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Proverbs 4:23

Guarding the Heart

Proverbs chapter four verse twenty-three gives a simple but weighty command: “Guard your heart above all else, for it is the source of life.” That word “guard” sounds like spiritual security duty—no days off, no coffee breaks, no letting down your defenses. The heart in Scripture is not just the emotional center but the control tower of your life—your thoughts, values, decisions, and direction. If the heart is compromised, everything else follows. That is why Paul echoes this wisdom in Philippians chapter four. He tells believers not to be consumed by anxiety but to bring everything—absolutely everything—to God in prayer. When we do, he says, “the peace of God will guard your hearts.” In other words, there are two guards at the gate of your life: your vigilance and God’s peace. One keeps threats from rushing in. The other keeps you from falling apart.

Life gives us plenty of opportunities to panic. We cannot control the choices other people make. We cannot always control our health, our finances, or the political stability of the world (though cable news will happily let you try). If we let these things dominate our thoughts, we will end up mentally exhausted and spiritually defeated. Guarding your heart does not mean ignoring reality; it means refusing to let fear, bitterness, or despair set up camp inside your soul. The word Paul uses—“guard”—comes from a military context. Picture a Roman soldier pacing in front of a city gate, weapon in hand, scanning the horizon. That is how closely we are to watch what enters our hearts. Shih Huang-ti, emperor of China, once claimed to have eighty thousand eyes. Along the Great Wall were forty thousand watchtowers, each staffed day and night by sentinels. Historians call it “the greatest example of vigilance ever known.” Yet even eighty thousand eyes cannot see everything. Human vigilance has limits.

That is why Christian vigilance must rest on something stronger than human control—it must rest on God’s sovereignty. We watch—but God watches over us. We stand guard—but God stands stronger. If we try to guard our hearts alone, we will eventually collapse under the pressure of everything we cannot control. The call is not to carry the world, but to guard what truly matters—and hand everything else to God. As Peter reminds us, “Cast all your cares upon Him, because He cares for you.” We post our watch. We stay alert. We pray. We trust. And while we sleep, God stays awake. His peace becomes the shield over the heart—a far better guard than fear ever was.

Nehemiah 1:4

Turning To God

Some parts of Scripture are easy to love—Psalm 23, Psalm 46, Psalm 100. Then there are the imprecatory psalms, the ones where David or another writer asks God to crush enemies, scatter bones, and rain down fiery judgment. These psalms do not make it onto inspirational calendars. You will never see a kitten hanging from a branch with the caption, “Break the teeth in their mouths, O God” (Psalm 58:6). Yet these psalms are woven throughout Scripture. As the “Got Questions” website explains, an imprecation is a curse calling down calamity or judgment on one’s enemies. Psalms 5, 10, 17, 35, 58, 59, and many others contain these emotional appeals. They sound harsh until you notice something significant—the psalmist never takes revenge into his own hands. Instead, he pours his rage, grief, and confusion out before God. David had multiple chances to kill Saul, yet he refused, saying vengeance belongs to the Lord. These prayers are not acts of cruelty; they are acts of surrender. Instead of picking up a sword, the psalmist picks up his pen and hands the burden of justice to God.

Nehemiah understood this same spiritual rhythm—take your pain to God first. When he heard that Jerusalem’s walls were broken and God’s people were living in disgrace, he did not criticize, strategize, or organize a committee. He prayed. He wept, fasted, and confessed the sins of his people before taking a single step of action. Prayer was not his last resort—it was his first response. I wish I could say the same about myself. My usual sequence goes something like this: get angry, blame someone, try to fix it, panic, and then—after emotional exhaustion—remember to pray. Nehemiah shows a better way. Prayer forces us to pause before reacting. It makes us think, cool down, and realign our will to God’s. Max Lucado once said, “Knees do not knock when we kneel on them.” Prayer settles the soul. It reminds us we are not running the universe. It invites God into the struggle and gives Him room to move. You cannot pray and obsess at the same time. One always pushes the other out.

