Thursday, February 26, 2026

Day 57 — The Price Tag on Your Soul | Proverbs 19:1–10

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.

Wednesday, February 25, 2026

Day 56 — The Favor Hidden in a Wife | Proverbs 18:13–24

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.

Tuesday, February 24, 2026

Day 55 — The Place You Run | Proverbs 18:1–12

Key Verse: “The name of the Lord is a strong fortress; the godly run to him and are safe.” (v.10, NLT)

Big Idea: We all run somewhere under pressure—wisdom is choosing a refuge that actually holds. 

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

The café windows were fogged from the inside, the kind of soft blur that makes the outside world look farther away than it really is. Espresso hissed. Cups clinked. A low indie track pulsed like a heartbeat under conversation. 

Solomon was already there. His leather notebook lay open between us, pages thick and weathered, filled with lines and arrows and symbols that looked half map, half confession.

He smiled, tapped the table once, and leaned in. “Today’s section,” he said, “is Proverbs 18:1–12. In this passage, I talk about isolation that pretends to be independence, mouths that outrun understanding, pride that struts ahead of collapse—and right in the middle, I bring up refuge.”

He slid the notebook toward me. On the page, he’d sketched a city with tall walls, then a stick figure sprinting toward a gate.

“Here’s the line people take to heart,” he said, and quoted it exactly, steady and clear: “The name of the Lord is a strong fortress; the godly run to him and are safe.”

I nodded, but my face probably gave me away. “That sounds… religious. Abstract.”

“Fair,” he said. “Let’s slow it down.”

The café noise seemed to dim when he spoke like that, as if the world leaned closer to hear.

“In my day,” he continued, “a fortress wasn’t poetry. It was survival. Thick walls. A high tower. A place you ran to when the dust cloud on the horizon wasn’t a storm but an army.” He traced the tower with his finger. “Notice the verb. I didn’t say they admire it. Or talk about it. They run.”

A barista passed by our table—late twenties, eyes tired, jaw clenched. She dropped off a refill a little too hard. Solomon watched her go, then said quietly, “She’s carrying something heavy.”

I watched too. She paused at the register, took a breath that didn’t quite make it all the way down, then forced a smile for the next customer.

“Most people don’t lack intelligence,” Solomon said. “They lack a safe place to take their fear and anxiety. So they isolate—verse one—or they talk loud and listen little—verses two and eight—or they puff themselves up—verse twelve. All of that is running. Just not to safety.”

I felt that land. “So what does it mean to run to the Lord?” I asked. “Because when pressure hits, my instincts take over. I distract. I self-medicate. I power through.”

He nodded. No judgment. “Running to the Lord isn’t a vibe,” he said. “It’s a direction. It’s deciding, under stress, to turn your attention—your trust—toward the One who made you instead of the things you use to numb yourself.”

He flipped the page and drew two arrows. One pointed inward, curling back on itself. The other pointed upward and outward.

“When I say ‘the name of the Lord,’” he said, “I’m talking about His character—who He is. Creator. Steady. Not panicked by your panic. When you run to Him, you’re not denying the threat. You’re choosing where you stand while it’s real.”

The barista came back, wiped the table next to us, then surprised herself by speaking. “Sorry,” she said. “Didn’t mean to eavesdrop. Just… that line about running somewhere? I run to work. To wine. To anything that shuts my head off.”

Solomon met her eyes. “You’re not weak for that,” he said. “You’re human. But some hiding places leak.”

She swallowed, nodded once, and went back behind the counter. When she left our orbit, the space she’d occupied felt empty.

I stared at the notebook. “So the difference between arrogance and refuge,” I said, “is where you place your weight.”

He smiled. “Exactly. Pride lifts you up until there’s nothing left holding you. Refuge humbles you enough to keep you alive.”

I thought about my week—the pressure, the isolation, the noise I’d mistaken for strength. “Running feels desperate,” I said.

“Only to people who’ve never been chased,” he replied.

“It’s turning toward the Lord instead of away from Him. When fear, pressure, temptation, or confusion hits, you choose God as your first refuge rather than your last resort.”

“And, above all,” he said, “It means seeking Him intentionally. Prayer. Scripture. Worship. Or even a simple ‘Lord, help me’ becomes the instinctive move of your heart.”

He closed the notebook and summarized, tapping the cover once. “Here’s what I want to stay with you: You will run. That’s not the question. But are you running in the right direction? Wisdom is choosing a refuge that doesn’t crumble. Turn your attention. Speak honestly. Ask for help. Step inside His strong walls.”

