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The Present Truth Magazine (Email)
December 2006


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FROM THE EDITOR’S HEART

Recently my teenage daughter was faced with a decision—obey the Lord or go along with what everyone else is doing. Obeying the Lord meant giving up something she really wanted and possibly experiencing some rejection from peers. As she made the right choice, I told her this would be a “monument” in her life that would always remind her of how God’s way is always the best way. 

In the Old Testament, God often had His covenant people establish memorials to help them remember the goodness of His covenant. These memorials were in various forms—physical monuments, ceremonies, holidays, songs, written documents or engravings, sacrifices, etc. Unfortunately, because of man’s fallen nature, these traditional memorials often lost their deep meaning over time. The children of Israel practiced customs but forgot their significance. 

During the Christmas holiday, I must guard against falling into carnal thinking and not get so caught up in the holiday “trappings” that I fail to speak to and spend time with the Lord. That would be like attending a birthday party and forgetting to speak to or even acknowledge the guest of honor.

I don’t want my family to forget our most precious Christmas gift—JESUS. The most well-known verse in the Bible must not lose its meaning: 

For God so loved the world that He gave His only begotten Son, that whoever believes in Him should not perish but have everlasting life (John 3:16). 

May the joy that comes from having divine revelation of what Christmas is all about fill your hearts this holiday season and always.

Sincerely in Christ,
Christa Clark
Editor


New

THE LAST DISCIPLE is a well-written novel that is a good alternative to the left-behind series.  It is written from what we consider a partial-preterist viewpoint; i.e. that the great-tribulation and most of the book of revelation was written about and fulfilled in the first century.  Reading it is an excellent way to both enjoy a novel and gain a scriptural understanding of how Jesus' and His apostles prophecies were fulfilled in the first century.
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5 Powerful Booklets

Click Here To

$10.00

or view them individually:

Spiritual Israel: Then and Now

Armageddon

Holy Spirit and Humanity

Divorce, Remarriage, and Apostolic Doctrine

The Perpetual Lie About Lucifer

 

Announcements:

You can now listen to our Sunday Sermons online!  Click on our Sermons page.

We are also making some of our sermon series available for purchase on the web.  These are messages that have been brought by the pastors of our church that we believe would be beneficial to the body of Christ at large.  Subjects include:

*Who is This Babylon: Teaching through the book of Revelation from a past-fulfillment covenantal perspective.

*The Power of Positive Thinking: How to be Holy Spirit led, Bible inspired, positive thinkers in Christ.

*Wealth, Riches & Money: Teachings on finances & stewardship.

*God, Man, & Miracles: How miracles can be experienced today with many practical examples.

*Hebrews: Covenants in Contrast: An in-depth study of the book of Hebrews from the past-fulfillment covenantal perspective.

By way of encouragement, we continue to receive regular additions to our magazine, as well as e-mail newsletter, Present Truth Newsletter.  We have also been receiving e-mails from all over our nation and the world from people whom God has in the process of reform.  God is continuing to reform His church and He is faithful to remind us through the testimonies of His people!

For Further Study

Spiritual Israel: Then & Now by Marti Mikl

SPIRITUAL ISRAEL: THEN & NOW
There exists a great debate today as to who the true Israel of God is.  Is it a small nation of people in the middle east, or is it a spiritual people? Spiritual Israel: Then & Now is a reader friendly, yet thorough, study of Israel from the covenantal perspective.  Today, all who are in Christ make up the Israel of God....
Read More

 

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Dear Present Truth Magazine Subscriber:

We are glad to have you as a subscriber to our Present Truth Magazine.  Below you will find articles from individual authors who have written for our magazine.   Our prayer for all who receive read these articles is that the Lord "...may give to you the Spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of Him, the eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that you may know what is the hope of His calling, and what are the riches of the glory of His inheritance in the saints (Ephesians 1:17-18).

A GUIDE INTO THE WAY OF PEACE
By A. Wilson Phillips
 

Prior to the birth of Jesus of Nazareth, Zacharias, a priest in Israel, prophesied over his son John’s prophetic ministry.  

…you will go before the face of the Lord to prepare His ways,

To give knowledge of salvation to His people

By the remission of their sins,

Through the tender mercy of our God,

With which the Dayspring from on high has visited us (shall visit us);

To give light to those who sit in darkness and the shadow of death,

To guide our feet into the way of peace (Luke 1:76-79). 

