Wisdom for the Heart

Humpty Dumpty Wasn't Pushed

26 min · 20. Mai 2026
Episode Humpty Dumpty Wasn't Pushed Cover

Beschreibung

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] A Swedish study once claimed researchers had found a “sin gene” that could predict cheating. It sounds like science, but it also sounds like permission. We take that impulse head-on and ask the question we all dodge: when I fall, who am I blaming and why does it feel so natural to point anywhere but the mirror? We camp in James 1:13-18 and follow James’s blunt logic about temptation, sin, and spiritual maturity. God is not the author of your temptation, and the devil is not your excuse. The real battleground is desire. James says each of us is tempted in a personal way, carried away and enticed by what already pulls on our hearts. We walk through his “bait and hook” imagery, the moment desire turns into disobedience, and why sin doesn’t just “happen” to us. We also tackle the big theological question in the text: if God cannot be tempted, how was Jesus tempted? That leads to a practical takeaway you can use today: Jesus resists with Scripture, and so can we. Then we zoom out for hope. Temptation thrives on deception, but clarity changes everything. James reminds us that every good and perfect gift comes from the Father of lights, and he doesn’t shift, darken, or manipulate. When we trust God’s goodness and remember his grace, purity stops being a vague goal and becomes a daily response to who we belong to. If this helped you name your patterns and see the hook behind the bait, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a quick review. What’s the most common excuse you hear people use for sin? Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

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471 Folgen

Episode See Jonah Swim (Jonah 1:17—2:9) Cover

See Jonah Swim (Jonah 1:17—2:9)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] Running from God rarely feels dramatic. It feels like momentum: one step, then another, and suddenly you realize everything is going down. Jonah’s story makes that slide visible, from Joppa to the ship to the sea, until the only thing left is desperation and a prayer he didn’t want to pray. We talk candidly about why Jonah and the whale is one of the most questioned passages in the Bible and why those questions matter. Along the way we share some of the blunt, brilliant questions kids ask about God, prayer, and truth, plus a powerful testimony from someone whose doubt over Jonah became the turning point that led her to trust Scripture and embrace the gospel. We also zoom out to the central claim of the text: “the Lord appointed” a fish, and God’s authority reaches into creation itself. If God can command what he made, then the real issue isn’t whether a fish could do it, but whether we believe God can. Then we slow down inside Jonah’s prayer and map what real repentance looks like when you feel trapped and out of options: admission of sin, restoration toward God’s authority, and appreciation that shows up even before any rescue is promised. The episode ends with a simple but profound comfort: no matter how long you stay silent, God is ready to listen when you’re ready to talk. If this helped you, subscribe, share it with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Jonah’s “down” story sounds most like your own right now? Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

8. Juni 202626 min
Episode See Jonah Sleep (Jonah 1:4-16) Cover

See Jonah Sleep (Jonah 1:4-16)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] You can say the right words about God and still be running from Him. That’s the uncomfortable tension we sit with as Jonah calmly claims he “fears the Lord” while doing everything possible to avoid the assignment of mercy God gave him. We unpack how good theology can turn into polished hypocrisy, and why a life of disobedience always leaks out eventually, even when we try to keep it hidden. A sudden storm turns Jonah’s private rebellion into a public crisis. While veteran sailors panic, pray, and toss cargo to survive, Jonah sleeps in the hold with a “do not disturb” posture toward both people and God. The captain’s blunt command, “Get up and call on your God,” becomes a haunting moment for anyone who has ever been corrected by a nonbeliever. Then the lot falls on Jonah, the questions fly, and the narrative forces the issue of identity: what do you do when your claimed calling and your lived choices no longer match? The biggest surprise isn’t Jonah’s confession, it’s the sailors’ response. They fight to save his life, pray to Yahweh, and after the sea goes calm, they worship with sacrifice and vows. We close with two anchor truths for Christian discipleship and Bible study readers: God can still work through a failing servant, and God doesn’t discard the runaway He intends to restore. If this helped you think more honestly about obedience, repentance, and God’s relentless grace, subscribe, share this with a friend, and leave a review. What part of Jonah’s “do not disturb” attitude do you recognize in yourself? Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

