Category: Moe Bergeron

  • Day 7: In Hope, A Promise Believer

    To be a Christian is to live by promise. We are not guided by sight or sustained by circumstances—we are anchored in the unshakable Word of God. Like Abraham, we are promise believers. We hold fast to what God has said, even when we do not yet see its fulfillment.…

  • Day 6: In Experience, A Pilgrim

    To be a Christian is to be a pilgrim—one who walks through this world with a heart set on another. This life, with all its joys and trials, is not our final home. Like Abraham, like Moses, like the faithful of every age, we journey forward with eyes of faith,…

  • Day 5: In Conflict, A Soldier

    To be a Christian is to be engaged in a spiritual conflict. We are not spectators—we are soldiers. When we came to Christ, we enlisted in a holy war—not with flesh and blood, but against principalities and powers, against the lies of the enemy, and against the lingering desires of…

  • Day 4: In Fellowship, A Friend

    What a staggering thought—that the King of glory would call us His friends! Jesus did not come merely to rescue us from wrath but to bring us into fellowship with Himself. He shares His heart with His people, revealing to us the Father’s will and walking with us as a…

  • Day 3: In Character, A Saint

    To be a Christian is to be called a saint—not because of personal merit, but because of God’s gracious work through Christ. The term saint does not describe spiritual elite or super-disciples. In Scripture, it refers to every believer, made holy through union with Jesus. 1 Corinthians 1:2 “I am…

  • Day 2: In Relationship, A Child

    To be a Christian is to be brought into the family of God—not as distant servants but as beloved sons and daughters. Adoption is one of the most tender and astonishing truths in all of Scripture. Through Christ, we are no longer orphans; we are heirs, embraced by the Father…

  • What/Who is a Christian?

    The word Christian is one of the most sacred titles that can be given to a person. It was first used to describe followers of Jesus in Antioch (Acts 11:26), and ever since, it has stood as a name filled with divine purpose and eternal promise. But what does it…

  • Driven Out by Their Own Messiah

    The gospel begins not with applause, but with outrage. In one of the earliest moments of Jesus’ public ministry, we find Him in His hometown, speaking with clarity and authority. The people listen—until they truly understand what He is saying. And then, the same crowd that admired Him becomes a…

  • Cut Off for the Transgression of My People

    The suffering of Christ is not only a matter of physical agony, but of divine mystery. In Isaiah 53, we are led beyond what the eye could see on Calvary and into the eternal purposes of God. And verse 8 stands like a stone marker, solemn and certain, telling us…