"Wisdom is the principal thing; therefore get wisdom.
And in all your getting, get understanding." (Prov. 4:7)
How do you get wisdom?
1) Be humble.
If you're not willing to acknowledge that beliefs you held in the past were wrong, none of the means of wisdom-getting will help. ("The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, But fools despise wisdom and instruction." - Prov. 1:7)
2) Read the Bible. All of it. A lot.
Apart from the attitude of humility and submission we bring to it, knowing Scripture is THE principle means of growing in wisdom. In order to think biblically, you have to know the Bible. In order to easily and effectively measure things against the standard of Scripture, you have to be heavily familiar with it. Familiarity is developed with usage. Just read it -- again and again. Study is good, but it's also slow. Not everything has to be study; just READ it. And don't ignore portions you find difficult, uncomfortable, or boring.
3) Develop a habit of asking, "What does the Bible say about ____?" "Is this thing I'm reading/hearing consistent with Scripture?" Practice this until it's as natural as breathing to do this *automatically* every time you take in information or ideas.
(This is much harder to do if you don't have much familiarity with the Bible, which is why #2 is so important.)
"And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God." (Rom. 12:2)
4) Ask God for wisdom.
Maybe this should have been first. But it only helps so much to ask for wisdom if you're not going to live in a manner that leads to wisdom. The primary way God gives us wisdom is through His Word.
"If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask of God, who gives to all liberally and without reproach, and it will be given to him." (Ja. 1:5)
5) Seek out the wise. Keep company with them, and seek their counsel when called for.
"He who walks with wise men will be wise, But the companion of fools will be destroyed." (Prov. 13:20)
Rachel (Bentley) Ramey
npub13tfa...ta79
Blogger. Author. Wife. Homeschool mom of 5. Christian. Bibliophile. Natural Health Aficionado.
I'm seeing a concerning trend of advertising from conservative companies claiming to be providing education "without ideology."
Folks, education without ideology doesn't exist. Thinking you can separate the two is what got us into the mess we're in, in the first place.
*Everyone* has bias. *Everyone* has a worldview. The only real questions are "which one?" and "are you AWARE of yours?"
Perhaps these companies are just trying not to trigger censorship bots by specifying *which* ideologies their products are free of, but I'm concerned they've fallen into the trap of simply being *unaware* of their *own*.
And that's dangerous, too, even if the ideology itself is a sounder one.
Balance.
Integrity.
Glory to God.
This is the kind of BIG impact we, as Christian homemakers, want our lives and homes to have. Yet all too often we're too busy being overwhelmed by all. the. things.
Learn to strip away all the outside expectations and be effective at what really matters, by learning to use who you Are, what you Believe, and Conduct-driving Concepts to take dominion over your life, to-do list, and your own little corner of the world.


Help a total Bitcoin newbie out, please. I had an Exodus wallet, but they use Wallet of Satoshi, which stopped serving the U.S. due to "regulations."
I'm apparently thoroughly tech-stupid where Bitcoin is concerned, so I need something pretty dummy-proof to get started. Blink or Strike? (Or is there a better option?) And how do I go about getting my current funds transferred from a non-Lightning Exodus wallet to the new wallet?
To say I was "offended" by the Last Supper depiction would be the wrong word. I was grieved by it. It's not something I have any interest in supporting. But God doesn't need me to take offense on His behalf; He's God above all gods and He can handle Himself.
What I *am* offended by is so-called friends gaslighting us over that depiction, and communicating that we don't have a *right* to be bothered by it.
We're not stupid. We recognized the bacchanalia. We also recognized that it intentionally used Da Vinci's Last Supper as a focal point for that, thus turning our Lord's sacrament -- that focal point and remembrance of the self-sacrificial very heart of our faith -- INTO a pagan orgy of self-indulgence. The fact that it portrays a bacchanalia isn't a substitute for its being a portrayal of The Last Supper; it's WHY the portrayal of The Last Supper is a mockery.
#olympics2024 #paris2024 #lastsupper #christianity #davinci #mythology #paganism
Being black and/or female doesn't make someone competent any more than being white and/or male makes someone competent.
Being capable of doing a job well is independent of skin color and (usually/mostly) independent of sex.
#Primal content filters seem to be broken. For everyone, or just for me? Seeing highly pornographic material when browsing, which is especially not cool with kids at home. If #nostr is to be practically usable for me, I need content filterng to work with at least moderate reliability. (I know nothing's perfect.)
The Church has adopted a lot of worldly thinking.
We keep telling women they should invest their time and money preparing for a "backup career" which, theoretically, they plan to never have (except that it is, in fact, THE thing they're "planning" for).
Because it's our expectation that they should be required to protect and provide for *themselves* should they never marry, or be widowed or abandoned. And that if they can't, they should beg the secular government to take up the slack.
If a woman in such a situation has the means to provide for herself, that's great. But it's not biblical to lay that weight on them? The Bible teaches that *families* and, in their absence, *churches* are to provide for widows. (It also teaches that a woman is under her father's headship until she marries, so an unmarried woman should still be provided for by her family of origin.)
The fact that everything is not always ideal doesn't mean we should just ditch biblical thinking altogether and replace it with worldly "wisdom" as our starting point and default.
The net result is that thousands of women are living their "backup plan" *because that's what they set themselves up for.* And families are suffering for it.
#christianity #biblicalwomanhood #biblicalmanhood #thechurch #biblicalworldview #christianfamily #patriarchy