and controlled. Jesus exposes the assumption itself.

You cannot reduce faithfulness to a category that can be managed. You cannot contain God within the boundaries of political convenience. You cannot force truth into a system designed to protect itself.

In fact, here’s a Biblical interpretive hack: Jesus returns question with question—“Whose image is on this?” Then, “give to Caesar what is Caesar’s and to God what is God’s.” No one could deny the words, but the weight underneath them was equally undeniable. What is Caesar’s, exactly? Not much in the grand scheme of things. What is God’s? Everything—including what Caesar claims.

And just like that, the trap collapses.

But the instinct behind it does not.

Because the altar of control is not confined to one group, one system, or one moment. It appears anywhere truth becomes secondary to outcome, anywhere questions are shaped not to learn, but to corner.

We know this instinct.

Where we ask questions to trap, not learn.
Where we debate to win, not discern.
Where we use Scripture to control, not reveal.

It shows up in religious spaces. It shows up in political spaces. It shows up in conversations where the goal is no longer understanding, but victory—where the outcome matters more than the truth itself.

And often, it is justified.

In John’s Gospel, the reasoning is made explicit: better to control the situation than to risk losing everything. Better to contain the disruption than to let it spread. Control is framed as wisdom. Preservation is framed as necessity.

That is how the altar is built.

Not through open rebellion, but through careful justification. Not through obvious corruption, but through quiet calculation. Not through abandoning faith, but through reshaping it into something manageable.

And Jesus will not participate in that.

Jesus does not play the game. Jesus does not accept the premise. Jesus does not allow truth to be reduced to something that can be leveraged for advantage.

Instead, Jesus reveals something deeper: that what belongs to God cannot be negotiated, controlled, or contained by the systems we build.

Which brings the question back to us.

Are we seeking truth…or control?

Because the difference is not always visible at first. It often sounds the same. It often feels the same. It often even uses the same words.

But one leads to surrender.
The other leads to power.

And only one of those leads to God.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
The altar of control is built wherever truth is shaped to secure outcomes instead of reveal God.

PRAYER
God, expose the places where I seek control more than truth. Where I have shaped questions to protect my own outcomes, bring honesty. Where I have used your word to manage rather than listen, bring humility. Teach me to seek what is true, even when it unsettles what I would rather keep. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 14: The Altar of Profit

Read Mark 11:15–19

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“I will bring them to my holy mountain of Jerusalem and will fill them with joy in my house of prayer. I will accept their burnt offerings and sacrifices, because my Temple will be called a house of prayer for all nations.” (Isaiah 56:7 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A large stone altar sits centered in a modern open courtyard, split by a deep crack running through its middle. The surrounding architecture is clean and symmetrical, with a distant city skyline blurred in gray light. Overlaid text reads “ALTAR AUDIT: A New Lenten Devotion Series” and “The Altar of Profit,” with “Life-Giving Water Devotions” at the bottom. The atmosphere is cold, still, and fractured, symbolizing the breaking of trusted systems.
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Profit” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 14: The Altar of Profit.The noise of Palm Sunday has not quite faded yet. The crowds have thinned, but the energy lingers—the sense that something important has begun, that something is about to happen. Jesus enters the Temple in that space between celebration and outcome, where expectation still hangs in the air.

And then everything shifts.

Tables are overturned, coins scatter, and animals are driven out. The disruption is physical, violent, threatening, and immediate—not symbolic or abstract. In a crowded Temple under watchful authority, this was not a safe act. By ordinary standards, it would look foolish. Foolish by worldly standards…faithful by God’s.

It is easy to misread this moment as anger at commerce itself, but that misses the point. The Temple required money. Pilgrims needed currency exchange, and sacrifices required animals. This system had long existed and was necessary for participation in worship. Jesus and the disciples would have navigated that reality.

So this is not outrage at the presence of money. This is judgment on what the system had become.

“My house will be called a house of prayer for all nations… but you have made it a den of robbers.” A den of robbers is not where robbery happens; it is where robbers retreat. It is where what has been taken is protected, where exploitation is shielded from consequence. It is a place that feels safe—not for the vulnerable, but for those who benefit from the system as it stands.

