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Do Not Depart

Encouragement and Tools to Abide in God's Word

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Guilty, But Set Free! {John 8:1-11}

October 22, 2013 by Patti Brown 2 Comments

Romans 8:1 donotdepart.com

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Romans 8:1  donotdepart.com
Do you know the discomfort of feeling unknown – the sense that who you are does not matter, that you are insignificant in the world?

The unnamed women in the gospels had roles so peripheral that the writers did not deem it necessary to share their names.

But these women were not unknown. Not to Jesus.

Six months before Jesus was to be crucified, He went quietly, alone, to Jerusalem during the Feast of Tabernacles. He went straight to the temple, where He could daily be found, teaching.

The scribes and Pharisees were already angry with Jesus, and could not abide His presence in the temple. They set about to trick Him, so as to turn the people against Him and have a reason to accuse Him.

Can you picture it?

An early morning, the sun rising slowly over the city, dust in the air. Jesus’ calm voice teaching truth, people coming in streams to hear Him. Then, in the middle of it all, comes a disruption and a clamor… a woman thrown to the ground and loudly accused.

A woman just caught in the very act of adultery.

There was no question. She was guilty.

Jesus knew.

The Pharisees demanded Jesus speak judgment over her. Would He abide by Mosaic law and turn His back on His teachings of mercy and forgiveness? Or would He break Mosaic law? They were sure that either way they would win.

His response?

Silence.

He waited, writing on the ground. Perhaps He was waiting for the men to realize the sinfulness of their own goals in confronting Him. But instead of self-awareness, they persisted in asking for a judgement on the woman.

Finally, He stood, and said, “Let him who is without sin among you be the first to throw a stone at her.” (John 8:7)

And bending back down, He continued to write on the ground.

He waited.

And they all left. Every one.

Oh the mercy! Jesus showed mercy to those guilty men. He did not stare them down. He did not watch their humiliation as they turned away in admission of their own sin.

When He looked up and saw they were gone, He turned to the woman. How broken she must have been, how terrified. She knew she had sinned. She knew what she deserved.

For when a law has been broken, whether biblical or otherwise, there are two phases to dealing with the transgressor.

First, guilt must be determined. This is the conviction phase. And in this story, everyone is convicted. In my story, in your story… everyone is convicted. We are guilty of sin.

Then, if guilty, the sentence is handed down. Condemnation. Punishment.

The woman waited for the worst.

Jesus did not minimize the woman’s sin. He knew. But He did not lay a sentence on her. Instead He offered her a fresh start, a clean slate. He offered her forgiveness. No condemnation.

Jesus stood up and said to her, “Woman, where are they? Has no one condemned you?” She said, “No one, Lord.” And Jesus said, “Neither do I condemn you’…” John 8:10-11a

Embodied in the man who would soon die on a cross for her, for you, for me… was both justice and mercy. In Jesus alone have righteousness and peace kissed (Psalm 85:10).

There is nothing, nothing, that you have done that can’t be forgiven by God in Christ Jesus. He knows everything about you, everything you have done, everything you need.

Are you cowering today, knowing your guilt, waiting for punishment? You have been rightly convicted. But hear this and believe truth: you are not condemned.

There is therefore now no condemnation for those who are in Christ Jesus. Romans 8:1

All that punishment you are waiting for has already been dealt, already been taken. Jesus, hanging bloodied and broken on the cross, knowing you and your guilt… He accepted it.

He sees you. He loves you. He forgives you.

Accept the freedom and forgiveness Jesus so lavishly holds out to you.

And choose to hear and walk in His final words to the woman caught in adultery: “Go. From now on sin no more.” (John 8:11)



photo credit

A Mom on a Mission

October 17, 2013 by Kathy Howard 6 Comments

Lori Wildenberg

Lori WildenbergA great big welcome to today’s guest blogger, Lori Wildenberg, co-founder of Corinthians 13 Parenting. Look for her bio at the end of the post!

