Wisdom for the Heart

Stephen Davey will help you learn to know what the Bible says, understand what it means, and apply it to your life as he teaches verse-by-verse through books of the Bible. Stephen is the president of Wisdom International, which provides radio broadcasts, digital content, and print resources designed to make disciples of all nations and edify followers of Jesus Christ.

  1. 1 DAY AGO

    Hudson Taylor

    Share a comment What if the moment that changes your life is a single line on a forgotten page? Hudson Taylor’s story begins with a teenage skeptic, a gospel tract, and one piercing phrase—“the finished work of Christ.” That realization doesn’t make life easier; it makes obedience possible. From that grounding, he learns to trust through delayed paychecks, slumside porridge meals, and a late-night choice to give away his last coin before any warm feeling arrives. We walk through the crucible that formed his resilience: the discipline of praising before relief, the courage to see cultural offense and remove it, and the humility to lose donor approval in exchange for real rapport on the street. His choice to adopt Chinese dress and customs wasn’t theater—it was neighbor-love that opened doors, even as grief, disease, and riots pushed back. Along the way, friendships with Spurgeon and Müller provide just-in-time fuel, while Taylor’s own words sharpen our practice: rude people accomplish little; responsibility rests with God when we obey. At the heart of this episode are five field-tested principles you can use today: improve the character of the work you already do, deepen piety with intentional effort, remove stones of stumbling if possible, oil the wheels where relationships stick, and supplement what is lacking instead of critiquing from the sidelines. We close by tracing the legacy—hundreds of outposts, schools, and a translation effort across 18 provinces—without losing sight of the source. The work that saves is finished, which frees us to attempt the tasks that look impossible, endure the ones that are difficult, and celebrate when, at last, they are done. If this story stirred your courage, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs resilience today, and leave a review with the one principle you’ll practice this week. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    26 min
  2. 2 DAYS AGO

    Jim & Elisabeth Elliot

    Share a comment What if the front lines of God’s kingdom run straight through your front yard? We explore the unsettling and beautiful truth that every believer is an ambassador for a conquering King who offers peace to people at war with God—and that this calling rarely respects our comfort zones. We start with a vivid image from American history: Wilmer McLean’s attempt to avoid conflict, only to see the Civil War begin at his farm and conclude in his parlor. That story becomes a lens for 2 Corinthians 5:17–20, where Paul names our role and our message—reconciliation. God makes us new, then hands us the word of reconciliation: a peace treaty drafted on a blood-soaked cross, where trespasses are no longer counted. Ambassadors don’t invent policy; we carry the terms of surrender and invite people to lay down their arms before a merciful, victorious Lord. To sharpen that calling, we look at ambassadors through Paul’s world, not ours. Roman envoys set borders, delivered constitutions, and integrated conquered peoples into a larger kingdom. They lived among strangers, learned their ways, and commended their homeland with clarity and courage. That’s our pattern too. The gospel must be truthful, accessible, and embodied where we live and work. The message comes to life in the story of five missionaries who reached out to the Waorani of Ecuador. Their careful approach, their choice not to retaliate, and their martyrdom sparked a movement of repentance, translation, and church planting led by the very people who once killed them. Elizabeth Elliot and Rachel Saint modeled a long obedience that turned enemies into family, giving us a living picture of reconciliation’s power. The takeaway is plain and piercing: our comfort, privacy, and agendas are not our own. We’re sent to commend our true homeland and deliver God’s terms of peace with humility and courage. If this stirs you, take one step: pray for the person nearest your “front parlor,” share the gospel with clarity, and ask God for the courage to live like an ambassador. Subscribe, share this episode with a friend, and leave a review to help others find the message of reconciliation. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    26 min
  3. 3 DAYS AGO

    Fanny Crosby

    Share a comment What if the story behind your hardest wound is the clearest window into God’s work? We start with John 9, where Jesus rejects the blame-laced question of who sinned and reframes a man’s lifelong blindness as the very stage for God’s power. Then we follow that thread into the life of Fanny Crosby, the blind poet whose 8,000 hymns carried the gospel into revival tents, cathedrals, and living rooms around the world. You’ll hear how Jesus intentionally breaks suffocating Sabbath rules to heal, spark a showdown, and raise a fearless witness who simply says what he knows: no one opens the eyes of the blind unless God is involved. That same clarity echoes in Crosby’s journey—from a childhood shaped by a tragic misdiagnosis to an adulthood anchored in Scripture, a dramatic conversion during a hymn, and a calling that turned private pain into public praise. Her lyrics traveled with Ira Sankey and D. L. Moody and later with Billy Graham’s team, leading countless people to faith while giving voice to those who grieved. We don’t smooth the edges. Crosby’s marriage buckled under the loss of her infant daughter. She rarely spoke of that wound, yet she wrote “Safe in the Arms of God,” proving that victory in one arena doesn’t guarantee victory in all. Along the way, we draw three practical takeaways: usability often grows where we accept our inability, simple truth can dismantle complex denial, and both cause and cure live under a sovereign God who composes meaning from every measure. If you’ve ever asked why pain persists or wondered whether purpose can survive it, this conversation offers courage, clarity, and a path forward. If this resonates, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review to help others find these stories of grace and grit. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    26 min
  4. 4 DAYS AGO