But prayer does not paralyze action—it prepares it. After praying, Nehemiah approached King Artaxerxes and requested permission to rebuild Jerusalem. Prayer gave him both clarity and courage. When the king granted his request, provided letters of authority, and supplied timber from royal forests, Nehemiah did not pat himself on the back for excellent leadership skills. He said simply, “The king granted me what I asked, for the good hand of my God was upon me.” The imprecatory psalms and the book of Nehemiah teach the same essential truth—whatever your battle, take it to God first. Let Him steady your heart and shape your actions before you act.

Ezra 10:44

A Positive Influence In A Negative World

Immorality has toppled more than a few giants in the Old Testament. It shows up early—Lamech in Genesis chapter five boasted about his sin and took multiple wives. Noah’s son Ham disrespected his father and exposed family shame. Abraham lied about Sarah and nearly handed her over to a king—twice. Jacob had more romantic complications than a daytime soap opera, and his sons followed in his footsteps. David, a man after God’s own heart, fell hard into adultery with Bathsheba and tried to cover it with murder. Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived, became the saddest warning in Scripture because his heart was stolen by foreign wives who led him into idolatry. Moses warned Israel over and over not to intermarry with pagan nations because such unions would lead them to abandon God. Yet Israel ignored the warning repeatedly. Even after seventy years of discipline in Babylon, the remnant returned to Jerusalem and repeated the same mistake. The book of Ezra ends not with a revival celebration, but with a list—a long, uncomfortable list—of men who married pagan women. These marriages brought idols into their homes, divided their loyalties, and threatened their spiritual identity. Their solution? Radical separation. They believed the only way to restore holiness was to put away their unbelieving spouses.

In my fifty years of ministry, I have met couples who came to this text like miners searching for gold—except they were not searching for gold, they were searching for an exit strategy. “We should never have married in the first place,” they say. “God wants me to divorce because this marriage is spiritually dangerous.” Believe it or not, I have heard that argument more than once. Some insist their unbelieving spouse is polluting their faith, dragging them away from God. It is easy to sympathize with someone in a difficult marriage. It is much harder to justify their use of Ezra chapter ten as a divine permission slip to call a moving truck. The problem is not only theological; it is contextual. Ezra’s situation was unique to the nation of Israel at a specific point in redemptive history. They were rebuilding a nation set apart for God, and their survival depended on spiritual purity. Applying Ezra’s remedy directly to Christian marriage today is like using Old Testament dietary laws to decide whether Christians can eat bacon. (Spoiler alert: they can. Thank you, Acts chapter ten.)

The New Testament shines a different light on marriages between believers and unbelievers. The apostle Paul addresses this exact issue in First Corinthians chapter seven. Instead of instructing believers to separate from unbelieving spouses, he says the opposite: “If any brother has a wife who does not believe… let him not divorce her. And a woman who has a husband who does not believe… let her not divorce him.” Why? Because “the unbelieving spouse is sanctified” by the believing partner—not saved automatically, but placed in a spiritually privileged position where salvation is near. Paul does not fear the unbeliever’s corrupting influence. He celebrates the believer’s transforming influence. Unlike Ezra’s call to separation, the New Testament calls us to stay, to love, and to shine. Jesus did not remove His followers from a sinful world; He sent them into it as light. Marriage is no exception. God is still in the business of redeeming situations that appear hopeless. That includes homes where faith is uneven, love is tested, and one spouse wonders if change is even possible. The Old Testament required separation to preserve Israel’s identity. The New Testament calls for influence to expand Christ’s kingdom—beginning at home.

