DiscoverWisdom for the Heart
Wisdom for the Heart
Claim Ownership

Wisdom for the Heart

Author: Stephen Davey

Subscribed: 251Played: 17,419
Share

Description

Stephen Davey will help you learn to know what the Bible says, understand what it means, and apply it to your life as he teaches verse-by-verse through books of the Bible. Stephen is the president of Wisdom International, which provides radio broadcasts, digital content, and print resources designed to make disciples of all nations and edify followers of Jesus Christ.

314 Episodes
Reverse
Send us a text What we celebrate reveals who we are. We open 1 Corinthians 13:6 and trace a straight line from our laughter, screens, and conversations to the loves that shape our lives. The theme is stark and liberating: love refuses to rejoice in unrighteousness and learns to rejoice with the truth. That clarity confronts how entertainment can dull our sense of holiness, how cultural approval can masquerade as compassion, and how gossip can turn our words into quiet weapons. It also offers ...
Keeping Erasers Handy

Keeping Erasers Handy

2025-10-3028:33

Send us a text What if the secret to durable relationships isn’t better conflict tactics but a different ledger? We open with the daring claim of 1 Corinthians 13: agape love “does not take into account a wrong suffered.” From there, we trace how scorekeeping slowly hollows out marriages, friendships, teams, and churches—and why the gospel gives us a better way. Not a sentimental shortcut, but a sturdier practice: refusing to record offenses, choosing willful forgetfulness, and building a lif...
Send us a text A $20 coin survived thefts, fires, a king’s collection, and a courtroom drama to fetch $7.6 million—yet it can’t buy a single act of love. We take that glittering legend and hold it up to a rarer treasure: agape that refuses rudeness, self‑seeking, and quick anger. Rather than treating love like a display piece, we walk through 1 Corinthians 13 as a field guide to action—15 verbs that pull love out of the safe and into circulation, where it belongs. We break the journey into t...
Send us a text What if the biggest threat to your relationships isn’t what you lack, but what you quietly protect—envy, self-promotion, and a puffed-up certainty that can’t be taught? We open 1 Corinthians 13 and treat love as verbs—habits that confront our reflex to compete, parade, and look down from a tower of pride. The result is a bracing, practical journey through three refusals that free us to love well: no envy, no bragging, no arrogance. We start where Paul starts: love without comp...
Send us a text What if the truest test of love isn’t how we feel but how long our fuse is—and how near we’re willing to move toward hard people? We dive into 1 Corinthians 13 and sit with two verbs that refuse to be sentimental: love is patient and love is kind. Not patience with things that break, but patience with people who do; not a vague warmth at a distance, but a generosity that crosses the hallway, answers the need, and carries enough “coals” to relight a life. We unpack the language...
Send us a text What if the entire logic of the gospel hinges on one daring claim: God made every nation from one man? We take you to Athens with Paul and walk through Acts 17 to show how he introduces the “unknown God” by starting at the beginning—creation, purpose, and the reality of a literal Adam. Not as a symbol or a myth, but as the historical foundation for why sin is universal and why the grace of the last Adam, Jesus Christ, is necessary and sufficient. Together, we explore why “one ...
Send us a text Start with a single word that dares to redefine everything: love. Not the kind that fades when the fireworks end, but agape—the steady, others-first commitment that turns a vice-soaked city into a living testimony of grace. We walk through Corinth’s streets, hear Paul’s urgent appeal in 1 Corinthians 13, and ask what happens when a church chooses to practice love daily rather than chase spiritual hype or cultural applause. We open the hood on four different “loves” and why onl...
Send us a text What if the part we’re most afraid to say is the part people most need to hear? We walk through Paul’s address at the Areopagus to show why the gospel isn’t just comfort—it's also a clear warning rooted in God’s holiness, justice, and love. Starting where Paul starts, we introduce God as Creator and sovereign over nations, then move to the urgent call to repent because “He has fixed a day” to judge the world in righteousness through the risen Christ. Along the way, we explore w...
Send us a text Start with the biggest question on your mind late at night: not how life works, but why you have life at all. From the Areopagus in Athens to our own cultural crosswinds, we follow Paul’s bold claim that God made the world, made humanity, and made every nation from one man—then pressed that truth into the deepest layers of identity, sin, and hope. The thread is simple and disruptive: if Adam is real, the gospel’s architecture holds together with clarity; if Adam is only a metap...
In the Beginning