That is the problem.

The Temple still functioned. Worship still happened. People still gathered. Nothing on the surface suggested failure. But underneath, something had shifted. A system that once served access to God had become a system that shielded injustice. It had become embedded, normalized, and—most dangerously—protected.

Because it worked.

It worked for those who benefited. It worked for those in power. It worked well enough that no one had to ask whether it was still faithful.

And that is what Jesus refuses.

Jesus does not disrupt the system because it exists. Jesus disrupts it because it has become untouchable, because what once served God had begun to serve itself, and because what should have opened the way had begun to control it.

This is not a gentle correction. It is a decisive refusal.

Not here. Not like this. Not in the name of God.

This is where the altar reveals itself.

The altar of profit is not built when money is present. It is built when systems that exploit are allowed to stand because they are useful, familiar, or beneficial—and are protected because they work for the ones in power. It is built when access is shaped by what someone can give, when belonging is quietly filtered, and when some move freely while others encounter barriers that were never meant to exist.

And most often, it goes unchallenged.

Because it works.

We are not distant from this. We inherit systems, participate in them, and benefit from them in ways we may not always recognize. Over time, what is familiar becomes unquestioned, and what is unquestioned becomes defended—not because we intend harm, but because disruption feels costly.

Because overturning tables always does.

But the gospel does not preserve what is comfortable if it is no longer faithful. Jesus does not protect systems simply because they are established. Jesus walks into the center of what we assume is holy and reveals what it has become, not only with words, but with action.

Which leaves us with a question that cannot be avoided:

What do we defend because it works…

and what might Christ overturn if Christ walked into it?

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
The altar of profit stands wherever exploitation is protected because it benefits those in power.

PRAYER
God, give me the clarity to see what I have accepted without question. Where I have benefited from what is not faithful, bring truth to light. Where I have defended what should be examined, give me courage to let it go. Lead me into a faith that reflects your justice, not my comfort. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 13: The Altar of Popularity

Read Luke 19:28–40

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“Then the Pharisees said to each other, ‘There’s nothing we can do. Look, everyone has gone after him!’” (John 12:19 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Popularity” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 13: The Altar of Popularity. Palm Sunday feels like a victory. The road is lined with people. Cloaks are thrown down. Branches are waved. Voices rise together in celebration. “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord.”

It looks like faith. It sounds like devotion. It feels like certainty.

But popularity is not the same as allegiance.

The crowd is not lying. They are responding. They see something in Jesus that stirs hope, and they respond with what they have—praise, excitement, expectation. There is sincerity here. There is even joy.

But there is also assumption.

They are welcoming the kind of king they expect. A king who will restore, elevate, and vindicate. A king who fits their vision of how God should act. The celebration is real, but it is built on a particular understanding of who Jesus is and what Jesus has come to do.

And that understanding will not hold. Jesus is the embodiment of “I AM WHO I AM”—“I WILL BE WHAT I WILL BE”—not who we wish Jesus to be, not who the crowd demands Jesus to be.

Because the road does not end in Jerusalem’s throne rooms. It leads somewhere else entirely. It leads to confrontation, to disruption, to suffering. It leads to a cross.

Palm Sunday celebrates arrival.

But it does not yet reckon with direction.

This is where the altar reveals itself.

The altar of popularity is built when faith is measured by approval. When what is affirmed by the crowd is assumed to be what is faithful. When the volume of praise is mistaken for the depth of commitment. It doesn’t take long to see how easily this happens. Even in something as simple as a show like The Traitors, herd mentality takes over quickly—people align with the crowd, suspicions spread, and “faithful” players turn on one another just to stay in step with the group. It is unsettling how quickly belonging outweighs truth.

It is easy to follow Christ when the path is lined with voices that agree. It is easy to join in when the movement feels like momentum, when the story feels like it is going somewhere triumphant and visible.

But the same road that receives praise will soon demand something else.

Not louder voices.

Not greater numbers.

But deeper trust.