The Canaanite woman knew what she wanted. She knew only he could answer her prayer. She was determined to have her request granted. She was persistent.

She was a mom on a mission.

Her name isn’t given, but it doesn’t need to be because…she is every mother. She is you. She is me.

“Lord, son of David, have mercy on me!” She cried out.

She was in agony. Like any mama, she was physically experiencing her child’s misery. “My daughter is suffering terribly from demon-possession.” Or… “My child is suffering terribly from a broken relationship, an illness, an injury….”

She would not be discouraged or dissuaded, even though the disciples urged The Lord to send her away. At the very least, this Gentile woman was distracting, annoying. The men whined, “She keeps crying after us.” (That motley crew of twelve was not going to get in her way. Never mess with a determined mother.) She knew who and what she needed. This mom persisted in her humble and honest cries that come from a broken heart.

But Jesus…he was quiet.

Isn’t that the hardest part? We cry out, beg, chase after him on behalf of our children…and he is quiet.

But…Jesus was also near.

The woman knew she needed what only Jesus could provide. She was not about to leave his presence empty-handed.

Even when Jesus said, “I was sent only to the lost sheep of Israel” she didn’t give up. Instead of tossing her arms in the air and stomping off, she came closer and knelt before him.

“Lord, help me!”  She knew with him, nothing was impossible.

“It is not right to take the children’s bread and toss it to their dogs.” He continued to test her faith.

“Yes, Lord, but even the dogs eat the crumbs that fall from their master’s table.” She responded with tenacity and in spite of the circumstances…even a little spunk!

“Woman, you have great faith! Your request is granted.” The Lord healed her daughter that very hour.

Having faith when things are difficult is …well…difficult.

I’ve been there. I suspect I’ll be there again. When my children hurt, I hurt.  Like the Canaanite mother, I pursue Jesus. I want to be near him when I petition on my kids’ behalf. And… like the Canaanite mom, I know he will hear me.

He works all things to the good for those who love him.

Like her, I will persistently seek Jesus for the sake of my kids. I may need to wait and trust his perfect timing. (I must say I do like the phrase, “That very hour.”) And when I do, I know my faith will deepen in the waiting and persevering space.

He will answer.

I am the Canaanite woman… a mom on a mission.  (Matthew 15:21-29, Mark 7:24-30)

Have you ever been a “mom on a mission,” asking God to meet the needs of your child?

 

Lori Wildenberg, co-founder of Corinthians 13 Parenting, has more than twenty-five years’ experience working with children and parents. She’s an author, national speaker, a licensed Parent and Family Educator, and co-columnist for  Parenting Prose found in MARRIAGE Magazine. Lori weaves warmth, transparency, and gentle humor into her realistic approach to raising kids today. Mostly, Lori is a mom of four and has been married to Tom for thirty-one years. The Wildenbergs (and their labradoodle) live in the foothills of the Rocky Mountains.

For more information go to www.loriwildenberg.com or www.1Corinthians13Parenting.com

 

 

Do You Ever Feel Like a Nameless Face in a Crowd?

October 15, 2013 by Kathy Howard 4 Comments

The Widow's Offering

Do you ever feel insignificant? I imagine this woman did. She was just one poor, lonely widow in the crowd that day. She probably felt invisible among the happy families and important religious leaders and rich people in their fancy clothes.

The Bible doesn’t even tell us her name. The Gospel of Mark only takes five verses to tell us her story:

41 Jesus sat down opposite the place where the offerings were put and watched the crowd putting their money into the temple treasury. Many rich people threw in large amounts. 42 But a poor widow came and put in two very small copper coins, worth only a few cents. 43 Calling his disciples to him, Jesus said, “Truly I tell you, this poor widow has put more into the treasury than all the others. 44 They all gave out of their wealth; but she, out of her poverty, put in everything—all she had to live on.” Mark 12:41-44, NIV

Jesus didn’t take note of the many rich or powerful or well-dressed or important people who gave an offering that day. It wasn’t even a man He called to the attention of His disciples. Instead, He noticed the poor widow.

