The Creek Church

Devotional

Monday, October 27

Do You Believe?

Read: 

“‘Do you believe in the Son of Man?’ … Then the man said, ‘Lord, I believe,’ and he worshiped Him.” — John 9:35–38

The story of this man reaches its climax, not in the moment his eyes were opened, but in the moment his heart bowed before Jesus. Physical sight was miraculous, but temporary—eventually, those eyes would close in death. Spiritual sight, however, would last for eternity.

When Jesus found him, He didn’t congratulate him for his courage or comfort him for his rejection. He asked a question that cuts to the center of every soul: “Do you believe?” It was never just about seeing—it was about trusting. The man could have clung to his newfound independence, his pride in standing up to the Pharisees, or even his anger at being cast out. Instead, he chose surrender. His simple words, “Lord, I believe,” carry the weight of a lifetime of longing finally satisfied.

And then, worship. That’s the natural overflow of true belief. To worship means to ascribe worth, to bend low before the One who is infinitely greater. For years this man had been the one on the ground—begging, dismissed, overlooked. But this time he bows not in shame, but in reverence. He isn’t defined by blindness, rejection, or accusation anymore—he’s defined by belonging to Christ.

This moment exposes what faith really is. It isn’t abstract doctrine or religious ritual; it’s the recognition of Jesus as Lord, and the reorientation of life around Him. To believe is to hand Him the pen and say, “Write my story from here.”

Application:

Where in your life is Jesus asking, “Do you believe?” Maybe in a place of disappointment, a fear about the future, or a struggle you can’t overcome. Answer Him not with explanations but with surrender. Let your belief move beyond words into worship.

Prayer:

Jesus, I believe You are the Son of Man, my Savior and my Lord. I lay down my pride, my doubts, my fears. Teach me to worship You with my whole life, finding in You what no one else can give.

Tuesday, October 28

The Blind Who See, the Seeing Who Are Blind

Read: 

“Jesus said, ‘For judgment I have come into this world, so that the blind will see and those who see will become blind.’ Some Pharisees who were with him heard him say this and asked, ‘What? Are we blind too?’ Jesus said, ‘If you were blind, you would not be guilty of sin; but now that you claim you can see, your guilt remains.’” — John 9:39–41

The story closes with a haunting exchange. The man born blind now sees more clearly than the religious leaders of his day. His worship rises like light at dawn, while the Pharisees remain trapped in the shadows of their pride. Jesus doesn’t soften His words—He reveals a devastating truth: those who admit their blindness will see, and those who cling to the illusion of sight will remain blind forever.

This is the great reversal of the kingdom. The ones who seemed strong, knowledgeable, and certain are exposed as blind. The one who seemed weak, broken, and forgotten now beholds the face of God. Grace has always chosen the low road. It fills the cracks where self-sufficiency can’t hold. It floods the humble heart but passes over the proud.

It’s unsettling, isn’t it? We’d rather think blindness belongs to “them”—the skeptics, the Pharisees, the hardened. But Jesus’ words press closer. Where have we claimed sight while resisting His light? Where have we convinced ourselves we know better, only to realize we’ve been stumbling in the dark?

The gospel calls us to confession, not performance. To see Jesus, we must admit our need. Pride may keep us respected, but humility will keep us saved. The Pharisees refused the cure because they refused to admit they were sick. The healed man received sight because he knew all too well he was blind.

Application:

Ask Jesus to reveal where pride, self-reliance, or stubbornness has blurred your vision. True sight begins when we confess our blindness and let His light flood in.

Prayer:

Jesus, strip away my pride. Expose the places I pretend to see but remain blind. Give me the courage to confess my need and the grace to walk in Your light. Let me be like the blind man—seeing You clearly, worshiping You fully.

Wednesday, October 29

The Voice That Calls Your Name

Read: John 10:1–5

“The one who enters by the gate is the shepherd of the sheep. The gatekeeper opens the gate for him, and the sheep listen to his voice. He calls his own sheep by name and leads them out… and his sheep follow him because they know his voice.” — John 10:2–4

So many voices call to you each day — the world’s noise, the inner critic, the restless ache of trying to prove your worth. They tell you to hurry, to perform, to keep up. But none of them know your name. None of them love you back.

Then comes another voice — quieter, but weightier. It doesn’t compete; it cuts through. It’s steady, familiar, and impossibly kind. The voice of Jesus.

When He called Himself the Shepherd, He wasn’t describing a distant ruler, but a tender leader who knows His own. In ancient Israel, shepherds didn’t drive their sheep from behind — they led from the front. Each morning, a dozen flocks might share one pen, but when the shepherd called, only his sheep moved. They didn’t respond to the loudest sound; they followed the one they trusted.