The Gospels do not present a crowd that slowly drifts away in confusion. They show something more unsettling. The energy shifts. The expectations collapse. The same public enthusiasm that welcomed Jesus does not sustain when the path becomes costly.

And this is not just about them.

We are not outside that crowd. We are formed by the same instincts. We know how to celebrate what feels right. We know how to align ourselves with what gains affirmation. We know how to participate when following Christ looks like belonging, like clarity, like movement.

But when Christ leads somewhere uncomfortable—when obedience disrupts what we would prefer to keep intact—the question changes.

Not, “Do we agree?”

But, “Will we continue?”

Popularity creates the illusion that we are further along than we are. It allows us to believe that agreement is the same as commitment, that enthusiasm is the same as trust. It gathers us into something that feels like unity, even when that unity has not been tested.

But faith is not formed on the road where everyone agrees. It is formed on the road where following becomes costly.

Palm branches are easy to carry. They require nothing but participation in themoment.

Golgotha requires something else.

It requires staying when the crowd thins. It requires trust when the outcome no longer looks like victory. It requires a willingness to follow Christ not just where it is celebrated, but where it is rejected.

And that is where the altar breaks.

Because the altar of popularity cannot survive that road. It depends on affirmation. It depends on agreement. It depends on a version of Christ that keeps the crowd intact.

But Christ does not move according to the crowd. Christ moves toward the cross.

So the question is not whether we have praised. The question is not whether we have participated.

The question is whether we will follow.

Do we follow Christ to Golgotha…or do we follow the crowd?

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Popularity may gather a crowd, but only trust follows Christ to the cross.

PRAYER
God, guard me from confusing approval with faithfulness. Give me the courage to follow Christ not only where it is easy, but where it is costly. Form in me a trust that remains when the crowd fades and the road becomes uncertain. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 12: The Altar of Delay

Read Mark 14:32-42

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“This is all the more urgent, for you know how late it is; time is running out. Wake up, for our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed.” (Romans 13:11 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A large stone altar sits centered in a modern open courtyard, split by a deep crack running through its middle. The surrounding architecture is clean and structured, with a distant city skyline blurred in gray light. Overlaid text reads “ALTAR AUDIT: A New Lenten Devotion Series” and “The Altar of Delay,” with “Life-Giving Water Devotions” at the bottom. The atmosphere feels cold, still, and fractured, suggesting the breaking of something once trusted.
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Delay” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 12: The Altar of Delay. There is a moment when faith stops being theoretical. There is a moment when belief becomes costly, when following Christ is no longer about agreement but obedience. Gethsemane is that moment.

Jesus does not ask for something dramatic or public. There is no crowd, no miracle, no spectacle. The request is simple: stay here, keep watch, and pray. It is quiet, immediate, and personal. And they cannot do it.

This is not betrayal—not yet. It is not denial—not yet. It is something quieter and far more familiar: delay. Delay is the refusal—or inability—to step into obedience when it becomes real.

“Could you not watch with me one hour?” The question is not about perfection. It is about readiness. Because delay rarely feels like rejection. It feels reasonable. Temporary. Understandable. “Just a moment.” “Not yet.” “Soon.”

But in Gethsemane, delay has weight. While they sleep, the moment passes. While they hesitate, the path unfolds without them. What could have been faithfulness becomes absence.

Do we have a faith of obedient trust, or a faith of complacency?

This tension is not new. It has always existed in the life of the Church, often in ways that are far less obvious than outright rejection.

Consider Constantine. Not villain, not hero—somewhere in between, and at times undeniably both. A ruler who reshaped the Church’s place in the world, aligned imperial power with Christianity, and altered history in ways we still live with. And yet, he was not baptized until near the end of his life.

Why? We do not fully know. Some point to political calculation. Others to a gradual movement toward belief. Still others suggest he delayed because early Christians took baptism seriously, recognizing the weight of life after it. What we can say is that his story is not simple.

Because marrying Christ to empire was never Christ’s aim. Christ did not seek power, nor build through domination, nor secure allegiance through force or favor. Many Christians recognized this and rejected that alignment outright, often at great personal cost.