How many others do you think noticed her that day in the Temple court? Probably not very many. Instead, the crowds noticed the rich people who threw large amounts into the offering boxes. Their silver coins would have made a loud clanking noise as they hit the other coins in the box. Can you hear it?

The Widow's OfferingThe widow lovingly tossed two small copper coins into the box. It was nothing by the world’s standards, but it was everything she had. No one else heard the sound they made. No one else, but Jesus. To Jesus, it was the sound of faith. Out of all the worshipers that day in the temple, Jesus noticed her. He even called His disciples over so He could point her out to them. And He praised her for giving all she had.

Those two copper coins was everything the widow had to her name. This one act tells us so much about her. She treasured God more than she treasured her next meal. She had complete trust in God’s faithfulness to provide. And she was willing to place her very life in God’s hands.

Tiny by the world’s standards, her offering was huge to God. Her demonstration of faith was what mattered. Jesus saw her faith. Jesus felt her heart. And Jesus knew her name.

Do you sometimes feel insignificant? Do you ever wonder what you have to offer Jesus? Do you feel like your efforts for the Kingdom are meager?

Sister, be encouraged! You are significant to Jesus. He sees your heart. He knows your name. Whatever you have to give impacts His Kingdom. And all He wants from you is you!

On what occasions do you feel insignificant, lost in the crowd? How does this story remind you of God’s truth?

Gifts from a personal God

October 10, 2013 by Lisa Burgess 22 Comments

She may have thought the worst had already happened. Her husband had died. In the male-dominated Jewish culture, women were economically dependent upon male relatives.

At least she still had her son.

Then the unthinkable occurred: her only son also died. Would this double loss be her end?

WHO WAS SHE?

Who was this woman from Nain, Israel? We don’t know her name; Luke didn’t record it (Luke 7:11-17). While he told more stories about women than the other three gospel writers, he only relayed names of ten women in stories where they had parts to play. Ten others with roles remain unnamed.

Did these unnamed women not matter as much?

Do you not matter as much when you’re not acknowledged by name?

No and no. They mattered. You matter.

GRACE IN HER STORY

The widow in Luke 7 was on the road to her son’s funeral. Her final gift was to follow his dead body to its burial outside the city gates. Many were with her, helping her grieve and carry her son.

But unbeknownst to her, her crowd was about to intersect the path of another crowd, being led by Jesus.

She was about to discover resurrection. And it would be personal.

Jesus saw her. He talked to her. He told her not to cry. Even though she didn’t ask for His help (Jesus had yet to raise the dead—Jairus’s daughter and Lazarus were yet to come), He was about to give her a magnificent gift of grace anyway. 

He touched the coffin. Everyone froze. Then talking directly to the dead son, Jesus said, “Wake up!”

And the dead man sat up and talked.

The crowd was awed. They’d personally witnessed a visit from God. They spread the news everywhere of their experience.

GRACE IN YOUR STORY

Even today, Jesus still sees. Even when you don’t know what to ask for, He knows exactly what you need.

It might not be a physical resurrection. That’s not always the best gift anyway.

On the day my mother died of Alzheimer’s, I wouldn’t have wanted her to return to that body. God blessed me instead with other gifts of grace—personalized for my family—to help us heal.

He graces you with resurrection in still other ways. Maybe with a restoration of hope. A friend to share your pain. An open door to something new.

While His salvation gift may look the same for all, His other gifts of grace are unique, personalized just for you.

  • To fit your personality
  • To favor your circumstances
  • To fill your holes

GOD IS PERSONAL

So maybe it’s on purpose that the widow wasn’t named. Maybe you’re supposed to fill your own name in the blank. And watch for how God will intersect your path, showing up with monogrammed gifts just for you.

There’s nothing impersonal about God. If you think there is, you have the wrong view of Him.