As we stood to leave, the fog on the windows had lifted. The street looked closer now. Less threatening. Still real.

I didn’t feel fixed. But I felt oriented.


What? This passage shows that isolation, empty talk, and pride are false refuges, while the Lord Himself is a secure place for those who turn to Him.

So What? Under pressure, we all run somewhere; choosing God as our refuge changes how fear, stress, and conflict shape us.

Now What? When anxiety spikes today, pause for one minute and intentionally turn your attention toward God—name your fear out loud and ask for strength instead of escape.

Monday, February 23, 2026

Day 54 — Medicine You Carry Inside | Proverbs 17:19–28

Key Verse: “A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit saps a person’s strength.” (v.22)

Big Idea: Your inner attitude isn’t a side issue—it actively shapes your strength, health, and capacity to live well. 

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

The rooftop garden was all sun and stillness, the kind that sneaks up on you after too much noise. Warm concrete underfoot. Planters spilling rosemary and lavender. The city below hummed, but softened, like it had been turned down a few notches. No rain today. No café. Just light.

I climbed the stairs with a knot in my chest that hadn’t loosened in days. I wasn’t falling apart—but I felt brittle. Tired in a way sleep hadn’t touched. My thoughts kept circling the same disappointments, like teeth worrying a bone.

Solomon sat on the concrete ledge at the edge of the garden, silver-streaked hair tied back, linen shirt catching the breeze. 

“Up here,” he said, tapping the stone beside him. “The noise loses its teeth.”

I sat. Let my shoulders drop a fraction.

“A lot packed into today,” he said after a moment. “Proverbs 17:19–28.” He slid his weathered leather notebook between us. The pages were dense—arrows, boxes, symbols, quick sketches. “It can sound scattered if you skim it. Conflict. Words. Foolishness. Joy. Silence.”

He drew a loose circle with his finger. “But I was writing about one thing: the inner life. The place where strength is either generated or quietly drained.”

He gave me the overview first—how loving conflict feeds pride, how reckless words spend energy you don’t have, how restraint can look like wisdom even when you don’t feel wise, how foolishness weighs not just on the fool but on everyone near them. “I wasn’t observing from a distance,” he said evenly. “I wrote this after living it.”

A woman edged near the planters, stretching her knee, wincing as she pulled out an earbud. Solomon noticed her immediately. He always does. “You can’t outrun injury forever,” he said quietly, not to her, not exactly to me—just true. She nodded, caught her breath, and headed toward the stairs. When she left, the empty space she’d occupied felt like part of the lesson.

Solomon turned the notebook toward me. Two bottles were sketched on the page. One labeled Cheerful Heart. The other, Spirit. A crack ran through the second.

“This,” he said, tapping the cracked bottle, “is where everything leaks.”

Then he quoted it slowly, letting the afternoon stretch around the words:
“Verse 22—A cheerful heart is good medicine, but a broken spirit saps a person’s strength.”

I frowned. “That sounds… simplistic. Like I’m supposed to just be happier and everything fixes itself.”

He laughed—soft, unoffended. “If that’s what I meant, I’d deserve your skepticism.” He leaned back, then forward again, eyes steady. “Joy isn’t decoration. It’s load-bearing.”

I crossed my arms. “Explain.”

He tapped the notebook once, twice. “Emotionally, joy keeps pain from becoming poison. Pain is unavoidable—you don’t get a vote there. But joy decides whether pain stays information or turns into identity.” 

He made a small box in the air with his hands. “When joy lives inside you, grief doesn’t get the keys to the whole house. You can feel sorrow without drowning in it. Hurt without becoming hard. That’s healing—space to feel without being consumed.”

I felt that land. Hard.

“A broken spirit,” he continued, “replays the wound until it deepens. Joy interrupts the loop.”

He flipped the page and sketched a small flame.

“Spiritually, joy is alignment. Not denial—alignment. When your inner life turns toward God, even imperfectly, your spirit stands upright again. Joy says, This story is bigger than this moment. That trust restores strength.”

His voice dropped. “I lost joy when I chased control instead of the Lord. My spirit bent under the weight. When joy returned, so did clarity. Direction. Hope.”

The city breeze shifted. Somewhere below, a single church bell rang—unannounced, unrepeatable—and then silence again.

“And physically,” Solomon said, resting both palms on the notebook, “joy tells the body it’s safe enough to heal.” He nodded toward his chest. “Fear and despair keep the body braced. Muscles tighten. Sleep shortens. Immunity weakens. But joy loosens the grip. It slows the breathing. It moves you from survival into repair.” A faint smile. “That’s why I called it medicine. Not magic. Medicine.”

