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Proverbs 30: The Gatherer


A digitally created image by Wombo Dream AI showing an older farmer with a name tag that says Agur gathering produce from a field of wisdom. The produce looks like vegetables, fruit, and flowers, but it is labeled as wisdom, humility, joy, life skills, etc. The farmer's baskets are full and he is distributing his wares to a long line of needy people holding empty baskets. The atmosphere is photo-realistic at Golden Hour and the image represents the wisdom of Proverbs in the Bible, specifically Proverbs Chapter 30 where someone called Agur (whose name means gatherer) has shared a collection of spiritual life hacks.
AI (Wombo) The Wisdom Farm by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

This is one of my favorite chapters in Proverbs. I’m always amazed at how smart this Agur is about the honor and glory due to God, even though he calls himself too stupid to know these things.

Proverbs Chapter 30 is filled with an abundance of great advice and good to read on the 30th of every month (except February when you read all the final chapters on the 28th, of course) to remind yourself of its wise life applications. It’s overflowing with spiritual life hacks we can all use, and they are gathered into this one chapter by a guy called Agur.

Note: In doing a little study on Agur and the audience he’s writing to named Ithiel and Ucal, it’s possible these are not names at all. They may actually just represent their positions. Agur means gatherer (hence the title of the post and the image), he’s the son of Jakeh which means obedient one, Ithiel means with God, and Ucal means I am consumed. Young’s Literal Translation picks up on this, and its verse 1 reads…

Proverbs 30:1 YLT98
[1] Words of a Gatherer, son of an obedient one, the declaration, an affirmation of the man: — I have wearied myself [for] God, I have wearied myself [for] God, and am consumed.

https://bible.com/bible/821/pro.30.1.YLT98

So this gatherer, if he is a real person, is probably like some folks we know or have known in our lives. They are not big or important in the world, or even in the church. They sit quietly and observe, and they pray, A LOT. They may not preach, but if you have a biblical or spiritual question, they are dependable to either know it or study to find out. They quietly gather wisdom from studying God’s Word and through prayer, and many can sense God’s Holy Spirit around them. Especially if they’ve been praying. It’s as if they don’t ever actually leave prayer behind but keep it constant, and you can be sure they’ve tarried on their spiritual knees until they’ve gotten an audience with The Almighty. Like Abraham, even the angels talk about the lawful heart of that one.

Many Bible versions have verse 3 saying that this gatherer does not know The Holy One. But YLT (Young’s) says the opposite and it matches the next two verses about God’s omnipresence much better…

Proverbs 30:3-5 YLT98
[3] Nor have I learned wisdom, Yet the knowledge of Holy Ones I know. [4] Who went up to heaven, and cometh down? Who hath gathered the wind in his fists? Who hath bound waters in a garment? Who established all ends of the earth? What [is] His name? and what His son's name? Surely thou knowest! [5] Every saying of God [is] tried, A shield He [is] to those trusting in Him.

https://bible.com/bible/821/pro.30.3-5.YLT98

This gatherer even seems a bit prophetic in speaking of a generation of godless people (like the ones uplifted and celebrated by current society). Verses 11-14 in the Christian Standard Bible read…

Proverbs 30:11-14 CSB
[11] There is a generation that curses its father and does not bless its mother.  [12] There is a generation that is pure in its own eyes,  yet is not washed from its filth. [13] There is a generation — how haughty its eyes and pretentious its looks.  [14] There is a generation whose teeth are swords,  whose fangs are knives,  devouring the oppressed from the land  and the needy from among mankind.

https://bible.com/bible/1713/pro.30.11-14.CSB

I love studying different versions of the Bible and often look up words in Strong’s to compare deeper meanings. Many translations have the last verse of this next set being all about a young man with a girlfriend, but I prefer YLT and even The Message Bible (MSG) as they make more sense to me. Here’s The Message version…

Proverbs 30:18-19 MSG
[18-19] Three things amaze me, no, four things I’ll never understand— how an eagle flies so high in the sky, how a snake glides over a rock, how a ship navigates the ocean, why adolescents act the way they do. * * *

https://bible.com/bible/97/pro.30.18-19.MSG

And I’ll close with Agur’s commentary on wise creatures from YLT where it says spiders, using their hands, take hold of King’s palaces instead of saying how people can catch lizards but they enter King’s palaces…

Proverbs 30:24-28 YLT98
[24] Four [are] little ones of earth, And they are made wiser than the wise: [25] The ants [are] a people not strong, And they prepare in summer their food, [26] Conies [are] a people not strong, And they place in a rock their house, [27] A king there is not to the locust, And it goeth out — each one shouting, [28] A spider with two hands taketh hold, And is in the palaces of a king.

https://bible.com/bible/821/pro.30.24-28.YLT98

I hope you readers are among those many people standing with baskets to fill from the farm and that you’ve enjoyed this gathering of wisdom. And I just have to add one more thing;  some interesting info I found about conies at Bible Hub…

Conies are mentioned in several passages in the Old Testament, where they are noted for their wisdom and ability to thrive in rocky environments.

The mention of conies in Scripture serves as a reminder of God’s creation and the wisdom inherent in nature. It underscores the biblical theme that strength is not solely physical but can also be found in wise decision-making and reliance on God’s provision. The cony’s ability to find refuge in the rocks can be seen as an allegory for believers finding refuge in the Lord, who is often described as a rock and fortress in the Psalms. Read the full info: https://biblehub.com/topical/c/conies.htm

March 30, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Thoughts and Articles | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

🎵Proverbs 29: No End in Sight


Digital image created by Wombo Dream AI of a runner who has given up, thrown down the baton, and sat on the racetrack with his head in his hands. The track, or many tracks in this case, go all over the place and there is no finish line. To make matters worse, there are signs all along the tracks that say, ”Finished?”
AI (Wombo) No Finish Line? By Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Imagine if you will, a runner. He came to win the race. He’s practiced, he’s ready, and he’s dressed to run. But when he gets to the track, er tracks(?), no direction is clear. Instead of the track knowing and showing the finish line, it just keeps asking, “Finished?”

Proverbs Chapter 29 includes the well-known verse…

Proverbs 29:18 KJV
[18] Where there is no vision, the people perish: But he that keepeth the law, happy is he.

https://bible.com/bible/1/pro.29.18.KJV

Various translations render the word vision as things like revelation, prophecy, divine guidance, or prophetic vision. And the word perish is replaced with “cast off restraint,” “run wild,” or “lose self-control.” I like the way it reads in The Message Bible: “They stumble all over themselves.” Because without God’s help and guidance, and the finish lines He has laid out in His Word, you’ll get lost in chaos and confusion. With no end in sight, how can you even know what direction to run?

It works the same in all of life. We start, when kids are little, asking “What do you want to be when you grow up?” And we don’t ask that because we think they really know or have their college path already decided. We ask because we want to know what excites them, so we can steer them toward a finish they will be happy with.

Human races, on the track or otherwise, often involve competition and include winners and losers. But there are some of us in this world that don’t like competition. For me, even winning at something is difficult because I feel bad for anyone who doesn’t win. That’s why I like God’s race where everyone who crosses the finish line gets the prize. Paul the Apostle states it this way…

Philippians 3:14 WEBUS
[14] I press on toward the goal for the prize of the high calling of God in Christ Jesus.

https://bible.com/bible/206/php.3.14.WEBUS

1 Corinthians 9:25-26 WEBUS
[25] Every man who strives in the games exercises self-control in all things. Now they do it to receive a corruptible crown, but we an incorruptible. [26] I therefore run like that, not aimlessly. I fight like that, not beating the air,

https://bible.com/bible/206/1co.9.25-26.WEBUS

2 Timothy 4:7 WEBUS
[7] I have fought the good fight. I have finished the course. I have kept the faith.

https://bible.com/bible/206/2ti.4.7.WEBUS

In case you have never read it, there’s a great poem about winning races called “The Race” and it even has its own website at https://theracepoem.com/ plus a lot of other places online. It’s a poem filled with heartache and victory, and it’s absolutely worth reading.