This peace would be a state of rest, quietness, calmness, and absence of strife. Peace that would also include harmonious relationships between God and men, families, and nations. People cannot be at peace with each other until they are at peace with God

John grew and became strong in spirit and was in the deserts until the day of his manifestation to Israel. John no doubt knew the day would come when Isaiah’s prophecy would be fulfilled—he would introduce to Israel the “Prince of Peace” (Is. 9:6). 

One day when John was preaching and baptizing in the wilderness of Judea, he said, Repent, for the kingdom of heaven is at hand!” (Matt. 3:2). 

...Then Jesus came from Galilee to John at the Jordan to be baptized by him…When He (Jesus) had been baptized, Jesus came up immediately from the water; and behold, the heavens were opened to Him, and He saw the Spirit of God descending like a dove and alighting upon Him. And suddenly a voice came from heaven, saying, “This is My beloved Son, in whom I am well pleased” (Matt. 3:13, 16-17). 

 

The next day John saw Jesus coming toward him, and said, “Behold! The Lamb of God who takes away the sin of the world!...I did not know Him, but He who sent me to baptize with water said to me, ‘Upon whom you see the Spirit descending, and remaining on Him, this is He who baptizes with the Holy Spirit’” (John 1:29, 33).  

By now, John had introduced and guided Israel and the world into the way of peace—Jesus. John’s ministry began to decrease to allow Jesus’ ministry to increase. 

After Jesus’ death, burial, and resurrection, He was raised up by His Father to sit on His throne. Jesus’ death on the cross as the Passover Lamb of God was opening the way for sinful humanity to enter into the way of peace. Sin’s ruinous consequence was universal and pervasive, placing all creation at odds with God and itself.  

For it pleased the Father that in Him (Jesus Christ) all the fullness should dwell, and by Him to reconcile all things to Himself, by Him, whether things on earth or things in heaven, having made peace through the blood of His cross (Col. 1:19-20).  

Jesus Christ’s shed blood paid the penalty for my sin and your sin. He willingly went to the cross as our substitute. Divine love motivated the innocent to suffer for the guilty. 

God’s Holy Spirit was sent into the world to bear witness to these truths. He guides us into the way of peace. By faith in God’s Word, we can trust in Jesus Christ as our Savior, confess Him as Lord (ruler) of our lives, and enter into the spiritual kingdom of our heavenly Father. 

A life in the kingdom is not just keeping a bunch of rules, or do’s and don’ts.  

For the kingdom of God is not eating and drinking, but righteousness and peace and joy in the Holy Spirit (Rom. 14:17). 

By God’s Word and Spirit, we can live a life of peace in every circumstance of life by letting the peace of God rule in our hearts (Col. 3:15).

A. Wilson Phillips is the co-founding and senior pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

GOOD NEWS
By Richard K. Clark
 

When Jesus was born nearly 2000 years ago, heaven sent a delegation to earth to announce “…good tidings of great joy which will be to all people… Glory to God in the highest, and on earth peace, goodwill toward men!” (Luke 2). Needless to say, the world was in dire need of some good news, and there was no better source than God Himself becoming a man. 

Since Adam’s sin, humanity had been plunged into sin/death, and God had patiently orchestrated what needed to be accomplished to bring forth His Christ. Abraham fathered our faith. Moses tutored us with God’s law. David cleared the land. And the prophets all saw the day approaching when the good news would appear.   

Though the Lord fulfilled all the old covenant promises through Jesus, many Jewish people still missed Him. They were looking at the prophecies through selfish lenses. Surely the Christ would ride into Jerusalem in royal array with thousands of soldiers at His command. Most certainly, He would deliver them from their Roman bondage and restore the majesty of Solomon’s kingdom. They desired to stay with their Old Testament types and shadows rather than receive the greater and more perfect reality, the permanent glory of Christ in His church. God’s ways were exceedingly abundant above what they were thinking. Only through humility will anyone ever see and experience all the goodness of God.

Even today, the good news is clearly manifest and declared through Christ’s body. Many in our troubled world are still missing out because they are looking through selfish lenses. Jesus is good news with great joy to all people. He is the only source of peace on earth and good will toward men.

