Wisdom for the Heart

The Truth About Trouble

25 min · 19. maj 2026
episode The Truth About Trouble cover

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Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] Trouble doesn’t knock politely, and James doesn’t pretend it will. We walk through James 1:2-12 with the original setting in mind: believers scattered by persecution, living with real fear, and asking the question every generation still asks, “What do I do with this?” James answers with a command that sounds outrageous at first, to consider trials with joy, not because pain is pleasant but because God is doing purposeful work through pressure. We unpack three hard truths that make the passage feel honest: trials are unavoidable, trials are varied, and trials are often unexpected. From health and finances to relationships and reputation, hardship can arrive like an ambush. James pushes us away from shallow “no problems if you have faith” thinking and toward a grounded biblical perspective on suffering. The key shift is learning to evaluate trouble differently, like an accountant totaling the real value of what’s happening beneath the surface. Then we follow James to the product: tested faith produces endurance, and endurance grows spiritual maturity and completeness, what James calls undivided affection. We also slow down on his practical instruction for the middle of a storm: ask God for wisdom. Not more facts, but the ability to apply truth well, choose rightly, and stay steady. Finally, we face his warning about double-mindedness, gain perspective on poverty and wealth, and end with the hope of perseverance and the crown of life. If you’re walking through a hard season, listen, share this with someone who needs it, and subscribe and leave a review with your biggest takeaway: what helps you choose faith when you cannot choose the trial? 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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469 episoder

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]

I går26 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
episode A Tale of Two Cities Part 2 (Revelation 17:1-7; 16-17) cover

A Tale of Two Cities Part 2 (Revelation 17:1-7; 16-17)

Share a comment [https://www.buzzsprout.com/2545810/fan_mail/new] History can feel like a pile of unrelated headlines, but Revelation frames it as a storyline with a destination. We follow the thread from Babel’s first push for a unified world system to Revelation 17’s shocking picture of “Mystery Babylon,” a global religious power that intoxicates nations, partners with kings, and sells spiritual confusion as unity. Along the way, we connect Daniel’s panorama of empires to the idea of one last human-ruled kingdom before Christ’s reign, so the prophetic pieces fit together instead of floating as disconnected symbols. We also slow down and read Revelation the way John presents it: like a rewind that pauses the action to show the hidden mechanics behind the end times. Why does Babylon get so much attention, even more than the new heaven? We talk about what Babylon represents, why false worship is described as spiritual adultery, and how “religion without the gospel” could surge if the church’s salt and light influence is removed. That leads straight into the uncomfortable topic of ecumenism and how unity can be manufactured by draining doctrine until almost anything counts as faith. Then we outline the major traits of religious Babylon in Revelation 17: worldwide influence, political partnership with the beast, stunning wealth, deep perversion, open hostility toward God’s people, and a brutal downfall when the Antichrist turns on the very system that helped him rise. We close with the anchor under all of it: God’s purpose is fulfilled, and the conflict ends with Babylon falling and Christ taking his rightful throne. If this helped you see Revelation 17 with clearer eyes, subscribe for more, share it with a friend who’s curious about Bible prophecy, and leave a review so more listeners can find the show. What part of the Babylon storyline feels most relevant 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]

1. juni 202627 min