And this is the perfect place to end with a song I once thought I’d sing on an album. It’s called “This Race I Have Begun,” and it’s written and sung by Bobbie Shoemake…

This Race I Have Begun by Bobbie Shoemake

March 29, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 28: Fearful or Formidable


A digital, 2-panel image created by Wombo Dream AI. It shows a man in the first panel running in terror from skittering leaves as if he's being chased by them. This lines up with the first half of Proverbs 28:1 that says “The wicked flee when no one pursues.” The panel on the right side shows man boldly standing with a huge lion by his side. It's to represent the other half of the verse that says, “but the righteous are as bold as a lion.”
AI (Wombo) Fearful or Formidable by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

As soon as I started reading Proverbs Chapter 28, the first verse reminded me of a verse in The Torah (in Leviticus) about people being afraid of the sound of a skittering leaf. And another in Joshua supports the part of the verse about boldness. I’ll post all three together…

Proverbs 28:1 WEBUS
[1] The wicked flee when no one pursues; but the righteous are as bold as a lion.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.28.1.WEBUS

Leviticus 26:36 WEBUS
[36] “‘As for those of you who are left, I will send a faintness into their hearts in the lands of their enemies. The sound of a driven leaf will put them to flight; and they shall flee, as one flees from the sword. They will fall when no one pursues.

https://bible.com/bible/206/lev.26.36.WEBUS

Joshua 1:9 WEBUS
[9] Haven’t I commanded you? Be strong and courageous. Don’t be afraid. Don’t be dismayed, for Yahweh your God is with you wherever you go.”

https://bible.com/bible/206/jos.1.9.WEBUS

There are more verses with similar messages, and they all point to the same basic idea: Life without The Lord is also without strength, promise, hope, or real peace. Life with The Lord includes these things and so much more. And while many pursue their own temporary pleasures, when that season passes, they’re left with an emptiness that echoes so loud, it creates heart-pounding fear. In writing about the difference without and with God, Paul said this to the converted (Messianic) Hebrews…

Hebrews 11:24-26 BSB
[24] By faith Moses, when he was grown, refused to be called the son of Pharaoh’s daughter. [25] He chose to suffer oppression with God’s people rather than to experience the fleeting enjoyment of sin. [26] He valued disgrace for Christ above the treasures of Egypt, for he was looking ahead to his reward.

https://bible.com/bible/3034/heb.11.24-26.BSB

And if you want to do an even deeper dive into this first verse, I’ve just learned tonight how many fantastic study tools are available at the Bible Hub website. https://biblehub.com/proverbs/28-1.htm will take you to multiple translations of verse 1, and when you scroll down, you’ll find commentaries, teaching points, Bible study questions, and more. But be careful because all the study info includes sources to even more study info, and you could be reading for a long time if you love God’s Word. The link I provide with each post at the top has a lot of study on the whole chapter as well.

The rest of this chapter talks about riches, power, and poverty. It’s all good advice, and its messages have proven true in the test of time, especially where it speaks of how leadership (good and bad) affects a community. Like verse 4 that says (my paraphrase) those who leave lawfulness behind end up praising the wicked, but the law abiding end up in arguments with the wicked. Yes, it is normal to find contention with those who refuse to give God the honor He deserves. And it’s much better to stand boldly for God’s ways than to end up like the person in verse 9…

Proverbs 28:9 WEBUS
[9] He who turns away his ear from hearing the law, even his prayer is an abomination.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.28.9.WEBUS

While I spent a good portion of time following verses and word studies, I also spent my fair share of time playing with different filters on the prompt for today’s picture. So now, just for fun, I’ll end with the adorable image I got using the knitting filter.

A digital image created by Wombo Dream AI and using their “knitting” filter. It's the same prompt as the image above only made cute by being knitted characters. It's a 2-panel image with a scared and running knitted man on the left to represent the first half of Proverbs 28:1 that says, “The wicked flee when no one pursues.” The panel on the right has a knitted, kinda grumpy, man standing boldly next to a knitted lion. This represents the 2nd half of the verse that says, “but the righteous are as bold as a lion.”
AI (Wombo) Knitted Fear vs Boldness by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

March 28, 2026 Posted by | AI Image Creations, Bible, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Wombo Dream | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

🎵Proverbs 27: Promise of Provision


Digital image created by Wombo Dream AI. A young business professional woman sits on a bus bench near the ocean at golden hour. Her hair and skirt flip in the ocean breeze while a tear falls down her cheek. She's got a Bible open to Proverbs 27 where she's reading of God's promises of provision, and it's bringing comfort to her since she just lost her job.
AI (Wombo) Bus Stop Bible Study by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

It was a cold January day on the 27th of the month. I started the year doing the daily Proverbs study, and until that day, I didn’t know how valuable it would become to me. On weekdays, I read it at the bus stop on the way home from work. Other than the crisp breeze from the ocean in the early evenings, my study time was a little escape from the bustle of busy Santa Monica streets and people.

Proverbs Chapter 27 was the day’s reading, and it started with a fitting verse…

Proverbs 27:1 WEBUS
[1] Don’t boast about tomorrow; for you don’t know what a day may bring.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.27.1.WEBUS

And I sure did not know I would lose my job that day just because I did my job as instructed. I loved my job as a law office receptionist and only had problems with one person there. She got upset when I wouldn’t lie and tell a caller she wasn’t there unless she went down the stairs and out the door. But that didn’t cause me to lose my job. It was an event the day before my firing that did that. The attorneys and paralegals were prepping for a major trial, and I was told that absolutely no one could disturb them unless it was a medical emergency. Well, one long-time and very rich client decided those rules did not apply to her. What’s an obedient Christian girl supposed to do?

I told her over and over that I was told I couldn’t even buzz the back office to see if they’d take a call. They never told me this one woman would’ve been an exception, so in trying to keep her business, they put the blame on me. Her solution was to tell them to either fire me or lose her as a client. Guess what they chose. The hiring manager told me I had done nothing wrong, so he was paying me through the end of the week. Apparently, he’d had to let others go for the same reason, so he decided I was the last one he’d hire for them, and he promised to give me a glowing review. But that didn’t change the fact that I needed a new job and a paycheck to pay the rent. And quickly.

As I sat at the bus stop reading that chapter, most of it felt just like meaningless words until I got to the end. In verse 27, I read…

Proverbs 27:27 WEBUS
[27] There will be plenty of goats’ milk for your food, for your family’s food, and for the nourishment of your servant girls.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.27.27.WEBUS

Even though I didn’t have servant girls, or understand the verses that came before about being a good steward of flocks, I grabbed this verse as a promise of God’s provision. Though still hurting from the unfairness of my experience, I believed God would make up for it and fix things. And boy did He!

That was a Tuesday. I went job hunting on Wednesday and Thursday with no success. I learned at one job that I was perfect for them, but they had already met their quota of non-Affirmative-Action hires, so they couldn’t hire me. I had one more paid day to get a job without losing money. And a storm was brewing that night that threatened to send me on my job interviews looking like a drowned rat because of the bus being my only transportation. I’ll never forget Friday morning in the kitchen where my roommate had a tiny television on the counter (I didn’t watch TV at all in those days), and it was on the weather report. The broadcasters talked of their surprise at how this storm made a big circle around the valley and was leaving us untouched and dry for the day. And I wondered if God would do something like that just for me.

I had an interview at an office to do collections for outstanding phone bills. They hired me on the spot and told me to start Monday morning. Not even one day without a paycheck! It’s one of those testimonies that God brings back when I’m struggling–and every time I read Proverbs 27.

My Shepherd Will Supply My Need by Lindsay Loch (with lyrics)
God Will Take Care of You by Rosemary Siemens (with lyrics)

March 27, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Devotion, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Slice of Life, testimony, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 26: Fools, Slackers, Meddlers, Gossips, and Liars


AI (Wombo) What’s Wrong With This Picture by Crystal A Murray
(CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

We often see the quote, “Hurt people hurt people,” but I’ve never fully agreed with that. From my own experiences, and what I’ve seen in others who experienced hurt, hurt people often become extremely empathetic to the pain of others. They would never cause it intentionally. But a fool doesn’t function that way.

In Psalm 14:1, we read…

Psalms 14:1a WEBUS
[1] The fool has said in his heart, “There is no God.”

https://bible.com/bible/206/psa.14.1.WEBUS

Today’s reading in Proverbs Chapter 26 deals a lot with fools in addition to other types of people who tend to regularly hurt other people. The chapter begins with a sort of what’s wrong with this picture statement…

Proverbs 26:1 WEBUS
[1] Like snow in summer, and as rain in harvest, so honor is not fitting for a fool.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.26.1.WEBUS

Though the little kids immediately run to play under the snowing tree in the summertime, the adults are likely confused by this oddity. Snow is a winter thing with maybe a few surprise downpours at the end of fall and beginning of spring. But by the time summer and lemonade show up, it’s definitely not right to have snow–even over only one tree. And it’s not right to give honor and preference to a foolish person, especially with what is likely in their hearts. Verse 8 even tells us what we are like if we’re the one who offers honor to a fool…

Proverbs 26:8 WEBUS
[8] As one who binds a stone in a sling, so is he who gives honor to a fool.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.26.8.WEBUS

It makes sense. What good would a rock tied into a sling do when you need to throw it. Like those old, dangerous toys called “Klick-Klacks” or “Clackers,” (there’s an interesting article about that toy at A Woman’s World magazine online) it’s a recipe for disaster. And it would certainly not help you with hunting–or killing giant Philistines. We must not assign improper honor based on our feelings. Like saying, “God bless you” to a person who would only dig deeper into their sins if they only had blessings and no struggles to make them stop and look at their conditions. It’s not loving to honor and uplift someone who’s stuck in foolishness and needs a jolt of reality to repent and be set free.