He is good, He is generous, and He is personal.

He knows everyone by name and by need. Including you.

That’s a gift of grace worth celebrating.  

And my God will supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus. To our God and Father be glory forever and ever. Amen.
Philippians 4:19-20

* * *

What gifts of grace have you received after a loss?

How has God blessed you in a unique way, perfect just for you? Please share in the comments.

5 Bible Studies for Kids {Let The Children Come}

October 9, 2013 by Caroline 2 Comments

Disclosure: Affiliate links are included below. See the bookstore page for full disclosure. Thank you for supporting this site!

Many of you and many us have families, and we’re big on helping encourage our children to get in the Word early. So big on this topic that we began our new Let The Children Come monthly feature a few months ago!

We’ve discussed raising kingdom builders with Scripture memory, helping kids with special needs be involved during study time, using inductive study with our kids, setting an example for our kids to see, and many Bible study resources.

Today, we have 5 more kids’ Bible study resources to share with you. These five come from this week’s Bundle of the Week!
Bundle #41: Bible Studies for Kids

This week’s bundle includes a ton of Bible study resources for kids! Discover resources for Scripture memorization, Bible study and character development, as well as handwriting practice, letter recognition and more, at more than 80% off.

This week only, get all five of these ebooks for more than 80% off:

God’s Word in My Heart by Jennifer Thorson
Help your children hide God’s Word in their young hearts and learn Scripture alongside them with Jennifer’s God’s Word in My Heart: A Scripture Learning Guide with Memory Verses! This program includes ideas for helping even the littlest of your children memorize Scripture, lists of songs to help with specific verses, printable Scripture memory verses and more. This set includes all 4 versions: ESV, KJV, NASB and variety (ESV, NIV 1984, NASB, NKJV).

Write Through the Bible: Exodus 20:1-21 by Luke and Trisha Gilkerson
Exodus 20 includes the Ten Commandments, which stand at the center of the Law of Moses and offer a foundational understanding of morality and the character of God. Luke & Trisha’s Write Through the Bible program provides 131 days of handwriting, copywork and dictation practice along with Scripture memorization, and this set includes both the cursive and manuscript versions of the workbook.

The ABCs for Godly Children by Lindsey Stomberg
The ABCs for Godly Children is a comprehensive, Bible curriculum centered around teaching children ages 4-10 about the God they serve and how to have a heart like His. Using each letter of the alphabet, a Bible lesson is presented in an understandable and interactive format to teach core truths concerning the Gospel, godly character, and biblical manhood and womanhood through Scripture memorization, detailed lessons, simple crafts, and interactive song.

The Dig: Luke (Volume 1) by Patrick Schwenk
The Dig for Kids: Luke (Volume 1) is a simple and easy way for parents to study the Book of Luke with their children. The Dig takes the guesswork out of teaching with one-page lessons that consist of: The Map, an overview of each lesson; The Dig, the main passage of the Bible you will be reading and three or four questions that will help with discussion and review; The Treasure, the big idea of the passage being studied; and The Display, to help your child live out what he or she has just learned.

Princess Training Plus Armor of God by Richele McFarlin
Princess Training: For the King’s Glory is a unit study designed to encourage young girls {7-13} to glorify God through their lives and understand their role as a daughter of the King. This study can be modified for younger or older girls and works great for a group study, and each lesson contains a short devotional, discussion, and activity. In addition, the Armor of God mini unit study includes copywork, Scripture study, discussion questions,vocabulary, and activities to help children {5-9} study the armor of God.

The Bible Studies for Kids bundle is only available through 8am EST on Monday, 10/14. Get yours today!

What’s your favorite Bible study resource for children?

Bondage broken after 18 crippled years

October 8, 2013 by Julie 10 Comments

crippled woman set free

If you’re bent over, all you can see is the dirty ground, the earth from which we came. It would be hard to lift your eyes and look up with hope if your view excludes the faces of people, the landscape, or the horizon. Even work would be mostly out of reach, not to mention community life and relationships, without the ability to look into the eyes of another person or reach forward with purpose.crippled woman set free That’s how we meet one unnamed woman in the Gospels.

