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Thursday, December 11, 2025

December 11 — "The Love That Calls Out Still"



Today's Reading: Revelation 2

Have you ever noticed how “falling out of love” doesn’t usually happen in a fiery explosion, but slips away in silence—like a boat drifting from its dock until you suddenly realize it’s halfway across the harbor? That’s the piercing image behind Jesus’ words in Revelation 2:4: “Nevertheless I have this against you, that you have left your first love.” Left—not lost. Lost suggests accident. Left suggests neglect. The Ephesian church hadn’t staged a rebellion, renounced Christ, or gone wild. They simply drifted… while still checking all the right boxes.

What shocks me most is who Jesus says this to. Not the spiritually lazy. Not the spiritually hostile. But the spiritually busy. These were the believers with packed calendars, sharp doctrine, steady endurance, and impressive resumes. They were truth warriors. Yet truth without love hardens into cement. It can build walls or fortresses, but it cannot warm a heart. Jesus essentially says, “You’re doing everything for Me—but not with Me.”

And doesn’t that sound painfully familiar today? We live in a whirlwind of hurry. Phones buzz, minds race, souls shrink. We’ve become pros at efficiency but rookies at affection. We defend faith more than we delight in Christ. We know about Him more than we sit with Him. Our hearts risk becoming theological filing cabinets—organized, accurate, and ice-cold.

But notice Jesus’ response. He doesn’t scold. He calls. With the tenderness of a Groom and the authority of a King, He names the drift so He can guide the return. His invitation—“Remember… repent… and do the first works”—is a summons back to where love once burned bright. Back to unhurried prayer. Back to open-Bible wonder. Back to worship that wasn’t rushed. Back to obedience that felt like joy, not duty.

Sometimes the deepest healing doesn’t come from learning something brand new, but from recovering something beautifully old. Jesus isn’t asking you to fake emotion. He’s inviting you to refocus attention. Love grows where attention rests. If your heart feels distant, He is closer than you imagine. If your affection feels faint, the flame is easier to rekindle than you think. He isn’t condemning your drift—He’s calling your name across the water before you drift too far to hear Him.

May the Lord draw your heart back to your first love, restore the freshness of fellowship with Christ, and warm your soul with renewed affection day by day. 

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