Key Verse: “The Lord’s light penetrates the human
spirit, exposing every hidden motive.” (v.27)
Big Idea: You can hide your motives from others—but
not from God, and not forever from yourself.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The café windows were thrown open to the street today. No rain. No gray. Just sunlight spilling across wooden tables like liquid gold. Outside, traffic hummed steady and indifferent.
I spotted Solomon near the front window. He looked up before I spoke—like he’d been expecting the exact second I’d walk in.
“You look like a man rehearsing arguments in his head,” he said, faint cedar trailing him when I sat down.
“I might be,” I muttered.
Before I could explain, someone slid into the empty chair beside me.
She looked mid-thirties, sharp blazer, laptop plastered with startup stickers. Dark circles under her eyes. Focused. Wired.
“Sorry,” she said quickly. “Is this seat taken? Every other table’s full.”
Solomon smiled warmly. “It is now.”
She introduced herself as Maya. Product director at a fast-growing tech company. Deadlines. Investors. “It’s a season,” she said, but the way her jaw tightened made it sound like a sentence, not a season.
Solomon leaned back, studying both of us.
“Today,” he said, “I want to talk about motives.”
He tapped the table lightly.
“In this section, I mention quick wealth that vanishes, loyalty and truth preserving a king, discipline shaping character. I speak about justice in business, about the glory of youth and the honor of age. It may seem scattered—but it’s not. The thread is integrity.”
He looked at Maya. “The kind no one sees.”
Then he quoted it, steady and clear: “The Lord’s light penetrates the human spirit, exposing every hidden motive.”
The café noise seemed to dull. Even the hiss of steam faded into background.
“Verse 27,” he said softly.
Maya shifted. “Hidden motives? Like… lying?”
“Sometimes,” Solomon replied. “But more often, it’s subtler. Why you push so hard. Why you cut corners. Why you need credit. Why you resent others’ success.”
I swallowed.
He opened his weathered leather notebook and slid it forward. Inside was a simple sketch: a house with a polished exterior, and beneath it—an intricate web of pipes and wires.
“Most people renovate the exterior,” he said. “The light of the Lord examines the wiring.”
He tapped the underside of the drawing.
“The Hebrew word ‘spirit’ here is neshamah—the breath inside you. The animating core. And I say the Lord’s lamp searches it. Like a miner with a torch descending into tunnels.”
Maya let out a small laugh. “That’s uncomfortable.”
“It should be,” Solomon said gently. “Because we are experts at self-justification.”
I leaned forward. “But what does that actually mean? I mean, I work hard. I want to succeed. Is that wrong?”
He looked at me—uncannily direct.
“Why do you want to succeed?”
The question landed heavier than it should have.
“To… provide. To be respected. To not feel behind.”
Maya nodded slightly.
Solomon’s voice softened. “Those desires aren’t evil. But if you peel them back far enough, what do you find? Fear? Pride? Comparison? A need to prove?”
Maya stared at her coffee. “My investors think we’re scaling for impact. I tell myself it’s about helping people. But if I’m honest…” She hesitated. “I just don’t want to fail publicly.”
Silence settled between us.
Solomon didn’t pounce. He didn’t preach. He just let the light linger.
“In verse 21, I warn about wealth gained too quickly. In verse 23, dishonest scales. In verse 30, painful blows that cleanse the heart. All of it comes back to this—God cares about what’s beneath the surface. Not just what you build, but why you build it.”
He leaned in. “You can impress the world and still corrode inside.”
Maya exhaled slowly, like something in her had been bracing for years.
“But how do you even see your own motives clearly?” she asked. “I mean, if they’re hidden…”
Solomon smiled faintly. “You invite the light. You ask uncomfortable questions. You let truth confront you before crisis does.”
I shifted in my seat. “That sounds like therapy.”
“Wisdom often is,” he said, amused.
Outside, a siren wailed faintly, then faded. The world resumed its pace.
Maya glanced at her phone, then closed it deliberately and slipped it into her bag. “I need this conversation,” she said quietly. “If that’s okay.”
Solomon nodded. “Stay.”
And something about the way he said it made it clear she wasn’t just staying for coffee. She was stepping into something deeper.
As we talked, I realized something unsettling: most of my stress lately hasn’t been about workload. It’s been about image. I want to look competent. Important. Ahead.
And if that’s true… what decisions am I making to protect that image?
Solomon closed his notebook.
“Here’s what I want you both to remember,” he said. “God is not scanning your life to shame you. His light is surgical, not sadistic. He exposes so He can heal.”
He looked at Maya.
“And integrity is not about perfection. It’s about alignment—your outer life matching your inner one.”