So whatever Constantine believed by the end of his life, his story carries a tension we cannot ignore. He moved the faith forward publicly while his own personal step of obedience came later.

That tension should feel familiar.

We do not often deny Christ outright. We align ourselves with Christ. We show up. We speak the language of faith. We build systems, communities, and identities around belief.

But when obedience becomes costly, we hesitate. We delay. We tell ourselves we will get there.

Romans speaks directly into this: “Wake up, for our salvation is nearer now than when we first believed.” There is an urgency to faith that delay resists. Not because God is impatient, but because moments of obedience are not indefinite. They come, and they pass.

The altar of delay is subtle. It does not demand that we reject Christ. It only asks that we wait. That we postpone. That we choose a more convenient moment.

But faith is not formed in convenience. It is formed in response.

And the longer we delay, the easier it becomes to believe that “later” is still faithful.

In Gethsemane, the disciples slept through the moment that mattered. Not because they did not care, but because they were not ready when it counted.

The same danger remains.

Christ still calls. Not always loudly. Not always publicly. Often in quiet moments that require immediate trust. The question is not whether we believe. The question is whether we will respond when obedience becomes real.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Delay is not neutral; it quietly reshapes obedience into absence.

PRAYER
God, wake me from the places where I have grown comfortable in delay. Give me the courage to respond when obedience is required, not when it is convenient. Form in me a faith that trusts you enough to act when the moment comes. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 11: The Altar of Comfort

Read Revelation 3:14-22

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“What sorrow awaits you who lounge in luxury in Jerusalem, and you who feel secure in Samaria! You are famous and popular in Israel, and people go to you for help.” (Amos 6:1 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A large stone altar sits centered in an open, modern courtyard framed by concrete columns, visibly cracked down the middle. Snow or ash falls lightly through the air. In the distance, a blurred city skyline looms under a gray sky. The scene feels cold, exposed, and fractured, symbolizing the breaking of false foundations.
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Comfort” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 11: The Altar of Comfort. Comfort is not the enemy. That needs to be said clearly. Rest is not the enemy either. Rest is sacred, commanded, and necessary. But comfort and rest are not the same thing, and confusing them may be one of the most dangerous spiritual missteps we make.

Comfort insulates. Rest exposes.

Comfort numbs. Rest awakens.

Comfort says, “I’m fine.” Rest says, “I need God.”

That distinction matters, because the church in Laodicea had comfort in abundance. It was wealthy, stable, and self-sufficient. It lacked nothing—at least, nothing it could see.

And yet Christ’s words cut straight through that illusion: “You say, ‘I have everything I need,’ and you don’t realize that you are wretched and miserable and poor and blind and naked.”

This is not a rebuke of weakness.This is a rebuke of self-secured religion.

The historical context makes this even sharper. Laodicea had no natural water source. Its water was piped in through aqueducts from surrounding cities—hot water from Hierapolis and cold water from Colossae. By the time it reached Laodicea, it was neither hot nor cold. It was lukewarm, mineral-heavy, and unpleasant.

So when Christ says, “You are neither hot nor cold…you are lukewarm,” this is not about emotional passion or spiritual hype. It is about usefulness.

Hot water heals.

Cold water refreshes.

Lukewarm water does neither.

It simply exists—offering no relief, no restoration, nothing of substance.

That is the indictment. Not a church that feels too little, but a church that does nothing. A faith that has become so accommodated, so self-protective, and so settled in its own adequacy that it no longer recognizes its need for Christ at all.

Stability has been mistaken for maturity.

This is where the altar reveals itself. The issue is not that Laodicea had comfort. The issue is that it trusted it. Comfort became the measure of health, the sign of blessing, and the goal to maintain. Nothing urgent. Nothing costly. Everything manageable.

But real rest is something else entirely.

