Daily Lenten Reflection – Tuesday of the First Week of Lent (February 24, 2026)
“Thus says the Lord: ‘Consecrate yourselves and be holy, because I am holy’” (Leviticus 11:44).
God does not lower the standard. He sets it. “Be holy, for I am holy.” The measure is not other people. It is not the neighbor, not society, not personal comfort. Comparing with others creates a false sense of righteousness. It leads to pride, not holiness. This daily Lenten reflection brings that truth into focus.
The command to be holy can seem impossible. No one can match the holiness of God by effort alone. That is why Scripture first says, “Consecrate yourselves.” Holiness begins with separation from sin, not comparison with others. It begins with truth. Sin cannot be covered, renamed, or ignored. It must be confessed.
Many attempt to appear good while avoiding the deeper work of repentance. That is not holiness. Covering sin does not make a person holy. It hardens the heart. God calls for something real. A life set apart, a life turned toward Him, a life that begins with confession and continues with obedience.
Consecration is not a one-time act. It is a decision made daily. It means setting aside time for prayer, choosing truth over convenience, and refusing to justify what is wrong. This is where the journey begins. Not in perfection, but in surrender.
Lent is a time to stop measuring against others and begin responding to God. The call is clear. Be holy. Not by pretending, but by turning away from sin and turning toward Him.
God does not ask for what He will not sustain. When a person consecrates his life and seeks Him sincerely, God takes care of the rest. He leads the heart toward the holiness He commands.
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