Verses 3-12 have so much more to say about fools than I can put here. It’s almost a blog post already created for April 1st. 😁 Verse 11 is the saddest one as it says that a fool never learns…

Proverbs 26:11 WEBUS
[11] As a dog that returns to his vomit, so is a fool who repeats his folly.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.26.11.WEBUS

Verses 13-16 switch subjects and talk about slackers, or sluggards in the World English Bible. And since verse 16 says the slacker is wise in his own eyes, I’m guessing the teacher is showing the slacker is just another type of fool. He then switches subjects again and begins talking about meddlers who (again foolishly) meddle in others’ business and how it’s like grabbing a dog by the ears. We know what happens there. I’m not sure if the joker in verses 18-19 is the same meddler from verse 17, but saying he was only joking doesn’t fix his offenses either way.

As the chapter finishes out with verses 20-28, the subject turns to gossip. It seems this gossip is a contentious liar who hates those he makes into his victims. He is somehow able to convince people to listen (silver-covered lips speaking dainty morsels in verses 22-23), but when things turn on the listener, that one will become even more of a victim because the hateful gossip will convince him it’s all his fault. I see this manipulation as the gossip being yet another type of fool: an arrogant one. But back in verse 20, we get the wisdom that if we just don’t allow the words of the gossip to spread, the quarrels will die like a fire with no fuel.

So this chapter didn’t have a lot of happy blessings to hand out unless you consider warnings that protect you from being victimized as its own type of blessing. I do. And I’m thankful for wisdom that works hand-in-hand with discernment to protect us. Sadly, we often let our feelings get in the way of both discernment and wisdom, but that’s where walking with God helps us get through the hard places in this life, even if we brought them on ourselves. But, there is one huge piece of good news in this chapter, so I’ll end with what it says in verse 2…

Proverbs 26:2 WEBUS
[2] Like a fluttering sparrow, like a darting swallow, so the undeserved curse doesn’t come to rest.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.26.2.WEBUS

It seems out of place in this chapter, but it’s a statement of faith to undo the lies and harms of the subjects in all the other verses. Resist even the accusations of foolish ramblings and know their manipulative curses will not be able to stand against you and rest in your life.

March 26, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Visual Parables (Images with a Message), Walking With The Lord, Warnings, Hard Wisdom, and Discernment | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 25: Apples of Gold


AI image generated by Wombo Dream AI of a bright and sunny farmhouse kitchen with yellow gingham curtains. The white marble table in the forefront includes an open Bible with a satin bookmark and some selective highlights on the pages. Next to the Bible is a silver bowl filled with sparkling gold apples. Around the table, the counters are decorated with yellow and white flowers and a silver-framed picture of gold apples in a silver bowl hangs on one wall.
AI (Wombo) Gold Apples in Silver Settings by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

This is another of those chapters where I’ve added all sorts of colorful highlights in my Bible app. Proverbs Chapter 25 is still a collection of wisdom from Solomon and copied for publishing by the men of Hezekiah, King of Judah. The chapter starts with the verse about God hiding things and giving kings the glory to search them out. Sort of like an Easter egg hunt but with far more valuable treasure.

I find this chapter to have a more conversational tone. Rather than a list of “these types of people get these types of rewards,” it sounds like the writers are reasoning with the readers. For…

Proverbs 25:6-7 WEBUS
[6] Don’t exalt yourself in the presence of the king, or claim a place among great men; [7] for it is better that it be said to you, “Come up here,” than that you should be put lower in the presence of the prince, whom your eyes have seen.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.25.6-7.WEBUS

It has sensible directions like where it tells people to be careful about taking their neighbor to court if the neighbor has dirt on them he can bring to the judge and leave the accuser embarrassed. And then it becomes a bit poetic with the verse that inspired today’s image…

Proverbs 25:11 WEBUS
[11] A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of silver.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.25.11.WEBUS

I had too much fun creating the image. Most versions say “settings of silver” and one says ”pictures” while another says “baskets.” I went with both the setting (bowl) and the frame (with the picture of a bowl). And then had the AI place it in something like my idea of a dream kitchen. I love the yellow gingham curtains. On a personal note, I came home from a trip one year to find that hubby had painted my kitchen walls with 2 shades of lemon yellow. The top part is more of a chiffon while the bottom is summer lemon, and I’m totally blessed by that loving gesture.

But I digress. The point of the beauty in that image is about how fitting the right words at the right time can be. The unspoken message here is to be a good listener, so you will know what words are needed most and exactly when to speak them. Since home decor means enough to people that examples of it fill magazines and TV shows, we could say the right words are like a beautiful kitchen, or whatever room means the most to us. And though I rarely read those types of magazines or watch the shows, I’ve certainly lingered on pictures of rooms with dreamy decor on sites that sell home improvement products.

And that actually leads me to a book I’ve enjoyed reading (though haven’t finished yet) called “Bold and Broken.” It’s written by identical twin brothers from a former home improvement TV series, and it’s filled with testimonies of words spoken in just the right scenarios. Again, I’ll use my Amazon link for tracking, and if you read it yourself, I’d love to hear your thoughts.

The full title is “Bold and Broken: Becoming the Bridge Between Heaven and Earth” by David and Jason Benham. Find it at Amazon at  https://amzn.to/40V00GA and I recommend at least viewing the page to see some of the great encouragements in the book’s description. It does say there’s an updated version as of 2025 which might be why I couldn’t find a Kindle version on this page, but I feel better giving the link to the one I’ve actually read.

The rest of the chapter is loaded with great advice, like using patience to convince a ruler because speaking softly can break him down. Or the admonition to not stay too long in your neighbor’s house and end up with an enemy. And then we get this…

Proverbs 25:21-22 WEBUS
[21] If your enemy is hungry, give him food to eat. If he is thirsty, give him water to drink; [22] for you will heap coals of fire on his head, and Yahweh will reward you.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.25.21-22.WEBUS

I always thought those coals of fire were a painful thing, but apparently they are a warm thing. This is literally saying to do good for the needs of your enemy, and God Himself will reward you. This is not always easy, but it’s a good word anyway. And it’s a good place to wrap this up.

March 25, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Thoughts and Articles, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 24: A Little Slumber


AI image created by Wombo Dream AI of a woman sleeping and trapped in thorns and thistles. She won't be able to get up and be strong when she needs to be because she's allowing herself to sleep instead of getting nourished. This applies to being nourished by God's Word and His Holy Spirit just as it does in not taking care of ourselves and the things in our lives.
AI (Wombo) A Little Slumber by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

There’s a lot of wisdom in Proverbs Chapter 24. As I’ve gone through this month, I realize that in all the years of reading daily Proverbs, what has worked in my days has been only one, or maybe 2-3, verses. That’s why it’s a bit difficult to try and do a post about a whole chapter. I’ve ended up focusing on sections of verses, but I was feeling a little guilty for not doing a complete chapter study until today. Having listened to someone else’s summary and seeing how it’s kinda disjointed to try and cover it all, it made me realize that it’s okay. Especially since I’ve linked to the entire chapter in each post, and I recommend a full reading in case what stands out to you is different than what mattered to me for the day

So, today, the final 11 “sayings of the wise” run through verse 22. When you click the Bible Hub link to read in the Berean Standard Bible, the sayings are clearly marked, and it makes for some nice study. I don’t post as much from there to avoid copyright issues. Anyway, the remaining verses are considered more sayings to the wise and I want to focus on the final 5 verses. In The World English Bible (public domain, copyright free) it reads…

Proverbs 24:30-34 WEBUS
[30] I went by the field of the sluggard, by the vineyard of the man void of understanding.
[31] Behold, it was all grown over with thorns. Its surface was covered with nettles, and its stone wall was broken down.
[32] Then I saw, and considered well. I saw, and received instruction:
[33] a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep,
[34] so your poverty will come as a robber and your want as an armed man.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.24.30-34.WEBUS

Yes, it’s common sense to know that neglected fields and homes will be taken over by weeds and will fall apart. So why is this considered wisdom? I’m thinking it’s because the message is to consider the not-so-tangible items in our lives that need to be maintained. If you don’t work on relationships, you may one day find miles between you and wonder how it happened. And if you don’t cultivate a relationship with The Lord, you may one day wake up like King David did once and felt like the heavens were brassed over.