When we finally stood to leave, the café felt brighter than when I’d walked in. Not because the sun had shifted—but because something in me had.
Maya lingered at the door. “Same time tomorrow?” she asked, half-smiling.
Solomon glanced at me. “Wisdom rarely works in one sitting.”
I nodded. “Yeah. Tomorrow.”
As she walked away, I realized she wasn’t just a stranger borrowing a chair anymore.
She was one of us now.
And maybe the light had just begun to turn on.
What? God’s light searches beneath our actions and exposes the motives driving them—because integrity starts in the heart, not the surface.
So What? Unchecked motives—fear, pride, insecurity—quietly shape our decisions and relationships, often leading us somewhere we never meant to go.
Now What? Ask yourself one honest question today: Why am I really doing this?—and sit long enough to let the answer surface.
Key Verse: “Even children are known by the way they
act, whether their conduct is pure, and whether it is right.” (v.11)
Big Idea: Your actions are already preaching your
character—long before you ever explain yourself.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The gym was louder than I remembered it. Plates clanged. Music pulsed through hidden speakers. Shoes squeaked across the rubber floor. Everywhere I looked, people were straining—trying to become something stronger than they were yesterday.
I spotted Solomon near the cable machines.
Silver-streaked hair tied back. Gray tee. He was watching—not judging—just observing.
“You ever notice,” he said as I approached, “how quickly you can tell who takes this seriously?”
I glanced around. The disciplined ones wiped down equipment, racked weights carefully, moved with intention. Others scrolled their phones between half-hearted reps, left plates scattered.
“Yeah,” I said. “It’s obvious.”
He nodded. “No introductions required.”
We stepped aside as someone pushed through a heavy set of squats, face red, jaw clenched. His friend hovered nearby.
“In this passage,” Solomon began, “I speak in compact lines. Dishonest scales. Guarding speech. Honoring parents. Refusing revenge. They may seem unrelated.” He paused... “They are not.”
He looked at me squarely. “They all shape how you are known.”
He let the noise of the gym swell and then quoted slowly, clearly:
“Even children are known by the way they act, whether their conduct is pure, and whether it is right.”
A barbell dropped somewhere behind us with a hard clang.
“Children?” I said. “So this is about immaturity?”
“It is about visibility,” he corrected. “If even a child—small, inexperienced—develops a reputation through repeated behavior, how much more an adult whose life carries weight?”
I watched a guy finish a set and immediately begin pacing, flexing in the mirror, clearly checking who was watching. A few people rolled their eyes.
“No one needed his résumé,” Solomon said quietly. “His actions introduced him.”
I shifted uncomfortably. “So you’re saying my life is… constantly making statements?”
“Yes.” His voice softened but sharpened at the same time. “Every tone of voice. Every financial decision. Every private compromise that eventually becomes public fruit.”
He gestured toward the front desk where a staff member patiently explained a billing error to a frustrated customer. Calm. Steady. No defensiveness.
“Look,” Solomon said. “Integrity builds a name without effort. Impatience does the same.”
I crossed my arms. “But people misunderstand. They assume the worst.”
“Sometimes,” he agreed. “But patterns are persuasive. Over time, your conduct becomes your reputation.”
He leaned closer. “The Hebrew idea behind children being ‘known’ carries the sense of being recognized, identified. People may not know your motives. But they will know your patterns.”
That hit deeper than I expected.
I thought about the last few weeks. The sarcastic comments I’ve brushed off as humor. The way I’ve rushed conversations at home. The shortcuts I justified because “everyone does it.”
What is that saying about me?
Solomon continued, “In this same passage I warn against dishonest scales—subtle manipulation for personal gain. I speak of honoring father and mother. How you treat those who cannot advance you. I caution against revenge—whether you escalate conflict or absorb it.”
He met my eyes. “All of these tell a story about who you are.”
A lifter near us struggled to rack his weights after finishing. He looked around, hesitated, then left them there and walked off. The next person sighed and began unloading someone else’s mess.
“Reputation,” Solomon murmured. “Eventually, the light exposes how you’ve lived.”
“So what if I don’t like what my life is saying?” I asked.
He didn’t hesitate. “Then change the message through consistent action.”
He bent down, picked up a stray plate someone had left on the floor, and quietly returned it to the rack.
“No announcement,” he said. “No speech. But if he does this every day, people will know him as steady. Reliable.”
He straightened and added, “The Creator weighs hearts, yes—but He also allows human communities to experience the fruit of one another’s character. Reputation is not vanity. It is the echo of your integrity.”
The music shifted tracks. The rhythm slowed.
“You cannot brand your way into being trusted,” he said. “You earn it by alignment—words and actions matching over time.”
I swallowed. “So my life’s already talking.”
