Tuesday, March 3, 2026

Wisdom Is Wealth

“Happy [is] the man [that] findeth wisdom, and the man [that] getteth understanding. For the merchandise of it [is] better than the merchandise of silver, and the gain thereof than fine gold.” (Pr 3:13-14 AV)

Sometimes this takes a lifetime to learn.  But it is true nonetheless.  Wisdom is far more valuable than all the things we might be able to attain.  The word ‘merchandise’ is interesting here.  It means to use in business in order to make a profit.  The old saying that money cannot buy happiness is certainly true.  Material goods, no matter how much, cannot buy certain things.  Wisdom, however, makes certain things attainable that money cannot buy.  With wealth comes stress.  There is anxiety over the things we have.  We must maintain them.  We must protect them.  We must store them.  With wisdom, there are no residual costs.  With material gain comes discontentment.  There is always more to have.  There is always more to gain.  With wisdom, contentment is the end of it all.  There are those who lack for nothing and yet are rarely at peace with life.  There are those who have very little and seem to enjoy life as it comes.  Furthermore, things have their limits.  Throwing money at something does not always fix it.  There are investments with great returns that don’t cost a dime.  Wisdom, and not material things, has the greatest return.

I was reminded of this recently.  While sitting at a table over a simple cup of coffee, there was more ministry accomplished than an entire program tailored solely for an individual.  We notice this while we do our work for the LORD in many ways.  Every summer we have a large VBS in a public park.  It takes many hands and a good chunk of resources.  Yet without follow-up, there seems to be no return.  What matters to people?  It is not the large programs we put on.  It is not the many different venues a soul might explore.  It is the single individual who spends just a small amount of time caring for the hurting soul.  It is the listening ear and feeling heart that sees return on their investment.  Knowing what to say and how to say it pays dividends far beyond patronization with much goods.

The older I get, the more I realize just how true this proverb is.  Over the last decade or so, the LORD has been teaching me skills in listening.  It is hard for a preacher to listen and not speak.  That is our calling.  We are supposed to offer a bit of knowledge that will help in a situation.  However, there are times when nothing needs to be said.  There are times when the hurting soul already knows what he or she needs to know.  They simply need someone to listen.  There is greater pleasure in silence than there is in speaking words that may not be needed.  Wisdom can accomplish many things that a bank account cannot.  Life is not about how much one can gain.  When we pass, it all stays here.  Life is about what we can accomplish for the LORD.  Wisdom is the currency.

Monday, March 2, 2026

Inevitability of Failure

“And it shall come to pass, when all these things are come upon thee, the blessing and the curse, which I have set before thee, and thou shalt call [them] to mind among all the nations, whither the LORD thy God hath driven thee,” (De 30:1 AV)

I’ve always thought the transparency above was a bit odd.  It is true.  But odd.  Israel will have times of obedience and faith.  They will also have many more times of disobedience and doubt.  Today’s overly positive world would criticize God for being so honest.  They would see the phrase above as setting Israel up for failure.  The world wants us to build each other up as though failure isn’t part of life.  All we want is good news.  All we want is to hear that we are supernatural and will never do anything wrong.  To inform someone that they cannot be perfect and that they will fail is believed to be a detriment to their improvement.  Yet, the LORD has no problem telling Israel that there will be times of blessing and cursing.  There will be good times and bad times.  They will struggle with temptation and fall into it.  This is not a foregone conclusion or self-fulfilling prophecy.  Just a statement on the nature of people.  How refreshing to hear the truth, even if it isn’t the encouragement we think we need.