Matthew 16:8

Wrestling With Weak Faith

Most of us will admit we struggle with weak faith from time to time. My faith often feels more like a mustard seed than a mountain mover. When that happens, I tend to do what many religious overachievers do—I try to muscle my way into stronger faith. I grit my teeth, pound the pulpit of my soul, and raise the volume of my prayers as if God might be hard of hearing. Strangely, there seems to be an inverse relationship between faith and loudness. The more insecure I feel, the louder I get. It is not conviction—it is self-convincing. It is as if I am trying to give myself a pep talk: “Come on, faith! Work harder!” But forcing faith rarely works. If the key to faith was emotional intensity, Pentecostal coffee shops would be handing out miracles with every espresso. Real faith does not come from noise, sweat, or flexing spiritual willpower. It is not self-generated at all.

Faith grows not by pushing harder but by leaning deeper. Reaching out to God in honesty—rather than trying to impress Him—is what steadies a shaken heart. I once read a fascinating description of mustard seeds. Each seed contains only enough nourishment to begin life. After the first tiny green shoot breaks through the shell, it must quickly pull strength from outside itself—soil, rain, and sunlight—or it will shrivel and die. The writer made this comparison: “The same is true with our faith. Because it is so weak, it must reach beyond itself for sustenance and growth. It should not be in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.” Faith that depends on emotion burns out. Faith that depends on God grows roots. That is why trying harder often leaves us spiritually exhausted. We are digging in shallow soil—our own.

The apostle Paul seems to have learned this lesson too. In First Corinthians chapter two he writes, “I was with you in weakness and in fear and much trembling… that your faith might not rest in the wisdom of men but in the power of God.” Paul, the great missionary and theologian, openly admitted that he sometimes felt fearful and shaky. If faith were about personal strength, Paul failed the test. But his confidence did not rest in himself—it rested in God. William Blake once said, “Great things are done when men and mountains meet,” but mountains only move when God gets involved. Any honest believer can admit that progress has little to do with personal brilliance and everything to do with divine help. Even a mustard seed of faith, when planted in the right place, can grow into something steady and strong—not because of the seed, but because of the soil that surrounds it.

Matthew 18:3

Listen to Him

In Matthew chapter eighteen, Jesus does something brilliantly simple—He puts a child on His lap and tells a group of adults arguing about greatness that they must become like children if they want to enter the kingdom of heaven. Imagine the scene: grown men debating their rankings like a fantasy football draft, only to have Jesus interrupt them with a child who still thinks dirt is a snack. Then in Matthew nineteen, when the disciples try to act as Jesus’ scheduling committee and keep children away from Him, He corrects them again: “Let the little children come to Me.” That is striking when compared to how Jesus talks about reaching adults. In Luke chapter fourteen verse twenty-three, He says, “Compel them to come.” Adults often need to be pushed, persuaded, coaxed, and occasionally dragged. Children? Just open the door—they will run in. One evangelist once said, “There are no real converts after age sixty-five.” That may be an exaggeration, but it makes a point: children tend to embrace Jesus with open hearts, while adults tend to embrace Him with open arguments.

Dr. Lois E. LeBar, in her book Children in the Bible, argued that children’s ministry is not a side program—it is strategic. She wrote that a child’s heart is fertile soil for the gospel. Why? Because faith comes naturally when dependence is already a way of life. Toddlers believe juice boxes appear by magic and fathers know everything. Trust is built into childhood. Spiritual habits formed early leave long fingerprints on life. Think about this: Matthew Henry was converted at eleven, Isaac Watts at nine, Jonathan Edwards at eight, and Richard Baxter at six. No wonder their lives made such a profound impact—they had time to grow deep roots. D. L. Moody once said that at one of his services “two and a half” people were saved. When asked if he meant two adults and one child, Moody shook his head. “No,” he said, “two children and one adult. The children have their whole lives ahead of them; the adult’s life is already half spent.”

