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Tuesday, June 30, 2026

Gentleness Calms Conflict

“A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger.” Proverbs 15:1 (NIV)

Human beings tend to mimic other people’s emotions, especially if we’re sitting or standing right across from them? We do that because of mirror neurons in our brains that allow us to sympathize and to mirror what other people feel.

For instance, if somebody gets angry with me, I get angry back. If somebody is really miserable and I hang around that person long enough, I get miserable too.

In the same way, when someone raises their voice against me, I usually raise my voice back. Then they raise their voice higher. Then I raise my voice higher. Then pretty soon things have escalated, and my emotions are out of control.

But the Bible offers a different way to respond: “A gentle answer turns away wrath, but a harsh word stirs up anger” (Proverbs 15:1 NIV).

When another person raises their voice, lower yours. When I do that, I'm demonstrating strength under control.

Another word for strength under control is gentleness. Gentleness defuses conflict. It de-escalates anger. A gentle person does not overreact and is not driven by emotions. A gentle person demonstrates strength under control.

The Greek word in the Bible for “gentleness” is the word prautes. Some older English translations of the Bible translate prautes as “meek.” The word “meek” isn’t used much anymore because meek has become a synonym for weak. But gentleness—or prautes—is anything but weak. 

In fact, the word prautes was used to refer to a wild stallion that had been tamed. Think about that image. If I go out in the hills and find a wild stallion, it’s unbridled and even dangerous, with a strength that could kill me pretty quickly. But if I tame that stallion, it’s still just as strong, but the strength is brought under control. The strength is bottled up for the master’s use.

When I learn true gentleness as a man or woman of God, I don’t become weak. I just bring my strength under God’s control and use it for his purposes. 

In Summary:

Proverbs 15:1 highlights a profound psychological and spiritual truth: human beings naturally mirror the emotions of those around them, which often leads to escalated conflicts when met with anger. While our neurological wiring prompts us to match a raised voice with a harsher one, biblical gentleness (prautes) calls for a counter-cultural response of strength under control. True gentleness is not weakness, but rather power tamed and harnessed for a purposeful outcome. By consciously choosing to lower our voice and respond softly when tension rises, we actively de-escalate wrath, master our emotional impulses, and align our strength with divine purpose rather than situational reactivity.

Bottom Line

True power is not proven by matching someone else's volume, but by possessing the emotional restraint to quiet the room.

Next Step:

The next time I sense a conversation rising in tension or someone approaches me with an aggressive tone, consciously pause for one deep breath and intentionally drop my vocal volume by 10%. Framing this practice around identity alignment, view this moment not as a suppression of my power, but as a deliberate deployment of my strength under absolute control, ensuring my reactions are dictated by my character rather than someone else's chaos.

Monday, June 29, 2026

From Pain to Purpose: Reclaiming Your Story

“We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him.” Romans 8:28 (NIV)

Grief, loss, and pain are inevitable parts of life. But know that God uses these things to help you grow. He does it in three ways.

First, God uses pain to get my attention. C. S. Lewis wrote, “God whispers to us in our pleasures, speaks in our conscience, but shouts in our pain.” Pain is God’s megaphone. We rarely change when we see the light. We change when we feel the heat.

Proverbs 20:30 says, “Sometimes it takes a painful experience to make us change our ways” (GNT).

Second, God brings good out of bad. One of the most famous verses in the Bible is Romans 8:28: “We know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him” (NIV).

When I experience a loss, it’s an opportunity to grow in character. I can’t control the pain I'm going through, but I can decide whether it’s going to make me bitter or better. I decide whether it’s going to be a steppingstone or a stumbling block. Remember, even in my pain, God is working for my good.

Third, God prepares me for eternity. The Bible says in 2 Corinthians 4:17-18, “These little troubles are getting us ready for an eternal glory that will make all our troubles seem like nothing. Things that are seen don’t last forever, but things that are not seen are eternal. This is why we keep our minds on the things that cannot be seen” (CEV).

