Thursday, January 1, 2026

DAY 1 — The Stranger at the Table | 1 Kings 4:34


 Big Idea: What if wisdom really could change everything?

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

I was half-awake, clutching a warm mug and scrolling through my phone like the answers to my life might eventually appear between notifications. Same café as always. Same moss-green walls. Same lo-fi beats smoothing out the edges of my exhaustion. And the same restless sense that something in my life needed to shift, but I had no idea where to begin.

That’s when he sat down.

A man I’d never seen before slid into the chair across from me with the quiet confidence of someone who belonged wherever he chose to be. His linen shirt looked soft and lived-in, sleeves rolled to reveal strong, scarred forearms. His silver-streaked hair was tied loosely back. His boots looked handmade, like something passed down rather than purchased. A faint cedar scent followed him — warm, grounding, familiar in a way I couldn’t explain.

He looked squarely at me. “You’re Ethan, right?” he inquired.

“That’s me, Ethan McKenzie.” I blinked. “Do I… know you?”

He smiled gently, tapping the table twice with two fingers — a gesture that felt intentional, almost rhythmic. “Not yet,” he said. “But you’ve read what I wrote.”

That didn’t clear anything up.

He nodded toward my phone. “Proverbs. I authored most of it.”

I stared. “You’re saying you’re Solomon?”

A soft chuckle. “The very one.”

My heartbeat shifted into a confused, caffeinated gallop. I wasn’t sure whether to run, ask questions, or check if someone had slipped mushrooms into my latte.

“Why are you here?” I finally asked.

He folded his scarred hands — hands that looked like they had once held both tools and crowns — and leaned in. “Because you’ve been making decisions tired,” he said. “Reacting instead of steering. You have more information than ever before, but less wisdom than you need. And wisdom,” he tapped the table again, “is why I’m here.”

A surprising lump formed in my throat. He wasn’t wrong.

Solomon reached into a weathered leather satchel and pulled out a small notebook — beaten, etched with strange markings, pages softened by centuries of use. When he placed it on the table, I felt as though something ancient had entered the room with it.

“I want to walk with you through the Book of Proverbs,” he said. “Ninety days. A slow journey. Simple enough for your morning coffee, deep enough to stay with you long after.”

I swallowed. “How… exactly?”

He opened the notebook and turned it toward me. Inside were sketches — paths, foundations, branching roads — like he carried a blueprint for the human soul.

“Each day,” he said, “we’ll look at a few verses from Proverbs. I’ll explain what they mean — not in religious fog, but in real language. We’ll talk through how they work in everyday life: relationships, decisions, pressure, temptation, identity. The things that undo people… and the things that build them.”

He flipped to another page with three handwritten lines:  What? So What? Now What?

“It ends this way each day,” Solomon said. “Three questions. Three anchors.”

He pointed to the first. “What? — What does this passage actually say? Not what you wish it said, or fear it says — what it says.”

Then the second. “So What? — Why does this matter right now? How does this intersect with your emotions, your choices, your patterns, your reality?”

Finally, the last. “Now What? — What should you do about it today? One step. One shift. Wisdom is not information. It’s action.”

 He closed the notebook, and for a moment, everything around us — the espresso machine, the clinking mugs, the swirl of conversation — seemed to fade into a soft, suspended hush.

“This isn’t a study,” he said quietly. “It’s a mentorship. A journey. A chance to stop drifting and start living with intention.”

He slid back his chair and stood, that faint cedar scent moving with him. “Tomorrow,” he said, “same table. Day two.”

I watched him walk out of the café, my mug warm between my hands, my pulse steadying into something I hadn’t felt for a long time:

Hope.

Anticipation.

And the quiet, unsettling sense that wisdom had just invited me into something that might change everything.


Wednesday, December 31, 2025

December 31 — "The Blessing Is In The Keeping"

 


Today's Reading: Revelation 22

The big idea of Revelation 22:7 is simple and searching: blessing flows not merely from knowing God’s Word, but from keeping it.

Jesus’s Revelation to John does not end the Bible with a puzzle—it ends it with a promise: “Blessed is the one who keeps the words of this book.” That blessing is not reserved for scholars or prophecy enthusiasts. It is for ordinary believers who take God at His word and live accordingly.

To “keep” Revelation is to let its truths shape how we worship, endure, repent, discern, and hope. At its core, Revelation calls us to keep Jesus central. This book pulls back the curtain to show Him reigning, victorious, and worthy of all allegiance. We keep Revelation when our lives orbit around Christ—not culture, comfort, selfishness, or fear. It reminds us that faithfulness matters, especially when following Jesus costs something. The early believers who first received this book lived under real pressure, and Revelation urged them to endure, stay loyal, and refuse compromise. That call has not softened with time.