But it is not only children who benefit from children’s ministry—adults do too. Teaching children forces us to rediscover what Jesus said grown-ups tend to lose: simple faith. Try explaining the Trinity to a room full of eight-year-olds armed with juice pouches and curiosity. It will sharpen your theology and your prayer life. Jesus used children as an object lesson not because they were cute props, but because their faith revealed what adults had forgotten. In Matthew eighteen verse three, Jesus said, “Unless you turn and become like children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven.” When God spoke from heaven in Matthew seventeen and said, “This is my beloved Son… listen to Him,” He was talking to adults who still struggled to trust. Perhaps children understand something essential: faith is not complicated—it is humble, trusting, and eager to come close to Jesus. Adults may need to be compelled, but children just need to be welcomed.

Exodus 36:35

Come On In

Exodus chapters 36 and 37 introduce us to a remarkable man named Bezalel, handpicked by God to lead the construction of the tabernacle. God said of him, “I have filled Bezalel with the Spirit of God and have given him the skill, ability, and knowledge to do all kinds of work.” Bezalel was, in many ways, the Michelangelo of the Hebrews—perhaps even their Leonardo da Vinci—a master craftsman, architect, and artist all in one. He personally built the Ark of the Covenant, the very heart of the tabernacle where God’s presence would dwell. The Ark was a masterpiece of divine design—crafted from acacia wood, overlaid with pure gold, and crowned by cherubim whose wings overshadowed the mercy seat. But Bezalel also designed the enormous veil that separated the Ark from the rest of the sanctuary. His greatest creation, the masterpiece of his inspired craftsmanship, would remain hidden behind a curtain—seen only by the High Priest, and even then, only once a year. What a strange paradox for an artist: to labor on something so magnificent that no human eye would ever see it.

That veil, however, carried a message far greater than its woven beauty. As Max Lucado writes, “A great curtain hung as a reminder of the distance between God and man. It was like a deep chasm… God could have left it like that. He could have, you know. But He didn’t.” The curtain was both a symbol and a barrier—a constant reminder that sin separated humanity from the Holy One. But God had a plan to bridge that chasm. Lucado continues, “God Himself bridged the chasm. In the darkness of an eclipsed sun, He and a Lamb stood in the Holy of Holies. He laid the Lamb on the altar—not the lamb of a priest or a Jew or a shepherd, but the Lamb of God. The angels hushed as the blood of the Sufficient Sacrifice began to fall on the golden altar. Where had dropped the blood of lambs, now dripped the blood of life. ‘Behold the Lamb of God.’ And then it happened. God turned and looked one last time at the curtain. ‘No more.’ And it was torn … from top to bottom.”

In that moment, everything changed. What had once been hidden was now revealed. What had once been forbidden was now freely open. The veil that Bezalel so skillfully wove became the very fabric God Himself would tear apart to welcome His children home. Through Christ, the true and final Ark of God’s presence, the invitation rings clear and personal: “Come on in.”

Ecclesiastes 1:3, 1 Corinthians 15:58

A Profit Motif

Benjamin Franklin is one of the most frequently quoted figures in American history—and quite possibly the only Founding Father who could also sell you a lightning rod, publish your almanac, and fix your printing press before lunch. His sayings are so familiar that people often mistake them for Scripture. I’ve even heard someone say, “You know, the Bible says, ‘Cleanliness is next to godliness,’” when, in fact, it was Brother Ben, not Brother Paul, who coined that phrase. Franklin had a knack for packaging common sense in catchy sound bites, most of which had a healthy dose of capitalism baked in. “Nothing but money is sweeter than honey.” “Beware of small expenses; a small leak will sink a great ship.” “A penny saved is a penny earned.” He was America’s first motivational poster. Alongside his passion for thrift, he also preached the gospel of hard work: “Early to bed and early to rise makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.” And while that advice may not guarantee sainthood, it probably explains why Franklin became such a successful businessman, inventor, and statesman.

