The Creek Church

Devotional

Monday, January 12

The Awkward Silence Around Heaven

Scripture:

“Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.” — Colossians 3:2

“For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come.” — Hebrews 13:14

“So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal.” — 2 Corinthians 4:18

Think:

If someone asked you—out of the blue—what heaven will be like, you’d probably pause longer than you’d want to.

You might offer something safe: “perfect,” “peaceful,” “better than here.” Maybe you’d joke about clouds or harps or endless singing, half-smiling because you’re not entirely sure. Heaven is one of those things we believe in… but don’t spend much time picturing.

And that pause—that hesitation—says more than we realize.

We can talk about heaven, but usually only when life forces the conversation. At funerals. In moments of crisis. When something breaks badly enough that we need hope to sound solid. In everyday life—meetings, errands, deadlines, family pressure—heaven feels distant. Abstract. Almost impractical. So we quietly leave it on the shelf.

Most of us are fluent in the language of the immediate. We plan for next week, next season, retirement, vacation. We manage stress, measure progress, chase stability. But forever? That feels harder to hold. And if we’re honest, part of the reason we avoid thinking about heaven is because we’re not sure it will really be enough to sustain us now.

Scripture doesn’t share our hesitation.

Paul writes, “Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.” Not because this world doesn’t matter—but because it isn’t permanent. Hebrews reminds us, “Here we do not have an enduring city.” In other words, this place—no matter how familiar—is not home. And when we forget that, we begin living as though it is.

That subtle shift changes everything.

When heaven feels distant, hope thins out.

When eternity feels unreal, obedience feels optional.

When forever is ignored, suffering feels unbearable and meaningless.

Paul goes even further: “We fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen.” That isn’t denial. It’s perspective. Heaven was never meant to be a sentimental idea reserved for the end of life. It was meant to steady us in the middle of it—to anchor us when we’re weary, grieving, tempted, or discouraged.

The silence around heaven in our lives reveals something uncomfortable:

We’ve learned how to live for what’s urgent, but not for what’s eternal.

Ignoring heaven doesn’t make us practical. It makes us short-sighted.

Today isn’t about answering every question about eternity. It’s about letting Scripture confront us with a simple truth:

If heaven is real—and God insists that it is—then it deserves more than occasional attention. It deserves our focus.

Application:

Pause today and notice what dominates your thoughts—pressure, plans, worries, goals. Gently ask God to lift your eyes beyond what’s immediate.

Choose one moment—stress, disappointment, or decision—where you intentionally remind yourself: this is not the whole story.

Consider how your priorities might shift if you truly believed eternity was shaping today.

Prayer:

God, Lift my eyes beyond what’s right in front of me. Help me live fully here while holding tightly to eternity. Reawaken my longing for heaven and show me how forever changes today. Amen.

Tuesday, January 13

What You Believe About Heaven Shapes How You Live Today

Scripture:

“Since, then, you have been raised with Christ, set your hearts on things above, where Christ is, seated at the right hand of God.” — Colossians 3:1

“Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” — Matthew 6:21

Think:

What you believe about heaven is not a side detail of your faith.

It’s a shaping force.

Even if you rarely think about eternity, it is quietly influencing the way you live right now. Your priorities, your risk tolerance, your generosity, your obedience, your response to suffering—all of it flows downstream from what you believe happens after this life.

Jesus made that connection unmistakably clear: “Where your treasure is, there your heart will be also.” In other words, what you believe lasts determines what you give yourself to now.

If heaven feels distant or abstract, then sacrifice feels unnecessary. Why give more than you have to? Why endure discomfort for faithfulness? Why loosen your grip on success, security, or control?

But if heaven is real—solid, promised, and coming—everything shifts.

Paul tells believers, “Set your hearts on things above, where Christ is.” Not because earthly things don’t matter, but because they don’t last. Heaven becomes the reference point that reorders everything else. It clarifies what’s worth pursuing and what can be held loosely.

This is why two people can face the same hardship and respond so differently. One grows bitter; the other becomes anchored. One collapses under pressure; the other endures with quiet strength. The difference isn’t personality—it’s perspective.

When heaven is small in our thinking, life feels heavy.

When eternity is ignored, disappointment feels final.

When forever is real, even pain is framed by hope.

Believing in heaven doesn’t make us passive or detached from the world. It does the opposite. It frees us to live courageously—to love deeply, give generously, forgive fully, and obey even when obedience costs us something.

