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From Hosanna to Halleluja

There's something strangely human about cheering for victory before we really understand what kind of victory we actually need.

We love quick fixes. We love obvious wins. We love the kind of rescue that shows up fast, solves the problem we can see, and lets us get back to normal life as quickly as possible. But God often works on a deeper timeline — one that doesn't always match our expectations, but always reaches further than we imagined.


Holy Week reminds us of this tension.


The same crowd that shouted "Hosanna!" was hoping for political freedom. They wanted relief. Stability. A reset button. What they got instead looked nothing like what they expected ... at least at first. Instead of a throne, there was a cross. Instead of immediate change around them, Jesus started with change within them.


And honestly? That's still how He tends to work.


We often want God to fix our circumstances while He's focused on transforming our hearts. We ask Him to remove difficulty while He's building faith. We want clarity while He's teaching trust. It can feel frustrating in the moment, but later we often realize He was doing something far more lasting than we would have asked for.


This week's devotional lives in that space between Hosanna and Hallelujah — between the cry for help and the confidence that God is still in control. It explores what it looks like to live with both honesty about the brokenness we still experience and hope because of the victory Jesus has already secured.


Following Jesus has always meant living in that in-between place: rescued, but still waiting. Hopeful, but still growing. Confident, but still learning to trust. This week, lean into that tension — not to resolve it, but to learn how to live faithfully inside it.


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