As a teenager, I had some serious surgeries that required long recovery times in the hospital. That may not be the same now as they’ve changed how quickly they want people to get moving, but back then, I had one stay of 8 days in the bed. During that time I was on a clear liquid diet, and I’m not sure they even gave me nutrition by IV. But I really didn’t know what I was missing because I wasn’t having to be physically active or upright. On the 8th day, when it was time to remove stitches, I learned what I’d been missing. I felt fine sitting on the edge of the bed. I felt strong standing at the side of it. But when I took the first step forward, I passed out immediately. They caught me and revived me, but I was shocked that I felt strong but truly was not.

Later, after becoming a follower of YahShua (Jesus Christ), I read these verses and connected them to my teenage experience. Just because you feel fine, and maybe even strong, if you’re not keeping yourself nourished in God’s Word and with His Holy Spirit, you may not know how weak you are until you need to move forward. King David says, “Taste and see that The Lord is good,” and YahShua said to pray for Daily Bread. In another proverb, there’s a verse about the slacker who won’t even put a spoon in his bowl and bring it to his mouth.

Let’s fall in love with the meat and gravy of God’s precious words and earnestly dig into that dish for taste and nourishment. Let’s not end up feeling like the thorns and thistles trapped us in bondage while we made everything else more important than God’s wisdom. God provides what we need to be strong if we seek and search with all our hearts. He will fill us up when we receive from His hand.

March 24, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs Series, Slice of Life, testimony, Thoughts and Articles, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 23: Buying Truth


A digital image created by Wombo Dream AI of 2 men in a marketplace row. They have lots of money they are looking to spend and 2 sides to choose from. The dark stalls sell evil things like drunkenness, drugs, and debauchery. The light stalls sell truth, wisdom, understanding, and discipline. The Scripture in Proverbs 23:23 says to buy the truth and the wisdom of charter 23 mentions the value of truth over silver and gold. The image is bright and colorful with an abstract filter to show this truth belongs to all people. It's combined with the botanical filter to represent life.
AI (Wombo) Buying Truth by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

This reading is filled with familiar wisdom, like “money sprouts wings and flies away,” and “spare the rod, spoil the child,” and that whole story from verse 29 to verse 35 about the drunk who ends up on top of a ship’s mast wondering how he got there. And then he starts wondering when he can do it again just because he survived. I’m not sure if the dad here knew a real person this happened to, but he’s certainly making sure to add the right amount of drama to dissuade him. Read all of Proverbs Chapter 23 if you want to know all this father’s advice.

If you’ve been reading in the Berean Standard Bible that I’ve been giving links to, you’ve seen how they subtitled the 30 wise sayings promised in Proverbs 22. Today, you’ll read sayings 7 through 19. I want to focus on saying number 17, which includes verses 22-25 with my emphasis on verse 23…

Proverbs 23:22-25 WEBUS
[22] Listen to your father who gave you life, and don’t despise your mother when she is old. [23] Buy the truth, and don’t sell it. Get wisdom, discipline, and understanding. [24] The father of the righteous has great joy. Whoever fathers a wise child delights in him. [25] Let your father and your mother be glad! Let her who bore you rejoice!

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.23.22-25.WEBUS

So the dad starts out telling the child not to labor to be rich since it flies away, and he describes the inner thoughts of a greedy rich man who invites someone to eat heartily but then worries about the cost. And then he tells his son to buy stuff and not sell it. Well, if he’s not actively trying to make money, how is he supposed to buy anything? And I think that’s the point. While the value of truth, discipline, and understanding are greater than gold or silver, the cost cannot be measured in monetary value. Their intrinsic value costs something from your heart, which is why selling it after you’ve purchased it would be a bad idea.

There’s a New Testament Bible story where Peter and John are walking by the Beautiful Gate of the temple, and one of the beggars asks for money. Peter says…

Acts 3:6-7 KJV
[6] Then Peter said, Silver and gold have I none; but such as I have give I thee: In the name of Jesus Christ of Nazareth rise up and walk. [7] And he took him by the right hand, and lifted him up: and immediately his feet and ankle bones received strength.

https://bible.com/bible/1/act.3.6-7.KJV

(And what happened next is a direct result of Peter buying the truth and then giving it away as needed.)

Acts 3:8-10 KJV
[8] And he leaping up stood, and walked, and entered with them into the temple, walking, and leaping, and praising God. [9] And all the people saw him walking and praising God: [10] and they knew that it was he which sat for alms at the Beautiful gate of the temple: and they were filled with wonder and amazement at that which had happened unto him.

https://bible.com/bible/1/act.3.8-10.KJV

It was great advice in Proverbs and in the New Testament, and it’s still great advice now. Though ”the world” (people living without God or His Word) tries to silence truth to avoid a painful conscience, those of us who know God’s truth need to keep sharing it. Like bright light that may hurt the eyes for a moment when they’ve been in the dark, the momentary pain is small compared to the blessings of light and truth.

🎶 And I’ll close with a couple of videos on the silver and gold topic. The first, by George Beverly Shea is called “I’d Rather Have Jesus” and it puts to music the idea of having The Truth (since Jesus is The Way, The Truth, and The Life), than silver or gold. The second is the song called “Silver and Gold” by Dolly Parton, and I found it with lyrics. I searched for hours for the Acts 3 song by Michael Card, and I never found it. If any of my readers find it, please comment with a link. Thanks.

I’d Rather Have Jesus by George Beverly Shea
Silver and Gold by Dolly Parton (with lyrics)

March 23, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Lyrics and Song, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

🎵Proverbs 22: Self-Pottering Much?


A collage of images designed in Wombo Dream AI with prompts about a clay vessel that tries to design itself and has a lot of disastrous, albeit funny, results. The image supports the Scriptures in both Proverbs 22:2 and Isaiah 64:8 along with many others.
AI (Wombo) The Results of Self-Pottering by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

I’m keeping this one short to allow readers to just enjoy the many wacky images in the collage. You can read all of Proverbs Chapter 22 at Bible Hub in the Berean Standard Bible (or change to a different version once you’re there) by clicking on the highlighted words.

My focus is on verse 2…

Proverbs 22:2 WEBUS
[2] The rich and the poor have this in common: Yahweh is the maker of them all.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.22.2.WEBUS

And I want to add the verse from Isaiah 64:8…

Isaiah 64:8 WEBUS
[8] But now, Yahweh, you are our Father. We are the clay and you our potter. We all are the work of your hand.

https://bible.com/bible/206/isa.64.8.WEBUS

I chose these to follow up on the Potter topic from yesterday about letting God remake our hearts. And the reason He can remake them is because He knows the original mold and how it was intended to come out. So when we see Him as our Creator, Maker, Father, etc., we can trust that we are, indeed, fearfully and wonderfully made as He designed.

But so often, we think we know best. Like a teenager who thinks they know everything about life, and parents know nothing, we all have our moments where we are certain our own way is better. An abundance of the Proverbs were written to warn people to avoid that kind of thinking.

Back in 2024, I wanted to see what Wombo would do with a prompt about a clay vessel trying to create itself. That’s where I came up with the term self-pottering to describe the effort of trying to make our lives perfect on our own and without God’s assistance or guidance. The crazy results in the collage, and especially the facial expressions, show the failure well. And for that reason, we want to pray for God’s perfect will above all else. That goes perfectly with the song Have Thine Own Way, Lord

Have Thine Own Way, Lord (with lyrics)

Pray with me for my desire to avoid self-pottering (and the anxieties that come with it) and keep the final verse active in my life:

Have Thine own way Lord
Have Thine own way
Hold over my being absolute sway
Filled with Thy spirit till all can see
Christ only always living in me

Christ only always, living in me! May it be your prayer, too.

March 22, 2026 Posted by | AI Image Creations, Creativity, Nonfiction, Photo Studio Pro app, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Visual Parables (Images with a Message), Wombo Dream | , , , , , , | Leave a comment

🎵Proverbs 21: When God Weighs Hearts


An AI generated image by Google's Gemini with a split panel visual parable. In the first panel, the arm of God is reaching down from the heavens, framed by clouds and rays of sunshine, and He's holding a silver scale in His hands. On one side of the scale, a hardened heart, heavy with a sharp stone in the middle, is pulling the scale down. On the other scale tray, a pink heart full of life is so light it's practically floating above the scales. In the second panel, God now reaches out with two hands toward a clay vessel on a pottery wheel. He has removed the sharp and painful stone and is making the heart pliable as He incorporates into the clay vessel. This takes Proverbs 21:2 where God weighs hearts to Psalm 51 where He is asked by the Psalmist to create a clean heart in him.
AI (Gemini) A Heavy Heart Made New by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Do you suppose that most people who misbehave think they are doing anything wrong? It seems to me that even those who know they are doing something evil (like taking revenge on someone) only do so because they somehow feel justified. Proverbs Chapter 21 begins with talking about the King’s heart being in God’s hands and following His direction. Then it goes to other men and says…

Proverbs 21:2 WEBUS
[2] Every way of a man is right in his own eyes, but Yahweh weighs the hearts.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.21.2.WEBUS

The juxtaposition of the two types makes sense because the wise king who’s writing most of these proverbial instructions is trying to lead people by God’s direction. Even if he later fails and begins his own ways of doing right in his eyes instead of God’s, it doesn’t change the wisdom that real leadership works best when it’s in God’s hands. And it doesn’t change the wisdom that God weighs the heart and motives underlying the thoughts and behaviors.

