📅 November 08
📖 2 Corinthians 6:10 — “As sorrowful, yet always rejoicing; as poor, yet making many rich; as having nothing, and yet possessing everything.”
Scenario
Scenario
Paul lived with two faces—not in deceit, but in devotion. Like the Roman god Janus, he stood at the threshold of sorrow and joy, lack and abundance. But unlike myth, Paul’s paradox was patterned after Christ Himself—who thirsted while giving drink, who died to give life. The apostle didn’t hide the tension. He bore it. And in that bearing, he revealed a kingdom that flips every earthly measure.
A tense journey
This verse doesn’t resolve the paradox—it honors it. Sorrow and joy aren’t opposites here—they’re companions. Poverty isn’t shame—it’s generosity. Emptiness isn’t failure—it’s freedom. Paul’s life was a contradiction, and that contradiction was holy. The tension doesn’t mean something’s wrong. It means something’s real. And Christ lived it first.
Sweetness Drop
I held nothing,
but You held me.
I gave what I didn’t own, and made others rich.
My tears didn’t cancel my praise—
they baptized it.
And in the ache of lack,
I found the wealth of nothing.
