The Wisdom Journey

Stephen Davey shares practical and relevant lessons through the entire Bible, Genesis to Revelation, in just 10-minute each weekday. Want to understand the Bible and its implications? Subscribe and learn to know God, think biblically and live wisely.

  1. Chasing Runaways (Jonah 1:4-16)

    2 DAYS AGO

    Chasing Runaways (Jonah 1:4-16)

    Share a comment A prophet boards a ship to escape God, then falls asleep while everyone else fights for their lives. We walk through Jonah 1 and watch the story turn on a brutal irony: pagan sailors pray, row, and risk everything to save the very man who refuses to bring God’s mercy to Nineveh. The storm is not random weather, it is a targeted confrontation, and Jonah’s silence becomes its own kind of rebellion. We follow the dramatic beats as the crew casts lots, the blame lands on Jonah, and the questions start flying: who are you, where are you from, what God do you serve? Jonah finally admits he worships the God of heaven who made the sea, which makes his attempted escape look impossible from the start. When Jonah tells them to hurl him into the water, he is not banking on a miracle fish or an easy exit. He would rather drown than obey, and that level of stubbornness forces us to ask what we are protecting when we resist repentance. Then comes the surprise revival on the deck. The sailors plead with the Lord not to be charged with innocent blood, they throw Jonah overboard, the sea goes calm, and their fear turns into worship, sacrifice, and vows that point to genuine conversion. We close with the uncomfortable comfort of the Book of Jonah: you can abandon God, but God does not abandon you. If you feel like a runaway believer or like someone just starting to reach for faith, this message puts words to the next step: confession, return, and trust in a gracious God who pursues. Subscribe for more Bible teaching, share this with someone who needs a way back, and leave a review so more listeners can find it. What part of Jonah’s story hits closest to home for you? The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min
  2. Watch Jonah Run (Jonah 1:1-3)

    3 DAYS AGO

    Watch Jonah Run (Jonah 1:1-3)

    Share a comment Everybody can finish the phrase “Jonah and the whale.” Hardly anyone finishes the thought. We dig into why the Book of Jonah is far more than a fish story and why its opening scene is designed to spotlight God’s sovereignty over creation and over the human heart. Miraculous storms, a divinely directed sea creature, and a citywide turning point are not random Bible trivia, they’re deliberate proof that the Creator rules what he has made. We also slow down and put Jonah back in his real world. Jonah isn’t an anonymous character or an inexperienced messenger. He’s a veteran prophet with a history in Israel during the reign of Jeroboam II, and God’s word comes to him with unmistakable commands: arise, go, call out. Then comes the assignment that changes everything, Nineveh. As the chief city of Assyria, Nineveh represents a violent, feared enemy, a nation known for cruelty and destined to threaten Israel’s future. Understanding that backdrop makes Jonah’s reaction less puzzling and more personal. From there, we wrestle with a question many Christians quietly carry: what do you do when obedience feels dangerous, unfair, or beyond you? God doesn’t soften the mission with guarantees of safety or success, and Jonah responds by buying passage to Tarshish in the opposite direction, effectively trying to quit his calling. If you’ve ever tried to run from God’s will, this story hits close to home. If this helped you see Jonah with fresh eyes, subscribe, share this with a friend who loves Bible study, and leave a review so more people can find the show. The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min
  3. The Shortest Old Testament Book (Obadiah)

    4 DAYS AGO

    The Shortest Old Testament Book (Obadiah)

