IN CHRIST WISDOM LIVES IN YOU

LifeLink Devotions for Monday, February 10, 2025

In the beginning, there was nothing but an eternal and  boundless intelligence – God. His wisdom was profound, encompassing all knowledge and understanding.

God pondered deeply, envisioning a magnificent creation that would reflect His boundless love and unparalleled wisdom. With a thought, He created the heavens and the earth that was initially only a vast and formless void, shrouded in darkness.

First, with a few simple words, He created light to banish the darkness, separating the day from the night. With simple yet all-powerful words, He formed the heavens, stretching them out like a vast canvas, dotted with stars that twinkled like diamonds in the night sky. Each star, a testament to His infinite creativity and care, was meticulously placed to serve a purpose in the grand design.

God then turned His attention to the Earth. By the sound of His voice the land was shaped and poured forth rivers and oceans. With another word, He commanded the earth to bring forth plants of every kind – towering trees, vibrant flowers, and bountiful crops, all brimming with beauty and sustenance.

Into this magnificent habitat God crafted living creatures. He created birds to soar through the skies, fish to swim in the waters, and animals to roam the land. Each creature was designed with precision and thought, fitting perfectly into the intricate web of life.

Finally, God fashioned humanity in His own image, bestowing upon them intelligence, free will, and a soul. He placed them in the Garden of Eden, a paradise filled with every kind of tree that was pleasing to the eye and good for food. He gave them the responsibility to care for and nurture the Earth, entrusting them with the wisdom to live harmoniously with all of creation.

God looked upon His creation with deep satisfaction, seeing that it was good. In His boundless wisdom, He had woven together the threads of existence into a masterpiece of beauty, balance, and harmony. The world was a testament to His eternal love, a reflection of His divine wisdom, and a gift to all who would come to dwell within it.

According to Proverbs 3:19-20, by God’s wisdom everything was created. “The LORD by wisdom founded the earth; by understanding he established the heavens; by his knowledge the deeps broke open, and the clouds drop down the dew.”

The same eternal wisdom and understanding that created and sustain everything in existence is available to guide and sustain our lives. Solomon says, “By wisdom a house is built, and by understanding it is established.” Not just houses, but lives. Not our wisdom, but God’s. The Apostle Paul says,” And we impart this in words not taught by human wisdom but taught by the Spirit, interpreting spiritual truths to those who are spiritual.”  The wisdom for which you search will not come from the world or from within yourself unless the Holy Spirit of God resides in you to speak His wisdom to you.

How is that possible? It’s really quite simple. Turn away from pursuing self and turn to Christ Jesus. Renounce your sinful ways and confess that Jesus is Lord and you will be forgiven for all your sin. Jesus will personally come and live in you in the Person of the Holy Spirit, and He will make you wise.

Pastor John

LOVE DISCIPLINES

LifeLink Devotions for Friday, February 7, 2025

In a cozy, sun-drenched house on the outskirts of a small town, there lived a loving father named David and his spirited seven-year-old son, Ethan. David, a gentle soul with an easy smile, cherished Ethan more than anything in the world. They spent their days exploring the woods, building forts, and sharing stories beneath the starlit sky.

One sunny afternoon, Ethan was playing outside when he found a packet of matches in the shed. Curiosity got the best of him, and he started striking matches, fascinated by the flickering flames. Unfortunately, his adventure took a dangerous turn when one of the matches ignited a pile of dry leaves, causing a small fire to spread rapidly.

Dad, who had been tending to the garden nearby, noticed the smoke and rushed to the scene. His heart pounded with fear, but he quickly grabbed a hose and doused the flames before they could cause any serious damage. Once the fire was out, he turned to Ethan, who stood there with wide, tear-filled eyes.

“Ethan,” his father said gently, kneeling down to his son’s level, “playing with matches is very dangerous. You could have gotten hurt, or worse, started a bigger fire that could have hurt others.”

Ethan nodded, sniffling. “I’m sorry, Dad. I didn’t mean to.”

David took a deep breath, his love for Ethan mingling with the need to teach him an important lesson. “I know you didn’t, buddy. But you need to understand the consequences of your actions. As a result, you’re not allowed to play outside for the next week, and we’ll have a talk every evening about fire safety.”

