Tag Archives: Lent Devotional

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.

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.

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).