Revelation also teaches us to keep our worship pure. Everyone worships something, and this book exposes the danger of misplaced devotion. To keep its words is to guard our hearts from idols—whether power, success, security, or approval—and to reserve our deepest affection for the Lamb alone.

Closely connected to this is the call to discernment. Revelation warns that deception will be persuasive, seem reasonable, and be widely accepted. Keeping this book means developing spiritual clarity—testing voices, weighing messages, and refusing anything that demands allegiance that belongs only to Christ. This discernment is especially vital when it comes to the "mark of the beast,” which represents total loyalty to a godless system. To keep Revelation is to say, even quietly and at great cost, “I belong to Jesus, not this world.”

There is also a strong call to repentance. Jesus speaks tenderly yet firmly to churches, urging them to return to their first love, awaken from spiritual drift, and correct what has gone off course. Keeping Revelation means staying humble and responsive, allowing the Lord to correct what He loves. This is not condemnation—it is restoration.

Finally, Revelation teaches us to keep hope alive. Evil does not win. Injustice does not last. God will dwell with His people, and all things will be made new. To keep this book is to live with eternity in view—holding earthly things loosely and eternal promises tightly.

May the Lord help you not merely read these words, but keep them. May He sharpen your discernment, strengthen your faithfulness, and anchor your hope in Christ alone. And may your life reflect the blessing promised to those who remain loyal to Jesus until the day He comes.

Tuesday, December 30, 2025

December 30 — "Home Sweet Home: God’s Promise of Presence"

Today's Reading: Revelation 21

Most of us have become accustomed to life’s background noise—not because it’s the way life is supposed to be, but because separation from God has made it all too familiar. The hum of anxiety, the buzz of distraction, and the low-grade ache of grief are really symptoms of living apart from our Creator.

We weren’t designed to be distant from God, yet we’ve adapted into this gap. We cope, we scroll, we fill the silence, and we normalize restlessness, calling it adulthood. That constant clamor is simply our hearts trying to function without the closeness they were made for. But hold onto your spiritual hats, folks! Revelation 21 doesn’t just suggest we cope with that distance; it declares it’s over! John hears a resounding voice proclaiming what humanity has never fully experienced: God is moving in!

Throughout Biblical history, God has visited, passed by, and interrupted life to reveal Himself—but these encounters were fleeting. Momentary. He showed up just long enough to change a name or redirect a future, then He withdrew. Even when He walked among us, the closeness was limited by time, geography, and mortality. And today, as He resides within us by His Spirit, that nearness is felt by faith rather than sight.

But Revelation 21 heralds an end to those fleeting visits. No more stopping by; God is settling in. It’s not just a friendly visit—He’s pitching His tent among us permanently. Imagine that! This isn’t merely an upgrade to our spiritual experience; it’s a complete redefinition of reality. The ache we’ve felt—the tendency to think God is sometimes distant or simply out of reach—was never meant to last. That distance was just a chapter, not the whole story. Revelation 21 reveals the trajectory of our story: toward nearness, permanence, and unbroken presence.

Living fully in His presence will just feel right. The low-grade tension and that nagging feeling that something is off—even when life seems good—will vanish. Not because we’ve learned to cope, but because the source of the tension has been eradicated. There will be no more need to prove, perform, or pretend. Peace won’t require upkeep. Contentment won’t feel fragile. We’ll live with the quiet confidence of knowing we are exactly where we belong.

Here’s the wonder of it all: God has longed for this more than we have! From Eden to the cross to the new creation, the story has always centered on His desire to dwell with His people. We hear it in His promise from Leviticus 26:11-12: “I will make my dwelling among you… I will walk among you and will be your God, and you shall be my people.” Revelation 21 reveals that the deepest longing fulfilled is not ours but His.

The God who once passed by, walked among us, and now lives within us will one day be with us—openly, permanently, forever. May the Lord steady your heart with the promise that your pain is seen, your tears are counted, and your future is far more solid than your present feels. Today, may you live anchored to the glorious day when God Himself makes all things new!

Day 63 — The Kind of Worship God Actually Wants | Proverbs 21:1–10

Key Verse: “The Lord is more pleased when we do what is right and just than when we offer him sacrifices.” (v.3)   Big Idea: God cares l...