    Adoniram Judson Part 2)

    Share a comment A young man asks a father for his daughter’s hand with a promise most would never make: expect hardship, insult, and maybe a violent death. That stark beginning sets the course for Adoniram and Ann Judson’s life of conviction, where truth outran comfort and a clear call survived the loss of money, safety, and applause. We follow their voyage where long hours in Scripture reshaped their beliefs, cost them their support, and sent them to Burma to start from nothing—no grammar, no dictionary, no church—only the resolve to build a language bridge strong enough to carry the gospel. What unfolds is both brutal and beautiful. Years of quiet work yield almost no visible fruit; persecution raises the stakes; the emperor tosses a tract to the floor; a child dies; a prison cell turns nights into torture; and grief carves out a hollow in Adoniram’s soul that swallows even joy. He steps back from honors, digs his own grave, and writes that God is the great unknown. Then a letter about his brother’s last‑minute faith lights a small fire. He returns to the desk, to translation, and to a patience forged by suffering. The tide shifts. Interest grows. A second marriage steadies the home. Among the Karens—keepers of oral traditions about a Creator, a tempter, and a promised deliverer—thousands travel for months to ask for writings that show the way of escape. Twelve years had seen eighteen baptisms; one year will bring more than a thousand. The legacy stretches far beyond numbers. Adoniram completes the Burmese Bible; grammars and dictionaries rest on his groundwork; and churches multiply where none stood. By his death at sixty‑one, hundreds of congregations gather, and estimates count over two hundred thousand believers across Burma. He returns to America only briefly and whispers the gospel when crowds beg for adventure tales, a quiet refusal that speaks louder than fame. This is a story for anyone weighing cost against calling, wondering if endurance matters when results lag. It says that a buried seed can outlive a lifetime and that conviction, language, and love can reshape a nation. If this journey moved you, subscribe, share the show with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway so others can find it too. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    27 min
  5. 5 DAYS AGO

    Adoniram Judson Part 1

    Share a comment A door splinters in Rangoon and chains bite into a young missionary’s ankles, but the story starts years earlier with a valedictorian who traded faith for fashionable doubt—and then spent a sleepless night listening to a dying friend through a thin wall. That shock sent Adoniram Judson home, back to Christ, and forward into a calling that would test every conviction he held. We walk through the unlikely steps: a proposal that reads like a martyr’s oath, a voyage that turns a Congregationalist couple into Baptists mid-sea, and a decade of language work without a teacher, dictionary, or church. Seven years for one convert. Twelve years for eighteen. Meanwhile, a printing press hums, pages multiply, and a New Testament in Burmese takes shape with careful, stubborn fidelity. Then the empire shifts. War erupts between England and Burma, suspicion falls, and Judson is dragged to prison as a supposed spy. We sit with Anne’s grit as she bargains for scraps, delivers a baby, and begs milk from village mothers while her husband hangs nightly by the ankles. Release comes suddenly, but the cost is devastating: Anne’s death, their daughter’s passing, and news of his father’s funeral push Judson into a dark season of silence and surrender. He gives away honors, moves into the jungle, and digs a grave beside a hut to face his own mortality. Out of that deep winter, the seed does its hidden work. The translation stands. The church survives. The scars become a map for anyone who wonders whether slow, faithful obedience still matters in a world that rewards speed and spectacle. We share this story to challenge how we measure impact and to honor the quiet craft of translation, cross-cultural ministry, and perseverance under persecution. If you’ve wrestled with doubt, chased purpose across false starts, or questioned whether costly conviction is worth it, Judson’s path offers a bracing, hopeful answer. Subscribe for more history-grounded faith stories, share with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review telling us: what fruit would you endure for? _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    26 min
  6. 6 FEB