I'm not taking my car to heaven; I'm not taking my jewelry or my clothes to heaven; I'm not taking my career to heaven. But I am taking my character. I am taking me

God is more interested in my character development than in my comfort. Why? Because when I get to heaven, I'll have plenty of time to be comfortable. But life on earth is the get-ready stage; it’s the learning phase or the warm-up act. God uses my troubles here on earth to get me ready for an eternal glory. That’s a comfort.

When I'm in pain, I need to ask, “What is God doing?” Is he trying to get my attention? Is he trying to bring good out of bad? Is he preparing my character for heaven?

I can trust him through it all. 

In Summary:

This study focuses on Romans 8:28 and supporting verses to explain how God utilizes unavoidable suffering, grief, and loss as catalysts for personal development. Rather than leaving me to suffer aimlessly, God uses pain as a megaphone to capture my attention, redeems difficult circumstances for my ultimate good, and refines my character to prepare me for eternity. Because earth is the foundational preparation phase for heaven, my struggles serve a distinct, divine purpose: shifting my focus away from temporary comfort and toward enduring, eternal growth.

Bottom Line:

God prioritizes my eternal character over my temporary comfort, intentionally leveraging life's inevitable pain to capture my attention and build a resilient faith.

Next step:

The next wisest step is to shift my daily mindset from reactive endurance to proactive character alignment by implementing a "Bitter to Better" Reflection. The very next time I encounter a frustrating setback, a moment of grief, or unexpected pain, pause before reacting and explicitly ask myself: "How can I use this specific discomfort as a steppingstone to build my character, rather than a stumbling block that fuels bitterness?" Documenting these moments will help me discipline my response to adversity and track my sustainable spiritual growth.



Thursday, June 25, 2026

Let God Defend You

“I depend on God alone; I put my hope in him. He alone protects and saves me; he is my defender, and I shall never be defeated. My salvation and honor depend on God; he is my strong protector; he is my shelter.” Psalm 62:5-7 (GNT)

I’ll always have people in my life who misunderstand and don’t like me. Others will criticize, judge, attack, and spread rumors about me.

In all of these circumstances, my natural tendency will be to fight back. When I'm misunderstood, I’ll want to defend myself. When I'm attacked, I’ll be tempted to launch my own attack. When people criticize me, I’ll want to criticize them. When people insult me, I’ll want to hurl back my own insults.

Don’t do it! Instead, let God be my defender. Every time I'm attacked, criticized, ridiculed, or misunderstood, I have two choices: I can defend myself, or I can let God defend me. Which will it be? Who do I think can do a better job defending me? God or myself? Of course, God can.

Pay attention to this: I'm most like Christ when I say nothing in the face of attacks, lies, and unfair criticism. I'm most like Jesus when I remain silent and leave it in God’s hands.

The Bible says, “When [Jesus] was insulted, he did not answer back with an insult; when he suffered, he did not threaten, but placed his hopes in God, the righteous Judge” (1 Peter 2:23 GNT).

In the face of his unjust conviction and persecution, Jesus did not fight back. When it mattered most, he trusted God to defend him and bring ultimate justice.

King David was criticized and attacked his entire life. In fact, people repeatedly wanted to kill him because they were jealous of him.

But David said this: “I depend on God alone; I put my hope in him. He alone protects and saves me; he is my defender, and I shall never be defeated. My salvation and honor depend on God; he is my strong protector; he is my shelter” (Psalm 62:5-7 GNT).

People will be jealous of my success, and some will even want to attack me. But like David, I need to let God be my protector, Savior, defender, victor, and my shelter.

Let God handle it. Let him be my defense. 

In summary:

This passage contrasts my natural human impulse to retaliate or self-defend with the divine invitation to rest in God's protection. Drawing from King David’s mindset in Psalm 62 and Jesus’ ultimate example of restraint during His persecution, the text emphasizes that true security and honor come from God alone, not from winning an argument or vindicating oneself. When faced with criticism, misunderstanding, or unjust attacks, choosing silence and relying on God as a personal defender is not a sign of weakness, but a profound demonstration of Christlike maturity and faith.

