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Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.
Read more about Project23 and partner with us as we teach every verse of the Bible on video.
Our text today is Judges 17:13.
"Then Micah said, 'Now I know that the Lord will prosper me, because I have a Levite as priest.'" — Judges 17:13
Micah's homemade religion is now complete. He's got a shrine, a priest, and a title. And now—he's got confidence. "Now I know," he says, "the Lord will prosper me."
But it's all fake. Fake priest. Fake faith. Fake confidence.
Micah believes he's in God's favor simply because everything looks right. But this is the final stage of spiritual delusion: when you mistake comfort for confirmation. He assumes that because his setup feels spiritual, it must be spiritual.
That's what happens when religion becomes self-made—you start measuring faith by your feelings instead of His truth.
This is the heart of counterfeit Christianity today. People claim assurance, quote Scripture out of context, or redefine sin, all while drifting further from God's Word. They've built a religion that feels peaceful because it never confronts them. And the more they say "God told me," the less they actually listen to what God already said.
Micah's confidence wasn't rooted in Scripture—it was rooted in self-deception. And that's what makes this so dangerous. You can be completely convinced you're right with God and still be miles from Him if your faith isn't built on truth.
We also see this in the church. Whole movements chase emotional experiences but ignore biblical obedience. Believers trust in positive feelings, prosperity, or political comfort instead of God's holiness. It's the American version of Micah's religion—comfort without conviction, blessing without obedience, and faith without truth.
False confidence always feels strong—right up until the truth tests it.
So here's the question I would present to you: Is your confidence based on God's Word—or your own worldview?
ASK THIS:
Father, I don't want false confidence. Expose any lie I've believed about You or about myself. Anchor my assurance in Your truth—not in feelings, comfort, or imitation faith. Amen.
PLAY THIS:"Build My Life."
By Vince Miller4.8
5959 ratings
Welcome to The Daily, where we study the Bible verse by verse, chapter by chapter, every day.
Read more about Project23 and partner with us as we teach every verse of the Bible on video.
Our text today is Judges 17:13.
"Then Micah said, 'Now I know that the Lord will prosper me, because I have a Levite as priest.'" — Judges 17:13
Micah's homemade religion is now complete. He's got a shrine, a priest, and a title. And now—he's got confidence. "Now I know," he says, "the Lord will prosper me."
But it's all fake. Fake priest. Fake faith. Fake confidence.
Micah believes he's in God's favor simply because everything looks right. But this is the final stage of spiritual delusion: when you mistake comfort for confirmation. He assumes that because his setup feels spiritual, it must be spiritual.
That's what happens when religion becomes self-made—you start measuring faith by your feelings instead of His truth.
This is the heart of counterfeit Christianity today. People claim assurance, quote Scripture out of context, or redefine sin, all while drifting further from God's Word. They've built a religion that feels peaceful because it never confronts them. And the more they say "God told me," the less they actually listen to what God already said.
Micah's confidence wasn't rooted in Scripture—it was rooted in self-deception. And that's what makes this so dangerous. You can be completely convinced you're right with God and still be miles from Him if your faith isn't built on truth.
We also see this in the church. Whole movements chase emotional experiences but ignore biblical obedience. Believers trust in positive feelings, prosperity, or political comfort instead of God's holiness. It's the American version of Micah's religion—comfort without conviction, blessing without obedience, and faith without truth.
False confidence always feels strong—right up until the truth tests it.
So here's the question I would present to you: Is your confidence based on God's Word—or your own worldview?
ASK THIS:
Father, I don't want false confidence. Expose any lie I've believed about You or about myself. Anchor my assurance in Your truth—not in feelings, comfort, or imitation faith. Amen.
PLAY THIS:"Build My Life."

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