Verse of the day: Philippians 2:9-11
"Therefore God exalted him to the highest place and gave him the name that is above every name, that at the name of Jesus every knee should bow, in heaven and on earth and under the earth, and every tongue acknowledge that Jesus Christ is Lord, to the glory of God the Father."
There is a beautiful tension in this verse—between humility and exaltation, between the suffering servant and the reigning King. The story of Jesus does not end at the cross but ascends to glory. God “exalted him to the highest place,” not as a reward for ambition but as the divine affirmation of self-giving love. The name of Jesus, once spoken in scorn, becomes the name before which all creation bows in reverence.
In the illuminated image, Christ sits enthroned in light, his name written in gold—the color of divine radiance. Angels bend low, kings remove their crowns, and even the shadows below lift their faces toward hope. This is not merely a picture of cosmic hierarchy; it is a vision of restored harmony. Everything that was fractured by sin now turns toward its true center. Every knee bowing is not an act of forced submission but of joyful recognition: here is the One who emptied himself for love’s sake and now fills all things with that same love.
As we meditate on this, we are invited to kneel too—not in fear, but in gratitude. Bowing the knee becomes a symbol of surrendering our pride, our self-sufficiency, our need to control. To confess that “Jesus Christ is Lord” is to acknowledge that love, not power, defines the highest throne. When we let Christ’s name shine above our own ambitions, we participate in the glory that radiates through the entire cosmos—a glory that points, always and forever, to God the Father.
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