But because of Calvary, we now know that God doesn’t stop with weighing hearts. He doesn’t see a pain-hardened heart with a jagged rock in the middle of it and just give up and throw it away. Instead, He offers the one suffering from a heavy heart an opportunity to let Him remake it into a tender heart of flesh.

Until putting this post together, I’d been reading all those verses showing the differences between righteous people and fools with a bit of judgment toward those who make foolish decisions and then pay foolish prices. It may be how it’s written, but I want to take this moment to look at every one of those differently; followed by a but it doesn’t have to stay this way thought process. Because, with the mercy and grace found in the holy blood of Jesus Christ shed at Calvary for you and me, we are no longer destined to be stuck in unrighteousness. We don’t have to be a king to put our hearts in the capable hands of The King of Kings and let Him direct us like He directs the rivers and oceans.

Verse 7 tells us…

Proverbs 21:7 WEBUS
[7] The violence of the wicked will drive them away, because they refuse to do what is right.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.21.7.WEBUS

So we know they refuse to do right because they already think they are doing right. And when being driven away causes the pain of rejection, the stone in the heart gets a little harder and sharper, and the person makes even more wrong decisions that bring even more rejection. It becomes a cycle that threatens to trap the heart in heaviness forever. But God looks deeper than others can see, or we can see about ourselves. We may feel burdened by the idea of God weighing our hearts when He may just be checking what needs to be done to fix things. Using the pottery metaphor, He’s finding out how much water to add to make the clay pliable again and soften it enough to pull the rock away like in the image above.

The Psalmist says…

Psalms 51:10 WEBUS
[10] Create in me a clean heart, O God. Renew a right spirit within me.

https://bible.com/bible/206/psa.51.10.WEBUS

And we can sing with the Maranatha singers, Change My Heart, Oh God and know that He will do it.

Change My Heart Oh God — Maranatha Music (with lyrics)

March 21, 2026 Posted by | AI, Bible, Devotion, Gemini (by Google), Grace and Mercy (In Scripture and In Life), Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Thoughts and Articles, Visual Parables (Images with a Message) | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

🎶Proverbs 20: Fruit of the Wisdom Tree


An AI generated image by Wombo Dream AI with a pastoral scene of rolling hills and a beautiful field. In the middle of the field is a colorful fruit tree bearing many different colors of tasty-looking fruit. Some of them are labeled with words like love, joy, and peace. The tree is labeled life and wisdom.
AI (Wombo) Wisdom Tree with Fruit by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Many years ago, my first foray into the World Wide Web was via a little device called WebTV. It hooked up to a television in ways similar to what boxes like Roku and Fire TV do now. It was super slow (as were most web interfaces back then) because of using a dial-up connection, but I learned so much from using it that I can truly say it changed my life.

One of the things I learned was how to subscribe to newsletters, and eventually how to write my own. A favorite series was by a woman in Georgia who went by the name “GA Girl” and who taught perspectives in biblical understanding that I still carry with me. (I tried to see if there was any hint of her still being online, but couldn’t find anything.)

So, with all the good fruit of wisdom I’m finding in Proverbs Chapter 20 today, my mind goes back to one of GA Girl’s lessons; the fruit of The Spirit. It was from her that I learned about the power of the word fruit being singular. I’d always thought of those sweet things like love, joy, peace, long-suffering, goodness, gentleness, meekness, self-control, and kindness as being individual fruits you may or may not display. Maybe someone was very gentle but not very meek. Maybe someone overflowing with goodness didn’t have much self-control. Each fruit could stand on its own and be either abundant or lacking, right?

So, with nine different traits, why is it listed as the fruit (singular) of The Spirit? What I learned from that old lesson was that it’s about One God with one single personality. He is the tree, and He bears the fruit that represents that personality. If we are filled with His Holy Spirit, every aspect of that fruit will flow from Him and through us. So we can all be loving, and joyful, and gentle, and good, and meek, etc. We can all be long-suffering when we must, and we can all exercise self-control with the help and wisdom of The Lord. Those traits are all fruit of His Spirit, so they should all be fruit of our lives when we yield to His Spirit. And I find that truly exciting, especially for the fruit that doesn’t change so easily to me in my own fleshly behaviors. It’s amazing that God knows our forms yet chooses to pour His form through our lives anyway.

This chapter had some great examples of what it looks like to have that fruit of God active, both in The Lord and in human lives. Here are some of the verses that jumped out at me as examples. My notes are in parentheses following the verses…

Proverbs 20:5, 7-8, 10-11, 15, 27, 29 WEBUS
[5] Counsel in the heart of man is like deep water, but a man of understanding will draw it out. (Fruit of understanding.)
[7] A righteous man walks in integrity. Blessed are his children after him. (Fruit of integrity, natural morals.)
[8] A king who sits on the throne of judgment scatters away all evil with his eyes. (Fruit of righteous judgment in leadership.)
[10] Differing weights and differing measures, both of them alike are an abomination to Yahweh. (Here is a lack of the fruit of honesty and integrity.)
[11] Even a child makes himself known by his doings, whether his work is pure, and whether it is right. (This shows that we can know people by their fruit.)
[15] There is gold and abundance of rubies, but the lips of knowledge are a rare jewel. (Fruit of wisdom.)
[27] The spirit of man is Yahweh’s lamp, searching all his innermost parts. (Fruit of meekness will allow us to be humble and let God search and heal us. )
[29] The glory of young men is their strength. The splendor of old men is their gray hair. (Fruit of long life and strength as given by God.)

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.20.5-29.WEBUS

I pray this little nugget informs and blesses you all as it did me when I learned it. If so, to forth and bear good fruit from the wisdom tree.

And now an update for the future of this blog. I’ve just spent many unplanned hours trying to find old stuff from my newsletter and the GA Girl website at the Way Back Machine (archive.org) only to find out that some links there can lead outside the archive to old domains that may or may not be safe. If you look anything up there, just be careful. To prevent causing my readers any issues, I’m going to create some PDF documents direct from the archives but with all links and scripts stripped away. It’s perfect into for My Cyberspace Journey but that’s not for this post because I’m way past my bedtime now. So Shabbat Shalom (Sabbath Peace) to all, and goodnight.

I don’t know why I didn’t think of this until after the fact, but here’s a video of I Shall Not Be Moved to go with the tree image…

Jesus is My Savior, I Shall Not Be Moved by Squirrel 24 at YouTube

March 20, 2026 Posted by | Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 19: The Day After the Day Before


A man whose home has just been destroyed by a huge tornado, but who has made it out of danger with his family, stands at a distance from his crying family and shakes his fist at the heavens. He blames God for his loss instead of thanking Him for the lives of his family and himself. This is like the raging fool in Proverbs 19:3.
AI (Wombo) Angry Man in Tornado by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

It’s easy to see the devastation and loss in this image. What the man once prided himself in is now worthless after the destruction of a tornado. His family is safe, but you can tell they are scared. And is the father trying to comfort them as they share in that loss? Is he looking at them as a gift that God allowed him to keep? Or, like the first man in the garden, is he just looking for someone to blame?

Proverbs Chapter 19 begins with the statement that a poor person who walks with integrity is better than a rich fool. Then it continues in verse 3 about that fool blaming God for his troubles. The Amplified Bible states it this way ..

Proverbs 19:1 AMP
[1] Better is a poor man who walks in his Integrity than a [rich] man who is twisted in his speech and is a [shortsighted] fool.

https://bible.com/bible/1588/pro.19.1.AMP

Proverbs 19:3 AMP
[3] The foolishness of man undermines his way [ruining whatever he undertakes];Then his heart is resentful and rages against the Lord [for, being a fool, he blames the Lord instead of himself].

https://bible.com/bible/1588/pro.19.3.AMP

So what happened the day before this terrible storm? As The family gathered around the dinner table, the television, or shared a hug before climbing into their comfy beds, did they stop to look up at the sky then? Did they think about God and all that He had provided for them and give Him the praise He’s worthy of? Or was it just another blessed day they took for granted?

Sometimes, I think it’s good that my sister and I grew up in a harder life situation where even ground beef for a skillet meal was seen as a benefit and something we should be grateful for. Though we didn’t have a regular church or religion, we had Bibles and we had at least an inkling of God as our Provider. When an earthquake damaged our apartment, we slept on the floor at our grandparents’ house; though it was only in adulthood that I looked back and saw all the provisions we had to be grateful for. Still , I never recall hearing all the blame and anger against The Almighty that seems to permeate the atmosphere these days.