Bottom Line:

True strength is found in relinquishing the need to self-defend and trusting God to be your ultimate protector and judge.

Next Step:

When I encounter the next instance of criticism, misunderstanding, or unfair judgment, implement a "24-hour pause" before responding. Use this intentional delay to consciously step down as my own defense attorney, align my identity with who God says I am are rather than public opinion, and actively commit the situation into His hands for sustainable emotional peace and spiritual growth.

Tuesday, June 23, 2026

The Purpose in the Pause

“I trust the LORD God to save me, and I will wait for him to answer my prayer.” Micah 7:7 (CEV)

The Bible is clear that I’ll go through different seasons in life. One season God talks about over and over is the season of waiting.

But I can trust that while I'm waiting, God is working. A season of waiting doesn’t mean that God has stopped working. In fact, he’s taking me through that season because he’s using the time to work in my circumstances for my good.

The truth is, I'm going to spend much of my life waiting. And so, if I don’t figure out how to trust God while I'm waiting, I'll spend a lot of my life not trusting God.

God is never in a hurry; he’s eternal! And as he’s working, he wants me to learn how to trust him.

I often ask, “When, Lord? When is it going to happen?” And God’s saying something like, “You can trust me with this.”

It’s human nature to say, “Don’t wait! Get things as quickly as I can.” But that goes against God’s blessing in my life—because God’s blessing often comes through times of waiting. Ecclesiastes 3:11 says, “[God] has set the right time for everything” (GNT).

In a time of waiting, I can be frustrated with how slowly things are happening. We’ve all been there.

There’s a promise in the Bible that not only tells me God is working but also how God is working. I need to claim it while I'm waiting: “I am the LORD, and when it is time, I will make these things happen quickly” (Isaiah 60:22 NCV).

That’s how God worked when he sent Jesus into this world. The world waited thousands of years for him to come the first time. And then he came at just the right moment.

We’ve been waiting 2,000 years now for Jesus to come again. When will that happen? At just the right time—God’s time. That’s when he’s going to return.

You can apply this same truth to my time of waiting. Remember that a delay is not a denial. When I think God is saying, “No,” he may just be saying, “Not yet. Will you keep trusting me through this?”

Micah 7:7 says, “I trust the LORD God to save me, and I will wait for him to answer my prayer” (CEV).

That is the kind of faith God blesses.

In Summary:

Today's study centers on the biblical reality of waiting, utilizing Micah 7:7 to illustrate that waiting is an intentional, God-ordained season rather than a sign of divine inactivity. Human nature naturally resists delays, frequently mistaking a temporary pause for a final denial. However, Scripture emphasizes that God operates on an eternal timeline, working behind the scenes to align circumstances for eventual, rapid breakthrough at the perfect moment. Ultimately, these periods of waiting are designed to shift focus away from a timeline and onto deepening personal trust in God's character and timing.

Bottom Line:

A divine delay is not a denial, but a purposeful season designed to build trust while God actively works out the perfect timing for my circumstances.

Next Step:

Identify one specific area of my life where I am currently experiencing frustration due to a delay, and deliberately shift my daily focus from asking "when" to affirming "who." Practice disciplined action by writing down the specific promise of God's timing from Isaiah 60:22, and review it each morning to align my identity as someone who rests in divine sovereignty rather than forcing independent control.


Friday, June 19, 2026

When Weakness Becomes Advantage

Are you tired? Maybe you’re running on steam, and at the end of each day, you’ve run out of energy. The reason why is really simple: You’re human.

My strength is limited. But God’s strength is unlimited. My strength is finite. But God’s strength is infinite. My strength is exhaustible—that’s why I get exhausted! But God’s strength is inexhaustible. God never runs out of energy. God never gets tired.

Psalm 84:5 says, “You bless all who depend on you for their strength” (CEV). If I want God’s blessing on my life? Then I need to depend on God for my strength.