No matter what skill I tried to learn, there was always a learning curve associated with it.  How many of us have scars to prove the lessons learned along the road of life?  I remember when I was promoted to the pizza making side of the restaurant.  I started out cutting the pizzas and sending them out to the front cashier.  My job was to mark the boxes according to the order.  The name went on the left and the type of pizza when on the right.  Then, as they came out, I sliced them, closed the box, and sent the box with the receipt to the front.  From there, I graduated to pulling.  That was the person who pulled the pizzas out of the oven and put them in the box.  When the head chef instructed us in the procedure, he warned us that we would suffer burns along the way.  Sure enough, I suffered a bit of pain.  From there, I moved along to a pizza maker.  More burns.  Most of the serious burns came from making pizzas and not pulling them.  Again, I was warned of the inevitability of burns and why they occur.  I was glad they told me.  Even though I relaxed my focus and suffered the consequences, at least I knew burns were coming and why they happened.

I would rather have an instructor or coach who would tell me that I probably won’t get it right the first few times I tried and show me why I failed than someone who told me I will be an immediate success and never fail.  Failure means improvement.  Failure means learning and growing.  Failure is a reality check on just who and what we are.  Failure is uncomfortable but necessary.  Failure produces results that can be fixed.  Failure reveals the why and not just the how.  Failure means there is greater insight into the nature of things.  Honesty, as it regards failure is refreshing.  When the LORD tells me that I will fall into temptation, it is not perceived as an insult.  The saint shouldn’t take it as a parent who doesn’t believe in their child.  Rather, knowing our propensity to fail, we are more aware of it and may even avoid it.  No, I would rather have a heavenly Father who knows the wisdom of full transparency than a God who wants to protect me from the truth.  Praise the LORD for the bad news!  The bad news helps us to overcome and enjoy more blessings than cursings.

Sunday, March 1, 2026

Beauty of Holiness

“And it shall be on the day when ye shall pass over Jordan unto the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, that thou shalt set thee up great stones, and plaister them with plaister: And thou shalt write upon them all the words of this law, when thou art passed over, that thou mayest go in unto the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee, a land that floweth with milk and honey; as the LORD God of thy fathers hath promised thee.” (De 27:2-3 AV)

Joshua’s altar had to be something to behold!  It was recently discovered.  Built like the letter ‘E’ laying on the ground, the priest would ascend the middle ramp while the penitent would climb the first ramp.  The animal would be killed, and the blood would run over the face of the altar.  The animal was sacrificed at the center, and being reconciled to God, the penitent would leave from the opposite direction from which he came.  This entire altar was plaistered with a substance made from bleached animal bone and pitch.  It dried like hardened cement, and when it did, it was as white as anything one could imagine.  The law was chiseled into the face of the altar so the people of Isael saw the record of the law written on a bone-white altar when entering the land of Canaan.  What a picture of perfection that must have been.

I have gone to our nation’s capital a couple of times.  There are many sights to see there.  There are a few monuments that strike at the heart of the visitor.  The war memorial is perhaps the most moving of all.  There are the Washington and Lincoln monuments.  The Capital build looms large.  And of course, there is the White House.  Upon these monuments, there are words etched for all time.  There are scripture verses.  There are patriotic quotes.  What is not on the monuments is a copy of the entire law of our land.  I don’t think it would fit.  These buildings are impressive.  They attempt to give praise to God, but in reality, they are erected to recognize great men of our past.  There is nothing inherently wrong with that.  It is just that compared to the law written on alabaster white walls of an altar doesn’t even come close.

I have a message regarding this altar.  It is a perfect picture of salvation in Christ.  But that is not what strikes the heart this morning.  It is the picture of perfection that someone entering the promised land witnessed as they passed by.  It is not just the altar which could be seen from Jerusalem, laying 17 miles away.  That bone-white altar could be seen from miles.  It wasn’t the absence of flaws or the fact that it was built with materials God had supplied beforehand that fit together like a puzzle without one chisel or hammer used.  No.  What impresses the mind this morning is the beauty that is the law.  Perfection on a road sign, so to speak.  What made this altar one of a kind was not the shape or color.  It was not the activity that occurred there.  Rather, it was the law written on its face.  I could not help but think of heaven.  Heaven is a place of absolute perfection and holiness.  There will be no need for law as we understand it because all the inhabitants will have no desire to break it.  The beauty of holiness is what the Hebrew saw when he entered God’s land, and it will be the beauty of holiness which the saint will see as well.

