The Creek Church

Devotional

Monday, May 18

When Drifting Becomes Sitting

Scripture:

“Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the wicked, nor stands in the way of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers.” — Psalm 1:1

Think:

Psalm 1 opens with a warning that feels almost painfully honest: nobody drifts all at once.

The psalmist gives us three movements: walk, stand, sit. It is not random language. It is a picture of spiritual progression—or really, spiritual decline. First, you walk in the counsel of the wicked. You are moving with it. Listening to it. Letting certain voices set the direction of your thoughts. Then you stand in the way of sinners. What once was just influence becomes a place you pause. You linger. You grow familiar with it. And eventually, you sit in the seat of scoffers. Now you are not just passing through. You are settled. Comfortable. Identified with a posture that no longer trembles at sin but begins to mock what is holy.

That is how drift works. It does not usually begin with rebellion. It begins with counsel. A voice. A suggestion. A way of thinking. A small compromise that feels harmless because it is still moving. But over time, what you listen to becomes where you stand. And where you stand becomes where you sit.

Psalm 1 is not trying to make us paranoid about people. It is trying to make us honest about formation. We are all being discipled by something. Every conversation, feed, friendship, habit, and hidden thought is shaping our loves.

The blessed life is not the life that never faces temptation. It is the life that recognizes the path before it becomes a seat.

Application:

Where are you most tempted to linger right now—mentally, emotionally, spiritually? Ask God to show you the difference between loving people and letting the wrong voices lead you.

Prayer:

Lord, open my eyes to the places where I may be drifting. Give me wisdom to recognize wrong counsel, courage to move from places I should not stand, and grace to stay rooted in You. Amen.

Tuesday, May 19

Why They Delighted in the Law

Scripture: 

“But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night.” — Psalm 1:2 (ESV)

Think:

At first glance, this feels strange.

Delight… in the law?

For most of us, law sounds like restriction. Rules. Boundaries. Something to endure—not enjoy. But when the psalmist writes this, he’s not talking about cold regulations. The Hebrew word used here is Torah—and it means far more than commands. It means instruction, teaching, direction. It’s the revealed heart and will of God.

So when they delighted in the law, they weren’t delighting in rules—they were delighting in relationship.

In the Old Testament, God’s Word was how He made Himself known. There was no completed Bible, no indwelling Spirit like we experience now. If you wanted to know what God was like—His character, His ways, His promises—you went to His Word. It was not just information. It was revelation.

That’s why passages like Psalm 19 say, “The law of the Lord is perfect, reviving the soul…” and Psalm 119 overflows with language like honey, treasure, and life. They had discovered something we often miss: God’s Word doesn’t just tell you what to do—it shows you who He is.

And when you begin to see that, something shifts.

Delight grows.

Not because every page feels easy—but because you begin to recognize the voice behind it. The consistency of His character. The faithfulness of His promises. The way His truth steadies you when everything else feels uncertain.

“…and on his law he meditates day and night.”

They returned to it again and again because it anchored them. It shaped how they thought, how they lived, how they trusted.

Because to delight in the Word is ultimately to delight in the God who speaks through it.

Application:

Do you see God’s Word as obligation or invitation? Ask God to help you not just read for information, but to encounter Him in it.

Prayer:

God, change the way I see Your Word. Let it become more than something I read—let it be where I meet You. Teach me to delight in Your truth because it reveals Your heart. Amen.

Wednesday, May 20

Roots That Hold

Scripture: 

“He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does, he prospers.” — Psalm 1:3 (ESV)

Think:

Everyone wants the life this verse describes.

Steady when life feels uncertain. Fruitful when others feel stuck. Unshaken when pressure comes.

But Psalm 1 doesn’t start with the fruit—it starts with the roots.

“He is like a tree planted by streams of water…”

This is not a wild tree, barely hanging on. This is a tree that has been intentionally placed where life flows. Its strength isn’t in itself—it’s in what it’s connected to.

Because here’s the truth: when the heat comes—and it will—what’s above the surface is only as strong as what’s beneath it.

“…yields its fruit in its season…”

That line matters more than we think. Fruit has a timing. There are seasons where growth is happening that no one sees. Seasons where you feel like nothing is changing, nothing is working, nothing is coming together.

But roots are growing.

God is doing something deeper before He does something visible.

“…its leaf does not wither…”

That doesn’t mean life is easy. It means life doesn’t have the final say. There’s a resilience here—a quiet strength that doesn’t collapse under pressure because it’s being sustained from a deeper source.

And then—“in all that he does, he prospers.”

Not in the way the world defines it. Not everything going perfectly. But a life that is aligned with God… covered by His presence… carrying a kind of strength that circumstances can’t take away.

