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Proverbs 3:5 Trust in the Lord with all your heart. Never rely on what you think you know. 6 Recognize Him in all your ways, and he will make your paths straight. |
Monday, February 16, 2026
Its good enough.
Tuesday, January 20, 2026
God's Grace is Free
- While we were yet sinners, Christ died for us.
- No man comes unto the Father except the Spirit draw him.
Tuesday, January 6, 2026
What is Truth?
Can Truth Really Be Known?
In a world filled with opinions and perspectives, many
wonder if anything can truly be known. Philosophy reminds us that human
understanding has limits. Our senses can mislead us. Our reasoning can fail.
Even our best conclusions are incomplete.
So the real question becomes:
If human knowledge is limited, where
does true wisdom come from?
The Bible agrees with this concern—but it does not leave us
in uncertainty. Instead, it points us to a truth that is not merely discovered
by the mind, but revealed through relationship with God.
Proverbs 3:5–6 — The Foundation of Knowable Truth
“Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and lean
not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge Him,
and He shall direct your paths.”
These verses do not reject knowledge—they redefine its
source.
They teach us:
- Human
understanding has value, but not authority.
- God’s
wisdom is not merely superior—it is essential.
- Truth is not only something we think about—it is something that guides our steps.
This is not abstract theology. This is usable truth—truth
that works in real life.
Solomon: When Wisdom Becomes Detached from Relationship
Solomon is one of the greatest examples in Scripture of what
happens when wisdom is misunderstood.
God gave Solomon wisdom beyond any man who lived before or
after him. But Scripture suggests something deeper than intellectual
brilliance: God intended wisdom to flow from relationship, not
independence.
At the beginning of Solomon’s reign, his heart was humble. He walked closely with God. His wisdom was not merely sharp—it was submitted.
But later, as we read Ecclesiastes, we hear a different
voice:
Solomon did not lose intelligence. He lost dependence.
Ecclesiastes is the testimony of a man who possessed
extraordinary wisdom—but tried to use it apart from ongoing trust in God.
The result was frustration, emptiness, and disillusionment.
This shows us something critical:
Wisdom separated from relationship with God eventually
becomes powerless to give meaning.
Truth That Is Revealed, Not Manufactured
Jesus later confirmed what Solomon learned through
experience:
“I am the way, the truth, and the life.” — John 14:6
Truth is not just a principle. Truth is a Person.
And knowing truth is not merely understanding ideas—it is
walking with God.
2 Chronicles 16:9 — The Heart God Responds To
This verse reveals something extraordinary about how God
works:
- God is
not searching for the smartest minds.
- God
is not searching for the most gifted leaders.
- God
is searching for hearts fully His.
Truth flows most powerfully not to the independent thinker,
but to the dependent believer.
This is the same principle Solomon began with—and later
drifted from.
What This Teaches Us About Truth
Truth is not:
- esoteric
knowledge for a few,
- intellectual
mastery for the elite,
- or
philosophical certainty for the confident.
Truth is:
- revealed
to the humble,
- given
to the dependent,
- walked
in by the willing.
This is why Proverbs 3:5–6 stands at the center of biblical
wisdom: Do not lean on your own understanding—lean on the Lord.
Why the Bible Is Reliable for Those Seeking Real Truth
For anyone seeking truth that actually works, the Bible
stands on three solid foundations:
- Historically
reliable — preserved with unmatched care.
- Spiritually
coherent — telling one unified story of God restoring relationship
with humanity.
- Existentially
proven — changing lives wherever its truth is trusted.
But more than all this, the Bible is reliable because it consistently leads people into relationship with the living God, not merely into better ideas.
Understanding biblical truth is not primarily about intelligence. It is about willingness.
- Willingness
to trust.
- Willingness
to listen.
- Willingness
to surrender independence.
God gave Solomon wisdom. But what sustained him at
first was his dependence on God.
Scripture shows us clearly: When wisdom remains
connected to relationship with God, it becomes life-giving. When it becomes detached, it becomes
empty.
Closing Thought
Truth is knowable. Not because our minds are
sufficient, but because God is faithful.
“Trust in the LORD with all your heart… and He shall
direct your paths.”
That is not a call to ignorance. It is a call to
relational wisdom— the kind of truth that does not merely inform
us, but forms us into the people God created us to be.