When you open the book of Ecclesiastes, you meet another man with Franklin-like tendencies—Solomon, the original philosopher-king, who also had plenty to say about work, wealth, and wisdom. He introduces himself as “the preacher” or “the teacher,” and right from the start he asks a question that would have caught even Franklin off guard: “What does it profit a man for all the hard work he does under the sun?” (Ecclesiastes 1:3). Solomon revisits that question again and again, like a refrain in a melancholy song. The expected answer each time is simple: “Nothing.” All the sweat, struggle, and striving “under the sun” leads to no lasting gain. His conclusion? “Vanity of vanities,” or as we might say, “It’s all pointless.” But before you cancel your to-do list, notice that key phrase—“under the sun.” It’s unique to Ecclesiastes and crucial to understanding Solomon’s point.

According to the United Bible Societies’ Handbook for Translators, “under the sun” can also be rendered “in this life.” From that perspective, Solomon’s argument makes perfect sense—when life is viewed purely from an earthly vantage point, nothing we achieve truly lasts. Yet the Handbook also notes that Solomon eventually hints at something beyond “this life.” In other words, there is meaning—just not here, not “under the sun,” but “above” it. The Apostle Paul picks up this very theme when he writes about the resurrection in 1 Corinthians 15. After proving that our labor has eternal value, he concludes in verse 58 (New Living Translation), “So, my dear brothers and sisters, be strong and immovable. Always work enthusiastically for the Lord, for you know that nothing you do for the Lord is ever useless.” Franklin might have said, “A penny saved is a penny earned,” but Solomon and Paul remind us that a life lived for God is an investment with eternal dividends.

Genesis 27:5, Hebrews 11:16

He is not ashamed of us

Numerous religious leaders throughout history have fallen into sins of immorality, and every time I hear of a pastor or spiritual leader caught in scandal, my first thought is always, “What could have happened?” Then, almost immediately, I’m tempted to say, “That could never happen to me.” But Paul warns us not to think that way. “Let him who thinks he stands take heed lest he fall.” Given the right circumstances, any of us could stumble. It’s sobering to remember that sin is no respecter of titles or positions. I once read that if the right pressures and circumstances were in place, most people would have obeyed Hitler. That’s chilling—but it reminds us that we all share the same human frailty. When famine struck in Isaac’s time, he ran to Egypt for help, just as his father Abraham had done. Egypt seemed to be Israel’s go-to escape plan whenever things got tough. And sure enough, on his way there, Isaac stopped in Gerar, where, in a moment of fear, he pulled an Abraham classic—telling the locals that his wife Rebekah was his sister to save his own skin. Like father, like son.

But the family drama didn’t stop there. It seems eavesdropping was a favorite family pastime. Sarah, Abraham’s wife, was known for listening in on her husband’s conversations—she even laughed when she overheard God’s promise of a son. Rebekah, apparently, inherited that same curious streak. In Genesis 27:5 we read, “Now Rebekah was listening when Isaac spoke to his son Esau.” When she realized Isaac was about to bless Esau instead of her favorite, Jacob, she cooked up a plan faster than you can say “goat stew.” Her scheme worked, but at a great relational cost. Families are supposed to support each other, not deceive each other. Love—not lies—is the glue that’s meant to hold homes together. But it’s hard to love truthfully when deceit runs in the bloodline. Sarah, Rebekah, Leah, and Rachel all learned manipulation and mistrust from their families. It was practically a family heirloom.

The pattern is clear—Isaac learned to lie from Abraham, and the women learned from their parents, too. It’s in the genes. Actually, it’s in our genes. We’re all children of Adam, carrying the same flawed DNA. Yet the beautiful truth is that God loves us anyway. Despite all the deception, fear, and moral failures, Hebrews 11:16 says that God “is not ashamed to be called their God.” What an astonishing statement! The same God who wasn’t ashamed of Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Sarah, Rebekah, and Rachel isn’t ashamed of us either. We fail, we fall, we repeat family mistakes—but God’s grace remains steady. Even when our lives don’t live up to our sermons, He still calls us His own. Now that’s what I call comforting grace.

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