God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.
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God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.
The Value of Restraint and Reconciliation - Proverbs 17:7-14
TBC Glassboro Sermons and More
8 minutes 49 seconds
3 weeks ago
The Value of Restraint and Reconciliation - Proverbs 17:7-14
Few tests reveal the depth of wisdom like the way we handle conflict. Proverbs 17 reminds us that words, once unleashed, can wound deeply and divide quickly, yet silence and patience can heal what pride would destroy. The wise learn the power of restraint, choosing to listen before speaking, to forgive before fighting, and to make peace before tempers flare. Just as a breached dam unleashes uncontrollable waters, so an unguarded tongue releases chaos, God calls His people to a higher path—to seek reconciliation instead of retaliation, to build bridges instead of walls, and to let humility, not anger, have the final word.
TBC Glassboro Sermons and More
God offers His people quiet streams of trust, but rejecting those streams invites waters that sweep away. The message becomes a sober reminder that when God’s people choose their own way over His, the consequences often rise like a flood: powerful, unstoppable, and deeply revealing. Yet even in the surge of judgment, the text whispers the name Immanuel, reminding Judah that the land still belongs to the Lord, and that His purposes will stand even when the waters rise.