In the Beginning

2025-10-2031:08

Send us a text Start with a world that looks arranged and ask the most honest question: who arranged it? We walk up the Areopagus with Paul, listen to his bold claim that God made “the world and all things in it,” and then follow that claim into modern labs, star fields, and the quiet intricacy of a single living cell. From the intuitive logic of Mount Rushmore to the stubborn math behind monkeys at typewriters, we weigh whether time and chance can truly write coherent sentences—much less enc...
Send us a text Why are people so fascinated with the supernatural—ghosts, spirits, haunted houses, even Bigfoot? Recent surveys show that nearly half of Americans claim to have had a supernatural encounter. Yet with all this obsession comes fear, confusion, and anxiety. In this episode of The Wisdom Journey, Stephen Davey explores Acts 17 and Paul’s encounter with the Athenians at the Areopagus. Surrounded by idols and altars—even one dedicated “To the Unknown God”—Paul took the opportunity t...
Divine Appointments

Divine Appointments

2025-10-1631:31

Send us a text Have you ever dismissed an encounter as random, only to later see how meaningful it was? The apostle Paul experienced that in Athens. Surrounded by idols and philosophers, he found himself drawn into conversations he never planned—but God had planned them. Those “chance encounters” became divine appointments, opening the door for Paul to proclaim the gospel in one of history’s most influential cities. In this episode, Stephen Davey unpacks Acts 17:16-21, showing how God orchest...
Send us a text Open-mindedness is a celebrated virtue today, but what does it really mean? Many people are open to anything—cosmic energy, horoscopes, or personal feelings as ultimate truth—while closing their minds to Scripture. Acts 17 introduces us to the Bereans, a community that provides a timeless model of how to be truly open-minded. In this episode of The Wisdom Journey, Stephen Davey explains how the Bereans received the Word with eagerness, examined the Scriptures daily, and allowed...
The Suffering King

The Suffering King

2025-10-1432:33

Send us a text What happens when the gospel collides with culture? In Acts 17, Paul arrives in Thessalonica and begins reasoning with the Jews in the synagogue. For three weeks, he opens the Scriptures, connecting the prophecies of the Old Testament to the suffering, death, and resurrection of Jesus Christ. The result is explosive. Some believe, joining Paul and Silas in following Christ, while others resist violently. A mob forms, riots erupt, and Paul’s host Jason is dragged before city off...
Waiting to Be Wanted

Waiting to Be Wanted

2025-10-1331:17

Send us a text What comes into your mind when you think about God? That question, A.W. Tozer once said, reveals more about your future than anything else. In this message from The Wisdom Journey, Stephen Davey opens a new series on the character of God. From creation’s beauty to the revelation of Scripture, we are invited to study God’s nature, His works, and His attributes. Why does this matter? Because knowing God leads to wisdom for life’s decisions, direction in uncertain times, courage i...
Making It Safely Home

Making It Safely Home

2025-10-1028:33

Send us a text What’s the goal of your life? Many of us pursue success, comfort, or recognition—striving for the “summit” of achievement. But Solomon, the wealthiest and wisest king of Israel, reminds us that these goals can leave us empty and vulnerable, like climbers who collapse after reaching the top of the mountain but never make it safely home. In this episode of Wisdom for the Heart, Stephen Davey takes us through Ecclesiastes 6:10–13, where Solomon reflects on the futility of ch...
Send us a text What are you chasing? A bigger paycheck, a better title, or a new relationship? The world tells us that satisfaction is just one step away—if we can grab the next carrot, we’ll finally be happy. But Ecclesiastes 6:7–9 tells a very different story. Solomon, the wealthiest and wisest king of his day, warns that you can have a full life on the outside while remaining desperately empty inside. In this episode of Wisdom for the Heart, Stephen Davey walks us through Solomon’s t...
Send us a text Are you running the wrong race? Ecclesiastes 6 gives us two striking examples of people who looked like winners but were actually losing. One man had wealth, possessions, and honor. The other had a large family and a long life. Yet both lacked the one thing that matters most—a relationship with God. In this episode, Stephen Davey takes you to Solomon’s sobering observations about life “under the sun.” Success, family, possessions, and status can all be good gifts. But without ...
Send us a text Have you ever noticed how easy it is to spend money, and how hard it is to keep it? Solomon did. In Ecclesiastes 5, he describes what happens when people clutch their possessions and gamble everything to get more. The result is insecurity, regret, and anger. But Solomon also shows us a better way—a way of life marked by gratitude, contentment, and joy. In this episode, Stephen Davey walks us through Solomon’s two case studies—one man who guarded his riches until he lost them a...
Send us a text Why is a good night’s sleep so hard to come by? For many, the answer lies in anxious thoughts about money, security, or injustice. In How to Get a Good Night’s Sleep, Stephen Davey opens Ecclesiastes 5:8–12 to show how Solomon wrestled with the same struggles—and points us toward God’s solution. Solomon observed oppression, greed, and injustice in society. He saw how even kings and rulers seemed to take advantage rather than provide relief. Yet he reminded us that above e...
loading
Comments