5. Juni 202626 min
Episode See Jonah Run (Jonah 1:2-3) Cover

See Jonah Run (Jonah 1:2-3)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] God tells Jonah to get up and go preach to Nineveh, and Jonah does what many of us do when obedience feels impossible: he runs. The command is simple and unmistakable, but it’s also unsettling, uncomfortable, and risky. That tension launches a deeper look at God’s will and why clarity doesn’t always produce compliance. We dig into what Nineveh really was: the capital of Assyria, infamous for violence, cruelty, and spiritual darkness. When you understand the historical reputation of Nineveh, Jonah’s resistance stops looking like a childish tantrum and starts looking like raw dread and moral outrage. God doesn’t soften the assignment or pretend it will be safe. He names the wickedness and still says, go speak. Then we follow Jonah down to the docks and out toward Tarshish, the farthest opposite direction he can find, and we draw out three lessons that hit home today: disobedience always points you the wrong way, it costs more than you planned, and the “perfect timing” that makes sin feel easy can be part of the trap. We also connect Jonah’s three imperatives to the many imperatives of Christian life like following Christ, speaking truth, giving generously, and staying alert. If you’ve ever tried to outrun a hard calling, this will feel uncomfortably familiar. Subscribe, share this with a friend who needs a nudge toward obedience, and leave a review with the hardest “go” you’ve ever been asked to say yes to. Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

4. Juni 202626 min
Episode More than a Fish Story (Jonah 1:1) Cover

More than a Fish Story (Jonah 1:1)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] Jonah gets filed away as a children’s story so easily that we forget how sharp it really is. We dig into the opening of Jonah and notice what the text does not bother to tell us: no origin story, no warm introduction, no details about how the message arrived. The book moves in fast motion, and that pace forces a question most of us would rather avoid. What happens when God’s word interrupts your plans and refuses to slow down for your comfort? We zoom out to show why Jonah is far more than “Jonah and the whale.” Inside fewer than 50 verses you find a storm, pagan sailors turning to God, a miraculous rescue, worship from the depths, and the repentance of a brutal nation. Jonah also becomes a surprising window into biblical theology: God’s mercy reaching Gentiles, God’s sovereignty over creation, and a prophetic signpost that ultimately connects to the resurrection of Jesus. Then we take on the criticism head-on, walking through five common objections people raise against Jonah’s authenticity, from miracles to Nineveh’s size to vocabulary debates. We ground Jonah in history through 2 Kings, highlight why the book begins with “And,” and unpack the meaning behind Jonah’s name as a “dove” sent with truth that leads to peace. We close with three practical takeaways for everyday faith: be alert, be encouraged, and be careful, because past obedience does not guarantee future obedience. Subscribe for more, share this with a friend who thinks Jonah is just a fish story, and leave a review with your biggest question after listening. Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

3. Juni 202626 min
Episode The Cradle is the Grave (Revelation 18:1-24) Cover

The Cradle is the Grave (Revelation 18:1-24)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] Babylon keeps rising in the human imagination for one reason: it promises unity, power, and prosperity without surrender to God. We follow that thread from the Tigris-Euphrates River Valley, where Genesis places the world’s earliest rebellion, through the Tower of Babel and God’s judgment that shattered one language into many. Along the way, we talk about why the “cradle of civilization” can also become a graveyard when pride hardens into defiance. We also zoom in on the real city of Babylon in modern-day Iraq. From Nebuchadnezzar’s engineered wonder and the Ishtar Gate to Daniel’s prophecies and Babylon’s historic collapse, the pattern is clear: empires love the idea of Babylon. Then the story jumps forward to leaders who tried to reboot it Alexander the Great, Napoleon, and Saddam Hussein, whose New Babylon dreams were entangled with money, oil, and a hunger for global influence. From there we land in Revelation 18 and the fall of Babylon the Great. We wrestle with the question of literal versus symbolic, walk through the warning to God’s people to separate from her sins, and face the haunting picture of global commerce grieving a city’s destruction in a single hour. If you care about biblical prophecy, end times, Armageddon, and the pull of a one-world government and one-world religion, you’ll find a lot to think about here. Subscribe, share the episode with a friend, and leave a review, then tell us: what modern “Babylon” tempts people the most today? Learn more: https://www.wisdomonline.org/ [https://www.wisdomonline.org/] Support the show [https://app.easytithe.com/App/Form/d39a9be4-01ce-4f82-a3ae-8b860c3ab89e]

2. Juni 202626 min