Because we’re no longer living as if this life is all there is.

Every choice we make reveals what we believe lasts. Every schedule, every sacrifice, every risk quietly testifies to where we think our true treasure lies.

The question isn’t whether heaven shapes your life.

The question is whether you’re letting it.

Application:

Pay attention today to the choices you make with your time, energy, and attention. What do they reveal about what you believe lasts?

Identify one area where fear or self-protection has been guiding you more than eternal hope.

Ask God to help you live with a heart set on what is above, not just what is urgent.

Prayer:

God, Align my heart with what truly lasts. Help me live today in light of eternity and place my treasure where You are. Amen.

Wednesday, January 14

Jesus Wouldn’t Stop Talking About Heaven

Scripture:

“Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth… But store up for yourselves treasures in heaven.” — Matthew 6:19–20

“In my Father’s house are many rooms… I am going there to prepare a place for you.” — John 14:2–3

Think:

If heaven were optional—or irrelevant to everyday life—Jesus would have treated it that way.

But He didn’t.

Jesus spoke about heaven constantly. In sermons. In stories. In private conversations. In moments of compassion and moments of confrontation. He talked about treasure, reward, inheritance, judgment, home, and eternity—not to satisfy curiosity, but to shape lives.

Jesus understood something we often forget:

People live in the direction of what they believe is coming next.

That’s why He warned, “Do not store up for yourselves treasures on earth.” Not because possessions are evil, but because they’re temporary. Fragile. Unable to carry the weight of a human soul. So He pointed people toward a different investment—treasures in heaven—because only what lasts can truly secure the heart.

Over and over, Jesus used heaven as a lens.

When He spoke about money, heaven was the reference point.

When He spoke about suffering, heaven framed the promise.

When He spoke about obedience, heaven was the reward.

And when His disciples were anxious—afraid of losing Him, afraid of what was coming—Jesus didn’t offer vague comfort. He said, “I am going to prepare a place for you.” Not an idea. Not a metaphor. A place. A future. A promise meant to steady them in the present.

Jesus didn’t talk about heaven to help people escape earth.

He talked about heaven to help them live faithfully on it.

Because without eternity in view, faith collapses under pressure. Obedience feels foolish. Sacrifice feels unnecessary. But with heaven in view, even costly faith makes sense.

The question isn’t whether Jesus cared about what comes next.

The question is why we talk about it so much less than He did.

If heaven mattered enough for Jesus to center His teaching around it, then it matters enough to shape how we live today.

Application:

Read one of Jesus’ teachings today (Matthew 6, Luke 12, or John 14) and notice how often eternity is woven into His words.

Ask yourself: What area of my life would look different if I believed heaven was truly coming?

Let one decision today—how you spend, forgive, endure, or obey—be shaped by what Jesus says lasts.

Prayer:

Jesus, Teach me to see life the way You do. Anchor my choices in what is eternal, and help me live today with heaven in view. Amen.

Thursday, January 15

The Problem Isn’t Heaven—It’s Our Imagination

Scripture:

“In your presence there is fullness of joy; at your right hand are pleasures forevermore.” — Psalm 16:11

“Behold, I am making all things new.” — Revelation 21:5

“What no eye has seen, nor ear heard… what God has prepared for those who love him.” — 1 Corinthians 2:9

Think:

Let’s admit it: most of us didn’t reject heaven—we just quietly downgraded it.

Somewhere along the way, heaven became soft-focus and beige. Clouds. Harps. Floating. Endless singing. No pain, sure—but also no thrill, no edge, no story. More like an eternal waiting room than the fulfillment of every longing we’ve ever had.

If that’s heaven, it explains a lot.

Why we don’t ache for it.

Why it doesn’t interrupt our priorities.

Why it rarely shapes how we live.

But that picture didn’t come from Scripture.

It came from an imagination starved of truth.

The Bible doesn’t describe heaven as less real than earth—it describes it as more. Not an escape from creation, but its renewal. Revelation doesn’t say God makes new things as much as He makes all things new. Everything familiar—only healed, strengthened, and fully alive.

Think about the moments in life that stop you cold for just a second:

A view that steals your breath.

A laugh that comes from deep in your chest.

Music that moves something you can’t name.

Work that feels meaningful instead of draining.

Love that feels safe and strong and unbreakable.

Scripture dares to say: that’s not the destination—that’s the trailer.

