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Don’t Test the Grace That Saved You | 1 Corinthians 10:8-9

The Daily + Weekly by Vince Miller

Release Date: 03/24/2026

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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.

Our shout-out today goes to Bill Shine from Surprise, AZ. Thanks for your partnership in Project23. We cannot do this without donors like you.

Our text today is 1 Corinthians 10:8-9.

We must not indulge in sexual immorality as some of them did, and twenty-three thousand fell in a single day. We must not put Christ to the test, as some of them did and were destroyed by serpents — 1 Corinthians 10:8-9

At some point, "spiritual freedom" stops asking the right question. It pushes too far.

Instead of asking, “Does this honor God?” the question quietly shifts to something far more dangerous: "How far can I go?"

That question assumes grace is elastic. That God’s patience can be stretched without consequence.

Paul says otherwise.

Israel didn’t fall because they lacked God's grace. They fell because they tested God's grace.

They crossed lines assuming protection would follow. They treated God’s mercy like a buffer instead of a boundary. And Scripture records the result without softening it—judgment came swiftly.

The "twenty-three thousand" Paul mentions are not some abstract statistic. They were Israelites who fell in the wilderness after giving themselves to sexual immorality and idolatry with the Moabites (Numbers 25). What began as indulgence quickly became defiance, and God’s judgment followed. Paul mentions that number to make the warning concrete—not theoretical.

Paul reminds the church at Corinth that Israel took deliberate steps in assuming that God would tolerate what he had already warned against.

Grace was never meant to be abused.

But our presumptions push against it.

Testing God is not courageous. It’s selfishness and desire for control. It’s deciding how close you can get to the edge without falling—and calling it freedom.

Grace is not a boundary to be tested.

God’s patience is real, but it is not permission. His mercy is deep, but it is not indifferent. Love does not indulge in anything that destroys us.

Paul is trying to sober the church up.

Because redeemed people can still drift from trust to entitlement. And entitlement always leads to consequences.

Grace saves. Grace warns. Grace disciplines. Grace is not entitlement.

DO THIS:

Identify one area where you may be pushing boundaries instead of trusting obedience. Stop asking how far you can go—and start asking what faithfulness looks like.

ASK THIS:

  1. Where have I treated God’s patience as permission?
  2. What lines might I be inching toward instead of stepping away from?
  3. How can trust replace testing in my obedience?

PRAY THIS:

Lord, forgive me for testing what you have already made clear. Teach me to trust your word without pushing against it. Let grace lead me to reverence, not entitlement. Amen.

PLAY THIS:

“O Come to the Altar”