Advice Against Rebellion

Saying 30

Fear the Lord and the king, my son,
    and do not join with rebellious officials,
for those two will send sudden destruction on them,
    and who knows what calamities they can bring?

Proverbs 24:21-22

This proverb stands at the intersection of divine and civil authority. The command to fear the Lord and the king reflects the wisdom tradition’s concern for order—recognizing that reverence for God and respect for legitimate governance are both essential to a stable and righteous life. The Hebrew verb yareʾ (“fear”) here implies awe, loyalty, and submission, not terror. It calls for a posture of humility before God and prudence before earthly rulers.

The warning—do not join with those who do otherwise—targets rebellion and instability. In the ancient Near Eastern context, political upheaval often led to violence and ruin. The wise person avoids aligning with agitators who reject both divine and royal authority, because such alliances invite judgment. The phrase “disaster will arise suddenly” underscores the unpredictability and severity of consequences when divine and civil order are violated.

The closing rhetorical question—“who knows the ruin that will come from them both?”—reminds the reader that rebellion provokes both divine wrath and royal reprisal. The “both” likely refers to the Lord and the king acting in tandem to punish disorder. The uncertainty of timing (“who knows?”) amplifies the urgency of obedience and caution.

In theological reflection, this passage teaches that wisdom involves recognizing the boundaries of authority and the dangers of prideful defiance. Reverence for God anchors moral integrity; respect for rightful leadership preserves communal peace. Together, they form a safeguard against the chaos that follows when fear of God and respect for order are abandoned.

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My Lord, My Strength

“I love you, O Lord, my strength… The Lord is my rock, my fortress, and my deliverer.”

The opening lines of Psalm 18 are not quiet reflections—they are a declaration. David speaks as a man who has been pressed, hunted, exhausted, and yet preserved. His first instinct is not to recount his trials but to proclaim his love for the God who carried him through them. That alone is a lesson for the soul: faith does not begin with our circumstances; it begins with our God.

David calls the Lord my strength… my rock… my fortress… my deliverer. These are not abstract titles. They are the vocabulary of someone who has lived through storms and discovered that God is not merely a concept but a refuge that holds.

When David says God is his rock, he is naming the One who does not shift when everything else does. When he calls God his fortress, he is remembering the moments he had nowhere else to hide. When he calls God his deliverer, he is testifying that rescue is not theoretical—it is personal.

And then David adds something even more intimate: “I call upon the Lord, who is worthy to be praised, and I am saved from my enemies.” Notice the order. Praise comes before deliverance. Worship is not the reward for rescue; it is the posture that leads us into it.

This psalm invites you to do the same. Not to pretend your battles aren’t real, but to anchor your heart in the One who is more real still. Your strength may fail, but His does not. Your footing may slip, but His rock does not. Your defenses may crumble, but His fortress does not.

So today, let David’s words become your own. Speak them not as poetry but as truth. Let them rise from your heart as a declaration of trust:

The Lord is my strength. The Lord is my rock. The Lord is my fortress. The Lord is my deliverer.

And as you call upon Him, expect Him to meet you—not distantly, but personally, powerfully, and faithfully, just as He met David.

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Don’t Envy Evildoers

Saying 29

Do not fret because of evildoers
    or be envious of the wicked,
for the evildoer has no future hope,
    and the lamp of the wicked will be snuffed out.

Proverbs 24:19-20

Here we go again with the same instruction that must be more needful that we would realize (see v. 1 and Psalm 37:1 and Proverbs 23:17). Psalm 73:3 shows us the tendency toward doing this: “I was envious at the arrogant, When I saw the prosperity of the wicked.”

Really there is nothing about the prosperous wicked to envy when we consider their end (no reward and his lamp put out).

Both Bildad:

The lamp of a wicked man is snuffed out;
    the flame of his fire stops burning.
The light in his tent becomes dark;
    the lamp beside him goes out. (Job 18:5-6)

and Job:

Yet how often is the lamp of the wicked snuffed out?
    How often does calamity come upon them,
    the fate God allots in his anger? (Job 21:17)

realized that God would deal with the wicked. Other passages on the light of the wicked going out: Proverbs 13:9; 20:20. The Psalmist in 73:3-16 quit envying the wicked when he went into the sanctuary and considered their “latter end” (v. 17).