Ethan’s lower lip trembled, but he knew his father was right. “Okay, Dad,” he whispered.

Throughout the following week, dad kept his promise. Each evening, they sat together and talked about the dangers of fire, how to stay safe, and the importance of making responsible choices. Despite the discipline, their bond grew stronger as Ethan realized his father’s actions came from a place of love and concern.

By the end of the week, Ethan had learned a valuable lesson. He understood the importance of being cautious and respectful of potential dangers. And David, as a loving father, knew that sometimes, the best way to show love was through gentle guidance and firm discipline.

A simple story that brings out the wisdom of Proverbs 3:11-12. “My son, do not despise the Lord’s discipline or be weary of his reproof, for the Lord reproves him whom he loves, as a father the son in whom he delights.”

Our heavenly Father loves us so much that He invests in our lives through gentle guidance and firm discipline. It’s possible that we don’t recognize the discipline when it is happening because we see it only as pain and suffering, but it is the expression of God’s Fatherly love for us. When things go wrong in our life, we have a choice to either blame God for keeping us from what we want or to thank God for how He is helping us grow. Choose wisely to embrace the Father’s discipline and learn His wisdom.

Pastor John

THE HONOR OF GIVING

LifeLink Devotions for Thursday, February 6, 2025

Twice I have been in court, both times as a witness. Once to testify against a criminal, and once to testify on behalf of an innocent person. Both times I sat under the authority of a judge. I addressed him as “Your Honor.”

There are several things that make someone worthy of honor. The position they hold is honorable and they honorably represent the position they hold. A judge is honorable because they represent the authority of the law, and their position demands they uphold the law with integrity.

Honoring someone entails a variety of responses from us. We honor them by listening to them. We obey their authority. We may even pay them homage by praising them or declaring their greatness. And sometimes we pay them monetary tribute.

It’s this last one that is least likely to happen, especially in our honor of God. We listen to Him and obey His authority. We praise Him and declare His greatness. But how often do we honor him with our wealth.

Proverbs 3:9-10 “Honor the Lord with your wealth and with the firstfruits of all your produce; then your barns will be filled with plenty, and your vats will be bursting with wine.”

Within the book of Proverbs there are over 100 verses dealing with the subject of wealth. Jesus Himself addressed wealth when He said, “You cannot love God and money.” The subject of how we use our earthly resources is important.

In Proverbs 3:9 we are told that giving the best of our resources to God is what honors Him.  That raises some interesting questions.

If I don’t put Christ first in my financial decisions am I dishonoring God? Seems logical.

When I use my resources for me first am I honoring myself over God? Also logical.

When I don’t give my best resources to Christ am I really hurting myself? YES.

The promise of Proverbs 3:10 is that the blessings of security and abundance are only available to those who honor God with their wealth and the best of everything they have or receive.

Please don’t think that I am giving you a formula to be rich. The abundance of wealth can also be a curse when the Spirit of Christ is not giving us contentment and joy with whatever we receive. But God’s economy is this – He will honor those who honor Him. Jesus said, “give, and it will be given to you. Good measure, pressed down, shaken together, running over, will be put into your lap. For with the measure you use it will be measured back to you.” (Luke 6:38)

How are you measuring out what you give to the Lord? Is it a cup of convenience, or a barrel of blessing? Does it honor you or God?

It’s time to start honoring God with everything He has given you, for nothing you have comes from you but from His grace.

Pastor John

ON A STRAIGHT PATH

LifeLink Devotions for Wednesday, February 5, 2025

What is the difference between a way and a path? Both words are used in Proverbs 3:6. We are told to acknowledge God in all our ways and then He will make our paths straight.

Very simply, a path is the place we walk, and our way is how we walk on the path.

Picture this. Two people walking side by side on the same smooth path surrounded on either side by thorn bushes. One walks consistently on the path and never deviates to the left or right. The other cannot seem to stay straight and wobbles from side to side being scratched by the thorns and even falls into them on occasion. The one who walks straight has remained sober-minded and focused on the goal ahead. The other has become drunk with the things of the world and has lost the ability to stand up straight.