Here’s what this is really saying:

If you want a life that holds, you have to be rooted in something that holds.

You don’t become this tree by striving.

You become this tree by staying.

Application:

Where are you looking for stability right now? Ask yourself honestly—what am I depending on to hold me steady? Bring that to God and ask Him to re-root you in Him.

Prayer:

God, I don’t want to live a surface-level life. Root me deeply in You. In seasons where I feel dry or unseen, remind me that You are my source. Make me steady, strong, and sustained by Your presence. Amen.

Thursday, May 21

A Life With Weight—or Without

Scripture: 

“He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does, he prospers. The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away.” — Psalm 1:3–4 (ESV)

Think:

The shift in Psalm 1 is intentional—and sobering.

After showing us a life that is rooted, steady, and full, the psalmist turns and says, “Not so…”

As in—there is another way to live. And it is fundamentally different.

“…but are like chaff that the wind drives away.”

This is not just contrast—it’s exposure.

Chaff is what’s left when the real substance is gone. It looks connected to the grain for a while, but when pressure comes—when it’s lifted and shaken—it separates. It has no weight to it. Nothing to hold it down. Nothing to keep it grounded.

That’s the image: a life that may appear full on the outside, but when it’s tested, there’s nothing underneath it that can endure.

This isn’t just about obvious rebellion. It’s about a life disconnected from God as its source. A life built on shifting ground—success, approval, comfort, control. Things that feel solid… until they’re not.

And when the wind comes—and it always does—it doesn’t create instability. It reveals it.

Jesus would later say something similar: the wise man builds his house on the rock, the foolish man on sand. The storm hits both—but only one stands.

Psalm 1 is asking a deeper question beneath the surface: What is actually holding your life together?

Because if it’s not rooted in God, it won’t have the weight to withstand what life brings.

The danger of chaff isn’t that it’s loud or destructive. It’s that it’s empty. Easily moved. Defined by whatever force is strongest in the moment.

But you were not made to live a weightless life.

You were made to be rooted. Grounded. Anchored in something eternal.

Application:

What are you depending on right now that feels secure—but could shift? Be honest before God and ask Him to show you what truly has weight in your life.

Prayer:

God, I don’t want a life that looks full but lacks substance. Expose anything in me that is not rooted in You. Anchor me in what is true, lasting, and unshakable. Give my life depth that can endure any season. Amen.

Friday, May 22

Known and Kept

Scripture: 

“Therefore the wicked will not stand in the judgment, nor sinners in the congregation of the righteous; for the Lord knows the way of the righteous, but the way of the wicked will perish.” — Psalm 1:5–6 (ESV)

Think:

Psalm 1 ends where it has been heading all along.

Two paths. Two lives. Two outcomes.

“Therefore…”

Because of what your life is rooted in—because of what has been quietly forming you—there is a day when it will all be revealed.

“…the wicked will not stand in the judgment…”

To stand here means to remain when everything is exposed. To hold your ground before a holy God when nothing can be hidden—no image, no effort, no comparison.

And that’s where this becomes deeply personal.

Because it forces the question: What will actually hold me in that moment?

Welsh Theologian Martyn Lloyd-Jones wrote that the ultimate test of our spiritual condition is not what we appear to be now, but what we are before God when everything is stripped away. And if we’re honest, that’s unsettling. Because left to ourselves, we don’t have the weight to stand there—not perfectly, not completely.

Which is why verse 6 changes everything:

“For the Lord knows the way of the righteous…”

This is not distant awareness. It’s not God looking on from afar. This is personal, relational, covenantal. To be known by God is to be seen fully and still held. It’s to belong to Him.

The difference between the two ways is not just behavior—it’s relationship.

The righteous are not those who have lived flawlessly, but those whose lives are bound up in God—anchored in Him, known by Him.

And this is where the gospel meets us.

Jesus is the only one who perfectly walked the righteous path. The only one who could stand under the full weight of judgment. And yet, at the cross, He was treated as though He could not stand—so that we could be brought into His standing.

So Psalm 1 doesn’t just leave us with a warning—it leaves us with a place to stand.

Not in ourselves.

But in Him.

Because in the end, there are only two ways.

One is known by God… and endures.

The other is not… and fades away.

Application:

When you think about your standing before God, what are you relying on? Let that question lead you back to Christ—your only true foundation.

Prayer:

God, thank You that You fully know me and still draw me near. I don’t want to stand in my own strength—I want to stand in Christ. Anchor my life in You, and keep me steady in Your grace. Amen.