Saturday, February 28, 2026

In Principle

“When thou dost lend thy brother any thing, thou shalt not go into his house to fetch his pledge. Thou shalt stand abroad, and the man to whom thou dost lend shall bring out the pledge abroad unto thee. And if the man [be] poor, thou shalt not sleep with his pledge: In any case thou shalt deliver him the pledge again when the sun goeth down, that he may sleep in his own raiment, and bless thee: and it shall be righteousness unto thee before the LORD thy God.” (De 24:10-13 AV)

Reading this passage, one might be curious as to exactly what the pledge was.  The pledge spoken above is a garment used for protection against the cold while one slept.  That is pretty detailed.  If we didn’t understand the principle of the law, we might pass right over it.  The law is specific here, but it teaches a broader principle.  If a temporary loan of a necessary possession is needed to be returned, the creditor is not to keep that which the debtor needs.  It is to be returned on a temporary status and then retrieved until the loan is paid.  The Bible may use specifics, but it uses specifics to teach broader principles.  Some believe the bible is antiquated and outdated and does not answer today’s issues.  Yet Peter says, “According as his divine power hath given unto us all things that [pertain] unto life and godliness, through the knowledge of him that hath called us to glory and virtue:” (2Pe 1:3 AV)  The Bible is the final authority in all matters of faith and practice.  No matter the culture, time, or place, the Bible has the last word.

My wife is a master game player.  If there is a loophole to exploit, she will find it.  A case in point concerns a game called Worst Case Scenario.  Gameplay involves one player to rank in order from least appalling to most appalling five different scenarios.  The rest of the players try to guess the rank of possibilities.  The spirit of the rules is to judge each possibility as an equal scenario.  Hence the name of the game.  However, when my wife plays, she ranks them according to the likelihood of occurrence.  Thus, she ranks losing all her photos on her phone as far more fearful than being mauled by a bear.  The directions do not specifically state that the player is to treat all scenarios as equally possible.  So, she stretched the spirit of the game because the letter of the law does not state the obvious.

The Bible isn’t a detailed rule book that covers all scenarios.  If it was, then there would be no end to it.  Rather, the Bible speaks of principles illustrated by examples but not necessarily constrained by them.  The Bible is filled with principles that guide our choices in every possible scenario.  It is a guide manual.  What follows chapter 24 of Deuteronomy are laws of separation.  The law speaks of keeping separate crops, types of linen, etc.  The principle is separation and distinction.  Not every possible distinction is mentioned.  But the principle remains.  God created things distinct and with particular purpose.  We are not to confuse them.  The point is this.  If we treat the word of God as a mere rule book with all relevant detailed laws enumerated within, we will fail to live a godly life.  It is, and always has been, the principles.

Friday, February 27, 2026

God Is Bigger

“When thou goest out to battle against thine enemies, and seest horses, and chariots, [and] a people more than thou, be not afraid of them: for the LORD thy God [is] with thee, which brought thee up out of the land of Egypt.” (De 20:1 AV)

We are not Israel.  Our battles are not physical in the sense that we are building a physical kingdom.  There are no cities to conquer.  There are no governments to topple.  Our warfare is a spiritual one.  Our enemies are the Devil, the world’s system of unbelief and sin, and the flesh.  The picture above is one of contrast.  Israel is contrasted against the ability of a formidable enemy.  This might be a reference to Israel’s first response when confronted with an adversary.  As twelve spies returned, ten of them reported the enemy ahead was too large for even God to conquer.  Two; Joshua and Caleb; spoke with faith and declared that no matter the size of the enemy, God was greater.  The assumption above is that Israel will be faced with many different adversaries that on paper are larger, stronger, and better equipped than they are.  This has been their history throughout human history.  Yet, the LORD seems to carry them through, and they survive the impossible.  This is the point here.  No battle is too big for God.  Yes, it is way too big for us.  But never too big for God.