Bent over for eighteen years, the crippled woman of Luke 13:10-17 had been “kept bound” by Satan himself. Unable to even straighten up, she waited at a house of worship, a synagogue. When Jesus came to her synagogue on a Sabbath day and saw the woman’s condition, he set her on a path to change the course of her life.

Freedom from bondage

On that day, the woman long bound by Satan was unbound.

The Devil is a supplier of sickness, a developer of diseases, and an ambassador of affliction. He loved taking a woman made in the image of God and twisting her with an infirmity as a trophy of his bondage. But then Jesus saw her, called her forward, and said, “Woman, you are set free from your infirmity.” Jesus laid his hands on her and right away her gnarled spirit-bound body straightened up. Right away, she praised God, because that’s what a genuinely unbound woman does.

Staying in bondage

On that day, a religious ruler long bound by tradition stayed bound.

The Devil has planted the sickness of legalism in the hearts of the religious ruler and his friends. Though not visibly bent in body, their hearts were gnarled by their regard for rules. As quickly as the freed woman stood to her full height in praise, the synagogue ruler was overcome with indignation, blurting out rebuke to the Healer for healing on the Sabbath day. Instead of a declaration of worship, he responded by defending the same hollow tradition that was unable to free the woman during any of her bent up, eyes down, infirmity ridden eighteen years. Jesus rebuked him in return, allowing the crowd to hear His heart for setting captives free. Instead of lifting up His opponents as He had the crippled woman, “all his opponents were humiliated” (v.17b).

The Devil despises the image bearers of God, but Jesus came to “free captives”(Isaiah 42:6-7) from the bondage of the Enemy. Has the supplier of sickness, the developer of disease, the ambassador of affliction bent you down physically, spiritually, or emotionally? Do you feel like all you can see is the dirt of the road you walk? Are you finding it hard to lift up your eyes and see a hope-filled future?

Jesus sees you, calls you, and wants to free you from what the Enemy is using to bind you. What do your shackles look like? He is the true Bondage Breaker who can take a gnarled heart or twisted relationships or a downcast life and raise them up for His glory. Ask God to unbind you and help you walk in newness of life. Let yours be the next voice to praise Him, because that’s what a genuinely unbound woman does.

Has God given you freedom from bondage in your life? Leave a comment and share a praise.

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Nameless Women in the Gospels

October 3, 2013 by Kathy Howard 5 Comments

We’ve read their stories many times. Their pain and grief jump off the pages of God’s Word. Their desperate need and raw emotion still flow down through the centuries. But the Gospel writers left out one detail. We don’t know their names.

Everywhere Jesus went He met need with power and compassion. The Gospels tell countless stories of healing, deliverance, provision, and freedom.

Sometimes Jesus met the needs of a multitude, like when he multiplied the loaves and fishes to feed 5,000 plus hungry people. Sometimes Jesus met the need of a group. For instance, He provided wine for a wedding feast and calmed the dangerous storm on the Sea of Galilee to save the twelve.

But most often, Jesus met the need of the one. Up close, personal, intimate. Sometimes the name of the one is included in the story and sometimes it is not.

Throughout October here at Do Not Depart, we will be exploring the nameless women Jesus encountered. Unnamed by the Gospel writers, these women were valuable to Jesus. In compassion and power, He reached out and met their need.

And He knew their names.

Do you ever feel “unnamed?” Just one insignificant person lost in an endless stream of needy people? Jesus knows your name. He knows your need. His power and compassion are sufficient for you today.

Join us through this series. Allow Jesus’ encounters with the “nameless” ones of the Gospels to encourage your heart today.

Have you ever felt “nameless?” How can recognizing that Jesus knows your name and need encourage you today?