I exhaled without realizing I’d been holding it.

“So guarding your inner life matters,” I said.

“It matters more than most people think,” he replied. “That’s why I talk about restraint in this passage. About words. About unnecessary fights. About silence. Every one of those either protects joy—or punctures it.”

“How do I get this kind of joy?” I asked.

“This kind of joy comes only through the Holy Spirit,” he replied.  “If we turn to Him and trust Him with our pain and struggles, something mysterious happens... he fills our heart with genuine, unexplainable joy.”

“Nehemiah was a leader who helped people rebuild when everything felt broken—both a city and the spirits of the people living in it. Here’s what he had to say: ‘Don’t be dejected and sad, for the joy of the LORD is your strength!’” (Nehemiah 8:10)

He closed the notebook and slid it back. “You’ve been waiting for circumstances to change,” he said gently. “But true joy grows right in the middle of your circumstances.”

As I stood to leave, the city looked the same. My problems were still there. But something inside me felt steadier—less brittle. I realized I’d been neglecting the medicine I already carried.


What? This passage teaches that joy and inner restraint protect our strength, while a broken spirit quietly drains it.

So What? In a pressure-filled world, guarding your inner life isn’t optional—it directly affects emotional resilience, spiritual clarity, and physical well-being.

Now What? Choose one way today to protect your inner life—limit negative input, speak fewer words, or pause to name one thing you’re grateful for—and do it on purpose.

Sunday, February 22, 2026

Day 53 — Injustice in the Public Square | Proverbs 17:10–18

Key Verse: “Acquitting the guilty and condemning the innocent—both are detestable to the LORD.” (v.15)

 Big Idea: Wisdom refuses to confuse justice for convenience—especially when power, policy, and public opinion are involved. 

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

The beach had traded rain for brightness. Not the soft kind—this was sharp, revealing light, the kind that shows every footprint before the tide gets ideas. The ocean kept its steady rhythm, indifferent to headlines. A breeze carried the scent of salt and sunscreen.

Solomon waited near a line of weathered posts, shoes off, linen shirt moving with the wind. Silver-streaked hair tied back. He tapped the edge of his leather notebook against his palm, slow and measured.

“No more rainy days.,” he said, scanning the horizon. “Clear weather exposes things.”

We walked closer to the water. The sand was cool underfoot. He opened the notebook. Today’s page wasn’t sketches or symbols—it was columns. Labels. Systems. Courts. Gates. Councils.

“In this passage,” he began, “I talk about how people respond to correction, how money speaks, how promises are made too quickly.” He tapped the page. “But all of it lives inside public life. Not just homes—institutions.”

I frowned. “Proverbs always felt… personal.”

“It is,” he said. “And it’s public. Wisdom doesn’t clock out when you enter a courtroom, write policy, or cast a vote.”

He spoke through the full passage, Proverbs 17:10-18—not reading, remembering. Rebuke that reshapes the wise. Fools untouched by punishment. Trouble stirred intentionally. Bribes smoothing outcomes. Pledges made without foresight. Then he stopped.

The world slowed—the waves holding their breath, gulls hovering like punctuation marks in the sky.

Then he said it plainly: “Acquitting the guilty and condemning the innocent—both are detestable to the LORD.”

The words felt bigger here, carried by open air. “That sounds like a headline,” I said.

“It should,” Solomon replied. “I wrote it for gates and councils. For judges, legislators, and leaders. For anyone entrusted with the power to decide who bears the cost when systems move forward.”

Out beyond the break, a surfer paddled hard, dropped in to a clean waist-high wave, and rose to his feet. Solomon watched him ride the face of it, steady and balanced.

“Public injustice rarely begins with villains,” he said. “It begins with rationalizations.”

“Like what?” I asked.

“Calling injustice ‘Efficiency. Stability. Party loyalty. The greater good.’” His smile thinned. “Words that make injustice feel responsible.”

I thought of trials streamed online, late-night votes rushed through chambers, press conferences that explained away harm. “So what’s wisdom supposed to do—protest everything?”

“Wisdom starts by refusing to lie,” Solomon said. “In the public square, truth is usually the first casualty. A wise person guards it.”

He slid the notebook forward and sketched a scale. One side he labeled Facts. The other, Narrative.

“When spin outweighs reality,” he said, “verdicts tilt. Policy bends. Innocence becomes expendable.”