    Share a comment Edom thought it had the perfect defense: mountain strongholds, a city carved into stone, and the confidence that no one could touch it. Obadiah answers that kind of pride with a single line that still lands hard today: God knows how to bring the lofty down. We spend time in the shortest book in the Old Testament and pull out why its message is anything but small, especially if you care about justice, character, and what God sees beneath the surface. We walk through why Obadiah targets Edom, how their family link to Israel through Esau and Jacob makes their hostility even darker, and why their “wisdom” only made them more foolish. Then the focus tightens on the real charge: violence. Not only the violence of a sword, but the violence of standing aloof while others suffer, rejoicing when an enemy falls, grabbing what you can from someone else’s disaster, and treating human pain like a chance to get ahead. It’s an Old Testament prophecy, but it reads like a mirror for modern habits of indifference and online gloating. The final turn is hope-filled and future-facing: the day of the Lord, God’s faithfulness to his promises, and the steady promise that history ends with the kingdom belonging to the Lord. We talk about endurance when injustice seems to win, and why Scripture points us to a coming reign of righteousness under Jesus Christ. If you want a clear Bible teaching on Obadiah, Edom, pride, judgment, and the day of the Lord, press play, then subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    13 min
  4. The Justice and Mercy of God (Amos 7–9)

    5 DAYS AGO

    The Justice and Mercy of God (Amos 7–9)

    Share a comment Mercy and justice sound like opposites, but Amos refuses to let us split God into the parts we prefer. We follow the final chapters of the Book of Amos as God gives the prophet five vivid visions, each one pressing the same hard question: what happens when a nation keeps leaning into idolatry and still expects peace? Along the way, we see something many people miss about the judgment of God, it is never random, never careless, and never disconnected from his patience.  Two early visions land with force because they touch everyday survival: locusts devouring the later crop and fire portraying drought that drains the land dry. Amos does what faithful leaders do, he prays, he pleads, and he asks how God’s people can stand. God relents, showing real mercy without pretending sin is harmless. Then the tone shifts as the plumb line appears, a simple tool that exposes a crooked wall. Israel’s spiritual collapse is measurable, and the confrontation at Bethel shows how quickly religious power tries to silence a voice that will not negotiate truth.  The final images grow even more sobering: a basket of summer fruit signaling the end, a famine of hearing God’s words, and a temple collapse that shows no idolater can outrun accountability. And yet, the closing note is not bleak. God preserves a remnant, promises restoration, and points hope down the corridor of history toward Messiah, Jesus the Redeemer. If you’ve wrestled with repentance, justice, mercy, or what it means to hear God clearly, this conversation will meet you there. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway. The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min
  5. Wasting Prosperity (Amos 3–6)

    6 DAYS AGO

    Wasting Prosperity (Amos 3–6)

    Share a comment A $314 million lottery ticket sounds like a dream until you watch what it can do to a human soul. We start with a true-to-life cautionary story of sudden wealth followed by chaos: wasted money, ruined relationships, addiction, legal trouble, and a family tragedy that shows how fast “more” can become a monster. The question isn’t whether money is powerful. The question is what prosperity does to us when it starts to feel like proof that we’re fine, approved, and beyond consequences. From there we open the book of Amos and trace three urgent messages to a nation enjoying peak comfort while decaying at the core. We talk about privilege and accountability for God’s people, why the “roar” of judgment is never empty noise, and how false security collapses when a culture builds its life on luxury instead of obedience. Amos doesn’t just confront personal sin; he exposes public injustice, where the cravings of the comfortable crush the poor and normalize selfishness. We also deal with religious hypocrisy, ignored warnings, and the chilling line “Prepare to meet your God.” Yet hope still breaks through: “Seek Me and live.” We connect that call to modern life, including Amos’s demand that justice and righteousness actually flow through the land. If you’ve ever wondered whether comfort is shaping you more than you realize, this conversation is for you. Subscribe, share with a friend, and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: where do you need to “swim upstream” right now? The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    13 min
  6. 17 APR

    From Fig Picker to Fearless Prophet (Amos 1–2)