Is comfort rest? Is rest—true rest—even comfortable? Who meditates in silence long enough to face what’s there? Some do…not most. People fear rest, honestly. They prefer leisure—and those are not the same thing. What we often call rest is controlled, comfortable, undemanding. It asks nothing of us. It changes nothing in us. It leaves us exactly as we are. And maybe that’s because we’ve learned to settle for what feels like peace without ever risking what is real. Sometimes what we call peace is simply the absence of disruption. Sometimes what we call wisdom is actually fear. And in the end, what we call rest is often just comfort dressed up in spiritual language.

But true rest…true rest places us before God without distraction, without performance, without control.

And that is rarely comfortable.

Churches can fall into the same pattern. Communities can appear calm while being spiritually numb. They can be orderly without being alive, stable without being faithful. Hard truths are avoided. Costly compassion is delayed. Difficult calls are softened. All of it done in the name of preserving peace.

But not all calm is holy. And in Revelation, Christ is not inside that system. Christ is outside it…knocking.

“I stand at the door and knock.”

Not forcing entry. Not breaking it down. But calling. Because the danger of the altar of comfort is not that it makes us feel bad.

It is that it makes us feel fine. Fine enough not to change. Fine enough not to listen. Fine enough not to need God. Until eventually, we no longer recognize the voice at the door.

But the knocking does not stop.

Christ still calls—not to disrupt for disruption’s sake, but to restore what comfort has numbed. To awaken what has settled. To enter what we have closed off in the name of peace.

The question is not whether Christ is near. The question is whether we will open the door.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Comfort becomes an altar when feeling “fine” replaces our need for Christ.

PRAYER
God, unsettle what has grown too comfortable in me. Strip away the illusion that ease is the same as faithfulness. Teach me the kind of rest that leads to surrender, not avoidance. Open my ears to your voice, even when it calls me beyond what is familiar or safe. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 10: The Altar of Preference

Read Luke 6:20-26

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“Listen to me, dear brothers and sisters. Hasn’t God chosen the poor in this world to be rich in faith? Aren’t they the ones who will inherit the Kingdom he promised to those who love him?” (James 2:5 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “ALTAR AUDIT, part 10: The Altar of Preference” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 10: The Altar of Preference. It’s easy to hear “blessed are the poor” and quietly translate it into something more comfortable—something spiritual, something distant, something we can agree with without changing much. But Luke doesn’t give us that distance. He places Jesus on level ground, among the people, where these words land differently.

What we often call the Sermon on the Mount in Matthew’s Gospel appears differently in Luke. Here, it is known as the Sermon on the Plain. And that difference is not incidental. In Matthew, Jesus goes up the mountain, sits, and teaches his disciples. In Luke, Jesus comes down, stands on level ground, and speaks among a large crowd—disciples, the sick, the poor, the desperate, all gathered together. What is said here is not abstract or removed—it is social, embodied, and immediate.

And even the words themselves shift. In Matthew, the blessing is for the “poor in spirit.” In Luke, it is simply the poor. Not a category that could be internalized or spiritualized, but a reality standing right in front of them. A reality standing in front of us all.

“Blessed are you who are poor… Woe to you who are rich.”

There is no softening here. No easy reframing that lets us keep everything exactly as it is. This is not an abstract principle. It is a reordering, and it cuts directly against the way we operate. Why? Because we do not build around the poor.

We serve them. We support them. We minister to them. We create programs, organize drives, and mobilize volunteers. Much of this is necessary. Much of it is good. People rely on it. It matters.

But it is also worth asking what kind of world our systems are actually forming.

We don’t reject the poor…we just build systems around them. We tell them who they are and what they need.

They are not the center. They are the recipients.

And over time, that distinction begins to matter more than we realize.

Because what we call ministry can slowly become preference. Not maliciously. Not intentionally. But structurally. We build in ways that are sustainable for us, manageable for us, comfortable for us. We decide what is possible, what is realistic, what is wise. Who fits the mold enough to be helped, and just what help we can give.

And in doing so, we may never notice that the system itself remains untouched.

Or worse—what we build around the “least of these” can quietly become part of the prison.

Not liberation. Not the release proclaimed in Luke 4. But a managed, contained version of care that keeps everything functioning just well enough to continue as it is.