Hudson Taylor was an influential missionary to China in the 19th century. He was a spiritual giant and a brilliant man. In his old age, he lost his health and became quite weak. He wrote a letter to a friend that said, “I am so weak I can no longer work. I am so weak I can no longer study. I am so weak I can no longer read my Bible. I cannot even pray. I can only lie still in the arms of God like a little child in trust.”

At some point in my life, I may be so weak that I can’t even pray, read the Bible, go to a Bible study, work, or really do anything. What do I do in those moments? I rest in the strength of the Lord—in his arms like a little child—and I trust.

Weakness can actually be a good thing in life if it causes you to depend on God. In 2 Corinthians 12:8-10, Paul says, “Three different times I begged the Lord to take it away. Each time he said, ‘My grace is all you need. My power works best in weakness.’ So now I am glad to boast about my weaknesses, so that the power of Christ can work through me. That’s why I take pleasure in my weaknesses, and in the insults, hardships, persecutions, and troubles that I suffer for Christ. For when I am weak, then I am strong” (NLT).

That’s the paradox of depending on God: The weaker I am, the more I depend on him.

And the more I depend on him, the stronger I get.

In Summary:

This text addresses the reality of human fatigue by contrasting our limited, exhaustible energy with God's infinite, inexhaustible power. Using the historical example of 19th-century missionary Hudson Taylor and the biblical theology of the Apostle Paul in 2 Corinthians 12, it re-frames physical and emotional weakness not as a failure, but as a strategic asset. The core message is that when we reach our absolute limits—where we can no longer perform, study, or even articulate prayers—we are positioned to experience the paradox of divine strength. By intentionally surrendering our need for self-reliance and resting in God's capacity, our moments of deepest vulnerability become the exact entry points for His sustaining power and blessing.

Bottom Line:

True resilience and sustainable power are realized only when we stop hiding our human limitations and intentionally allow our weakness to bridge us to God's inexhaustible strength.

Next Step:

To transition from a pattern of burning out on sheer willpower to operating out of sustainable, identity-driven strength, implement a daily "Margin Audit" at my midpoint transition: pause for three minutes, identify exactly where your energy is flagging, and explicitly hand that specific limitation over to God in prayer before tackling your next task. This disciplined pause breaks the habit of self-reliant striving, helping me realign my execution with the identity of someone who builds from a place of rest rather than running on empty.



Thursday, June 18, 2026

Depend on God, Not Your Feelings

Have you ever had the feeling that something was so very, very right, but then when you did it, it ended up being so very, very wrong?

Feelings often lie. There’s an old country song that says, “How can it be wrong when it feels so right?” There are a lot of things that are wrong that feel so right at the moment.

After six months in a relationship, you wonder, “What was I thinking?” Just a few weeks into a job, you think, “How in the world did I get caught up in this?” A quick decision that seemed harmless at the time leaves you broken and scarred years later.

If I want to experience fewer dead ends and failures in my life, I need to hear what Proverbs 3:5-7 says: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will show you which path to take. Don’t be impressed with your own wisdom. Instead, fear the Lord and turn away from evil” (NLT).

If I really want God’s blessing on my life, I have to depend on God’s wisdom and not on what my feelings say or what my gut says. In other words, trust in the Lord and not my own understanding.

So how do I get God’s wisdom?

I pray. I talk to God, and I let him talk to me as I read His Word. That’s how I get his wisdom.

The Bible says in James 1:5, “If any of you lacks wisdom, you should ask God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to you” (NIV).

God doesn’t want me to make foolish mistakes. He wants me to succeed. He wants me to make wise decisions with my time, money, and relationships.

The truth is, I'm not waiting on God for his help; he’s waiting on me! It’s like he’s saying, “Hey! I’m here. I’ll give you wisdom, and I’ll give it generously. I want to make you wise. You’ve just got to ask.”