This image depicts the lives of many Christians. God’s promise to us is this: when we trust Him completely, refuse to lean on our limited understanding of things, and let our relationship with Him take priority over all else, He will keep us on a straight path and keep us straight.

Unfortunately, many people are caught up in the thorns on the side of the path. At first they don’t look like thorns. The bushes are covered with sweet-smelling flowers. We intended to only pick a few to carry with us, but when we touched them we became addicted to their beauty and wanted more.

So enticing is their beauty that we overlook a few scratches. We are willing to shed a little blood to get the enjoyment the bushes offer, and soon we don’t even realize that we are no longer on the path. We are tangled in the thorns and don’t know how to get out.

We didn’t trust the One who put us on the path.

We turned to our own understanding of life and our own solutions to its problems.

We acknowledged that there was something more we desired.

So we turn to look at the path and see someone still walking on it with a joyful smile on their face. We cry out for help. The person stops. We ask them how we can get back on the path. Their answer is simple.

Start trusting God completely.

Ask for His wisdom and stop depending on your own.

Let your relationship with Jesus by the highest priority of how you live your life.

We agree, and suddenly we are standing next to the person on a straight path, and we can see the goal of glory ahead.

Today can be your day to get back on the path. And if you are already on it, today may be the day you help someone else walk with you.

Pastor John

LET IT SHOW

LifeLink Devotions for Tuesday, February 4, 2025

When I got married almost 49 years ago, I gave my bride a ring, and she gave one to me. It was to be an acknowledgment of our lifelong love for each other and a testimony to others that we were in a committed relationship that didn’t allow for any distractions. But the ring itself does not acknowledge who my wife is, it simply bears witness to others that I have one. It is up to me to acknowledge who she is and introduce her to people.

What would you think of a man or woman who wears their wedding ring some of the time but takes it off in other situations? You would doubt that person’s commitment, right?

That’s the point I want us to see from Proverbs 3:6. “In all your ways acknowledge Him…”

Consider the similarity between wearing a wedding ring and wearing a cross. Both are supposed to signify a committed relationship. But does the wearer always represent the relationship in every part of their life? What do you think is the commitment level of a man wearing a wedding ring while sitting in a bar flirting with other women? How dedicated to the relationship is a woman wearing a wedding ring while she dreams of the life she could have in the romance novel she is reading? And how committed to Jesus Christ is the person who says they have taken up the cross of Christ yet dabbles in the addiction to self-gratification from the world?

The wisdom of God encourages us to acknowledge our relationship with Him in every aspect of our lives, and to reveal Him to others by our lifestyle choices. We may go to church, read our Bible, and even wear a cross, but those things only reveal that we are in a relationship. To acknowledge God means to reveal Him to others.

In my early days of marriage, I didn’t do that very well. When I entered a room my type A personality took over and I stood out in front of my wife to relate to people. She was there, but I did not acknowledge her. It was shameful.

Is that how you treat Jesus? Do your desires and preferences take priority over acknowledging Christ in every aspect of your life? Start changing that today. Don’t be satisfied to just know in your heart that you belong to Jesus. Let it show to everyone else.

Pastor John

ENDLESS POSSIBILITIES

LifeLink Devotions for Monday, February 3, 2025

As I age I find myself leaning on things more often. When I stand for an extended length of time I move towards walls or counters or chairs that can provide support. It’s not like I need a lot of support, but a little feels more comfortable for these old spindly legs. Having something to lean on adds to my endurance. It’s really hard to physically lean on myself. I usually fall over when I try.

The same thing happens when I try to lean on my own understanding of things. My perspective of things is short-sighted so I can’t see the big picture. My knowledge is limited to the realm of my experiences, so my list of possible solutions is short. If the outcome of any circumstance is dependent on only what I see and know, then I will experience lots of failure.

Not so if I choose not to lean on me. The second piece of wisdom found in Proverbs three verse five is this – “lean not on your own understanding.” In other words, “It doesn’t have to make sense to me.”