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Lesson 2: Put Love into Action

Romans 12:9-16

Paul continues in these verses with his discussion of our response to grace. Here, he sets the tone with verse 9:

 Love must be sincere. Hate what is evil; cling to what is good. 

Our response to God’s grace must be one of love, both love for God and love for others, and this love must be sincere. It is interesting that Paul should modify this sincere love statement with the concept of hating what is evil and clinging to what is good; in our sincere love, we are to maintain the highest of ethical standards, not allowing ourselves to misuse our new freedom.

So then, what does love in action look like in practice?

Paul begins shedding light on this question in the verses that follow, first with an emphasis on what we should do to put love into action:

Be devoted to one another in love. Honor one another above yourselves (12:10). 

Because our response to grace is that we love others, we should be devoted to one another, and we should put others ahead of ourselves. 

Never be lacking in zeal, but keep your spiritual fervor, serving the Lord (12:11). 

Because our response to grace is that we love God, we should serve Him with enthusiasm always. Because our response to grace is one of love, our attitudes should reflect that love for God and other people: 

Be joyful in hope, patient in affliction, faithful in prayer (12:12).

Since we have a whole new attitude because of the grace we have received, our love should result in generosity toward other people: 

Share with the Lord’s people who are in need. Practice hospitality (12:13).

Many commentators refer to this section as the “Law of Christ” but at least for me, it doesn’t really read that way; I highly doubt that Paul is intending to give us a list of rules that we check off as we go. Instead, I think he is simply pointing out some no brainers as if to say that since we love God and love others, these are the natural kinds of things that should follow. In the next three verses, his emphasis shifts slightly, but he is still speaking of sincere love:

Bless those who persecute you; bless and do not curse. Rejoice with those who rejoice; mourn with those who mourn. Live in harmony with one another. Do not be proud, but be willing to associate with people of low position. Do not be conceited.

Romans 12:14-16

As we read these verses, notice that they are not things that are common in this world. I’ve never met someone who blessed their oppressors, for instance; have you? I don’t always see people rejoicing with their friends who are rejoicing, for all too often a person sees their friend rejoicing while harboring resentment because their friend was fortunate in an area where they hadn’t been as fortunate. Harmony is surely lacking in our world, while pride and conceit are commonplace; and so many decline to associate with the less fortunate. Real sincere love is a very rare thing in our world, but within the church, it is supposed to be a given.

In fact, the apparent lack of love in some church bodies is a sore subject for many people. Some of them complain loudly and criticize bitterly about the lack of love in this or that church, some even leave church entirely because of it. While on the one hand I might be inclined to feel for such people, on the other hand, after going through these verses, I can’t help thinking that they aren’t exhibiting love either. Thus, I’ll add a response to grace that Paul alluded to in verse 14, but hasn’t mentioned yet by name: Sincere love requires quite a lot of forgiveness, for all of us are works in progress.

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Photo of the Week: May 20. 2026

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Gloating may not be the best move

Saying 28

Do not gloat when your enemy falls;
    when they stumble, do not let your heart rejoice,
or the Lord will see and disapprove
    and turn his wrath away from them.

Proverbs 27:17-18

This is not the only place in Scripture where we are told not to gloat over an opponent’s downfall; no sir, not by a long shot. We have a tendency to rejoice over an enemy’s troubles (Psalm 36:15). Obadiah 12 told Edom not to rejoice over Israbl’s fall. David prayed that his enemies would not be given the chance to rejoice over his calamities (Psalm 35:19). Job said he had not erred in this field (Job. 31:29). And David was a good example of one who did not rejoice over his enemies’ misfortunes: see him as he weeps over the death of Saul (11 Samuel 1:11) and over the death of the revolting Absalom (2 Samuel 18:33).

God sees everything that takes place on the earth. He saw Adam and Eve’s sin in the beginning, and He has seen every sin since. Rejoicing over an enemy’s troubles or fall is displeasing to God to the point that in some way He will deal mercifully with him in the future as a result.