That’s what Jesus means when He says, “My sheep hear My voice.”

Faith isn’t flawless understanding — it’s recognition. It’s learning to distinguish His whisper from the world’s shouting. The Shepherd doesn’t coerce; He calls. He doesn’t demand perfection; He delights in relationship.

And He calls you by name.

Not “hey, you,” not “if you get it right.”

By name. The same voice that spoke galaxies into being speaks your name with affection and authority.

You may not always understand the path He leads you on — the valleys, the shadows, the pauses — but His voice never wavers. The Shepherd doesn’t promise to remove every danger; He promises to go before you in all of them. His presence is the pasture.

Theologians have called this the great paradox of faith: that the God who reigns over all also walks beside the one. You don’t need to know every turn to follow — you only need to trust the 

One who calls.

So pause. Breathe. Listen.

Amid all the voices that fill your day, His is still the one that brings peace. The Shepherd is calling your name — not to scold, but to lead you home.

Application:

What voices are competing for your attention today? How can you make space to truly listen to the One who calls you by name?

Prayer:

Jesus, still my heart until Your voice is the one I follow. Teach me again that safety isn’t in knowing the way, but in knowing You. Amen.

Thursday, October 30

The Gate to Life

Read: 

“Therefore Jesus said again, ‘Very truly I tell you, I am the gate for the sheep. All who have come before me are thieves and robbers, but the sheep have not listened to them. I am the gate; whoever enters through me will be saved. They will come in and go out, and find pasture. The thief comes only to steal and kill and destroy; I have come that they may have life, and have it to the full.’” — John 10:6–10

We spend so much of our lives looking for a way in.

Into peace. Into purpose. Into a place that feels like home. The world is filled with doors that promise life, but each one demands something in return — performance, perfection, approval. We push and strive, but somehow the door never really opens.

Then Jesus says, “I am the gate.”

In the fields of ancient Israel, shepherds didn’t build wooden gates for their sheepfolds. At night, they would lie across the opening themselves. Their body became the doorway — nothing entered or left without passing over their watchful care. The shepherd himself was the protection, the access, and the assurance that every sheep was safe.

That’s what Jesus is saying here. He isn’t one of many ways to God — He is the way. He isn’t offering a self-improvement plan; He’s offering Himself. Every other gate demands that you earn your way in. But this one? This gate is grace.

Tim Keller put it simply: “The gospel is not ‘I obey, therefore I’m accepted.’ The gospel is, ‘I’m accepted, therefore I obey.’”

Religion tells us to climb higher, to prove ourselves worthy. But Jesus lies down at the threshold of heaven and says, “You can stop climbing. Come through Me.”

Through Him, you don’t just find safety — you find abundance. “Life to the full” isn’t comfort or success; it’s a heart alive in His presence, secure in His care, and free to rest.

So if you’ve been knocking on doors that never satisfy, stop.

The gate is open.

The Shepherd who guards it is calling you home.

Application:

Where have you been trying to find peace apart from Him? What false gates have promised you life but left you empty?

Prayer:

Jesus, You are the gate that leads to life. I’m done trying to earn my way in. Help me walk through the grace You’ve already opened and rest in the safety of Your presence. Amen.

Friday, October 31

The Shepherd Who Stands in the Gap

Read: 

“I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep. The hired hand is not the shepherd and does not own the sheep. So when he sees the wolf coming, he abandons the sheep and runs away… I am the good shepherd; I know my sheep and my sheep know me—just as the Father knows me and I know the Father—and I lay down my life for the sheep.” — John 10:11–15

When Jesus said, “I am the good shepherd,” He wasn’t making a sentimental statement — He was making a scandalous one. In the Old Testament, God alone was called the Shepherd of Israel. By using this image, Jesus was claiming the divine name for Himself. He wasn’t just a messenger from God; He was God — stepping into the field to find His lost sheep.

Shepherding in the ancient world wasn’t gentle work. It meant long nights, fierce predators, and constant vigilance. The shepherd was the first line of defense — the one who slept in the doorway of the pen, his own body forming the barrier between his flock and danger.

So when Jesus says, “The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep,” He isn’t speaking in metaphor. He’s saying, “When death comes for them, it must come through Me first.”

Every other shepherd — every substitute savior — eventually runs when the wolves appear. 

Power, money, approval, and religion all promise safety, but none will bleed for you. Only Jesus does. The hired hands flee when it costs too much. The Shepherd stays.