Heaven is not the absence of pleasure but the completion of it. Psalm 16 doesn’t promise rest alone—it promises fullness of joy and pleasures forevermore. Not shallow pleasure. Not numbing comfort. But deep, satisfying joy that never fades, never disappoints, never leaves you wanting more because it finally fulfills you.

Paul says our hearts cannot yet imagine what God has prepared—not because heaven is vague, but because our imaginations are too small. We’re trying to picture eternity with minds shaped by fatigue, sin, and disappointment. Of course it falls flat.

And here’s why this matters more than we think:

A small heaven produces small hope.

If heaven feels dull, obedience feels heavy.

If eternity feels vague, sacrifice feels unnecessary.

If God feels secondary to the picture, desire collapses.

But Scripture insists that heaven’s greatest joy isn’t scenery—it’s God fully enjoyed. Not glimpsed. Not interrupted. Not diluted. Fully present. Fully known. Fully satisfying.

That ache you feel—that sense that even your best days fall short—is not failure or ingratitude.

It’s evidence.

You were made for more than this world can deliver.

The problem isn’t heaven.

It’s that we’ve been imagining something too small to carry the weight of our longing.

Application:

Today, notice what stirs joy, beauty, or longing in you—and let it point you forward, not inward.

When heaven feels abstract, trust God’s character more than your mental picture.

Ask yourself honestly: Do I want heaven because I want relief—or because I want God?

Prayer:

God, Stretch my imagination beyond what I know. Awaken my longing for what You’ve promised. Teach me to trust that You are better than anything I can picture. Amen.

Friday, January 16

Why Comfort Isn’t the Same as Hope

Scripture:

“We do not grieve as those who have no hope.” — 1 Thessalonians 4:13

“For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all.” — 2 Corinthians 4:17

Think:

Comfort is easy to confuse with hope—but Scripture makes a careful distinction.

In the New Testament, the word often translated comfort comes from the Greek παρακαλέω (parakaleō). It means to come alongside, to encourage, to speak soothing words. Comfort draws near. It steadies. It helps someone breathe again in the middle of pain. And that’s good—God Himself comforts His people.

But comfort was never meant to carry the full weight of suffering.

Hope is different.

The word Paul uses in 1 Thessalonians—hope—is ἐλπίς (elpis). And elpis is not wishful thinking or positive vibes. It is confident expectation. A settled assurance that something promised is coming—even if it hasn’t arrived yet.

Comfort helps you endure the moment.

Hope secures the future.

Think of it this way: comfort is like turning up the volume on the radio when your car starts making a strange noise. It helps you ignore the sound for a while—but it doesn’t fix what’s wrong.

Hope opens the hood.

Hope doesn’t deny the noise. It says, This matters—but this isn’t the end. There’s a future beyond this breakdown. There’s a destination that hasn’t changed.

That’s what elpis does.

Paul doesn’t tell believers not to grieve. He tells them not to grieve as those who have no elpis. Grief is real. Loss is real. Pain is not minimized. But it is not ultimate.

Comfort (parakaleō) walks with us through sorrow.

Hope (elpis) tells us where sorrow is headed.

This is why comfort alone collapses under deep suffering. When the loss is heavy, when answers don’t come, when prayers feel unanswered—comfort runs out of words.

Hope does not.

When Paul calls our troubles “light and momentary,” he isn’t dismissing pain. He’s comparing weights. Present suffering placed next to eternal glory does not tip the scale. Eternity outweighs the moment—every time.

Comfort says, “Just get through this.”

Hope says, “This will not have the final word.”

Comfort soothes.

Hope sustains.

Many of us are very skilled at seeking comfort—distraction, control, numbing—especially when we’re tired. But Scripture invites us to something sturdier than relief.

It invites us to assurance.

Not that pain will end quickly.

Not that life will suddenly make sense.

But that what is broken will be restored.

What is lost will be redeemed.

What is endured will not be wasted.

Comfort fades when circumstances don’t change.

Hope remains—because it is anchored in eternity.

Application:

Notice where you instinctively reach for comfort instead of anchoring yourself in hope.

Ask God to help you exchange temporary relief for eternal assurance.

Speak this truth today: I can grieve—and still live with confident expectation.

Prayer:

God, When comfort is not enough, anchor me in true hope. Help me trust what You have promised more than what I am facing. Amen.

