Wisdom Matters

Welcome to Wisdom Matters, the chance to reflect on a Bible verse or two each day for the purpose of living and thinking biblically. Wisdom is a gift from God that enables us to know how to filter and use all we learn for God’s higher purpose. I hope you will join me for Wisdom Matters.

  1. 5 hr ago

    Which friends offer God’s counsel?

    Which of your friends will pray with you and for you? Which of your friends will listen and try to understand your needs? Which of your friends offer you quick opinions and which offer you wise counsel? We have a lot of friends and acquaintances throughout our lives. Some friendships are for a season while others continue in some way through every season. All of us should pray for the Lord to guide us to the people who will bless our lives as friends and strengthen our walk with God. All of us should pray for the wisdom to be that kind of friend for others. When I packed my mom’s possessions to move her into a new place, a friend helped me physically box up and label her things. She helped me finish a job and she helped me spiritually to accept the change. The rewards were a simplified task and spiritual blessings for both of us.  When we have gone through medical challenges, friends were there to ease the realities of life and to pray for our spiritual needs as well. We can be there for people when they have needs, knowing they will be there for us someday as well. Friends “lift” one another up. Which friends do you enjoy at parties or other social events? Who is most likely to help when there is work to be done? Which friends do you call when you need someone to pray or give wise counsel? Do you have someone who can fill all of those categories? Whom have you thought about as you heard these words? Thank the Lord for the friendships he has blessed you with. God knew we needed to walk through this life as a community of faith and experience what it means to “love one another” as Christ loved us. Good advice and careful instruction provide wisdom. Praise God for the friends who provide wise counsel and the love of God. Let’s pray for the wisdom to be that kind of friend to others because that effort brings “good reward” for each of us.

    3 min
  2. 1 day ago

    Do you fear the Lord as you seek his counsel?

    To fear the Lord is to live with a reverent awe of his infinite place and power in the world. Our understanding of God’s immeasurable character is simply the beginning of knowing him. The Apostle Paul said, “For now we see in a mirror dimly, but then face to face. Now I know in part; then I shall know fully, even as I have been fully known” (1 Corinthians 13:12). If we studied God’s word and meditated on it day and night, we would still only begin to comprehend his greatness. Yet, that kind of thinking is the path to wisdom. If we aren’t careful, we will learn to value our own thoughts more than his. Foolish people “despise wisdom and instruction.” Do you fear the Lord? Do you magnify him with reverent awe?  Praying to God as your Father, knowing you are his beloved child, is good. We should rest in the knowledge that when the veil in the temple was torn from top to bottom, God was inviting everyone into his presence through faith in the sacrifice of his Son. But the priests were taught to enter God’s presence carefully prepared and thoughtful about his infinite greatness.  Fearing God is the way to approach God with a personal yet profound understanding of his infinite character. When we enter God’s holy presence with reverent awe, we can experience his will and his wisdom. When we are given God’s wisdom, we would be foolish to consider it simply a suggestion. God’s wisdom and instruction reveal his loving will for our lives. The only response is our obedience. Good advice and careful instruction provide wisdom. Fearing God is the pathway to our best advice and our most needed wisdom.

    3 min
  3. 2 days ago

    Will you think often about God’s wise counsel?

    G. K. Chesterton is attributed as writing, “When men choose not to believe in God, they do not thereafter believe in nothing, they then become capable of believing in anything.” An agnostic isn’t a person who does not believe in God as much as they are a person who doesn’t believe in believing. In this era of endless information, we seem to lack an abundance of wisdom. We don’t lack ideas, opinions, and factual knowledge. We can search for answers about our health, wealth, and anything else we have questions about. Wisdom is knowing what to do with all we know. Wisdom is knowing what to believe and what to ignore. I’m often surprised at the ideas and entertainment people fill their time and minds with. A science fiction movie used to be unusual; now those movies dominate the theaters. Why are people fascinated with all that cannot be true yet able to ignore what has been trusted and believed for centuries from the pages of God’s word? Why are we more fascinated by things created than we are by the Creator? The simple will believe anything, which is really a belief in nothing. A “prudent” person is a person who thinks. Thinking takes time and energy. Discernment requires us to think with God’s perspective. Wisdom requires a desire for truth, not just a hunger for more ideas. Good advice and careful instruction provide wisdom. Our best advice is the result of “prudent” thinking. We need to discern those thoughts and ideas that are authored by God. Wisdom is truth, and believing truth is wisdom. Will you think often about God’s wisdom and choose to believe him?

    3 min
  4. 3 days ago

    Who are our counselors?