That is so hard. I want everything to make sense. I have always questioned how everything works because I want to understand it. Early on in my life it became an expression of my pride. If I could understand it and explain it, then I stood approved in my own eyes. But God has replaced that pride with a healthy desire to know more. What makes that desire healthy is that it’s not for my benefit, but for His service. And when He doesn’t reveal the understanding to me He’s building my trust in Him.

Being a Pastor takes a lot of understanding, and a constant recognition that I will never understand enough to do it on my own. In fact, even what I do know is insufficient to claim even a little success. I must lean on God’s understanding and trust Him to guide every decision and provide the wisdom necessary for every situation. Trust in Him and less leaning on me are inseparable.

Let’s go back to the story of my move into full-time ministry. I had been pastoring a small church part-time for about seven years when we moved, and we had even gone through a building program. But this new church had different challenges, and God had a different vision for its impact on the community. I could not lean on my own understanding. God gave me His vision for a youth ministry in the town that would require great faith to implement. I had no experience with the ministry, so outside resources were brought in to increase our understanding. We had to lean on them to make it work. And work it did. We started with thirteen children from our church and grew to over forty in the first two weeks. Within three months we were over one hundred and had to find a new space to hold the ministry.

When the idea was first introduced to the congregation of 35 people, it was overwhelming. But we knew God was doing it so we didn’t lean on our own understanding, but chose to trust Him. To this day I still get calls from children who were in that ministry and they thank me for what it did in their lives.

Your understanding will only get you so far as you can go by yourself. But when we lean on God and His infinite understanding, the possibilities are endless.

Pastor John

PERMANENT TRUST

LifeLink Devotions for Friday, January 31, 2025

Over the next few devotionals, I want to share some personal stories of how God’s wisdom has been proven in my life. It all comes from two popular verses in Proverbs. I remember memorizing them in Sunday School as a child, and they have stuck with me. Here’s how I learned them.

Proverbs 3:5-6  “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean not on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will direct your paths.”

What does it look like to trust in the Lord with all your heart? They key is to understand the word “all”. It means all. Not some or most, but all. Is that even possible?

There are many Bible stories of men and women who trusted God with all their heart for a moment, but not permanently. I think permanent trust is hard to achieve while we live in these bodies of flesh. Abraham trusted God completely when asked to move to a new land, but his trust wavered when he got there. Moses trusted God in the wilderness until the second time they needed water and he didn’t follow God’s instructions. The Apostle Paul trusted God until he had a disagreement with John Mark and Barnabas.

We all have moments when we trust God completely, but like the people in Scripture we have too many moments of trusting ourselves.

Late in 1986 I was living a comfortable life in South Dakota. My wife and three children were being taken care of as I worked a full-time job, and I was also living out God’s call on my life to pastor a church. Then God called. He directed my wife and me to begin planning to enter ministry full time and leave behind the comforts of our home and possessions. We obeyed. In early 1987 we accepted the call to a church over 300 miles away. It would cut our salary by almost 40%. We sold our home, my classic 1964 Ford pickup, our boat, my guns, and planned for major budget reductions because we trusted what God was doing to fulfill His call on our lives. It was the most joyous and rewarding obedience in our lives.

Did I continue to trust God explicitly? No, and there are far to many stories to prove my trust in myself. But this I know. God is faithful, and will never stop welcoming us into a relationship of complete trust. So no matter what your trust level is right now, set a goal to make trust complete, and then strive for trust to become permanent. Imagine what God can do with a person who trusts Him in ALL things.

Pastor John

FOUR WISDOM RULES TO LIVE BY

LifeLink Devotions for Thursday, January 30, 2025

One morning as I scanned Facebook to stay connected friends around the world, I came across a post from one of my “adopted” daughters in the Philippines. It shared four truths to live by, and the first one caught my attention because it illustrated a wisdom principle I had just read in Proverbs 27:19.

As in water face reflects face, so the heart of man reflects the man.”

Her are the four wisdom rules for today.

Rule #1 – Live without pretending – that’s integrity. Every part of our lives integrated together in perfect harmony with no contradictions. Nothing fake. Nothing done to impress others. Just a life lived as a reflection of the character of God in us.  