    Legacies of Light: Oswald Chambers

    Share a comment What if prayer isn’t about prying blessings from a reluctant heaven, but receiving the Giver himself? We follow Oswald Chambers from a teenage surrender on a country path to a wartime awakening in Cairo, then turn to Luke 11 to rethink how Jesus taught us to approach the Father. Along the way, we meet Biddy—his brilliant stenographer wife—whose shorthand preserved sermons that would outlive them both and disciple millions. We open with the unsettling simplicity of Jesus’ promise: ask, seek, knock. Not to wear God down, but because the door is already open. The midnight neighbor is a contrast, not a comparison; the Father isn’t irritated, he’s eager. That’s why Chambers hung a banner over his chapel hut: How much more will your heavenly Father give the Holy Spirit to those who ask. In a camp full of soldiers who feared they would not see home, the message landed like water in a desert. Prayer became less about extracting outcomes and more about receiving presence, wisdom, and courage for the next step. Chambers’ life throws the teaching into sharp relief. He abandoned art school, endured a dark night, and embraced a Spirit-led obedience shaped by mentors like Spurgeon and Alexander Whyte. He ran a Bible college on faith and famously refused a full endowment, trusting provision to fit God’s will. During World War I he canceled YMCA entertainments, taught Scripture, and watched a quiet awakening spread. His death at 43 might have closed the story, but Biddy’s notebooks turned a hidden ministry into a global voice. His counsel still steadies us: never make a principle out of your own experience; trust God and do the next thing. If this conversation reframed your view of prayer and faith, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review so others can find it. What’s your next step of trust today? _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    27 min
  7. 5 FEB

    Legacies of Light: Suzanna Wesley

    Share a comment Fires, riots, and a mother praying under an apron—this is the untidy ground where a spiritual movement took root. We step into the world of Susanna Wesley, a pastor’s daughter who faced poverty, public hostility, and staggering loss, yet stitched her home together with steady practices and an unshakable trust in God. England sat in a moral fog, pulpits droned without conviction, and even executions sold like theater. In that setting, Susanna’s daily choices created a quiet counterculture that outlasted the chaos. We trace her journey from a mud-floor parsonage to the night a neighbor’s human ladder pulled six-year-old John from a burning home. We sit with a marriage marked by sharp disagreements and debt, where Samuel Wesley’s misjudgments and absences deepened the strain. And we examine Susanna’s small, repeatable acts of faith: the “apron over the head” prayer time, the weekly hour of one-on-one counsel for each child, the insistence on Scripture shaping minds and manners. Her story holds both pain and paradox—several children wandering or wounded, others, like John and Charles, carrying a methodical faith into streets and chapels that needed awakening. Rather than a tidy formula, we offer an honest ledger: faithful parenting without guarantees, structure without control, courage without applause. You’ll hear how the famed “Methodist” method mirrored habits formed at home, how Charles’s hymns trained hearts to sing doctrine, and how John’s pulpit design anticipated riots sparked by sermons against slavery. The thread through it all is a woman who chose to “fill a little space” if God would be glorified, trusting that perseverance, not perfection, leaves the deeper imprint. If this story moves you, follow the show, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. Your support helps more listeners find these grounded, hope-filled histories. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    26 min
  8. 4 FEB

    Legacies of Light: AW Tozer

    Share a comment A street sermon in Akron. An attic prayer. And a life that wouldn’t make peace with a low view of God. We follow A.W. Tozer’s journey from a teenage conversion to a ministry that challenged the church to recover holiness, embrace lordship, and set our minds on things above. Drawing a line from Peter’s invitation at Pentecost to Colossians 3, we explore why a towering vision of Christ changes everything—from the way we worship to how we preach and live. I share Tozer’s fiercest insights in his own words: why entertainment can’t sustain a church, how “motion” often mimics growth, and what true exposition aims to do—produce moral action, not mere information. We also talk about the work behind The Pursuit of God and the need to behold the majesty of the One who sits enthroned, who calls the stars by name, and never learns because He already knows all things. This isn’t a call to be louder; it’s a call to be deeper. But the story isn’t airbrushed. We reckon with Tozer’s blind spots at home—the distance, the costs of relentless focus—and what that teaches us about holding a high view of God alongside a practiced love for people. If you’ve felt the ache for more than spiritual gadgets and clever slogans, consider this your invitation: raise your gaze, expand your heart, and let truth lead to action. If this conversation stirred you, subscribe, share it with a friend who needs courage, and leave a review with one way you plan to set your mind on things above this week. _____ Stephen's latest book, Legacies of Light, Volume 2, is our gift for your special donation to our ministry. Follow this link for information or to donate: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/legacies Support the show

    27 min

About

Stephen Davey will help you learn to know what the Bible says, understand what it means, and apply it to your life as he teaches verse-by-verse through books of the Bible. Stephen is the president of Wisdom International, which provides radio broadcasts, digital content, and print resources designed to make disciples of all nations and edify followers of Jesus Christ.

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