He didn’t look at the page. He looked at me.

“Before this ever reaches a courtroom,” he said, “it shows up in smaller rooms.”

I waited.

“When you repeat a story because it flatters your side. When you assume motives without evidence. When you stay quiet because the truth would make things awkward.”

He closed the notebook. “That’s how people practice for bigger injustices.”

“But systems are messy,” I pushed back. “Compromise is how anything gets done.”

“Compromise is not the same as inversion,” he said, leaning in. “I’m not condemning negotiation. I’m condemning calling wrong right because it’s useful.” He paused. “When institutions punish truth-tellers to protect reputations, they don’t just silence individuals—they train an entire culture.”

He knelt and drew two paths in the sand. One straight. One slowly bending toward shadow.

“Public injustice,” he said, “is personal injustice scaled up.”

A lifeguard’s whistle cut through the air—sharp, corrective. Solomon smiled faintly. “Truth-telling isn’t hatred. It’s care with a spine.”

I felt the tension rise. “But what about safety? Careers get ruined. People get crushed.”

His voice softened. He tapped the notebook—authority shaped by regret. “I know. I watched courts sell justice. At times, I benefited from it. And I paid for it later.” He looked out at the water. “Wisdom doesn’t promise protection from consequences. It promises you won’t lose your soul trying to avoid them.”

The tide crept higher, erasing his lines. He stood.

“In this passage,” he said, “I warn about bribes because they don’t just change outcomes—they reshape hearts. About pledges because public promises made without wisdom become traps. About correction because leaders who can’t receive it eventually persecute those who offer it.”

“So how should a wise person deal with injustice out there?” I asked, gesturing toward the city beyond the beach.

“Three things,” he said, counting on his fingers. “First: tell the truth plainly—facts over spin. Second: refuse shortcuts that punish the innocent, even when it may appear to hurt ‘your side’. Third: stay human. Don’t become what you oppose.”

He closed the notebook. The sun was higher now. The beach louder. Life resumed at full speed.

I watched the water swallow our footprints. Lines don’t last here. You have to redraw them every day.


What? God calls it detestable when power flips justice—excusing guilt or punishing innocence—whether in courts, governments, or institutions.

So What? Because societies are shaped by what they reward and punish; when truth-tellers are condemned, everyone learns to lie quietly.

Now What? Choose one public issue you engage with—news, work, or community—and commit to facts over spin this week, even if it costs you comfort.

Saturday, February 21, 2026

Day 52 — Under the Heat | Proverbs 17:1–9

Key Verse: “Fire tests the purity of silver and gold, but the Lord tests the heart.” (v.3, NLT)

Big Idea: Pressure doesn’t create who we are—it simply reveals who we’ve become. 

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

The café windows were propped open today, sunlight spilling across the concrete floor like a slow-moving tide. The late-morning crowd hummed—cups clinking, a milk steamer hissing, a low playlist of acoustic guitar drifting overhead. No rain. No gloom. Just warmth and motion.

I arrived lighter than I had been lately, but still carrying questions. Pressure had been stacking up—work deadlines, strained conversations, a sense that something in me was being squeezed. I slid into my usual seat and rubbed my hands together, not from cold, but nerves.

Solomon was already there.

Silver streaks cut through his dark hair, tied back loosely. Linen shirt, sleeves rolled. Handmade boots scuffed and honest. His weathered leather notebook sat between us, closed for now.

“Ethan,” he said, warm smile. “Today is a good day to talk about heat.”

I raised an eyebrow. “That sounds ominous.”

He chuckled softly, tapping the table once with his knuckle. “In Proverbs seventeen, I bring up a cluster of things—peace in a simple house, restraint with words, patience with flaws, loyalty in friendship. It’s a chapter about what holds when life presses in.” 

He paused. “And then I say this.” He leaned in, voice lowering as the café noise seemed to blur. “Fire tests the purity of silver and gold, but the Lord tests the heart.”

I exhaled. “So… God stress-tests people?”

“God doesn’t test people to trap them—He tests them to reveal what’s in them. Not to Him (He already knows), but to ourselves.”

He slid the notebook forward and opened it. Inside were sketches—crude furnaces, arrows, a heart drawn beside a lump of ore. He traced one diagram with his finger. “Silver doesn’t start shiny. It comes buried in rock. To purify it, you apply heat until it melts. The impurities—called ‘dross’—rise to the surface. The refiner scrapes them away. Then more heat. More scraping. Repeat. Over and over.”

“How do they know when it’s done?” I asked.