    God created us to need other people in order to prosper in our lives. Just like our fingerprints, our gifts and abilities are uniquely our own. One of the best examples of the infinite wisdom of God is creation itself. We are each created to be loved and known personally by our Creator and to be cared for by him. God directs our paths, and he often directs our paths to intersect with others. There are people God will bring into our lives for his unique purpose and some who will help us fulfill his calling in our lives. Each of us has wisdom to give as well as a need to receive wisdom from others. God’s word reminds us that we need to listen to those around us in order to gain the wisdom we need for our future.  This month we will consider the many ways God uses others to guide us to a greater wisdom for our lives and a greater wisdom for our souls as well. Good advice and careful instruction provide wisdom.  Are we willing to listen? “Where there is no guidance, a people falls, but in an abundance of counselors there is safety.” —Proverbs 11:14 A lot of people are able to give advice, but whose advice should you follow? The proverb teaches us that if we live our lives based solely on our own abilities, at some point we will fall. No one is created to know everything or with the ability to be right in every situation. We need advice from others if we hope to gain a diverse and well-rounded understanding of our circumstances. How do we surround ourselves with people who will offer us wise counsel? Seeking counsel from experts who write for the internet is common these days. Their advice comes instantly with one quick line typed into our computers. Our presumed “safety” is often looking at the number of stars, the comments, or the open rate of an article. We can gain good advice on the internet, but “God advice” will require another level of thinking. When it comes to spiritual matters, we need to seek counselors who understand their need for God’s unique wisdom. There is safety in the advice that is the direct result of a faithful prayer. There is wisdom in the advice that is born from a knowledge of God and his word. One of the goals of life should be to surround ourselves with people who can counsel us with good advice and God’s wisdom. Good advice and careful instruction provide wisdom. It’s important to consult the experts, but it’s equally important to submit their advice to the perfection of God’s teaching. We should surround ourselves with counselors who understand our need for God’s wisdom because they can offer his good advice and careful instruction.

    4 min
  5. 4 days ago

    Why is yielding to the wisdom of Scripture essential?

    *This episode originally aired on May 3rd. Have you ever seen the phrase in Scripture “And God said” and wondered how the Lord spoke to that person? How did they know it was God? Have you ever wondered why God doesn’t seem to speak to you or others that way today? God still speaks to his children, but we have his voice in a way that those in biblical times did not. Most of us have several Bibles on our shelves, not to mention access to God’s word through our technology. In the first century, only the priests and rabbis had access to the Old Testament scrolls. In the New Testament days and beyond, only some knew how to read. The letters and Gospels were usually read aloud to groups in the churches. For centuries, the Bible was painstakingly handwritten by priests who preserved the integrity of each word. It wasn’t until the late 1800s that people were given the chance to own a Bible, and it was the 1900s before owning a Bible became commonplace.  We refer to the Bible as “God’s word.” But we could also refer to the Bible as God’s voice to his people today. We shouldn’t just read the words; we should learn to hear God speak his word, from the pages, especially those phrases that begin with “And God said.”  Jesus was in the wilderness being tempted by Satan when he said, “Man does not live by bread alone, but by every word that comes from the mouth of God.” Jesus used Scripture to answer Satan’s temptations and taught his disciples to do the same. There are many remarkable statistics about the accuracy and history of our biblical text. Suffice it to say that the Bible is known to be a sacred and miraculous volume of historical and proven truth. The Bible is God speaking his wisdom to us from its pages. Reading the Bible is time spent listening to the word and will of God. The Bible is the unchanging wisdom of our unchanging God. When you read Scripture, you can hear the words “And God said” from each page. The Bible is everything everyone needs to know in order to know and trust God’s authority in their life and live in obedience to his will. God’s voice is the best source of his wisdom. He can speak into your life at any moment but will most often speak to you from the pages of his comprehensive, historical, miraculous word. Yielding to God’s wisdom is spiritual strength. We live for God when we study and obey his voice of wisdom, written and preserved for us in the Bible.

    4 min
  6. 5 days ago

    Why should God be our fortress?