“It always is,” he replied gently. “The only question is whether its voice reflects wisdom.”
As I left the gym, I noticed things I hadn’t before—who cleaned up, who encouraged others, who cut corners. None of them had said a word.
But I knew exactly who they were.
And I realized— So do people about me.
What? A person’s consistent actions create their reputation; even small, repeated behaviors reveal whether their character is pure and right.
So What? Your life is already introducing you to others—at work, at home, in conflict—long before you explain your intentions.
Now What? Choose one visible habit (speech, honesty, reliability) and practice it consistently this week so your actions say what you want your name to mean.
Key Verse: “Wine produces mockers; alcohol leads to
brawls. Those led astray by drink cannot be wise.” (v.1)
Big Idea: What you consume can quietly begin to
consume you.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The café windows were wide open again today. No rain. No gray skies. Sunlight spilled across the wooden floor like honey, catching dust in slow motion.
Solomon was already there. He tapped the table twice as I sat down—his little signal that we were getting right to it.
“Proverbs 20,” he said. “Today I talk about kings, fairness, integrity… and what controls a man.”
He let that hang.
A couple at the corner table laughed too loudly over mimosas. It wasn’t even noon.
“In this section,” he continued, “I warn about provoking authority, about laziness, about dishonest scales. It may seem scattered. But it isn’t. I’m circling one idea: self-mastery versus self-deception.”
He leaned in slightly. I caught the faint cedar scent that always clung to him.
“Here’s the line you can’t ignore,” he said, quoting slowly. “‘Wine produces mockers; alcohol leads to brawls. Those led astray by drink cannot be wise.’”
The café noise seemed to dull for a second, like someone turned the volume knob down on the world.
“I’m not condemning celebration,” Solomon added. “I’m exposing slavery.”
I shifted in my seat. “You mean addiction.”
“Yes. But not only to drink.” He gave me a look that felt uncomfortably specific.
“Anything you reach for to escape reality can begin to rewrite your reality.”
He gestured subtly toward the laughing couple. The man was getting louder, gesturing big, knocking over a napkin holder. The woman rolled her eyes, half embarrassed, half entertained.
“Wine produces mockers,” Solomon repeated. “The Hebrew idea there is that it makes you foolishly loud, overconfident, untouchable. It whispers, ‘You’re fine. You’re stronger than this.’ And then it quietly rearranges your judgment.”
I folded my arms. “So are you saying we shouldn’t drink?”
He smiled gently. “You’re trying to turn wisdom into a rulebook. I’m asking a deeper question: What happens to you when you do?”
That landed harder.
He continued, “Notice I say, ‘Those led astray by drink cannot be wise.’ Wisdom isn’t just intelligence. It’s alignment—your mind, your body, your desires moving under God’s design. When something else starts steering… you drift.”
The man at the corner table stood abruptly and bumped into a server. Coffee splashed. His apology came out half-joking, half-irritated. The air tightened.
Solomon watched quietly. Not judging. Observing.
“In verse 3,” he went on, “I say, ‘Avoiding a fight is a mark of honor; only fools insist on quarreling.’ Alcohol lowers the barrier between irritation and explosion. But pride does the same. So does anger. So does social media.”
I laughed despite myself. “Okay, that one stings.”
He reached into his weathered leather notebook and slid it toward me. Inside was a simple sketch: a cup at the top, a heart beneath it, arrows running both ways.
“You think you’re consuming what’s in the cup,” he said. “But what’s in the cup eventually consumes the heart. Not just alcohol. News. Porn. Success. Validation. Rage. Even comfort.”
The sunlight hit the page, making the ink shimmer slightly.
“What you consume,” he said quietly, “can begin to consume you.”
I thought about my own habits. The two drinks that sometimes became four. The late-night scrolling. The way I justified it because I wasn’t “that bad.” No DUIs. No public scenes. Just a slow dulling.
“You know what scares me?” I admitted. “I don’t feel out of control.”
Solomon nodded. “Rain doesn’t announce itself as a flood either.”
He let that sit.
“In verse 7, I say, ‘The godly walk with integrity; blessed are their children who follow them.’ Integrity means wholeness. The same man in private and public. Substances—and whatever else masters you—fracture that wholeness. You become two people.”
I swallowed. “And if I don’t think it’s a problem?”
He gave a small, sad smile. “Mockery is subtle. The drink doesn’t just make you mock others. It makes you mock wisdom. It convinces you warnings are exaggerated.”
The couple eventually left, quieter now. The server wiped down the table, the smell of citrus cleaner replacing champagne.
Solomon closed the notebook.
“Listen carefully,” he said, voice steady. “God is not trying to shrink your joy. He is protecting your freedom. Anything that controls your choices, dulls your judgment, or inflames your anger is not your friend. Wisdom asks: Who is steering my life?”