If I want to be blessed, I've got to get God’s wisdom. And if I want God's wisdom, I need to ask for it—and then be open to receive it.

In summary:

This passage highlights the inherent danger of relying on subjective feelings or internal "gut checks" when making life-altering decisions, noting how easily what feels right in the moment can lead to long-term regret. Using the foundational wisdom of Proverbs 3:5-7 and James 1:5, the text emphasizes that avoiding dead ends requires a conscious shift from self-reliance to active dependence on God's objective wisdom. Getting this wisdom isn't a passive waiting game; it requires an active, relational pursuit through prayer and scripture. Ultimately, God is ready and eager to generously guide our decisions regarding time, finances, and relationships—the constraint is simply our willingness to pause, ask, and align our steps with His direction rather than our own limited understanding.

Bottom line:

Lasting success and guidance are found when I stop being impressed by my own instincts and intentionally ask for God's generous, objective wisdom to direct my path.

Next Step:

Before making any tactical or strategic decisions this week, practice an "Understanding Audit": pause, write down what my immediate emotional impulse or "gut feeling" is telling me to do, and explicitly test it against scriptural principles or seek wisdom in prayer. By forcing a gap between impulse and action, I'll align my execution with a disciplined, objective standard rather than reacting to fleeting feelings.


Tuesday, June 16, 2026

Is Busyness Keeping You from Knowing God?

Happiness is found in getting to know God more every day. 

Paul said in Philippians 3:10, “I want to know Christ and experience the mighty power that raised him from the dead. I want to suffer with him, sharing in his death” (NLT).

Another translation says that Paul became “thoroughly acquainted” (AMP) with God because he had a relationship with him and took the time to get to know him. He understood the difference between knowing about someone and actually knowing someone—and Paul wanted to really know Christ.  

You don’t become thoroughly acquainted with God by accident. You don’t just wake up and accidentally fall into a relationship with Jesus. Paul says it’s a determined purpose. It’s something you have to do something about. You have to invest your time in it. You have to invest your heart in it. You have to invest your resources and your energy. Getting to know God requires the best of everything you have!

One trap that can keep you from getting to know God better is busyness. Just like busyness can destroy your relationships, it can also destroy your relationship with God.

Psalm 46:10 says, “Be still, and know that I am God” (NIV).

To grow in your relationship with God, you need to make time for him and be still. Just a few minutes of focused time every day can make all the difference in the world. I’m not saying you have to spend an hour in prayer every day. You can start with 10 or 15 minutes each morning, reading the Bible and talking with God.

The most important thing is to make it a habit and commit to getting to know God. Only then will you, like Paul, begin understanding the wonders of God with greater clarity.

Make this your daily prayer: “Lord, if I don’t do anything else today, I want to get to know you a little bit better and I want to love you a little bit more.” As you pray and live this out, you’ll begin to experience greater happiness in your life.

In Summary:

In this passage, the focus is on the intentional pursuit of deep intimacy with God as the true source of lasting happiness, using the Apostle Paul’s radical commitment in Philippians 3:10 as a road map. The text draws a sharp distinction between merely knowing about God and being "thoroughly acquainted" with Him, emphasizing that a vibrant spiritual life never happens by accident. The primary obstacle identified is the trap of daily busyness, which erodes relationships both human and divine. By contrasting this frantic pace with the command in Psalm 46:10 to "be still," the text argues that cultivating a resilient relationship with God requires a disciplined, daily investment of time, heart, and energy, starting with small but consistent habits.

Bottom Line:

True fulfillment and spiritual power are found not in the frantic pace of busyness, but in the disciplined, daily choice to pause and intentionally cultivate a deep relationship with God.

Next Step:

To align my daily execution with my higher identity, commit to a "Quiet 15" protocol this week: block out the first 15 minutes of my morning for uninterrupted scripture reading and prayer before checking notifications or engaging with my task list. This sustainable micro-habit protects my energy, counters the trap of reactive busyness, and ensures my daily momentum is anchored in purposeful stillness rather than accidental drift.