Jesus does something different.

Jesus heals who is in front of him. Jesus feeds who is hungry. Jesus restores who is broken. But Jesus also announces a Kingdom that does not simply patch the existing system—it overturns it. The poor are not recipients in that Kingdom. They are centered. Blessed, not because poverty is good, but because God’s reign is breaking in among those the world has pushed aside.

That is the inversion.

And it exposes something deeper in us.

Preference is not always about what we like. It is about what we are willing to reorganize our lives around. It is about who we place at the center—and who we keep at the edges, even while serving them.

Even in the Church.

Especially in the Church.

This is not a call to abandon the work we are doing. It is a call to examine the structure in which we are doing it. To ask whether our ministry reflects the Kingdom Jesus proclaims—or simply makes the current world more bearable.

Because one sustains.

The other transforms.

And those are not the same thing.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
The Kingdom of God does not ask us to serve the poor from a distance—it calls us to rebuild the world with them at the center.

PRAYER
God, open our eyes to the ways we have mistaken preference for faithfulness. Give us courage to see clearly, humility to listen deeply, and wisdom to build differently. Reorder our lives, our churches, and our systems so that they reflect your Kingdom—not our comfort. Lead us from maintenance into transformation. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 9: The Altar of Strength

Read Isaiah 42:1–4

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“The Spirit of the Lord is upon me, because he has anointed me to bring good news to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim release to the captives and recovery of sight to the blind, to set free those who are oppressed,

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A large cracked stone altar sits in an open modern courtyard framed by tall pillars. The altar is split down the middle by a deep fracture. In the background a hazy city skyline rises under a gray sky. The scene feels quiet and solemn, suggesting broken foundations and the examination of what we place our trust in. The words, "The Altar of Strength" appear near the
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Strength” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 9: The Altar of Strength. Strength is one of the most celebrated virtues we know. It is praised in leadership, rewarded in culture, and quietly expected in everyday life. We are taught to admire those who endure, who push through, who hold it together no matter the cost. Strength, on its own, is not the problem. It is real. It matters. It can protect, sustain, and even heal.

But what happens when strength becomes something more than a virtue—when it becomes an altar?

The altar of strength is built not just on what we admire, but on what we are willing to overlook. Because the moment strength becomes the standard by which we measure worth, those who cannot meet it begin to disappear. Not all at once. Not violently, at least not always. But quietly. Systemically. Acceptably.

We tell ourselves a lie: that strength is simply what is good. And in doing so, we justify who we ignore.

Isaiah offers a different vision. The Servant of God does not raise a voice to dominate. The Servant does not crush the bruised reed or extinguish the faintest flame. This is not weakness. This is not passivity. This is strength—restrained, intentional, and directed toward justice. It is power that refuses to prove itself through destruction.

That is a direct contradiction to the strength we are used to seeing.

Because empire has always defined strength by who survives and who does not. Strength, in that system, is measured by dominance, endurance, and control. Those who cannot keep pace—the bruised, the exhausted, the barely holding on—are not centered. They are managed, minimized, or moved aside.

And here is the harder truth: the Church is not immune to this.

We say we follow Christ, but we often mirror empire. We celebrate resilience while ignoring burnout. We platform voices that project stability while sidelining those who struggle to be heard. We call it wisdom. We call it order. We call it strength.

But beneath it is a quieter confession: we do not know what to do with weakness—especially our own.

So we construct an altar.

We convince ourselves that we are strong, even when we are not, because admitting otherwise feels like losing value. And in maintaining that illusion, we distance ourselves from those who cannot hide their fragility. What we refuse to face within ourselves, we often reject in others.

This is how the altar holds.

Jesus dismantles it—not by denying strength, but by redefining it. In Luke’s Gospel, the good news is not announced to the powerful but to the poor, the captive, the blind, the oppressed. Not as an afterthought, but as the center.

That is the inversion.

Strength, in the kingdom of God, is not proven by who stands above others. It is revealed in who refuses to step over them. It is not the ability to endure at all costs—it is the willingness to remain with those who cannot. It is not dominance—it is presence. Not force—but faithfulness.