I stared at the empty space where the couple had been. Their absence felt like a living illustration of the very wisdom Solomon was teaching.
Solomon tapped the table once more.
“Master your appetites before they master you. Choose clarity over escape. Choose honor over impulse. And remember—you don’t fight these battles alone. The Creator is not distant from your struggle. He is invested in your freedom.”
Walking out into the sun, I felt exposed—but lighter. Not condemned. Just… seen.
And aware that some of my “harmless” habits weren’t as harmless as I’d pretended.
What? Proverbs 20:1–10 warns that intoxication—and anything that clouds judgment—leads to conflict, self-deception, and fractured integrity.
So What? That which we regularly consume—alcohol, media, validation, anger—can quietly begin steering our lives and reshaping our character.
Now What? Identify one habit that dulls your clarity or fuels your impulses, and intentionally step back from it this week to reclaim control.
Key Verse: “Fear of the Lord leads to life, bringing
security and protection from harm.” (v.23)
Big Idea: Wisdom isn’t learned once—it’s rehearsed
until it reshapes who you are.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met somewhere unexpected today—the city driving range on the edge of town. Bright afternoon sun, the sharp thwack of golf balls splitting the air, green turf glowing almost neon against the blue sky. No rain. No café. Just repetition.
Buckets of balls stacked like little pyramids.
Solomon stood at the far stall, linen shirt sleeves rolled up, silver-streaked hair tied back. Handmade boots planted firmly on rubber matting. He swung—not perfectly, but consistently. Clean contact. Again. Again.
“You ever notice,” he said, setting another ball down, “how no one complains about repetition when it improves their swing?”
I leaned against the divider. “Wisdom’s not as satisfying as watching a ball fly two hundred yards.”
He smiled, faint cedar drifting in the heat. “Only because you can’t see the distance it saves you from regret.”
He didn’t open the notebook today. He didn’t need to.
“Proverbs 19:21–29,” he began. “You may have noticed that today’s passage seems a bit repetitive. A review. And it is! A good teacher repeats what keeps a student alive. Today’s section lends itself to some personal reflection and a check of how wisdom is affecting you. How much progress you’ve made.”
He looked at me. “Ready?”
I nodded, “Sure, I guess.”
“Verse 21 — Many plans, but the Lord’s purpose stands.”
“Do you still over-plan?” he asked casually.
“Yes,” I admitted. “Five-year projections. Backup plans to backup plans.”
“And how often do you pause to ask what the Creator might be shaping instead?”
I hesitated.
He tapped the mat with his club. “You can design your swing. But the wind still exists. Wisdom isn’t abandoning plans—it’s holding them loosely.”
I swallowed. “I don’t like loose.”
“I know.”
“Verse 22 — Loyalty makes a person attractive; better poor than a liar.”
“Integrity check,” he said, glancing sideways.
“I haven’t lied,” I said defensively.
“Half-truths?”
I winced.
He nodded gently. “Loyal love. Steadfast kindness. It’s better to lose money than lose your soul in deception.”
A ball arced high into the distance.
“Where are you tempted to polish the truth?” he pressed.
“Work,” I muttered. “Performance metrics.”
“It is so much more important to protect your name than your numbers.”
“Verse 23 — ‘Fear of the Lord leads to life, bringing security and protection from harm.’”
He set the club down.
The driving range noise seemed to dull for a moment.
"This isn’t talking about panic or terror. It means awe. Alignment. Living aware that God is real and near.”
I folded my arms. “But harm still happens.”
“Yes,” he agreed. “But not the harm that corrodes your core. Reverence builds a life that doesn’t implode.”
He leaned closer. “You chase security through control. But security flows from surrender.”
That landed harder than any golf ball.
“Verse 24 — The lazy won’t even lift food to their mouth.”
He raised an eyebrow.
“I’m not lazy.”
“You procrastinate.”
“That’s strategic delay.”
He laughed—warm, not mocking. “Sometimes. Other times it’s avoidance.”
He gestured at the row of buckets. “Change doesn’t happen because you understand something once — it happens because you practice it repeatedly.
I nodded slowly. There were emails I hadn’t answered. Conversations I’d delayed.
“Verse 25 — Fools learn when consequences hit. The wise learn by watching.”
“Have you been watching?” he asked.
“I think so.”
“Then why repeat what you’ve already seen wreck someone else?”
That stung.
He didn’t soften it. “Wisdom means learning from other people’s bruises.”
“Verses 26 and 27 — Don’t shame your parents. Don’t stop listening to instruction.”
He glanced toward a teenage boy two stalls down, frustrated, slamming his club.