Rule #2 – Love without depending – that’s identity. It’s knowing we have God’s approval rather than seeking the world’s approval. That’s accepting God’s definition of our being rather than seeking it from others. That’s giving to others out of security rather than seeking to receive affirmation. The world’s love depends on a response and looks for a return benefit. But when our identity is secure in Christ, sacrificial love that originates in the heart of God will overflow in us.

Rule #3 – Listen without defending – that’s humility. Be able to be corrected. Pride defends the value we think is being attacked. Humility listens to the possibility of improvement. Pride protects personal choice. Humility submits to anything or anyone as being God’s instrument of perfecting our lives. Pride convinces us we are right and that we have rights. Humility sees the right in others. Pride cannot see a reason to improve because that would require admitting a weakness or fault. Humility can admit faults because value is not found in performance but in the Person of Jesus Christ.

Rule #4 – Speak without offending – that’s grace. Speak the truth, but do it in love, with a pure and holy motivation to truly help the person to whom you are speaking. Do not speak to be heard. Do not speak to build up self. Speak to impart God’s wisdom so that it will be heard and applied. Speak to be an instrument of God’s grace to others.

Now those are four rules by which we all should live.

Pastor John

LISTEN FOR GOD’S VOICE

LifeLink Devotions for Wednesday, January 29, 2025

Proverbs 1:33  “…whoever listens to me will dwell secure and will be at ease, without dread of disaster.”

He woke up early in the morning with a question burning in his heart. “Could I ever convince anyone that God is real”  He thought back to the many experiences of his life, and was convinced that He had never heard God’s voice, and most certainly had never seen God’s face. Yet he believed.

As he got into his pickup that morning and drove away from the farm that was home to over a dozen horses, he began to talk out loud to his heavenly Father. He asked why God had never spoken audibly like he had read about in Scripture. He wondered what he would ever tell someone who wanted proof of the existence of God. He looked at the seat next to him currently occupied by a pack of necessities and accessories for his day and stated, “God, I know you are as real as this black bag, and that you occupy this seat with me. But I want to see you like I can see it.” As he related the story to me I thought to myself, “Be careful what you pray for.”

Later that night, after a hard day of work and an evening visit with a friend, he got back into the pickup and headed for home. He was in a hurry – too much of a hurry. Excessively exceeding the speed limit on a rural North Dakota road, he was within a half mile of home when he came over a small hill. As the truck leveled off at the bottom of the hill and the headlights illuminated the path ahead he saw a frightening sight. There on the side of the road was one of his horses – the same horse that had been returned to him the night before after escaping through a hole in the fence that he had planned to fix earlier that morning.

Instantly his mind went into high gear. Isn’t the brain that God created for us amazing? The speeds at which it can process information is incredible, even though it’s not until well after the event that we realize how much information was processed. Options came to his mind. Decisions had to be made. He thought, “I can maintain control and try to go around the horse, but he will likely be spooked and jump into me and end up coming through the windshield. Which way would he jump? Which side of the road do I choose? I’d better slow down.”

He slammed on the brakes. As the information processed he chose an option that was in his own words totally stupid – he jerked the steering wheel hard to the left and sent the truck into a spin and headed for the ditch. Later he would make this statement – “God’s grace covers stupid.” That was lesson number one, but not the most important lesson of the night.

As the truck skidded sideways and backwards down the highway, he began thinking of more options. He knew from years of experience that the outcome of this decision was going to be tragic. He knew that as soon as the truck went off the road and down into the ditch that the wheels would catch in the dirt and the truck would flip and roll uncontrollably. At that moment he felt a peace came over him that he cannot explain and that he had never felt before. When the truck impacted the ditch he knew from the depths of his heart and soul that he should let go of the steering wheel and sit back and relax. That’s exactly what he did – he totally let go.

As I stood where this happened, I saw the spot the truck hit the ditch backwards and the back bumper dug into the ground and carved out a mini ravine.  That contact caused the truck to flip end to end and roll side to side. I stood on the glass-covered spot twenty feet away where the roof over the driver’s seat hit the ground and was crushed to within inches of the steering wheel. Anyone sitting in that position would have been killed. I walked up the hill where the truck had flipped again, clearing a barbed wire fence and rolled several more times up the hill.