A Recap on Wisdom for Life

September 30, 2013 by Julie Leave a Comment

Wisdom for Life

We’ve been in pursuit of Wisdom for Life here this month. Our prayer is that we’ve given you some Bible study tools to know how to get the wisdom and insight you need for life as a woman, an employee, a mom, a friend, a wife, a sister, a child, a friend, a neighbor.

How much better to get wisdom than gold! To get understanding is to be chosen rather than silver. (Proverbs 16:16)

A Recap on Wisdom for Life

  • 3 Tips to Understanding Proverbs
  •  Wisdom for today … still calling
  • What the world needs now … wisdom
  • Using Inductive Bible Study with Kids
  • Where you find wisdom
  • Oh, Job (Learning to abide with God when you don’t understand)
  • Applying Wisdom with Love (Rather than legalistic law)
  • Wisdom from Proverbs (free printable)
  • Ecclesiastes:  Wisdom to Understand What Matters Most

Wisdom for Life

 Let us know if you were helped this Wisdom for Life month. Share in the comments if this helped you to “wise up.”

Ecclesiastes: Wisdom to Understand What Matters Most

September 26, 2013 by Julie Leave a Comment

Today we welcome Stephanie Shott, founder of The MOM Initiative and author of Ecclesiastes: Understanding What Matters Most. We’ve asked her to pull back the curtain on this wisdom book that has many readers stumped. Find out why it’s a book of the Bible that helps us understand how to avoid wasting our lives. 

I have a huge affinity for Ecclesiastes. It was the unexpected place God took me when God called us to the mission field and I was desperately trying to make sense of that which didn’t make any sense at all.

Yet, it was one of those books of the Bible others had told me I would never really understand. So every year, when I read through the Bible, I would kind of ‘read over’ it, skimming the pages of what seemed to be one of the most negative twelve chapters I have ever read, written by one of the most pessimistic men who had ever lived.

But when I really needed to know what matters most in life, God planted my face and my heart smack dab in middle of that often avoided book where I discovered how we can make our lives count and minutes matter.

When Solomon was about 20 years old, he became the successor to his father, David’s throne. Solomon’s wildest dreams came true, when in a dream God asked him, “What shall I give you?”

Wise enough to choose wisdom, Solomon was given more than what he requested. He was a man who started really well, but didn’t cross the finish line as well as I’m sure he had hoped he would.

Solomon had it all. But like his daddy, he was a sucker for a pretty woman and what David did in moderation, Solomon did in excess. Somewhere along the way in his quest for more, he went from faithful to philanderer and from a man who worshiped God to a man who worshiped idols.

Ecclesiastes is written in his later years and was penned as a sort of riches to rags story. Kind of like a “been there, done that, you don’t want to go there” kind of message.

Wow! What a waste! All that wisdom and he still blew it!

That’s pretty scary to me!

I don’t know about you, but I don’t want to waste my life. It’s really one of my greatest fears. I don’t want to start out well and blow it along the way, do you?

I don’t want to spend my days letting life happen, focusing on the insignificant, and being so distracted by the dailies that I miss what really matters most.

And it can happen so easily. The laundry, the dishes, the all night cry-a-thons with the baby, little-league practice, work, life, even ministry – they all vie for our attention.

But what I love about Ecclesiastes is that Solomon covers the gamut of life experiences and gives us a solution to how we can make our lives count, not in spite of all of what is going on in our lives, but in light of it all.

From Solomon & the book of Ecclesiastes we learn:

1. WISDOM DOES NOT EQUAL PERFECTION ~ Knowing how we should live and actually living like we know we should are two very different things. Wisdom gives us the knowledge and ability to choose well, but it is an act of our will to actually do it.

Recently, I noticed a Facebook post from someone who is known to have a wealth of biblical knowledge, yet he is also known as a very hard and arrogant man. It’s pretty hard to tell someone about the love and mercy of God when others don’t see the love and mercy of God actively at work in the lives of His children. We are to be living epistles who live out loud for Christ. Not perfect. But passionately pursing a life that honors God.