“Pride isolates,” Solomon said. “When you stop listening, you start drifting.”
“I don’t ignore advice,” I protested.
“You filter it through ego.”
Silence.
“Stay teachable, Ethan. Especially when you feel certain.”
“Verse 28 — False witnesses mock justice.”
He exhaled slowly. “Words shape worlds. Don’t use yours carelessly.”
I thought about sarcasm. About conversations where I’d exaggerated for effect.
He saw it in my face. He always does.
“Verse 29 — Penalties exist for mockers. Consequences are real.”
“Grace doesn’t cancel reality,” he said. “Choices carve grooves.”
The boy two stalls down packed up and left, shoulders tight.
Solomon watched him go. “Absence teaches too.”
The stall felt quieter.
He picked up one final ball.
“Ethan,” he said, voice steady, “review isn’t regression. It’s reinforcement. Wisdom fades when it isn’t revisited.”
He swung.
Perfect contact.
“Fear of the Lord leads to life,” he repeated. “When awe anchors you, everything else finds proportion.”
I stared downrange at the scattered white dots.
I’ve been trying to improve my swing without respecting the wind.
He handed me a club.
“Your turn.”
I stepped onto the mat, aware of my grip, my stance, the heat on my neck. A hundred small adjustments.
Repetition.
Maybe wisdom isn’t a breakthrough moment.
Maybe it’s buckets of practice under a wide, honest sky.
What? Proverbs 19:21–29 reviews core wisdom themes: surrendering plans to God’s purpose, valuing integrity, staying teachable, working diligently, and living in reverent awe of the Lord.
So What? We don’t drift into wisdom—we drift away from it. Rehearsing these truths protects our character from slow erosion.
Now What? Choose one area from today’s review—plans, integrity, diligence, teachability, or reverence—and take one concrete step this week to realign it with God’s wisdom.
Key Verse: “Keep the commandments and keep your life;
despising them leads to death.” (v.16)
Big Idea: True freedom isn’t doing whatever you
want—it’s living in the design that keeps you whole.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rooftop garden shimmered in late afternoon heat. Bees drifted over lavender, the city humming below like a distant engine. The air smelled of basil and warm stone. No rain. No coffee cups. Just sky and summer.
I came in restless. Solomon stood near the railing, sleeves rolled, silver streaked hair tied back. The breeze tugged at it gently.
He smiled when he saw me. “You look like a man negotiating with gravity.”
“Feels like it. Are rules always good? Or do they just control people?”
He didn’t answer right away. He pointed toward the streets below—cars in ordered lanes, pedestrians waiting at crosswalks, a crane turning above a half built high rise.
“In this section,” he said, “I gather wisdom about restraint—self control, humility, listening. I contrast hot tempers with patience, stubbornness with teachability. I warn about ignoring counsel. It all orbits one idea: whether you’ll live under wisdom or under impulse.”
He turned toward me.
“And I wrote this plainly: ‘Verse 16… Keep the commandments and keep your life; despising them leads to death.’”
“That sounds intense,” I said. “Death?”
“You're thinking of death only to mean a coffin,” he replied. “But there are other kinds. The death of trust. The death of marriages. The death of peace in your own mind. The death of vibrancy in your soul.”
The world seemed to quiet around us.
“When I say ‘keep the commandments,’” he continued, “I’m describing alignment with the design of reality.”
“Design?”
He nodded. “The commandments weren’t arbitrary. They revealed how life actually works.”
He counted on his fingers.
“No other gods—because what you worship shapes you.
No idols—because shrinking the infinite distorts truth.
Don’t misuse God’s name—because words shape worlds.
Remember the Day of rest—because you are not machinery.
Honor your parents—because respect anchors stability.
Do not murder—because life is sacred.
Do not commit adultery—because intimacy is covenant, not consumption.
Do not steal—because trust is the currency of community.
Do not lie—because truth is the skeleton of reality.
Do not covet—because envy rots joy.”
He lowered his hand. “Tell me—what part of that sounds outdated?”
I couldn’t answer. Laid out like that, they didn’t sound restrictive. They sounded sane. Almost freeing!
“But people break them all the time,” I said. “And they seem fine.”
“For a while,” he said. “But every command protects something precious. Break one, and something breaks with it.”
I exhaled sharply. “Even if I agree—they’re impossible. I can’t even keep from coveting for a single day.”
Solomon smiled knowingly. “Exactly.”
He pulled a weathered notebook from his satchel and sketched a shoulder joint—ball, socket, tendons stretched tight. “Imagine someone tears their rotator cuff,” he said. “The surgery repairs the damage. But then comes physical therapy.”
“My dad did PT after his knee replacement,” I said. “He hated it.”