Surely, the rich and wise King Solomon based verse 6 on his own kingly experiences. It says,…

Proverbs 19:6 WEBUS
[6] Many will entreat the favor of a ruler, and everyone is a friend to a man who gives gifts.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.19.6.WEBUS

And they treat God the same way. They entreat His favor and offer Him friendship as long as He’s willing to pour out gifts on them. But even in that, it’s a shallow friendship. Though it doesn’t have to be that way. Each of us can look at what we have gained and lost in this life and offer praise to The Great Provider. We can know that nothing is guaranteed (and, yes that can stir up fear if we dwell on it) and just trust that Abba Yahveh has been there before us and nothing surprises Him.  If we spend the day before with a grateful heart, we will have more resilience and strength if the day after the day before (today) brings something unexpected.

And this is a great place for the song, “Count Your Blessings.”

Count Your Blessings by Guy Penrod (with lyrics)

March 19, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Thoughts and Articles | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 18: Finding Good “God” Things


AI Edited (Photo Studio Pro) Image of Me & Hubby by Crystal A Murray
(©All Rights Reserved)

You can see Proverbs Chapter 18 right in the picture, so it seemed like the perfect image for this post. And, yes, I know hubby doesn’t exactly have a “Wow, I’ve really found something good” look, but in the original image, it’s obvious he’s in a lot of pain. So, the skin softening and background decor make it a little better. I tried the facial expression changer, and a fake smile definitely did not work for him. Lol 😆.

Anyway, the verse you see on this wonderful gift of shirts hubby got for us on our last anniversary is from 18:22 and reads…

Proverbs 18:22 WEBUS
[22] Whoever finds a wife finds a good thing, and obtains favor of Yahweh.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.22.WEBUS

As I opened my Bible app to read today’s chapter, I was shocked at how colorful it was from highlights I’d left with previous readings. I read in multiple versions, and most had a variety of colorful highlights already. A few examples of my highlights (which I will quote from the WEBUS version because it’s copyright-free and a bit easier to understand than King James Version but I’ve linked to both of them) are:

Blue highlights for verses that make me sad like…

Proverbs 18:2 WEBUS
[2] A fool has no delight in understanding, but only in revealing his own opinion.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.2.WEBUS

That makes me sad because I’m a natural teacher, so a person who doesn’t have any desire to understand is also one who rejects teaching. Plus, I know what they’re missing out on by not having any willingness to at least investigate for themselves, especially with God’s Word.

I highlight in green for the verses I see as urging me or others to go forward and do something. Like these 2 verses that instruct how to hide and seek

Proverbs 18:10 WEBUS
[10] Yahweh’s name is a strong tower: the righteous run to him, and are safe.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.10.WEBUS

And

Proverbs 18:15 WEBUS
[15] The heart of the discerning gets knowledge. The ear of the wise seeks knowledge.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.15.WEBUS

I use red highlights for warnings…

Proverbs 18:3 WEBUS
[3] When wickedness comes, contempt also comes, and with shame comes disgrace.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.3.WEBUS

Proverbs 18:21 WEBUS
[21] Death and life are in the power of the tongue; those who love it will eat its fruit.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.21.WEBUS

And I do a lot of turquoise highlights for encouraging Scriptures. That’s a little harder with so many verses in Proverbs including both the good results of good behavior and the bad consequences of bad behaviors all in the same verses. But here are a few…

Proverbs 18:4 WEBUS
[4] The words of a man’s mouth are like deep waters. The fountain of wisdom is like a flowing brook.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.4.WEBUS

Proverbs 18:16 WEBUS
[16] A man’s gift makes room for him, and brings him before great men.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.16.WEBUS

Proverbs 18:20 WEBUS
[20] A man’s stomach is filled with the fruit of his mouth. With the harvest of his lips he is satisfied.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.18.20.WEBUS

And then I have a variety of yellow and orange and tan to remind me to study more or focus on certain verses. In The Bible App by YouVersion, when you highlight verses, they share to your community stream (if you allow that in settings), so it’s a great way to share what has affected you in your current studies. I often end up highlighting a verse I see highlighted by a friend because it may be in a version I haven’t read or they combined the verse with one that makes me consider it differently. I love that living aspect of God’s Word and highly recommend reading it for yourself to see how God speaks “good” to you from His love letter of the ages.

I’ll close with a video of a song I’ve never heard before called “Happy the Home When God is There” from 1846. This singer says, “Happy our home” and I liked it best for voices and the key on lyric videos.

Happy the Home When God is There (with lyrics)

March 18, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Creative Image Editing, Nonfiction, Photo Studio Pro app, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 17: What Does John 3:17 Have to do With St. Patrick? Finding the Refiner’s Fire in the Mud of Slemish Mountain


A digital AI image created by Google Gemini of a hard-working silversmith sitting by a forge and watching the fire to perfect his latest piece. He has a bucket of mud-covered ore rocks that will get their turns in the furnace. The twilight around him is pleasant on the rolling Irish hillside where he prepares to work for the whole night just as God kept vigil over His people when He delivered them from Egypt in Exodus 12:42. This image represents the refining moments of God setting us free from the dross of sin and shaping us into what He created us to be.
AI (Gemini) The Refiner at an Irish Forge by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

For six years on Slemish Mountain, Patrick was a slave in isolation from his home and family after being kidnapped at only 16 years of age. His journey didn’t begin in a cathedral but rather in a pit; in the furnace of refinement. Proverbs 17:3 describes it this way…

Proverbs 17:3 WEBUS
[3] The refining pot is for silver, and the furnace for gold, but Yahweh tests the hearts.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.17.3.WEBUS

From a Pit of Mud to the Reflection of Christ

In Patrick’s Confessio, the raw Latin he uses to describe himself says, “Ego eram sicut lapis qui iacet in luto profundo.” The literal translation reads, “I was just like a stone which lies in mud deep.” But it was from that stone in the mud that The Refiner (who Patrick referred to as “Qui potens est” or “Who powerful is” in English) began His work.

The image I asked Gemini to create is of a silversmith carefully watching the refining process going on inside a kiln on an Irish hillside. There is a story about a woman going to a silversmith to learn about the process and better understand the Scriptures about these crucible moments we must sometimes walk through in this life. The author is unknown, but it’s a powerful story…

“The Refiner’s Fire
There was once a group of women studying the book of Malachi in the Old Testament. As they were studying chapter three, they came across verse three, which says: “He will sit as a refiner and purifier of silver.” This verse puzzled the women, and they wondered what this statement meant about the character and nature of God. One of the women offered to find out about the process of refining silver and get back to the group at their next Bible study.
That week this woman called up a silversmith and made an appointment to watch him at work. She didn’t mention anything about the reason for her interest beyond her curiosity about the process of refining silver.
As she watched the silversmith, he held a piece of silver over the fire and let it heat up. He explained that in refining silver, one needed to hold the silver in the middle of the fire where the flames were hottest as to burn away all the impurities. The woman thought about God holding us in such a hot spot; then she thought again about the verse that says: ‘He sits as a refiner and purifier of silver.’ (Malachi 3:3)
She asked the silversmith if it was true that he had to sit there in front of the fire the whole time the silver was being refined. The man answered that yes, he not only had to sit there holding the silver, but he had to keep his eyes on the silver the entire time it was in the fire. If the silver was left a moment too long in the flames, it would be destroyed.
The woman was silent for a moment. Then she asked the silversmith, ‘How do you know when the silver is fully refined?’ He smiled at her and answered, ‘Oh, that’s easy — when I see my image in it.’”

I love what this woman learns from the silversmith. She sees the loving personality of a Master Creator who doesn’t put us through the fire without a purpose and doesn’t leave us in the fire without a plan. Without even realizing it, she sees Exodus 12:42 in action. In Hebrew, it reads… “Leil shimurim hu l’Adonai” with the literal translation: “Night of vigils/safekeeping it [is] unto-the-Lord.” Like a silversmith, God never looked away but rather He kept a vigil throughout the night, never leaving His people unwatched, so He could bring them out safely. In the Complete Jewish Bible, it says ..

Sh'mot (Exo) 12:42 CJB
[42] This was a night when Adonai kept vigil to bring them out of the land of Egypt, and this same night continues to be a night when Adonai keeps vigil for all the people of Isra’el through all their generations.

https://bible.com/bible/1275/exo.12.42.CJB

For Patrick, the “heat” of refinement while he lived in slavery wasn’t a punishment. It was the necessary environment to burn away the dross of his sin and reveal the “silver” of his soul when touched by salvation. As I put this post together, I realized the date of 3/17 and how St Patrick’s life and these Scriptures about the refiner’s fire line up with John 3:17.