Saturday, May 23

Crowned Dust

Scripture: 

“When I look at your heavens, the work of your fingers, the moon and the stars, which you have set in place, what is man that you are mindful of him, and the son of man that you care for him?” — Psalm 8:3–4 (ESV)

“What is man, that you are mindful of him, or the son of man, that you care for him? You made him for a little while lower than the angels; you have crowned him with glory and honor.” — Hebrews 2:6–7 (ESV)

Think:

There are moments when everything gets quiet enough for you to actually feel how small you are.

Not in a vague, poetic way—but in a way that catches you off guard. You look up, and the sky just keeps going. More stars than you can count. More space than you can process. And for a second, it does something unsettling:

It reminds you that your life is not the center of everything.

That your worries, your plans, your timeline—feel big to you, but small in the scope of it all.

That’s where David is.

“When I look at your heavens…”

He’s not trying to be poetic. He’s being honest. The more he sees of God’s world, the more aware he becomes of his own limits. His life is brief. His control is thin. His place in the universe feels almost… insignificant.

And then he says it out loud:

“What is man…?”

What are we, really?

Not impressive. Not permanent. Not in control.

And yet—this is where the whole thing turns.

“…that you are mindful of him… that you care for him?”

Because somehow, the God who set all of that in place… has not overlooked this.

Has not overlooked you.

Not in a distant, general way—but personally. Intentionally. He has not moved on past you.

And that’s the part that doesn’t resolve easily.

You are smaller than you think…

and more seen than you can imagine.

Genesis tells us we were formed from dust—dependent, fragile, limited. But Psalm 8 refuses to let that be the whole story. Just a verse later, it says we are crowned with glory and honor.

Dust… crowned.

Small… yet significant.

Not because we demanded it—but because He chose it.

And Hebrews 2 takes it even further—pointing us to Jesus. The One who stepped into our frailty, took on our “dust,” and then was crowned with glory after suffering.

In other words, Jesus doesn’t just answer the question—He embodies it.

What is man?

Important enough that God would come near.

Broken enough that He would have to.

Loved enough that He was willing to.

So don’t rush past the tension.

You are not as big as you think.

But you are far more valued than you’ve ever dared believe.

Application:

Where do you tend to lean—feeling insignificant, or feeling self-reliant? Let this passage recalibrate you. You are dependent… and deeply valued.

Prayer:

God, remind me who I am in light of who You are. Humble me where I’ve made too much of myself, and steady me where I’ve believed I don’t matter. Thank You for seeing me, for valuing me, and for coming near in Jesus. Amen.

Sunday, May 24

Where You Run First

Scripture: 

“The Lord is my rock and my fortress and my deliverer, my God, my rock, in whom I take refuge, my shield, and the horn of my salvation, my stronghold.” — Psalm 18:2 (ESV)

Think:

David doesn’t give us one picture of God—he gives us six.

Rock. Fortress. Deliverer. Refuge. Shield. Stronghold.

It almost feels excessive… until you realize where this psalm comes from.

Psalm 18 is written after God delivered David from years of pressure, danger, and enemies—including Saul. This isn’t theory. This is language forged in real fear, real waiting, real rescue.

And what’s striking is this: David doesn’t just say God gives protection—he says God is protection.

“The Lord is my rock…”

A rock doesn’t move. It doesn’t shift under pressure. David is anchoring himself in something outside of his circumstances—something that doesn’t rise and fall with what he’s facing. In a life full of instability, God becomes his fixed place.

“…my fortress… my stronghold…”

These are elevated places. Places you run to when you’re under attack. Not casual spaces—but intentional refuge. Henderson often talks about prayer as running to God, not just talking about Him—and that’s exactly what this language reflects.

David isn’t observing God from a distance. He’s running to Him.

“…my deliverer…”

Not just protection—but rescue. A God who doesn’t stay removed from your struggle but steps into it.

“…my shield…”

Close, personal defense. Not distant. Not theoretical. Right in front of you in the moment of need.

“…the horn of my salvation…”

This is strength. Power that pushes back what’s coming against you. Not passive safety—but active victory.

Here’s what all of this reveals:

David has learned, over time, where to run.

And that’s the question underneath this verse:

Where do you run first when pressure hits?

Because we all have default refuges. Control. Distraction. People. Performance. We run somewhere.

But David shows us something deeper—real security isn’t found in managing your circumstances. It’s found in returning to God again and again until He becomes your first instinct, not your last option.

Not just a place you visit…

but a place you live.

Application:

When pressure or stress rises this week, pause before reacting. Intentionally turn to God first—even if it’s just a simple, honest prayer. Train your heart to run to Him.

Prayer:

God, You are my refuge—even when I forget to run to You. Teach me to turn to You first, not last. Be my rock when life feels unstable, my shield when I feel exposed, and my stronghold when I feel overwhelmed. Amen.