Solomon smiled. “When the refiner can see his reflection in the metal.”

That landed harder than I expected.

A barista nearby was quietly losing it—jaw tight, movements sharp—as a customer complained about foam density like it was a moral failure. 

“Heat doesn’t make that man impatient,” Solomon said. “It shows the impatience already there.”

I shifted in my chair. “That feels unfair. Sometimes pressure just… pushes you past your limits.”

He nodded. “I used to tell myself that too.” His voice carried the weight of memory. “When I was younger, I had everything—resources, power, opportunity. And I thought my heart was solid. Then comfort revealed my pride. Desire revealed my lack of restraint. Pressure came later, and it exposed what ease had been hiding.”

“Many years after me, a prophet named Malachi picked up this same image—' For he will be like a refiner’s fire… He will sit like a refiner of silver, burning away the dross. He will purify…’ He paused for a second, “Picture the Lord like a refiner—patient, attentive—watching the metal until it’s pure. He doesn’t walk away from the fire.” (Malachi 3:2-3)

“Another old Psalm says it plainly—'For you have tested us, O God; you have purified us like silver.’ This tells us that we’re tested the way silver is purified. Not crushed. Refined.” (Psalm 66:10)

Solomon was quiet for a moment, eyes resting on the cup between his hands. Then he leaned in—close enough that the noise of the room seemed to soften.

“Let me tell you why the Lord bothers,” he said. “Because He sees worth where you see interruption. You call it inconvenience; He calls it something precious that shouldn’t be left unfinished.”

He tapped the table again, slow and deliberate.

“He isn’t chasing your comfort. He’s guarding your future. Feelings come and go, but the kind of person you’re becoming—that lasts. So He works there, even when it costs you ease.”

His voice lowered. “And He never sends you into the fire and walks away. Refiners don’t do that. They stay close. They watch. They know when enough is enough. Love doesn’t abandon—it remains.”

He sat back, exhaling softly. “And hear this: the Lord does not waste your pain. If your struggles can produce life, clarity, strength—He will make it so as we trust in Him. He refuses to let loss have the final word.”

Solomon met my eyes, steady and kind.

“Refining isn’t cruelty,” he said. “It’s commitment. It isn’t harshness—it’s love that takes you seriously.” He closed the notebook slowly. “I learned the hard way: character isn’t proven in calm seasons. It’s revealed in refining ones.”

I frowned. “So what—every hard thing is God doing this to us?”

“No,” he said quickly, kindly. “Life has heat on its own. Consequences. Other people’s choices. A broken world. But the Lord uses that heat—without wasting it. The question isn’t why is this happening? It’s what is this showing me?”

I stared into my coffee. Reflections wobbled on the surface. “What if I don’t like what it shows?”

Solomon’s gaze softened. “Much of the time you won’t. But that’s the point. When the impurities in your heart come to the surface, the Lord’s purpose is to scrape them off.”

“That’s… uncomfortable,” I muttered.

He laughed under his breath. “Yes. Refining usually is.”

We sat in silence for a moment. The world sped back up—the grinder roared, chairs scraped, someone laughed too loudly. But inside, something slowed.

Solomon leaned back. “Let me leave you with this. The Lord doesn’t apply heat to watch you fail. He applies it because He sees value in you worth refining. And He stays close enough to know when the process is complete.”

I swallowed. “And if I resist it?”

He smiled. “Then the heat tends to last longer.”

When we stood to leave, the café felt different. Brighter. Less threatening. As if the pressure I’d been dreading wasn’t an enemy—but an invitation.

I stepped outside into the sun, wondering what in me was rising to the surface… and what might finally be scraped away.


What? Pressure reveals the true condition of the heart, just as fire reveals the purity of silver and gold.

So What? Life’s stress doesn’t invent our flaws or strengths—it exposes them, giving us a chance to grow wiser and cleaner on the inside.

Now What? The next time pressure hits today, pause and ask: What is this revealing in me—and what needs to be refined?

Friday, February 20, 2026

Day 51 — The Narrow Bridge of Self-Control | Proverbs 16:22–33

Key Verse: “Better to be patient than powerful; better to have self-control than to conquer a city.” (v.32, NLT)

 Big Idea: Real strength isn’t about overpowering people or situations—it’s about mastering yourself, especially in moments charged with emotion. 

🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here

The wind off the river cut through my jacket as I stepped onto the pedestrian bridge. Traffic hummed somewhere behind me, but out here the sound softened—water rushing below, gulls calling, metal cables creaking faintly with each step. Late afternoon light slid across the surface of the river, broken and restless.