John 3:17 CSB
[17] For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.

https://bible.com/bible/1713/jhn.3.17.CSB

While The Refiner sits by the forge, watching the surface of the metal, ensuring the heat is perfect—enough to purify, but never to destroy, we know the kiln is not a place of condemnation. The Silversmith doesn’t put the metal in the fire because He hates the silver; He does it because He loves the silver and hates the dross that hides what it is meant to be. He will know the work is finished when He can see His own image in us and our behaviors.

Whether you are in the forge, or you are still stuck in the mud and mire, remember that The Watchman is still keeping vigil over His chosen and called people. It may seem difficult to get loose from our bondage and sin, but once we have tasted the grace of salvation and been set free, it will all be worth it. As it says in the lyrics of the old hymn, when nothing else could help, love lifted me. Then, we may even feel like Patrick (and so many apostles after him); we must spread the good news.

Love Lifted Me by The Forester Sisters (with lyrics)

March 17, 2026 Posted by | AI, Bible, Christianity, Gemini (by Google), Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Slice of Life, Thoughts and Articles, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 16: There is a Fountain


A digital image created by Wombo Dream AI showing a colorful water fountain made of gold and jewels with the words ”love,” ”joy,” and ”peace” embedded in the fountain in jewels. The water is filled with gold to represent that God's blessings are worth more than silver or gold. Above the fountain, heavenly rays of sunshine and peace doves hover in fluffy white clouds.
AI (Wombo) Fountain of Blessings by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Figuring out how to distill the many wonderful teachings in the Proverbs is proving a bit more difficult than I thought it would be. It’s one thing to read them everyday and let them speak to wherever you are in your season of life. But it’s totally different to try and share the whole point when so many points are being made. So, start with reading Proverbs Chapter 16 in full at Bible Hub or your favorite Bible website or app. What jumps out to you that seems perfectly timed to what you might be going through at this moment.

For me, I kept focusing on the values of wisdom and humility being worth more than silver or gold. And then, I grabbed verse 22 and a big promise because it works multiple ways, and makes a nice visual. It says…

Proverbs 16:22a WEBUS
[22a] Understanding is a fountain of life to one who has it.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.16.22.WEBUS

Our own understanding can spring up into life. And, God’s understanding of our weaknesses and need of salvation springs up into eternal life. He desires life for every person He created, but He desires our best life. So by seeking His wisdom, we can receive more than silver or gold will ever be able to buy.

This chapter also includes the oft quoted (and often misquoted) verse about “pride going before a fall.” You’ll see that it’s actually arrogance that goes before a fall and pride leading to destruction. You can get up from a fall. You might be battered and bruised, but you can get up. But if you suffer destruction, there is very little hope of recovery without a total rebuild. Of course, God specializes in mercy that allows for total rebuilds, so a little hope is still hope.

Proverbs 16:18 WEBUS
[18] Pride goes before destruction, and an arrogant spirit before a fall.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.16.18.WEBUS

I guess the big lesson in all of today’s proverbial statements is to stay humble before God and let Him be the one to pour out His choice of blessings on you. With all of creation and salvation being His idea, it’s a more likely scenario that He can come up with blessings greater than you or I could even think to ask for. Here’s one promise on that ..

Proverbs 16:20 WEBUS
[20] He who heeds the Word finds prosperity. Whoever trusts in Yahweh is blessed.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.16.20.WEBUS

And now for some music by one of my the favorite worship bands, Selah.

There is a Fountain Filled with Blood by Selah (with lyrics)

March 16, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 15: The Eyes of March


A digital AI creation by Wombo Dream of a field of people being watched from the heavens with soft eyes looking down through fluffy white clouds, rays of sunshine, and peace doves.
AI (Wombo) The Eyes of March 😁 by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Well, I said I may have a few days in this year where I couldn’t write much, so this is the first of those. I still recommend a full reading of this chapter on the 15th of every month. A link to the Bible Hub website can help you do that, and I also recommend a download of the Bible app from YouVersion. That website will take you to the app page, so you can choose the one that works for your device.

Bible Hub: Proverbs Chapter 15.

YouVersion app install page.

So, I’m keeping the focus today on verse 3…

Proverbs 15:3 WEBUS
[3] Yahweh’s eyes are everywhere, keeping watch on the evil and the good.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.15.3.WEBUS

And, in case you don’t know, my title is a word play on “The Ides of March” when Julius Caesar was killed on March 15th in 44 BC by a group of conspirators, including one whom he thought was a friend. Or at least someone who valued the position he’d been awarded by Caesar. Read a short coverage of the history at https://www.historyskills.com/classroom/ancient-history/marcus-junius-brutus/ and then think about what you know of changes to the Roman empire just 77 years later when they crucified The Messiah.

Since we know that God’s eyes are everywhere, and that He is the same yesterday, today, and forever, we know He was watching all the events that surrounded The Ides and making sure the scene was set in the land of Israel, and in the Roman empire, for what needed to transpire for His purposes. We can trust that He always watches and prepares, and even more that He always plans to work things for the good.

I tried to find this song on video with lyrics, but I could not. I found the clearest and loudest one I could though, since most of them seemed to be played from record players and weren’t the easiest to hear.

Romans 8:28, All Things Work Together for Good by The Cathedrals

March 15, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Books and Writings, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, special days | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 14: SEEMS Right vs IS Right


A digital image of an AI scene in knitting yarn and stitches. The scene compares a woman in black tearing down her own home and pulling threads of destruction with a woman in white standing outside a nice home with sunshine and doves above it.
AI (Wombo) Tearing Down vs Building by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

Whenever I’ve read verse 12 in Proverbs Chapter 14, I’ve always thought about it in terms I could relate to; my way of life before committing to walk with The Lord. It reads…

Proverbs 14:12 WEBUS
[12] There is a way which seems right to a man, but in the end it leads to death.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.14.12.WEBUS

When I wasn’t living FOR God, I was not purposely living against Him. And I imagine there are many people out there who really think their ways are right, but they have no idea what kind of path they’re on. Of course, when God calls their attention to it, they will need to decide if they will accept or reject Him, but until their eyes are opened to see the end of their road, how can they know? That’s where believers come in.

We see these fruits, like a woman tearing down her family and her home, or a mocker refusing to take responsibility for his own behaviors and never trying to make things right by atoning for bad decisions. We get frustrated with these people because their destructive behaviors often hurt us or those we love. And it’s hard to feel compassion and love in our hearts for them. Even worse if they are arrogant as they pull the strings of destruction and act like they enjoy it.

But if those fruits of destruction are not waking up those who are causing them, should we just let them keep walking toward eternal death? No, we are given open eyes to see the paths when they cannot see for themselves. But, we are not given these eyes to condemn them, so we can feel better about ourselves. And we are not seeing those fruits, so we can take them away to make people feel better on their walk toward death. Instead, we see the truth, the way things really are, so we can warn them. And by our own testimonies, we can show them a better way.

We’re told in verse 25…

Proverbs 14:25 WEBUS
[25] A truthful witness saves souls, but a false witness is deceitful.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.14.25.WEBUS

Again, it may not be easy when we share the truth because, even if we’re not judging, those stuck in their own ideas of what SEEMS right may feel judged and be angry with us. But it doesn’t mean they haven’t heard what we’ve shared. Verse 33 says ..

Proverbs 14:33 WEBUS
[33] Wisdom rests in the heart of one who has understanding, and is even made known in the inward part of fools.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.14.33.WEBUS

Somewhere, deep inside, they know the truth that can set them free. In the best case scenario, we will share The Lord with them, and that inward part will be stirred to wake them up to salvation. And the icing on the cake is to be with them as they let go of their sins and accept The Lord.

But if you don’t see any change right away, don’t give up sharing, building, or praying. Remember, the enemy of our souls comes only to steal, kill, and destroy (see John 10:10), so with the strength of YahShua (Jesus) who came to bring abundant life, we can do the opposite. We can restore, bring life, and rebuild. That IS wisdom, and that is The Way that IS right.

And now, here’s a song by one of my favorite Cowboy Christian artists. It perfectly supports the message to never stop ministering to the lost with the line, “Everything you thought I never heard, I hung on to every single word.” It’s called Daddy, I Met a Friend of Yours Today

Daddy, I Met a Friend of Yours Today by Ken Holloway

March 14, 2026 Posted by | AI Image Creations, Bible, Christianity, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, testimony, Thoughts and Articles | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 13: You Are What Your Soul Eats


A digital image of a human feeding himself nourishing food that is filled with energy represented by bright sparkles. The sparkling energy goes from the food to his brain and heart which are located close to the neck because the Hebrew word ”nephesh” in the attached article is related to the word ”neck.” The image is framed with illustrations of smiling fruits.
AI (Wombo) Nourishing the Mind & Heart by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

How do you feed a hungry soul? (Hah, you thought I was gonna say “man” there, didn’t you? 😁 And now you’re humming the TV dinner tune, right? 🎶 Okay, maybe that’s just me.)

