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. 1 DAY AGO

    Do you share a good word with others?

    We should never underestimate the power of God’s word or the power of his word in us. People need God’s joy. A sense of “gladness” should motivate us to speak of God and share his word. But God’s word needs to fill our lives if we want to share it with others.  Every night our news can create anxiety in our hearts. Imagine the anxieties that might have weighed on the hearts of those in ancient times. They went to bed hoping for rain or hoping that it might stop. They didn’t have a “radar” to give them hope and understanding. In ancient times, people went to bed wondering what might have happened that kept their loved one from returning home. They didn’t have a cell phone to call and check on them. They didn’t know what another nation was planning or preparing to do. They didn’t know if their crops would succeed, if their livestock would live, or if their illness was an inconvenience or a concern. No matter what era of history, people have always needed “a good word.”  We should never underestimate the power of God’s word or the power of his word in us. Whom have you shared the joy and certainty of Christ with? Whose spirits have been lifted through the Spirit at work in you? God created us to speak and hear; therefore, he must have known of our need for his word to make us “glad.”  Churches were often built with beautiful stained glass windows, and their beauty had a higher purpose. So many of the Christians who entered those older churches were unable to read. The sermons each week were the way many learned what the Bible said and meant. In addition, the earliest stained glass window “told a story.” What the people in the church couldn’t read they could see illustrated in the beautiful glass.  Let the word of Christ dwell in you richly so that your life can share and display the stories that some people might never read. A good word can make people glad!

    3 min
  2. 2 DAYS AGO

    Do you allow Christ to provide your spiritual strength?

    Christians can do anything Jesus calls and strengthens us to do. Equally important is the knowledge that if we do things in our own strength or personal motives, Jesus is not at work; we are. The key to living with the strength and purpose of Christ is understanding it's much different than our own.  Spiritual things happen through the Spirit of Christ. Remember, Jesus said, “I can do nothing on my own. As I hear, I judge, and my judgment is just, because I seek not my own will but the will of him who sent me” (John 5:30). Jesus, when he submitted himself to a human body, walked and ministered according to the strength and judgment of God. Jesus’ earthly ministry is the perfect example for ours. We cannot accomplish the work of God. We can be available to God so that he can work through us.  We are called to be disciples, students of Jesus Christ. We need to study his words and his earthly ministry in order to know how to have a ministry ourselves. Jesus taught us to allow God’s voice to call us to his purpose. Jesus taught us to pray for his “kingdom to come, on earth as it is in heaven.” Jesus taught us to allow God to reign in our lives.  Now Jesus is seated at the right hand of God, no longer bound by a human body. His Holy Spirit is our strength. The Holy Spirit is the Spirit of Christ, and when we are led by his Spirit we continue the earthly ministry of Jesus in the world. That is why Paul could say, “I can do all things through Christ who strengthens me.”   That is why we allow the word of Christ to dwell in us richly. It's the word of Christ the Spirit, who will speak to us so that we will function in the power of Christ to fulfill our calling. Apart from him, we can do nothing. With him, we can do all things.

    3 min
  3. 3 DAYS AGO

    Do you allow the love and forgiveness of Christ to flow through you?

    Paul had just listed many of the sinful human behaviors that were causing divisions in the early church and damaging their witness. Then he provided the solution for fixing those natural human behaviors. Paul didn’t say, “Act kind to one another.” Rather, he said, “Be kind.” Another translation could say “Become kind.”   The work of the Holy Spirit in our lives is to change us, to help us become more like Christ each day. Scripture often refers to that growth process as our sanctification. God doesn’t want children to simply act kindly toward one another. He wants us to be kind. If we apply that thought to raising our children, we can easily understand the difference. Kindness shouldn’t be measured by our actions; it should become our character.  Paul then used a word that is rarely used in Scripture and is difficult to translate. But his first-century readers would have understood completely. It's the word tenderhearted or, in some versions, compassionate. It's worth knowing because embedded in that one word is a measure we should each use for our own lives.  How do we know if we are truly “tenderhearted” toward others?   To be compassionate means to “feel with.” People in Paul’s culture understood what it meant to walk by a person who was hurt, see their wound, and have their stomach clench. They knew when their hearts ached with the grief another person was feeling. They understood the physical, visceral sensations associated with “compassion,” or feeling with, another person. That sensation had a word in the original language of Scripture, and Paul used that word in his letter to the Ephesians.   We have become tenderhearted, compassionate Christians when we care enough to feel with other people. A person who cares like that has become a Christian who will know how to love and forgive like Christ.  Allow the word of Christ to dwell in you richly and become the tenderhearted, forgiving character of Christ to others.

    3 min
  4. 4 DAYS AGO

    Do you live with the peace of Christ?