“Of course he did. The exercises feel small. Repetitive. Restrictive. Lift only this far. Hold for ten seconds. Again and again.”
He mimicked the slow, controlled motion.
“In the moment, it feels like limitation. ‘Why can’t I just walk normally?’ But the therapist knows unrestrained movement too soon will cause more damage.”
A bee hovered between us, then drifted away.
“The commandments function like spiritual therapy,” he said. “Humanity has torn something deep—pride, selfishness, distrust of God. The law doesn’t just expose the injury; it prescribes the movements that restore strength.”
“But physical therapy hurts,” I said.
“Yes. Because healing weak muscles is uncomfortable.”
He tapped the notebook.
“Honoring God above ambition feels restrictive. Telling the truth when a lie would protect you feels risky. Resisting envy feels like denying yourself something you deserve.”
He looked at me steadily. “But each command strengthens something atrophied in you.”
I felt that.
“And here’s what most people miss,” he said. “No patient rehabilitates by willpower alone. They need guidance. Encouragement. Sometimes even assistance moving the limb.”
He held my gaze.
“You are not strong enough to restore yourself. That’s why the same Creator who commands, also walks with you, enabling you in the therapy.”
“So when you wrote, ‘Keep the commandments and keep your life,’” I said slowly, “you weren’t saying ‘perform perfectly or else.’”
“No,” Solomon said. “I was saying: follow the path of restoration. Refuse it, and the injury worsens. Accept it, and life returns.”
He closed the notebook.
“Despising the commandments is the same as skipping rehab because it’s uncomfortable.”
“And death?” I asked.
“Untreated injury spreads.”
The city noise rose again—the hum of traffic, a siren in the distance.
“God’s commands,” he said softly, “are movements that restore your design. And when you come to the end of your strength—when you admit you can’t lift the weight alone—that’s when His strength begins to move through you.”
The sun slipped lower across the skyline.
For the first time, obedience didn’t feel like control.
It felt like rehab. And maybe I was more injured than I wanted to admit.
What? Proverbs 19 teaches that God’s commands protect life, and rejecting them slowly damages the soul—relationally, emotionally, and spiritually.
So What? In a culture that equates freedom with self definition, ignoring God’s design quietly erodes trust, joy, and stability.
Now What? Choose one commandment this week and ask honestly: Where am I resisting this? Then ask God for the strength you don’t have on your own.
Key Verse: “Better
to be poor and honest than to be dishonest and a fool.” (v.1)
Big Idea: Wealth
gained without integrity always costs more than it pays.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We returned to the rooftop garden above the old downtown museum today. It felt like a different world. Late afternoon sun stretched long shadows across brick and ivy. The air smelled like warm stone and rosemary. Below us, traffic hummed—steady, impatient, mechanical.
Solomon stood near the railing, sleeves of his linen shirt rolled to his forearms, silver-streaked hair tied back. Handmade boots planted steady. He looked like a man who had seen both palaces and prisons.
He didn’t greet me with a smile today. Just a long look.
“You look tired,” he said.
“I’ve been thinking about money,” I replied. “And how much I don’t have.”
He nodded slowly, like he’d expected that answer.
“In this passage,” he said, tapping the stone ledge lightly, “I contrast wealth and poverty. But not the way people usually do. I’m not impressed by numbers in an account. I’m concerned about what they do to the heart.”
He turned toward me fully. “Let’s walk through it.”
We paced the perimeter of the rooftop as he summarized. In these verses, he explained, that he wrote about integrity, impulsive desires, quick tempers, favoritism toward the rich, the corruption that comes when influence bends toward wealth. He talked about how the poor are often ignored, how fools speak too much, how power can distort justice.
“It’s a warning,” he said. “Not against money itself—but against what happens when money becomes your god. When wealth has taken the place that belongs to your Creator alone—your ultimate source of security, identity, trust, and decision-making authority.”
He stopped walking.
Then he quoted it, steady and clear:
“Better to be poor and honest than to be dishonest and a fool.”
The city noise seemed to lower. A helicopter passed somewhere in the distance, but it felt muted.
I exhaled. “That sounds noble,” I said. “But being poor doesn’t feel noble. It feels stressful.”
“I know it can feel that way.” He replied softly.
And that surprised me.
“I had more wealth than any king before me,” he continued. “Gold stacked like firewood. Silver so common it lost its shine. I built gardens, fleets, trade routes. I chased abundance like it could satisfy the ache in my chest.”
He looked out over the skyline.
“And I learned something the hard way.”
His voice wasn’t dramatic. Just honest.
“Money gained without integrity always demands a payment later. Sometimes that payment is peace. Sometimes it’s trust. Sometimes it’s your ability to look at yourself in the mirror.”