2. DON’T WASTE YOUR TIME GRASPING AT THE WIND ~ Throughout Ecclesiastes, Solomon uses the terms, vanity and grasping at the wind a lot. But in Ecclesiastes 12, he sums up what is important in life and tells us the bottom-line to life is that we fear God and keep His commandments.

It’s easy to struggle with living for eternity in the midst of the dailies of life. But one day, with a toilet brush in one hand and a can of Comet in the other, the Lord showed me that I can even clean toilets to the glory of God.

It’s so easy to long for the significant rather than the menial. Yet, each is equal in God’s site when done for His glory. I’m not wasting my time when I’m cleaning toilets or scrubbing dried spaghetti off the carpets. With the right heart attitude, I can even do those things for eternity.

3. FAILURE IS NEVER FINAL ~ One of the hidden treasures of Ecclesiastes is the fact that it was written by a man who had forsaken God and followed false gods. He not only failed God, he forsook Him! But Ecclesiastes was penned in Solomon’s later years…after he had taken a detour and tried to live life under the sun apart from Him. The book of Ecclesiastes stands as a testimony to all of us that failure is never final.

I’ve failed God a lot. Maybe you have too. And it’s easy to think that God is done with us. But if you and I are still breathing, He’s not. He not only has a plan for your life, but He has plans for each minute of your life. Don’t give up. Don’t give in. Do the next thing because He’s not done with you yet!

HAVE YOU EVER AVOIDED ECCLESIASTES? HAVE YOU EVER FELT LIKE YOU HAD LET GOD DOWN AND COULDN’T BE USED ANYMORE? WHAT ARE YOU DOING NOW THAT MAY SEEM MUNDANE, YET CAN BE DONE FOR THE GLORY OF GOD?

Find Stephanie at www.stephanieshott.com

Wisdom in Proverbs {free printable}

September 24, 2013 by Patti Brown 6 Comments

Wisdom in Proverbs {free printabel} via DoNotDepart.com

We have been walking through the wisdom books together this month. The five books of Wisdom – Job, Psalms, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and the Song of Solomon – are replete with guidance for navigating life.

Do you ever wonder what wisdom actually is?

My husband makes the analogy that knowledge is like a player piano, and wisdom is like a piano player. The player piano has everything technically correct, but the piano player has the heart. Wisdom includes a type of understanding and discernment that allows a person to take information and apply it with nuance to each situation. Only humans can be wise. There are no wise computers!

Our beliefs about what is wise in a given situation are inherently driven by our world view. A person who believes the ultimate goal in life is to acquire as much as possible would think it wise to invest and negotiate with no thought to the human cost. This is the type of worldly wisdom that organized the bookstore Julie visited in her post earlier this month.

But we Christians have a different world view. Godly wisdom has Jesus Christ as our focus.

Christ the power of God and the wisdom of God. 1 Corinthians 1:24b

If we want to grow in wisdom, we begin with the Lord, and with His Word.

Wisdom in Proverbs {free printabel} via DoNotDepart.com

The book of Proverbs is chock full of little snippets about wisdom. I have, at times, found my eyes glossing over as I have read through Proverbs… so many of them, one right after the other. So this year I decided I wanted to slowly chew on Proverbs all year. I bought a scripture-a-day calendar of Proverbs and put it where I could see it while washing the dishes. One Proverb a day to consider.

Perhaps you also would like to grow in understanding of what godly wisdom is. I compiled a printable with eighteen proverbs that each address wisdom. You can download and print the Wisdom in Proverbs sheet, and slowly digest these tidy little proverb packages.

May you be blessed as you grow in wisdom in Christ!

Wisdom in Proverbs - free printable from DoNotDepart.com

How do you like to study Proverbs? Click here to share your tips for absorbing these little nuggets in the comments.

Download Wisdom in Proverbs by first clicking here, then pressing the “download” button on the top right.

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