Living Sacrifice – Romans 11:33–12:2

Romans 12:2 (NIV) – “Do not conform to the pattern of this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind. Then you will be able to test and approve what God’s will is—his good, pleasing and perfect will.”

Paul begins this section with what amounts to a hymn, pulling language from the Old Testament to describe God’s wisdom, knowledge, and ownership over all things. Everything comes from Him and exists for Him. Because of that reality, Paul then calls believers to offer their lives as living sacrifices. His original readers would have immediately thought about temple sacrifices, animals whose lives were poured out completely on the altar. Paul turns that image on its head. God is not asking for a dead offering. He is asking for a life that is set apart for His purposes.

In that light, what follows that makes sense. If a person’s life belongs to God, then it should not be shaped by whatever the world says is normal or desirable. Paul tells them not to be molded into that pattern, but to be transformed by him, instead. This idea of being set apart would have been familiar, especially through things like the Nazarite vow, where a person’s entire life was dedicated to the Lord. The Old Testament talks about that. Here, Paul is applying that same idea to everyday Christian living.

This passage reminds me that the word “therefore” matters. It connects God’s greatness and ownership directly to how I live. My life is not my own. I have been bought with a price. My work, my habits, my decisions on an unremarkable day in September. God does not want occasional sacrifices or seasonal displays of devotion, like we do for Lent in March. He wants my ordinary life. That kind of surrender is far more meaningful than giving something up for a short religious season. God does not want a small thing from me. He wants me.

What God Likes – Amos 5:21–24

Key Verse:
“But let justice roll on like a river, righteousness like a never-failing stream!” — Amos 5:24 (NIV)

God’s words through Amos are uncomfortable by design. Something was fundamentally wrong. Israel’s worship had become performative. They honored God publicly while privately allowing idols, injustice, and divided loyalties to take root. God makes it clear: religious activity, no matter how sincere it looks, cannot substitute for faithfulness, justice, and wholehearted devotion.

This passage reminds us that God is not impressed by outward displays if they are disconnected from inward allegiance. What He desires most is a people who place Him first, live justly, and walk in righteousness as a natural overflow of a genuine relationship with Him. Worship that pleases God is not loud or visible by necessity.  It is faithful, obedient, and aligned with His character.

For me, this lands close to home. It is easy to confuse spiritual activity with spiritual intimacy. God is calling me back to the quiet places.  He calls me to be still, seek His face deliberately, fast privately, read His Word not for appearance or output, but for communion. Justice, righteousness, and loyalty to God begin there, in the unseen places where no one else is watching.

Today’s call is simple, but not easy.  Pursue God Himself, not just the actions that look like devotion. When that happens, justice and righteousness will follow—not as performance, but as fruit.