In the heat of the moment, we often forget the battles of the past.  The LORD makes reference to the Exodus many times.  He does so above.  His point is this.  If He miraculously brought Israel out of Egypt with plagues and wonders, how much more difficult is the present threat?  Jehovah does this frequently because Israel forgot too many times the wonders that God wrought.  Jehovah references something they can relate to so that the present becomes doable.  The only difference here is Israel’s participation.  When leaving Egypt, all they had to do was leave.  There was no battle to fight.  There was no active participation on their part.  All they needed to do was to trust the LORD and leave.  There were no swords, bows, or arrows.  No shields.  No battlefield.  It was the LORD and only the LORD.  There were no boats to assemble.  No guards were on duty.  There were no watchmen necessary.  All was in the hands of God.  Now that they were free, the LORD required Israel to participate in their own deliverance.  The first time it was all God.  Now it was them and God.  This is what troubled Israel so.

How soon do we forget the miracle of salvation?  We walk with the LORD for so long that we forget the miracle that deliverance from sin and hell truly was.  We forget what it was like to live in wickedness and bondage.  We forget how hopeless our souls truly were.  So, when faced with an ongoing battle over sin or doubt, we think God is not able.  Or, if He is, that we are not able.  Both are incorrect.  God will not deliver us from our old natures without our participation in the process.  At least as long as we are on this side of glory.  God expects His children to wield the sword of truth, bend the knee of prayer, and face the foe in the strength of the Spirit.  He has given the tools and the strength.  If we cower at the threat of our enemies, then we have forgotten what God has done in the past.  Victory is only as far as effort and faith will take us.  God is not going to do it all for us.  He takes over where we cannot continue.  Israel forgot the great things God had done.  Now, the LORD is commanding them to remember and believe.

Thursday, February 26, 2026

Pass Right On By

“He that passeth by, [and] meddleth with strife [belonging] not to him, [is like] one that taketh a dog by the ears.” (Pr 26:17 AV)

There is wisdom in staying out of things.  There is also a balance between being a peacemaker and a meddler.  Perhaps Solomon is referring to a battle in which the peacemaker has no standing, credibility, ability, or is simply not welcomed.  Two sides at odds must come to a place where a peacemaker is welcomed before a peacemaker can become involved.  The picture above is a good one.  If you have ever witnessed two dogs that in the throes of a fight, breaking it up often results in a bite or two.  Passing by here is the key to understanding the situation.  The strife existed prior to the meddler’s observation.  It was ongoing.  It was fierce.  It was escalated.  The meddler was not planning on a fight.  He doesn’t look for one to settle.  He simply passes by and notices two who are at great odds.  His pride causes him to think that he can be the bigger person in the room and invites himself into something that is none of his business.  He thinks he alone has the solution to the problem.  He believes that if the two would simply pause and listen to his wonderful wisdom, it can all be worked out.  The reaction is like a dog who has his ears pinched.  He we turn on the pincher and forget the fight he was just in.  The better part of wisdom says that if we are not invited into a problem, maybe it is best to pass on by.

I am a hockey fan.  I love watching a sport where the final score is not the motivation for watching.  Hockey can be a violent sport.  The hits and checks are rather robust.  An open ice check is one of the greatest sports events of all time.  When one player sends another flying through the air because the second was not paying attention is wonderful.  Then there is the on-ice justice.  The game moves so fast that the officials cannot see all that goes on.  There are cheap shots that need a response.  Perhaps someone was boarded after a play was over.  Or perhaps a player was pushed headfirst into the boards.  Maybe the goalie was slashed, or a player was sandwiched.  These plays cannot go unanswered.  If they do, the offending team believes they can intimidate their opponent into a loss.  So, from time to time, a fight breaks out.  Usually, two face off and no one else gets involved.  But if a third person does get involved, he usually does so at the earliest onset of the altercation.  Being the third person in, he draws a lot of attention.  Often, he gets the bigger penalty or even worse, hurt by the response of the other team that intervention, although noble, was not the wisest move.