Saturday, January 17

What We’re Really Afraid of When We Think About Forever

Scripture:

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.” — Proverbs 3:5

“For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face.” — 1 Corinthians 13:12

Think:

We don’t avoid thinking about forever because we don’t believe in heaven.

We avoid it because forever asks something of us.

When eternity comes into view, it presses on the places we guard most carefully—control, understanding, and the quiet hope that life will eventually make sense on our terms. Heaven reminds us that we won’t manage the ending, interpret every chapter, or tie up every loose thread. And for people who have learned to survive by staying capable and prepared, that can feel deeply unsettling.

So we stay busy. We focus on what we can fix. We keep our faith practical and our expectations small.

Scripture, however, invites us to something braver.

“Trust in the Lord with all your heart,” Proverbs says—not because understanding doesn’t matter, but because it has limits. Faith has always required leaning into God when clarity runs out. Paul echoes this reality when he admits that for now, we see only dimly. Partial glimpses. Incomplete answers. Not because God is withholding, but because this side of eternity cannot yet hold the fullness of what is coming.

This is where fear quietly takes root.

What if heaven doesn’t explain everything?

What if some losses still ache?

What if surrender feels like loss before it feels like freedom?

Beneath those questions is a deeper one: Can I trust God when I don’t fully understand Him?

Heaven doesn’t promise us control—it promises us communion. It doesn’t guarantee that every mystery will be neatly explained—it assures us that we will be face to face with the One who has never failed us. The hope of eternity is not that we will finally know everything, but that we will finally know Him without distance, doubt, or distraction.

That’s why the fear we feel around forever isn’t a weakness—it’s a crossroads. An invitation to stop demanding certainty and start choosing trust. To believe that the God who has been faithful in the shadows will not disappoint us in the light.

Heaven asks us to loosen our grip not because God is unsafe, but because He is good.

And trusting Him with eternity becomes the training ground for trusting Him now.

Application:

Notice which fear rises first when you think about eternity—loss of control, disappointment, or unanswered questions.

Bring that fear honestly to God instead of managing it alone.

Practice trust today by releasing one outcome or question you’ve been holding tightly.

Prayer:

God, I confess how much I want clarity and control. Teach me to trust You

when understanding is incomplete. Help me rest in who You are and believe that You will be enough. Amen.

Sunday, January 18

Reawakening Eternal Longing

Scripture:

“For here we do not have an enduring city, but we are looking for the city that is to come.” — Hebrews 13:14

“Set your minds on things above, not on earthly things.” — Colossians 3:2

Think:

Most of us don’t feel an obvious longing for heaven.

What we feel is something quieter and far more familiar—the sense that no matter how much we accomplish, something is still unfinished. That even when things go well, they don’t stay satisfying for long. That rest never quite settles as deeply as we hoped it would.

We don’t usually call that longing. We call it pressure. Fatigue. Restlessness. But underneath those feelings is a simple truth: this world keeps asking more from us than it can give back.

Scripture names that reality without judgment. “Here we do not have an enduring city.” Not eventually. Not someday. Here. This life was never meant to feel fully settled or permanent. And when we try to make it so—when we ask it to carry the full weight of our hopes—it leaves us strained and unsatisfied.

That strain isn’t failure.

It’s evidence.

It’s the quiet recognition that even the best parts of life are incomplete. That joy fades. Success passes. Control slips. And something in us knows this can’t be the whole story.

That’s why Paul urges us to set our minds on things above. Not as an escape from life, but as a way to live it with clarity. Eternity doesn’t remove the pressures of today—it puts them in their proper place. It reminds us that our deepest desires weren’t misplaced; they were simply aimed at the wrong horizon.

Heaven becomes compelling not because it’s sentimental, but because it’s secure.

A future that doesn’t decay.

A joy that doesn’t thin out over time.

A belonging that isn’t fragile or conditional.

A home that doesn’t shift beneath our feet.

That’s what your heart is reaching for when life feels thin.

You don’t have to force yourself to long for heaven.

You only have to listen to what your restlessness has been saying all along.

This world is good—but it is not final.

And the desire for more isn’t something to silence.

It’s something to follow.

Application:

Notice moments today when life feels incomplete instead of rushing past them.

Let those moments remind you that this life was never meant to satisfy you fully.

Ask God to reorient your hope toward what is lasting and secure.

Prayer:

God, You know the restlessness I carry. Help me recognize it as longing,

not dissatisfaction. Lift my eyes beyond what fades and anchor my hope in what lasts. Amen.