    Share a comment A Shakespeare line about “greatness thrust upon them” turns out to be the perfect doorway into Amos. He is not polished, powerful, or credentialed. He is a shepherd from Tekoa and a fig picker, yet God makes him fearless, clear, and impossible to ignore. We slow down to place Amos in biblical history under Jeroboam II around 760 BC, a prosperous era that masks deep moral decay in the northern kingdom of Israel. From there, the prophecy of judgment arrives fast. Amos starts with the surrounding nations so nobody can claim God is singling Israel out. Syria’s violence, Philistia’s slave trade, Tyre’s broken covenant of brotherhood, Edom’s hatred, Ammon’s atrocities, and Moab’s desecration all come under the same divine standard. Along the way we unpack the repeated phrase “for three transgressions and for four,” not as a number game, but as a warning that the evidence has piled up and refusal has consequences. Then Amos brings the message home: Judah rejects God’s law, and Israel’s sins stack up in a grim list of greed and oppression. People are treated as disposable, the poor are crushed, and comfort becomes a cover for injustice. We close by drawing the line from Amos’s warning to our own day, where delayed judgment can feel like safety until it suddenly is not. Subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us what part of Amos challenges you most. The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min
  7. 16 APR

    Keeping Your Eyes on the Road Ahead (Joel 2:28–3:21)

    Share a comment The rearview mirror is tiny compared to the windshield, and that’s not an accident, it’s a metaphor for how we’re meant to live. We start with a story about choosing eyesight over memory, then take that wisdom straight into Scripture: God does not ask us to camp out in what we lost, what we regret, or what we can’t change. He keeps pulling our attention to what’s ahead, because Bible prophecy is designed to produce endurance and hope, not panic.  We dig into the Book of Joel as it turns from immediate disaster to long-range promises about the latter days and the Day of the Lord. Joel 2 describes a future outpouring of the Spirit with dreams and visions, paired with unmistakable cosmic signs like the sun darkening and the moon turning blood red. We also clear up a major confusion point around Acts 2 and Pentecost: Peter is pointing to the Spirit’s arrival, not claiming the tribulation has begun or that every sign in Joel is already fulfilled. That context helps us avoid end times sensationalism and the modern habit of treating every “vision” claim as automatic proof of prophecy.  From there we follow Joel 3 into Israel’s restoration, the gathering of nations for judgment in the valley of Jehoshaphat, and the final conflict Scripture connects with Armageddon. We trace the images that reappear in Revelation, including the harvest and winepress language that highlights the certainty of Christ’s victory. The episode ends where prophecy is meant to land: confidence that Jesus reigns, a coming millennial kingdom marked by renewal, and a practical call to stop living in the rearview mirror. If this strengthened your hope, subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Bible prophecy do you most want to understand next? The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min
  8. 15 APR

    In Control of the Chaos (Joel 1:1–2:27)

    Share a comment A tsunami wipes out entire coastlines and the same question rises in every generation: if God is sovereign, why didn’t He stop it? We start there because real life starts there, with grief, shock, and the temptation to explain other people’s pain. Instead of reaching for quick answers, we follow the clearer path Scripture gives: don’t assume disasters are targeted payback, and don’t waste the warning that life is fragile.  Then we open the book of Joel and watch a nation reel under a locust plague so severe it destroys fields, dries up wine, and leaves the land mourning. Joel doesn’t lead with weather patterns or theories. He calls priests and people to gather, to pray, and to return to the Lord. Along the way we unpack the meaning of the Day of the Lord, why Joel describes an invading army as the Lord’s army, and how repentance is meant to be inward and honest, not performative.  The surprising turn is hope. Joel points to God’s mercy and His willingness to relent, and he holds out one of the most healing promises for anyone who feels devoured by loss: “I will restore to you the years that the swarming locust has eaten.” If you’re wrestling with suffering, judgment, repentance, or what it means to trust God without getting an explanation, you’ll find both clarity and comfort here. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs hope, and leave a review with the line that challenged you most. The Christian's Compass is a companion study guide that corresponds to each of these lessons along The Wisdom Journey. Download a copy for free, or cover the cost of printing and shipping and we'll mail you a booklet. Learn More: https://www.wisdomonline.org/mp/the-christians-compass Learn more at https://www.wisdomonline.org/ Support the show

    12 min

About

Stephen Davey shares practical and relevant lessons through the entire Bible, Genesis to Revelation, in just 10-minute each weekday. Want to understand the Bible and its implications? Subscribe and learn to know God, think biblically and live wisely.

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