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Lesson 1: Humble Service

Romans 12:3-8

Paul set out his proposition in verses 1-2, that we offer ourselves as living sacrifices and be transformed by the renewing of our minds as a response to grace; in verses 3-8 we have our first lesson on how to go about it: Serve the body of Christ in humility.

For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the faith God has distributed to each of you. (12:3)

So, the first step in the transformative process is that we adopt an attitude of humility. Right away, we can see that not being conformed to this world was something Paul was very serious about (v. 2) for in this age of “game”, “swagger” and “bling” humility is very much out of style. Verse 4 uses the metaphor of our bodies in the same way that Paul uses it in 1 Corinthians 12 as he shows that each of us has a unique part to play in the Body of Christ. While this is easy enough to grasp, he takes another shot at the attitudes of this world in verse 5 when he says each member belongs to all the others. I can’t tell you how many times I have seen Christians bristle at that one.

In verses 6-8 Paul refers to spiritual gifts that each of us has received by the Holy Spirit.

I hope you will consider this carefully: In a context of humble service, a context that is not only counter-intuitive but also counter cultural for most of us, Paul tells us to exercise our spiritual gifts in humble service to the Body of Christ. Think about the magnitude of the implication of this…

Not only are we to adopt an attitude of true and honest humility, not only are we to consider our positions as members of and belonging to the Body of Christ, but we are to serve the Body of Christ. Yet even more striking than that, we are to rely upon our spiritual gift from God in our service, which is to say that we are not to rely on our own strength, ability or talent, but on God’s grace alone.

Now, let’s consider why Israel did not obtain righteousness by the Law. They relied on their own strength and ability to follow the Law, but they did not rely on God for His righteousness. How are we to live as Christians? We are to rely on God in all things to serve His purpose and not our own.

Just think, Paul is just getting started in these life lessons,  we’ll look at the second one next time…

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The Right will Rise

Saying 27

Do not lurk like a thief near the house of the righteous,
    do not plunder their dwelling place;
for though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again,
    but the wicked stumble when calamity strikes.

Proverbs 24:15-16

The wicked are described as lying in wait for the righteous, seeking his ruination (Psalm 37:32). Whoever does this qualifies for the title “wicked man’’ used here. Every persecutor of the righteous would be included in what is said here. The righteous will have many trials, but he will prevail through the special help of God. Notice these interesting verses: “The righteous person may have many troubles, but the Lord delivers him from them all” (Psalm 34:19); “though he may stumble, he will not fall,
for the Lord upholds him with his hand” (Psalm 37:24). See Micah 7:8; Job. 5: 19. In other words, as our expressions go, “you can’t keep a good man down;” he may be “down”, but he isn’t “out”. Notice that when the wicked fall, he is not promised to come back, for he has no personal God to whom to look for restoration.

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Spiritual Thirst

Forest-River_1280x800-Wallpaper1

There’s nothing worse than being thirsty, seriously thirsty!

Millions are slowly dying of thirst in our world, but theirs is a different kind of thirst.  Spiritual thirst is pandemic and has been all through the ages.  The symptoms are fairly easy to identify: people grabbing anything and everything in a vain attempt to satisfy the longing and never succeeding in quenching their need for more.

In many cases they find a substitute that can mask the symptoms for a time, but the crisis always returns…

Jesus Christ offered Mankind living water, a kind of water that could quench a spiritual thirst for all time.  He said that this would be like a spring of water within, welling up into eternal life.

Spiritual thirst can be quenched; all we need to do is take a big, long pull from the right cup!

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Honey and Hope

Saying 26

Eat honey, my son, for it is good;
    honey from the comb is sweet to your taste.
Know also that wisdom is like honey for you:
    If you find it, there is a future hope for you,
    and your hope will not be cut off.

Proverbs 24:13-14

The people of that day depended upon honey for their sweetening, and its properties are still highly acclaimed by health advocates. Judea was a land with an abundance of natural honey as we see in Exodus 3:8. The father would urge his son to seek, find, and know wisdom with the same eagerness with which he enjoyed the sweetness of honey. The sweetness of the wisdom found in the Word of God is compared with the sweetness of honey: Psalm 19:lO; 119:103. The ending of this verse is much like Proverbs 23:18. It shows the great reward and ’the hopeful life that wisdom brings to its possessor.

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