Somewhere during the first flip, before the roof was crushed, the driver was extracted from the truck through the passenger door window and catapulted sixty feet through the air into the ditch, suffering multiple rib fractures, a punctured lung, hip and leg injuries which required surgery, and multiple bumps and bruises. When he regained consciousness, he tried to make a call to a friend for help. In a nightmarish moment his phone battery died. But the black bag in the truck contained an extra battery. It was his only hope for life.

As he pushed himself up to his feet he was amazed at the power of adrenaline. He felt no pain and was able to walk slowly to the barbed wire fence. Somehow with his debilitated legs he was able to hoist each leg high enough to get over the fence and make his way up the hill to the truck. In the dark as he circled the truck he saw the shadowy image of the black bag in the pasture grass. After replacing the phone battery he made seven calls before he finally got someone to answer. By now he barely had any breath left as a result of the punctured lung and the pain was beginning to overpower the adrenaline. Weakly he asked for help and was barely able to say, “I’m south of the farm.”

As he shared the story with me and took me to the place where it all happened, he declared several eternal truths:

  • I never fully experienced God because I had never totally let go.
  • Our control of our lives limits God’s presence and power.
  • God is revealed only in our weakness, not in our strength.
  • God became as real as the black bag and my only hope for life is in Him. I may only see shadows of His presence, but He is there, and in Him is found the rescue for human sin and for human stupid.

Be careful what you pray for – but be assured of this – God hears you and will reveal Himself to you according to the level of your surrender. Let go and know God!

Pastor John

THE ENEMY OF WISDOM

LifeLink Devotions for January 28, 2025

Within each of us is a terrifying enemy of God. Not terrifying to God, but to us. Unfortunately, we have embraced this enemy and signed what we think is a lasting peace treaty with it. However, this treaty is a lie, and sooner or later we all discover that the enemy has deceived us and brought us to destruction.

The enemy I refer to is Pride. God hates pride.

  • “Whoever has a haughty look and an arrogant heart I will not endure.” Psalm 101:5
  • “The fear of the LORD is hatred of evil. Pride and arrogance and the way of evil and perverted speech I hate.” Proverbs 8:13
  • “Everyone who is arrogant in heart is an abomination to the LORD; be assured, he will not go unpunished.” Proverbs 16:5

Pride manifests itself in a variety of ways in our lives. But the single most prominent way pride reveals itself as both the enemy of God and the enemy of our life is this – when we reject correction. When confronted with a wrong and a challenge to change there is an immediate rise in our pride pressure, and just like an exaggerated rise in blood pressure, our heart is at risk when it happens.

Pride seeks to protect when in reality it is causing harm. We are deceived into believing that we are guarding our hearts – our value system and our image – when actually we are moving quickly towards the destruction of our spiritual hearts. Just as high blood pressure is an indicator of hardened or constricted arteries, so high pride pressure is an indicator of a hardened heart.

King Solomon states that pride is conquered only when we respond humbly to the reproof of God when He lovingly disciplines us for our sin. How we respond to God’s correction reveals the nature and extent of pride in our hearts.

Proverbs 1:23  “If you turn at my reproof, behold, I will pour out my spirit to you; I will make my words known to you.”

Those who embrace the perceived benefits of pride’s self-protective responses will find themselves alone, abandoned, and absorbed with awful consequences. In Proverbs 1:29-31 we read,“Because they hated knowledge and did not choose the fear of the LORD,would have none of my counsel and despised all my reproof, therefore they shall eat the fruit of their way, and have their fill of their own devices.

But those who humbly seek the Lord and embrace His correction comes the abiding Presence of God in the Person of His Holy Spirit, and a constant understanding of God’s Word – His purpose for our lives and the power and provision to accomplish it.

What a contrast. The choice is ours. Pride resulting in only what we can do for ourselves, or Godly correction resulting in what God can and will do in us. Today, and every day from here forward, while we know we are weak and our pride is strong, we can choose to read God’s Word, not for knowledge, but for transformation, calling out for God’s reproof, correction, and training in righteousness.

How about you? How do you respond when someone tries to correct you? What does that say about the enemy of God in you? What will you do about it?

Pastor John