And that kind of strength cannot coexist with the altar we have built.

Because one sustains systems that discard. The other restores those systems have already crushed.

So the question is not whether we value strength.

It is which definition we are willing to lay down.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
Strength, in the way of Christ, is not proven by power over others, but by refusing to abandon them.

PRAYER
God, strip away the false strength we cling to and the illusions we use to measure worth. Teach us the strength of Christ—the kind that does not crush, does not discard, and does not turn away. Give us courage to face our own fragility, and compassion to stand with those the world overlooks. Re-form us in your way of justice and mercy. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 8: The Altar of Approval

Read Galatians 1:1-10

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“Fear of people is a dangerous trap, but trusting the Lord means safety.” (Proverbs 29:25 NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

Part 8: The Altar of Approval. Approval is one of the quietest altars we build.

It rarely looks like idolatry. It looks like professionalism. It looks like respectability. It looks like wisdom, diplomacy, or knowing how to read a room. But beneath all of that can sit a quieter question: Who are we really trying to please?

Paul names the tension directly in Galatians. “Am I now seeking human approval, or God’s?” It is not a rhetorical flourish. It is a diagnostic question. Because the moment approval becomes the measure of faithfulness, the gospel itself begins to bend.

The Church has never been immune to this. Congregations want stability. Leaders want credibility. Communities want reassurance that the people guiding them will not embarrass them or disrupt the fragile peace that holds institutions together. None of that is inherently wrong. But when approval becomes the altar, faithfulness becomes the sacrifice.

The danger is subtle. No one wakes up one morning and decides to worship approval. Instead, it grows slowly through a thousand small calculations. A leader softens a truth because it might upset someone. A congregation rewards the voices that affirm what it already believes. A system quietly teaches that survival depends not on conviction, but on acceptability.

Over time, approval begins to shape identity.

Years ago, when I was serving as a youth pastor, I learned something about this the hard way. I had written and recorded a song and paired it with a dark, gothic-style video—creative work that reflected the artistic voice I had carried with me my entire life as a poet, musician, and artist. At some point, that video found its way into the hands of church leadership after someone burned it onto a CD and mailed it anonymously.

I never learned who sent it. In the end, it did not matter.

What mattered was the note written across the top of the disc:

“Youth Pastor Todd Lattig serving his lord Satan.”

Moments like that clarify something quickly. When approval is the altar, anything unfamiliar becomes a threat. Anything that does not fit the brand must be corrected, contained, or quietly removed.

But Paul’s words refuse that logic.

“If I were still trying to please people, I would not be a servant of Christ.”

The apostle is not celebrating antagonism or encouraging leaders to provoke conflict. Faithfulness is not measured by how many people we offend. But Paul is naming something deeper: the gospel cannot survive if approval becomes its guiding compass.

Because the gospel itself is disruptive.

It proclaims grace where systems prefer merit. It lifts the overlooked where hierarchies prefer order. It exposes idols we have grown comfortable with. And when that happens, approval often evaporates quickly.

This is where Proverbs offers its quiet warning: “Fear of people is a dangerous trap.”

Fear is the hidden engine behind the altar of approval. Fear of rejection. Fear of losing influence. Fear of disappointing those who hold power in our lives or communities. And fear has a remarkable ability to reshape conviction into compliance.

But the gospel begins somewhere else entirely.

It begins with belovedness.

Before reputation, before usefulness, before success or failure, the gospel announces that we belong to God. Not because we performed well enough to earn approval, but because grace has already claimed us. Belovedness is not branding. It cannot be curated, managed, or polished into something marketable.

It is given.

And that changes everything.

When identity rests in belovedness rather than approval, we are finally free to speak truthfully, lead faithfully, and love courageously—even when doing so costs us the approval we once believed we needed.

That freedom does not make life easier. But it does make faithfulness possible.

Because the question Paul asks still echoes through every generation of the Church:

Who are we really trying to please?

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
When approval becomes the altar, faithfulness becomes the sacrifice.