    The “peace that passes all understanding” is never fully understood, except through experience. It isn’t the peace we can work hard to achieve. It isn’t the result of our efforts or the consequence of a choice. The peace Christ has left with us is unique because it's only experienced as a gift received from his Holy Spirit.  Jesus left us with his Spirit so that we would have his gift of peace. When our minds won’t rest from our troubled thoughts and when we fear the possibilities that exist while living on this side of heaven, it's difficult not to be anxious and afraid. In fact, it's likely that our minds will be troubled at times.  But Jesus told his disciples to make a choice during those difficult times. He said, “Don’t be troubled.” How is that possible? If we knew we would inherit a fortune next month, this month’s bills wouldn’t trouble us. If we knew we were immune to disease, we wouldn’t worry about what the doctor might say. If we knew we would always be safe, we wouldn’t fear what might happen. The peace the world gives is only temporary. The peace of Christ is anchored in eternity.  We know we have all the promises of heaven, but we want those promises now too. Jesus promised us his peace. We can live with confidence in our inheritance, our health, and our security. The peace that passes all understanding comes from keeping our hearts and minds fixed on Christ, not by focusing on the things of earth.   Christ died and rose again and is now seated at the right hand of God. We have proof that the circumstances of this world are all temporary. Christians will rise again, just as Jesus did, and enter into our promised land. That is the peace that is ours in Christ Jesus, the peace only Jesus can give.    Allow the word of Christ to dwell in you richly and the peace of Christ will follow. Jesus left us with his peace because he left us. He ascended to heaven and promised, one day, he would take us too.

    3 min
  5. 5 DAYS AGO

    Do you live with the contentment of Christ?

    How would our lives be changed if our highest goal was contentment with all we have?  Getting ahead is a great goal unless you are getting ahead of God in the process. Jesus told his disciples to take up their cross and “follow” him. It’s easy to lose sight of Christ in our lives when we are focused on things that, in that moment, we want more than what we have.   Our goal is to be content with what we have and live a life that is free to follow Christ. We are content with what we have when we are content in the knowledge that Christ's presence dwells with us continually through his Holy Spirit, providing all that we need. Jesus said, “I will never leave you nor forsake you.”  When we consider the monumental blessing of our salvation in Christ, the things of this world seem to pale in that light. We will never have everything we want. Even if we did, that would change tomorrow. We do have the ability to be content with what we have. We can’t love God as we should when we love money and possessions more than we should.  How many emails would we simply delete if we were content with what we have? How many choices would we adjust if we didn’t feel a need for greater success but simply wanted to enjoy the success we have achieved? Do we define “enough” as “just a little more?” If so, place Jesus on the throne of your life and follow him as Lord.  Allow the word of Christ to dwell in you richly and the contentment of Christ will be your result.

    3 min
  6. 6 DAYS AGO

    Do you hand your worries to God?

    We usually talk about the subject of prayer when we discuss this verse, but it's also important to look at these words from a different perspective. Paul was telling the Philippians to pray about everything. But this verse is also about God, your Father.  God doesn’t want us to fret and worry. We don’t have to be anxious about anything. Why then are we anxious so much of the time? What are you worried about right now? Paul would say, “Take it to your Dad!”   Why do we need to make requests “known” to God, who already knows everything? The answer is simple: God wants us to know we have given our requests to him. When we leave our requests, our worries, and our concerns at his throne, we can be grateful that they are now safely and securely in God’s hands. The same hands that created the world are more than able to handle our requests.   Maybe our most amazing thought is the knowledge that we have been invited to come to God’s throne. Approach him as a child. He is your Abba, your loving dad. He wants you to bring him all of your hurts, bothers, guilt, and worries. You can be joyful knowing God wants to do whatever is perfect. He can forgive, comfort, counsel, and direct. Be thankful that you have an Abba who wants to help.  Jesus was praying for the strength to face the cross when he said, “Abba, Father, all things are possible for you. Remove this cup from me. Yet not what I will, but what you will” (Mark 14:36). Even Jesus needed to lay his worry at the foot of the throne.  Allow the word of Christ to dwell in you richly. Allow Abba the chance to assure you that every prayer is heard and held in his mighty hand.

    3 min
  7. 11 MAR

    Do you live with the freedom of Christ?

    God created each of us with free will, and we are each designed to desire freedom. Yet, every generation has had people who are enslaved in some ways. Some have been enslaved, but most submit their freedoms because of their personal choices.  Paul described slavery as a “yoke.” The yoke was a heavy burden placed on the neck of an animal so it could then be forced to walk a certain path and work for someone else. Another type of yoke during that day was used to keep prisoners chained.  When Paul wrote to the Galatians, he was speaking to some who had been unable to lay down the many Jewish laws of the Old Covenant and step into the freedom Christ had provided in the New Covenant. Paul was also speaking to some who had come to the Christian faith from a Gentile background. Before their salvation, they had been “free” to behave in some pagan practices they now knew were wrong. Their desire to keep some of their pagan practices had enslaved them to their wrong choices. The same is true for God’s people today.   Our sin entangles our lives, and our consequences burden us with a yoke of slavery. If we stand firm in our faith, we can be free of those burdens.  Paul encouraged all of them to seek the freedom Christ offered. Christians have freely chosen Jesus to be our Savior and Lord. We are truly free when we stand firm in our faith, when we choose to walk through life “in step with God’s Spirit” (Galatians 5:25).  When you allow the word of Christ to dwell in you richly, you are most able to stand firm in your faith and live as the Lord intended. It was for freedom that Christ has set us free.

    3 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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