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Michelle DeRusha

Every Day Faith. Faith Every Day.

Book of James

Hear It on Sunday, Use It on Monday: Wisdom from Above

March 31, 2014 By Michelle

We are enjoying a bit of Lenten quiet on Mondays here until Easter. I’m posting a verse, a devotion and a prayer. Peace and grace, friends…

But the wisdom from above is first of all pure. It is also peace-loving, gentle at all times and willing to yield to others. It is full of mercy and good deeds. It shows no favoritism and is always sincere. And those who are peacemakers will plant seeds of peace and reap a harvest of righteousness. (James 3:17-18)

When we think of the typical attributes of wisdom, we might consider words like knowledgeable, thoughtful, contemplative, experienced, discerning. But James’ definition goes so much further, introducing descriptors we might never have associated with wisdom: gentleness, peace-loving, merciful, sincere, fair, yielding to others and a doer of good deeds.

The difference between James’ definition and ours is that James describes “wisdom from above” – a pure God-centered and Kingdom-centered wisdom, rather than a sullied earthly- or self-centered wisdom.

A person blessed with wisdom from above – a wisdom that comes from God – is not concerned with self-advancement or even self-preservation. A person blessed with wisdom from above is not focused on self but on the other. He plants seeds of peace. She plants seeds of mercy, kindness and goodwill. God’s kind of wisdom is humble, unassuming and based entirely on love for the other.

So here’s the most beautiful part about these verses: each and every one of us is blessed with wisdom from above. This isn’t a special gift given only to certain, elite believers; this kind of wisdom, God’s kind of wisdom, is offered freely to each of us.

We have the choice: we can live by wisdom from above – generously, selflessly, lovingly, gently – or not. We can choose the freedom of living a life guided by God-inspired wisdom or the imprisonment that comes with a wisdom created by our own flawed and fallible selves. Which do you choose today?

Lord, so often I am swayed by the wisdom of world. As a result, I succumb to selfishness, envy, bitterness and deceit. Breathe a renewed understanding of Your wisdom into me today, Lord, so that I may live peacefully, mercifully, gently, humbly, sincerely and fairly. Amen.  

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Welcome to the Hear It on Sunday, Use It on Monday community, a place where we share what we are hearing from God and his Word each week. If you’re here for the first time, click here for more information.

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Thank you — I am so grateful that you are here!

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Filed Under: Lent, Wisdom Tagged With: Book of James, Hear It on Sunday Use It on Monday, Lent

A Divided Loyalty and the Stinging Truth

January 29, 2014 By Michelle

Two weeks ago I watched as the endorsements deadline for my first book came and went. I watched the deadline pass, knowing seven authors hadn’t responded.

Endorsements are the pithy accolades that appear in the opening pages and on the front and back covers of a book. Two months ago I learned from my publisher that it’s the author’s responsibility to ask other writers if they might be willing to take a look at the book and write an endorsement. The emails I dutifully typed to more than a dozen authors were among the most awkward I have ever written, because when it comes right down to it, asking for an endorsement for your book is asking for praise, and asking for praise places you in a position of vulnerability and weakness. Not my favorite place.

I waited. And I cried tears of relief and joy as I read some of the early endorsements that came in. I felt a little like Sally Field at the Oscars. People like my book, they like it, they really like it!

Until, that is, the endorsements stopped coming, and the deadline passed.

…I’m over at Nacole’s place, Six in the Sticks, guest posting for her series on Christian writing and blogging. Join me over there? 

Filed Under: envy, publishing, writing, writing and faith Tagged With: Book of James, Christian writing, the struggle with envy, writing

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For as long as I can remember, I’ve been a Triple Type A, “make it happen” (my dad’s favorite mantra) striver and achiever (I’m a 3 on the Enneagram, which tells you everything you need to know), but these days my striving looks more like sitting in silence on a park bench, my dog at my feet, as I slowly learn to let go of the false selves that have formed my identity for decades and lean toward uncovering who God created me to be.

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