But, seriously, for all we’ve talked about hungering and thirsting for The Lord, we haven’t really discussed the care and feeding of that hunger and thirst. Solomon got it in a few verses of Proverbs Chapter 13. Like…

Proverbs 13:2-3, 19, 25 WEBUS
[2] By the fruit of his lips, a man enjoys good things, but the unfaithful crave violence.
[3] He who guards his mouth guards his soul. One who opens wide his lips comes to ruin.
[19] Longing fulfilled is sweet to the soul, but fools detest turning from evil.
[25] The righteous one eats to the satisfying of his soul, but the belly of the wicked goes hungry.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.13.2-25.WEBUS

But there’s so much more depth to it, especially when you learn the meaning of the word soul in Scripture. The Bible Project guys do an amazing teaching on this subject. Watch the video from YouTube here on the blog, or go to their site where you can find all 6 videos in the Shema series plus read the transcripts or download them in PDF. The site is at https://bibleproject.com/videos/nephesh-soul/ and here’s the video…

What It Means to Love God With “All Your Soul” by BibleProject at YouTube

Once you’ve learned the meaning of the word soul (Hebrew nephesh), go back to those four verses above and read them again. Spoiler: the word represents the complete essence of life in its fullest form. So when you read Psalm 42:1-2, you’ll see it as something like, As the desperately thirsty deer pants for the water, my whole life longs for You, Lord God. It desperately thirsts to be satisfied by The Living God. When can I come before Your Holy Presence again? And when you seek with that kind of longing and get filled up by The Lord Himself, you will wonder how you ever wanted anything less than that. And you will have just an inkling of how God feels and why He pursues us. The Got Questions site has a great article on the question “Does God Pursue Us?

And now, enjoy this video of the song As the Deer

As The Deer (with large-print lyrics)

March 13, 2026 Posted by | AI Image Creations, Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, The Bible Project, Walking With The Lord, Wombo Dream | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 12: Life on Planet Earth


Image of a maze filled with multiple paths that lead to a variety of objects; some good and some bad. Many people walking in this maze that sits on top of the planet Earth and represents life on this Earth. A few walls in the maze include portals to get through some of the dead ends. That's like praying through the impossible in the life of a believer in Christ.
AI (Wombo) The Maze of Life by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

I didn’t ask Wombo to create an actual working maze, so if you can solve it, I’d be surprised, but go ahead and try if you like. I did ask for a few portals that could get folks through dead-end walls, though.

So why a maze? Because it’s a great representation of life with how we navigate through it, run into walls, find good and bad along the way, and sometimes feel like there’s nowhere else to go. Plus, Proverbs Chapter 12 begins with the statement that, “Whoever loves discipline loves knowledge.” And what could take more discipline than a maze?

I always laugh when I read the second half of verse 1 in the modern translations. While the King James Version (KJV) calls the person who hates discipline “brutish,” many of the more recent texts say the person who hates correction is “stupid.” That wasn’t something I was supposed to call people according to my raising, so seeing it in a Bible totally shocked me the first time. I like the way the New Living Translation (NLT) says it better. Verse 1 reads…

Proverbs 12:1 NLT
[1] To learn, you must love discipline; it is stupid to hate correction.

https://bible.com/bible/116/pro.12.1.NLT

This chapter has another set of comparisons in all facets of life on Earth. Each one could prove the two points made in verse one. For example, the disciplined people who have learned and gained knowledge would be more apt to be good or godly. That means they’ll be approved by God, and they’ll have deep roots. The opposite personalities will plan wickedness that never brings stability and is not approved by God. The list continues with the godly using words that save lives, winning admiration, making just plans, and having strong family ties. The wicked give treacherous advice, use murderous words, and have a warped mind that is despised.

Like the maze, life is filled with common sense choices and foolish choices. We will make (or should make) the ones that get us to where we want to go. It won’t always be perfect even with wise choices, and foolish choices are not always the impossible-to-escape ends of the roads we walk. Without God, there would be no hope for those who make foolish choices, but because of His grace, we are given ways to escape and, often, start over. Verse 20 says that deceit fills the hearts of those who plan evil, but joy fills the hearts of those planning peace. I consider that joy one of those sparkling portals along with words of encouragement mentioned in verse 25.

And sometimes, no matter what decisions we make, we get tumbled by something as simple as a common cold. I asked myself if I’m dealing with this now because of the lack of sleep from doing these late-night blogs, or because I went somewhere and got exposed but didn’t clean my nose well enough when I got home, or just what. But maybe it wasn’t anything I did or did not do, and it’s just my body being human. Hubby had it for almost 2 weeks, so I know I could’ve gotten it from him even with being careful.  I’ll be pulling out all the stops (vitamins, Oscillococcinum, Zicam, copper, sunshine, coconut oil coating my nose, and Day/Night cold relief) and trying to get through it. I’ll gladly take prayer, and I’ll hold on to the hope in the last verse of this chapter…

Proverbs 12:28 WEBUS
[28] In the way of righteousness is life; in its path there is no death.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.12.28.WEBUS

And now an old Sunday School favorite about wise and foolish builders…

The Wise Man Built His House (with lyrics)

March 12, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Slice of Life, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 11: But It’s Not Fair


AI (Wombo) Imbalanced Scales by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

What’s wrong with this picture? Shouldn’t the gray rocks be heavier? Maybe it’s the mix of worthless rocks within the colored gems that has them weighing more. Whatever the cause, scales out of balance are something most of us know go against justice. The seller whose wares are not paid for honestly, or the buyer who pays and finds later he’s been a victim of lies, can both shout, “But it’s not fair!”

But God loves balance and justice. He gave Solomon wisdom that supports balance and justice, so Solomon begins Proverbs Chapter 11 with the statement that God hates dishonest scales but takes delight in accurate weights. He then goes on to describe more either/or statements that show the fruit of being in balance vs out of balance.

This chapter has enough in it to break it down for as many studies as there are verses (31), so I know I’ll be marking it to go back and study more. For tonight, though, I’m going to leave you with the Bible Project site to read, and I’m posting another video from Bryce Crawford because of his verse by verse breakdown. Plus I love his comments on verse 14 about preachers needing preachers and mentors needing mentors because of the safety in multitudes of counselors. He mentions that if you only surround yourself with those who look up to you, you won’t have caring people to hold you accountable and protect you from falling. Here’s that video…

Bryce Crawford on Proverbs 11 Verse by Verse at YouTube

March 11, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Nonfiction, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

Proverbs 10: Either, Or…


AI (Wombo) Two Paths by Crystal A Murray (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0)

The conjunction of choice and consequence is a connection far too many people ignore these days. Everyone wants the freedom to choose, but they want to be able to choose without consequences. That’s impossible since the word “consequence” means “with sequence” or “with what follows.” All of Earth demonstrates the concept of reaping (harvesting) what we plant, and it doesn’t take the wisdom of Solomon to understand the basics of getting back what we put in.

But Solomon does give us perspective here in Proverbs Chapter 10 by contrasting the consequences of choices made for or against God’s ways. He shows by example that people can either walk the wise path or the otherwise path with its potholes and crookedness. One will leave you weary, and one will leave you energized because the finish line brings joy and peace. Click the link above to read the full chapter at the Bible Project website where you can also find podcasts and great animated videos with simple Bible teaching.

Wisdom is Solomon’s stock in trade, and he tells you in verses 8 & 9 why it’s so important for him to share that wisdom.

Proverbs 10:8-9 WEBUS
[8] The wise in heart accept commandments, but a chattering fool will fall. [9] He who walks blamelessly walks surely, but he who perverts his ways will be found out.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.10.8-9.WEBUS

When you read the chapter for yourself, mentally arrange the items in 2 columns. Either you choose the crooked road or you choose the straight path. Either you choose the curses, or you choose the blessings. Read the results you desire first, and then look at the steps to take to get those results. If you’re already living with results you don’t want, now you’ve got a roadmap of steps to change that. Your goal is verse 22…

Proverbs 10:22 WEBUS
[22] Yahweh’s blessing brings wealth, and he adds no trouble to it.

https://bible.com/bible/206/pro.10.22.WEBUS

And writing this brought my mind back to an old song about people who are sick and tired of the cost of the crooked road, and they want to live with love forever. All they have to do is say, “I do.”

Say I Do (with lyrics)

For further study, I was really impressed with the grasp this young man has on Scripture and his presentation, so I want to share his verse by verse study of Proverbs Chapter 10. His name is Bryce Crawford and his ministry is called “Jesus in the Street.”

Bryce Crawford — Proverbs 10

March 10, 2026 Posted by | Bible, Christianity, Proverbs & Wisdom, Proverbs Series, Walking With The Lord | , , , , , , , , | Leave a comment

   

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