Tim Keller once wrote, “The cross isn’t just where Jesus died; it’s where He absorbed everything that could destroy you.” That’s what makes Him good. His goodness isn’t abstract kindness — it’s crucified love.

And then He says something breathtaking: “I know My sheep, and My sheep know Me—just as the Father knows Me.”

That’s not shallow acquaintance; it’s intimacy beyond comprehension. The same love that flows between Father and Son now flows toward you.

You are not a number in His flock. You are known. Defended. Carried.

The Shepherd didn’t just risk His life for you — He gave it.

And because He did, nothing can ever snatch you from His hands.

Application:

What does it mean for you today to live as someone fully secure in the care of the Shepherd who never runs?

Prayer:

Jesus, You are the Shepherd who faced the wolves for me. Help me rest in Your protection and walk with confidence in the love that never leaves. Amen.

Saturday, November 1

One Flock, One Shepherd

Read: 

“I have other sheep that are not of this sheep pen. I must bring them also. They too will listen to my voice, and there shall be one flock and one shepherd. The reason my Father loves me is that I lay down my life—only to take it up again. No one takes it from me, but I lay it down of my own accord. I have authority to lay it down and authority to take it up again. This command I received from my Father.”  John 10:16–18

When Jesus said, “I have other sheep,” He was talking about us.

He looked beyond the hills of Judea, past generations and borders, and saw faces like yours and mine. While His disciples were still thinking in terms of tribes and territories, Jesus was already dreaming of one family — one flock gathered by one Shepherd.

Every other love in this world is limited by reach or condition. His isn’t. The heart of Christ is always moving outward — toward the forgotten, the outsider, the one who has wandered far from home.

And He doesn’t send someone else to go find them. He goes Himself.

That’s why He says, “I must bring them also.”

This isn’t reluctant duty; it’s relentless devotion. The Shepherd’s “must” is love’s compulsion. He cannot rest while any sheep remain lost. His voice crosses time and distance, cutting through fear and shame to call every heart that will listen.

And then He says something even more astonishing: “No one takes My life from Me; I lay it down of My own accord.”

The cross wasn’t forced on Him. It was His choice — the Shepherd stepping willingly between the flock and the wolves, taking on every danger Himself. His death wasn’t defeat; it was deliberate love. His resurrection wasn’t recovery; it was victory.

When Jesus rose, He made the promise complete: no division, no distance, no darkness could separate His sheep from His voice again.

One flock. One Shepherd. One love strong enough to gather the world — and tender enough to know your name.

Application:

Where have you drawn lines that Jesus is calling you to cross with His love?

Prayer:

Jesus, You are the Shepherd who gathers without borders. Open my heart to love like You love — wide, willing, and full of grace. Amen.

Sunday, November 2

Safe and Secure

Read: 

“My sheep listen to my voice; I know them, and they follow me. I give them eternal life, and they shall never perish; no one will snatch them out of my hand. My Father, who has given them to me, is greater than all; no one can snatch them out of my Father’s hand. I and the Father are one.” — John 10:27–30

We live in a world built on uncertainty. Jobs shift, relationships strain, and even our faith can feel like it’s slipping through our fingers. But Jesus says something that cuts through every fear: “No one will snatch them out of My hand.”

The security of the believer doesn’t rest on the strength of our grip — it rests on His.

He doesn’t say, “They’ll hold on tightly enough.” He says, “I will hold them.” That’s the difference between religion and the gospel. Religion tells you to cling harder; Jesus tells you to rest deeper.

When He calls you His sheep, it isn’t a term of weakness but of belonging. You are His. He knows your name, your failures, and still refuses to let go. Matt Chandler once said, “If you could lose your salvation, you would — but you can’t, because it isn’t yours to lose.” That’s what Jesus is teaching here. The safety of your soul is sealed by divine hands.

And not one hand — two.

The Son holds you. The Father holds you. Two omnipotent hands overlapping in eternal purpose. If the Son’s blood purchased you and the Father’s power preserves you, then your salvation is not a question mark; it’s an exclamation of grace.

Notice that Jesus grounds your safety in His unity with the Father: “I and the Father are one.” Your security is as sure as God’s own nature. For you to be lost, the Trinity itself would have to break apart — and that will never happen.

So when doubt whispers, “You’ve gone too far,” remember this: the Shepherd who saved you has never lost a sheep yet. You are not dangling on the edge of grace; you are engraved in His hands.

Application:

Where are you still living as though your salvation depends on your strength instead of His security?

Prayer:

Jesus, thank You that my safety is not fragile. When I waver, remind me that Your grip does not. Keep me steady in the promise that I am forever held by You. Amen.