A couple emerged from the museum stairwell and wandered past us. Designer clothes. Loud laughter. The man’s phone was pressed to his ear even as he walked. “Just move the funds,” he said sharply. “No one’s going to audit that.”
Solomon’s eyes followed him briefly—not judgmental, just observant.
“Riches gained dishonestly carry weight,” he said quietly. “They feel light at first. But they grow heavy in the soul.”
I felt defensive. “Easy to say when you’ve had money. Some people cut corners because they’re desperate.”
“Yes,” he said. “Desperation tempts. But dishonesty reshapes you. It teaches your heart that truth is flexible. And once that happens, you don’t just bend facts. You bend yourself.”
He leaned closer, lowering his voice.
“The Hebrew word I use for ‘fool’ here isn’t about intelligence. It’s about moral dullness. A person who loses the capacity to feel the sting of wrong. That is far more dangerous than being broke.”
I stared at the rosemary bushes lining the walkway. I’d been tempted recently—to exaggerate on a contract. Nothing huge. Just enough to close a deal faster.
“It’s not like I’m stealing,” I muttered.
Solomon’s glance was sharp now. Not harsh. Just penetrating.
“Ethan,” he said, “integrity doesn’t collapse in one dramatic moment. It erodes in quiet compromises.”
The wind picked up slightly, tugging at his tied-back hair.
“I’ve seen poor men sleep deeply,” he continued. “And wealthy men pace marble floors at 2 a.m. wondering who they can still trust.”
He rested both hands on the railing.
“Money amplifies what’s already in you. If integrity is present, wealth can become a tool for good. But if deception is present, wealth becomes gasoline.”
I swallowed. “So what? We’re supposed to just accept being poor?”
“No,” he said gently. “Work hard. Build. Create. Invest. But refuse to trade your soul for speed or your honesty for assets. And, you must deliberately trust God—not money—as your ultimate source of security, and practice integrity and generosity even when it costs you financially.”
He turned back toward me fully.
“The Creator is not impressed by your net worth. He cares about the kind of person you are becoming.”
That landed heavier than I expected.
“The tragedy,” Solomon added, “is that dishonest gain rarely delivers what it promises. It says, ‘You’ll finally feel secure.’ But security built on lies is fragile. It cracks under pressure.”
The couple from earlier disappeared down the stairs.
“I wrote this,” he said quietly, tapping his chest, “because I learned that success without integrity is just a dressed up form of failure.”
I felt that in my gut.
“So how do I know if money’s becoming my god?” I asked.
He smiled faintly—warm now.
“Ask yourself: What am I willing to sacrifice to get it? My honesty? My relationships? My sleep? My time with God?”
He paused. “And if losing money terrifies you more than losing your character… that’s your answer.”
We stood in silence for a moment. The sun dipped lower, casting gold across the city.
“Here’s what I want you to remember,” he said at last. “Wealth is a tool. Integrity is your foundation. Tools can be replaced. Foundations cannot.”
As I walked down the museum steps later, I felt both exposed and relieved. The contract waiting in my inbox suddenly felt heavier. Not because of the money—but because of the choice attached to it.
Maybe being honest costs something. But maybe dishonesty costs everything.
What? This passage teaches that integrity is worth more than wealth, and dishonest gain ultimately turns a person into a moral fool.
So What? In a world obsessed with success and speed, it’s easy to justify small compromises—but those compromises slowly reshape your character and steal your peace.
Now What? Identify one area where you’re tempted to cut corners for financial gain, and choose honesty there this week—no matter the short-term cost.
Key Verse: “The man who finds
a wife finds a treasure, and he receives favor from the Lord.” (v.22)
Big Idea: A good marriage
isn’t luck or chemistry—it’s a gift from God that multiplies strength, joy, and
grace in a man’s life.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The café had all its windows thrown open to the street, sunlight pouring in like honey. The air smelled of espresso and toasted sourdough. Someone had dragged a speaker onto the sidewalk, and an acoustic guitar hummed through an old Tom Petty song. It felt like the kind of day you forgive people on.
I spotted Solomon at our usual corner table.
“You look lighter,” he said.
“I slept,” I shrugged. “First time all week.”
He smiled knowingly, like that meant more than I’d said.
“Today,” he began, “I want to walk you through a whole section—Proverbs 18:13–24. I speak about listening before answering. About how words can wound or heal. About pride isolating a man. About friendship that sticks closer than a brother.”
He leaned in slightly. The café noise softened in my ears.
“This passage,” he said, “is about relationships. All of them. And how wisdom—or the lack of it—shapes your life through the people you let close.”
He took a sip, then quoted slowly, clearly.