    Psalm 59 is David’s song of prayer and praise for the protection God provided when Saul had sent his men to spy on his home. The psalm begins, “Deliver me from my enemies, O my God” (v. 1).  Scripture is clear that if we choose to live a holy life, we will be persecuted by those who are antagonistic to our faith. How comforting to go to God with David’s words of wisdom and praise, “O my Strength” and “You, O God, are my fortress.” There are a lot of places we might run for God’s protection. His word is our wisdom and the answers we need in times of trouble. His Spirit is our Counselor who provides wisdom and direction. But, we have also been given a “place” to run. We have been invited into God’s presence, which is our “fortress” and our “refuge.” We can rest in God’s presence, knowing him as our “Strength.” We can remain with God for as long as we need him to be our refuge. We should not leave the fortress until our Commander instructs us to go back into the field. Wisdom and strength are necessary to fight for the Lord, and sometimes God calls us away from the field and into his protection to spare us from the battle. King David knew God as his King, his Commander, and knew him as his great Protector as well. Persecution shouldn’t be a surprise for people in ministry. Jesus taught us to expect that. We will all be faced with a few “fights” in our lives. Wisdom is knowing what to do when we face these confrontations. Are we to take up the battle or retreat to the fortress and find refuge? The only answer to that question is God’s individual word for your life. Follow David’s wise example and say, “O my Strength, I will watch for you.” Look for God in the words of your Bible. Pray for God’s counsel in the quiet voice of his Spirit. Run to your refuge and pray until your direction is clear.  After David said he would watch for God, his fortress, he said, “My God in his steadfast love will meet me; God will let me look in triumph on my enemies.” When God fights for us, he always wins the battle. That is why we look for God’s refuge and trust his steadfast love to “meet” us there. We can’t fight our battles without him. Yielding to God’s wisdom is spiritual strength. Wisdom is running to our fortress to rest and wait until we are strong enough to let God fight for us and through us. Spiritual battles are fought under the Commander’s orders. So we pray, “Be our strength, O God. We will wait and watch for you.”

    4 min
  7. 6 days ago

    Why should we pray for greatness?

    Many passages in the Bible speak to the importance of humility. One example is when James and John, two of Jesus’ disciples, came to him asking if they could be on his right and on his left when he came to power. Their request immediately caused an argument among the other disciples. Jesus was quick to teach them all the great flaw in their thinking. Jesus said, “Whoever would be great among you must be your servant, and whoever would be first among you must be slave of all” (Mark 10:43—44).  Yet, the passage in 1 Chronicles reveals King David’s praise of God, whose hand of power is to “make great and to give strength to all” (1 Chronicles 29:12). There is no doubt that God gives some people the power to be great and influential in our world. We should pray to be “great” Christians, knowing that means we are asking to be “great servants” of God. Our blessings, our gifts, our abilities, and our calling comes from God the Father, who has “all power and might.” God decided how to make each of his children great and strong. We decide to accept God’s blessings or deny them by our choices. King David had to wait a long time after he was anointed king to become the king and to take the throne. Those years of waiting were spent as a fugitive running from King Saul. Personal greatness also came with great consequences for most of the leaders in the Bible.  We should pray to be “great” influencers for the gospel, but when we voice that prayer we should also pray for the great strength we will need to handle our personal consequences.  A great Christian is one who is a committed servant of God. To be first in some circles is to be last in others. Greatness is living for God and using our gifts for his kingdom purpose.  Riches and honor can come from God. So do servitude and submission. Yielding to God’s wisdom provides the spiritual strength we need to serve him in whatever ways we will be called to be great as we serve our kingdom purpose.

    3 min
  8. 28 May

    Why do we yield the glory to God?

    The Apostle Paul had done amazing work sharing the gospel with people and establishing Christian churches in major cities and regions of the Roman Empire. He worked tirelessly under difficult circumstances in spite of personal illness and persecution. He was a hero in the first century and remains a hero today. The letter to the Ephesians was written while Paul was under house arrest in Rome. He was in prison for his faith yet continued his ministry of sharing the gospel. If awards were given, Paul might have won first prize. Yet, Paul wanted the church in Ephesus to join him in praising God for all that God had done. In Paul’s words of praise, we see the truth about yielding to God any glory that is given for the work of the ministry. Paul praised God for doing what he himself could never have accomplished. God had done more than the people had asked for or even thought about. Paul understood that the success he had achieved was not because of his abilities or his sacrificial service. Instead, the gospel had advanced “according to the power at work” in the Apostle’s life and the lives of the other Christians. Paul knew the churches he had helped to establish were there because the Holy Spirit had led and prospered the work. That is why Paul said, “To him be glory in the church and in Christ Jesus throughout all generations, forever and ever. Amen.” Giving God the glory for his work in our lives is so important because directing praise to God reminds us, and others, that we are only the hands and feet of Christ. He is the head of the church and it is Jesus who guides and equips the saints to serve.  Paul understood the source of the wisdom that had directed his ministry was the Spirit of God. Paul’s great ministry was the result of God’s strength and leadership within his life. We listen to the weather anchor report the forecast but not once do we imagine that they created the weather. Only God can raise the sun, warm the earth, or bring the storms. To take credit for the success of our ministries is like the weather anchor taking credit for the weather.  Yielding to God’s wisdom is spiritual strength. Wisdom is recognizing that all the glory should be given to God because it was his power at work within us, and not us, that accomplished the ministry. To God be the glory forever and ever. Amen.

    4 min

About

Welcome to Wisdom Matters, the chance to reflect on a Bible verse or two each day for the purpose of living and thinking biblically. Wisdom is a gift from God that enables us to know how to filter and use all we learn for God’s higher purpose. I hope you will join me for Wisdom Matters.

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