Solomon was already there, leaning against the railing, hands folded over his weathered leather notebook. He looked like he’d been waiting awhile. Or maybe he always looked that way—unhurried, fully present.

“You picked a good day to feel conflicted,” he said without turning around.

I exhaled. “Is it that obvious?”

He smiled and finally faced me. “You’re gripping your thoughts the way people grip railings when they’re afraid of falling.”

Before I could respond, Sandra joined us, hair tied back in a tight pony tail. She looked steadier than the last time I’d seen her. Not fixed—but grounded.

Solomon noticed instantly. His eyebrows lifted just a touch. “Something’s different.”

She nodded. “I talked to my brother.”

The river surged below us, fast and brown from last night’s rain.

“I didn’t confront him,” she said. “Not the way I usually do. I stopped trying to manage the outcome. I asked questions. I listened longer than was comfortable. I told him I was scared, not angry.”

She swallowed. “He listened. Really listened. He didn’t bolt. He didn’t lash out. He admitted he’s overwhelmed. We talked about changes—small ones—but real. He agreed to make some changes. A real breakthrough!”

Solomon’s smile deepened, but he didn’t rush to speak. He let the moment breathe.

“That,” he said gently, “is strength most people never learn.”

He opened his notebook and held it between us so we could see. “In this passage, I talk about how wisdom plays out under pressure—how insight refreshes the soul, how words can heal, how anger quietly sabotages lives.”

He tapped the page. “I wasn’t writing theory. I was writing scars.”

The wind picked up. Below us, the river pushed hard against the bridge pylons, splitting and reforming on the other side.

Solomon drew two circles. “Most people experience life like this. Something happens.” He tapped the first circle. “A trigger. A look. A tone. A fear.”

Then the second. “A response.”

He didn’t connect them at first.

“Most people live like these two circles are touching,” he said. “Trigger—reaction. No space. No pause.”

I nodded. That was me. Emails sent too fast. Words sharpened by pride. Regrets that showed up later like unpaid bills.

Then Solomon drew a narrow bridge between the circles.

“This,” he said, tapping it, “is where wisdom lives.”

He gestured to the bridge beneath our feet. “Look around. The water moves whether you want it to or not. You don’t stop the current. But you don’t have to jump into it either.”

Sandra leaned on the railing, watching the river. “That’s what it felt like,” she said. “Like everything in me wanted to rush in and take control.”

“Exactly,” Solomon replied. “Patience stretches time right here.” He tapped the bridge. “Self-control stands guard. It keeps your first impulse from grabbing the wheel.”

I frowned. “But it feels weak. Like you’re letting things slide.”

Solomon turned to me, his voice calm but firm. “Conquering a city looks impressive. Mastering yourself looks invisible. But one lasts longer.”

He paused, eyes distant for a moment. “I conquered cities and still lost myself. I wish I’d known earlier that strength without restraint eventually turns on its owner.”

A couple holding hands passed us, earbuds in, never looking up. A moment later, they were gone, the space they’d occupied already forgotten.

“Whoever controls this space,” Solomon said, tapping the bridge again, “controls the outcome. Skip it, and your triggers decide for you. Use it, and you do.”

Sandra exhaled slowly. “That pause changed everything.”

“Yes,” Solomon said. “Because wisdom understands people, not just problems.”

The sun dipped lower, the light warming, the shadows lengthening across the water.

Solomon closed his notebook. “Here’s what I want you to carry with you today,” he said. “Patience isn’t weakness. It’s delayed strength. Self-control isn’t silence—it’s direction. And the hardest battles you’ll ever fight won’t be against other people. They’ll be right here.”

He tapped his chest lightly.

Sandra said goodbye first, her footsteps fading down the bridge. I noticed the absence she left behind—like a conversation that had finished well.

I stayed a moment longer, hands resting on the railing, watching the river move beneath me.

Maybe strength wasn’t about stopping the current.

Maybe it was about choosing how—and when—you crossed.


What? True wisdom shows up as patience and self-control, creating space between impulse and response.

So What? Most damage in life doesn’t come from lack of power, but from unguarded reactions that cost more than we expect.

Now What? The next time you feel triggered, pause long enough to name what you’re feeling before you respond—build the bridge, and cross it on purpose.

Day 57 — The Price Tag on Your Soul | Proverbs 19:1–10

Key Verse: “Better to be poor and honest than to be dishonest and a fool.” (v.1)   Big Idea: Wealth gained without integrity always cost...