PRAYER
Holy One, free us from the quiet fear that binds our hearts to the approval of others. Teach us to rest in the belovedness you have already given. When truth is costly and courage feels uncertain, steady us in your grace so that our lives seek faithfulness more than applause. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

ALTAR AUDIT, Part 7: The Altar of Image

Read Matthew 4:1–11

ALSO IN SCRIPTURE
“Though he was God, he did not think of equality with God as something to cling to. Instead, he gave up his divine privileges; he took the humble position of a slave and was born as a human being.” (Philippians 2:6–7b NLT)

Altars reveal what we worship. Some are obvious—raised platforms of stone and flame. Others are quieter, constructed in systems, reputations, loyalties, and assumptions. Lent is a season of holy examination. It calls us to look closely at what we have built, what we defend, and what we trust. In this series, we conduct an audit—not of budgets or buildings, but of allegiances. Lent strips away every false altar until only Christ remains.

A cracked stone altar sits in an open modern courtyard framed by concrete pillars, with a distant city skyline fading into mist. Cold light and drifting particles create a stark, contemplative mood, symbolizing the fracture between outward appearance and inner reality.
Image: AI-generated using DALL·E and customized by the author. Used with the devotional “The Altar of Image” at Life-Giving Water Devotions.

Part 7: The Altar of Image. Most people know the quiet pressure of needing to prove themselves. To show they are capable. To demonstrate they belong. To convince others that they are strong enough, faithful enough, or successful enough to be taken seriously. Much of life teaches us that identity must be displayed to be believed. If we cannot show evidence, the world assumes it is not real.

Over time that pressure becomes deeply ingrained. We learn to manage impressions. We highlight what looks strong and hide what feels fragile. The goal slowly shifts from simply living to making sure our lives appear convincing.

And this pressure does not stop at the doors of the Church.

Faith communities often promise freedom from the world’s expectations, yet sometimes they quietly reproduce them. Belief becomes something to demonstrate. Faithfulness becomes something to measure. Callings become something that must constantly be justified or defended. In ways both subtle and overt, the Church can begin to ask the same question the world asks: prove it.

Without noticing it, we begin to serve an altar built from appearances.

This is the altar of image.

The wilderness temptation reveals how deeply this pressure runs. Three temptations appear in the story, yet beneath them lies a single challenge. The tempter repeatedly begins with the same words: “If you are the Son of God…”

The temptation is not merely about bread, spectacle, or power. The deeper temptation is to prove identity instead of trusting it.

Jesus has just heard the voice of God declare belovedness. That declaration should be enough. Yet almost immediately the wilderness introduces a different demand: demonstrate it. Turn stones into bread. Perform a miracle. Display authority. Show the world what you can do.

But Jesus refuses.

He does not perform for the wilderness. He does not prove himself to the tempter. He does not turn identity into spectacle. Instead, he trusts the word already spoken.

This refusal exposes something uncomfortable about the way image functions in human life. When identity must constantly be demonstrated, life becomes performance. Strength must be visible. Certainty must be projected. Weakness must be hidden.

And when these pressures enter the Church, the results can be subtle but profound.

Congregations begin measuring vitality through appearance. Leaders feel pressure to display success. Ministries begin shaping themselves around visibility rather than faithfulness. Slowly, almost imperceptibly, the Church begins to mirror the same image-driven systems it was meant to challenge.

The altar of image is not built with statues or incense. It is built with perception. With reputation. With the constant need to appear convincing.

Yet Christ refuses that altar in the wilderness.

Identity does not need to be proven when it has already been spoken by God.

THOUGHT OF THE DAY
When identity must be proven, faith becomes performance.

PRAYER
Holy One, free us from the exhausting need to prove ourselves. Quiet the voices that demand performance and comparison. Teach us to trust the belovedness you have already spoken over our lives. Strip away every false altar we have built around reputation, image, or approval. Lead us again into the freedom of living honestly before you, grounded not in appearance but in grace. Amen.


Devotion written by Rev. Todd R. Lattig with the assistance of ChatGPT (OpenAI).

A biweekly devotional