“The man who finds a wife finds a treasure, and he receives favor from the Lord.”
He let it sit there between us like sunlight on the table.
“A treasure?” I said. “That feels… dramatic.”
He laughed gently. “You think I was exaggerating?”
“I don’t know. I’ve seen marriages. “They look like chores and compromise, not buried gold.”
Solomon grinned, but there was gravity behind his eyes.
“Ethan, I wrote those words after living both sides of them. I chased beauty without wisdom. I multiplied wives without multiplying covenant. And I paid for it. I learned the loneliness of a full house.” His voice carried the weight of memory. “But when a man finds a faithful wife—finds, not collects—he discovers something sacred, something special.”
Outside, a woman stepped into the café line. Dark hair pulled back loosely. Yellow sundress catching the light. She scanned the pastry case with the seriousness of someone choosing a future.
My eyes flicked back to Solomon. He noticed.
Of course he noticed.
“You’ve been avoiding that possibility,” he said calmly.
“I’m not avoiding,” I said too quickly.
He raised an eyebrow.
He slid his weathered leather notebook onto the table and opened it. Inside were two simple sketches. On one side, a single line. On the other, two braided strands.
“A man alone,” he said, pointing to the single line, “is strong in bursts. But two lives braided together? Strength multiplies. Stability deepens. Joy compounds.”
He tapped the braided sketch. Then he added a third strand, saying, “In one of my later writings I say, ‘A cord of three strands isn’t easily broken.’ Marriage isn’t just two people holding on to each other. It’s two people held together by God.”
“In Hebrew, the word I used for ‘finds’ carries the sense of discovering something of value—like uncovering hidden wealth. And ‘favor from the Lord’—that’s not random luck. That’s divine kindness. God’s smile resting on a union.”
I shifted in my chair. “What if you pick wrong?”
“Then you didn’t listen long enough.”
He gestured toward the earlier verses.
“In this passage, I warn about answering before listening. About pride that isolates. About words that wound. A wise marriage begins long before vows. It begins with humility, discernment, and friendship.”
The woman in yellow reached the counter. She laughed at something the barista said. It was unforced. Warm.
“You see her?” Solomon asked quietly.
I nodded.
“You’re afraid.”
“Of what?”
“Being known. Being needed. Losing control.”
I hated how accurate that felt.
“I’ve arranged my life carefully enough that no one could rearrange it.” I said. “Marriage feels like handing someone the blueprints.”
He leaned back, sunlight tracing the silver in his hair.
“Exactly.”
The café noise seemed to slow. Cups clinked softer. The guitar outside softened into background hum.
“Marriage,” he said, “isn’t about finding someone to be your companion. It’s about covenant partnership—two people walking under God’s design. It reflects Him.”
“Reflects Him how?”
“In faithfulness. In sacrificial love. In joy that costs something.” He paused.
“From the beginning, the Creator said it was not good for man to be alone. That wasn’t weakness. That was design.”
He closed the notebook.
“When I say a wife is a treasure, I don’t mean flawless. I mean life-giving. She sharpens you. Grounds you. Exposes your selfishness. Doubles your laughter. Shares your grief. Builds something that outlasts mood.”
He softened.
“And yes, it’s favor. Not every man receives that gift. So when he does, he should treat it like gold.”
I stared at the table. “What if I’m not ready?”
“No one is fully ready,” he said. “But you can be becoming ready.”
“How?”
“Become the kind of man who listens before speaking. Who controls his tongue. Who values covenant over convenience. Who walks with God so closely that he can recognize the right partner when she appears.”
The woman in yellow took her drink and turned. For a split second, our eyes met. She smiled politely, then headed toward the door.
I felt something shift inside me—not fireworks. Not fantasy. Just possibility.
Solomon watched her leave, then looked back at me.
“You don’t swipe past treasure,” he said gently. “You slow down long enough to recognize it.”
He rested his hands on the table.
“Here’s what I want you to remember: A wife is not an accessory to your life. She is a gift entrusted to you by God. If He grants that gift, receive it with gratitude. Guard it with humility. And build it with wisdom.”
Sunlight filled the space she’d vacated near the door.
And I realized I’d been living like independence was the prize.
Maybe partnership was—and maybe I was finally letting the light in.”
What? Proverbs 18:13–24 teaches that relationships require humility and discernment, and that finding a godly wife is a priceless gift and an expression of God’s favor.
So What? Marriage isn’t random romance—it’s a divine design meant to multiply strength, joy, and spiritual growth. Treating it casually means missing one of God’s richest blessings.
Now What? Instead of asking, “Who should I find?” start asking, “Who am I becoming?” Begin cultivating the character that can recognize and honor treasure when God brings it.