Knowing when and how to get involved is the point here.  If passing by one notices strife between two, it is probably wise not to insert oneself unless asked to.  This doesn’t mean the authorities should be ignored.  By all means, call or notify an agent of authority who can step in and stop the strife.  But if we have no standing and are not asked to resolve a problem, it is not our to solve.  Trying to do so will cause more harm to us than it may cause the two combatants.  Being a peacemaker does not mean we have to be pro-active.  Meddling will get us bit.  Letting those who have authority and standing resolve the conflict is the wisest of choices. 

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Praise His Word

“In God will I praise [his] word: in the LORD will I praise [his] word.” (Ps 56:10 AV)

The phraseology of this verse is intriguing.  One would think the order would be reversed.  Because of God’s word, we will praise Him.  This makes complete sense.  Yet, David makes an important theological argument that God and His word are to be seen as one and the same.  As another Psalmist states, “I will worship toward thy holy temple, and praise thy name for thy lovingkindness and for thy truth: for thou hast magnified thy word above all thy name.” (Ps 138:2 AV)  When one thinks of how God brought the material world into existence, He spake it and it was done.  All that God created was done by speaking.  Why?  The preeminence of the word of God is a universal doctrine upon which the veracity of the written word stands.  I don’t think David is praising the word of God as separate and apart from the person of God and is worthy of praise because of it.  Rather, he is acknowledging that the written word of God and the person of God should be held in the same regard.

The word of God is a miracle.  By its very existence, it testifies to the might and power of God.  Existing eternally, yet inspired by God through man over a period of four thousand years it has remained perfect to every joy and tittle.  Only since the modern age of reason has doubt been cast on the reliability and perfection of God’s word.  Man, who is never as smart as he thinks he is, chooses to believe his senses rather than the supernatural acts of God.  It does not dawn on the philosopher that if God created all things from nothing, then surely He can inspire and preserve His word, perfect, throughout the existence of man.  In disputing the eternal and sovereign might of God, the philosopher has shown himself to be of shallow intellect and vacant of all reasonable truth.  The intellectual theologian will dispute God’s ability to provide His word perfect, even in the translation process when translation occurs in the narrative of the word of God itself.  Joseph speaks Egyptian to his brothers and is translated into Hebrew for his brothers.  Paul speaks Hebrew to his audience in Acts 22, yet it is inspired in Greek.  A good portion of the dialogue of both the old and new testaments was not spoken in the languages of the inspired word of God.  In assuming perfection is lost in the translation process, the intelligent become simpletons.   It really boils down to faith.  If God exists; if God created; if God created to know; if God created to know He also created to be known; if God created to been known, the way by which He is known must be as perfect as He is.  Thus, providing His word perfect and without error so that we can know a God who is perfect and without error is the only reasonable conclusion to be made.

I think David is praising the word of God because it is the extension of God to man by which man may know Him!  In praising the word of God, David is grateful for the word of God that is perfect and without error.  It is the means by which the sinner can know his or her creator.  It is the means by which we can learn why God created us and how we are to live according to the Creator’s design.  Those who would argue for no perfect word of God are shorting themselves.  The life of those who do not believe the word of God is praiseworthy can only live to the degree they disbelieve in the perfection of the word of God.  I am with David!  I praise the word of God because it exists.  It exists perfectly and without error.  In a world that is constantly changing and nothing can be taken for granted, the word of God is an anchor for the soul.  No wonder the troubles of man only mount.  We stray further and further from God and His word.  Rather than praise the word of God, we critique it.  Rather than trust every single word without requiring it to subject itself to our intelligence, we stammer along in our own value system and crash because of it.  I praise God’s word.  I praise God for His word!