Richard K. Clark is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

The Name of Presence
By Benjamin Davis
 

In the midst of difficult circumstances, I found myself one morning saying to the Lord, “I always enjoy my time alone in the morning.” I realized this was because as I spend time alone in the morning in prayer and the Scripture, I always experience His presence. 

Central to the coming of Jesus to the earth is the hope of God’s presence with man. The gospel writer Matthew said it this way:  

“Behold, the virgin shall be with child, and bear a Son, and they shall call His name Immanuel,” which is translated, “God with us(Matt. 1:23). 

Matthew is quoting from Isaiah 7:14 and, according to many skeptical scholars, pulling it out of its original context.   

In Isaiah’s day, the nation of Judah faced a crisis. Israel and Syria combined forces to attack Jerusalem. The Lord sent Isaiah to the king of Judah, Ahaz, to encourage him. Isaiah prophesied that Judah would be delivered from Israel and Syria if Ahaz would trust in the Lord. However, there was also a warning to Ahaz: “If you will not believe, surely you shall not be established…” (Is. 7:9).   

God’s desire is that His children always believe in Him and by believing experience His presence. Therefore, He offered a sign to Ahaz:  

Therefore the Lord Himself will give you a sign: Behold, the virgin shall conceive and bear a Son, and shall call His name Immanuel (Is. 7:14). 

Isaiah’s prophecy had an immediate meaning to the crisis in his day—God was with Judah to deliver them from Israel and Syria. In the Hebrew wording, the miracle was not in a virgin birth in their day. It is better understood to say a young woman who is not yet married will get married and have a child. That child would grow up and serve the Lord in Judah. The miracle of Isaiah’s day was that because God was with Judah and King Ahaz, they would be delivered from the superior forces that faced them, and Jerusalem would survive. 

In the new covenant, Isaiah’s prophecy takes on a new meaning. The miracle of the virgin birth of Jesus was God’s ultimate sign that He is with His people for all time. This brings new meaning to God’s promise of His presence in times of turmoil and trouble. 

God is our refuge and strength,

A very present help in trouble (Ps. 46:1). 

Today we can experience God’s presence and know Him as our Father. All that is required of us is simply to believe in the One whom He sent and yield to His working in our lives. 

For I am persuaded that neither death nor life, nor angels nor principalities nor powers, nor things present nor things to come, nor height nor depth, nor any other created thing, shall be able to separate us from the love of God which is in Christ Jesus our Lord (Rom. 8:38-39).

Benjamin Davis is an associate pastor of Abundant Life Covenant Church

The Mother of the Prophet
By Jonathan Clark
 

At the Christmas season, it is not uncommon to have a special focus on one of the biblical women of faith, Mary the mother of Jesus. There is another woman of faith that I have been reading about lately—Hannah the mother of Samuel. 

The story of Samuel is a beautiful story of how God raised up a lad as a prophet during a time in Israel’s history when the word of the Lord was rare. As Samuel submitted to his spiritual authority, Eli the priest, God began to speak to the chosen boy. Eli, although corrupt, perceived that God was speaking to Samuel and instructed the future prophet how to answer, “Speak, Lord, for Your servant hears” (1 Sam. 3). In the process of time, God raised up Samuel as a mighty voice of God in his generation. 

What recently jumped out at me in Samuel’s story was the prayer of His mother Hannah, found in the second chapter of First Samuel. 

My heart rejoices in the Lord,

My horn is exalted in the Lord.

I smile at my enemies,

Because I rejoice in Your salvation.

No one is holy like the Lord,

For there is none besides You,

Nor is there any rock like our God…

For the Lord is the God of knowledge;

And by Him actions are weighed…

The Lord kills and makes alive…

The Lord makes poor and makes rich…

For the pillars of the earth are the Lord’s,

And He has set the world upon them… 

As I read through her prayer, I marveled at the level of Hannah’s revelation. She lived during the time of the judges—no prophets, priests, or rabbis taught her these deep truths. As I studied her story further, I saw how Hannah suffered greatly at the hand of her rival, Peninnah. Before the birth of Samuel, Penninah often taunted her because of her inability to have children. “And she was in bitterness of soul, and prayed to the Lord and wept in anguish” (1 Sam. 1:10). Hannah acknowledged her suffering in verse 15, “…I am a woman of sorrowful spirit…” 

As the Lord often does, He revealed Himself to this woman of faith during her deep trials of affliction. Her revelation was great. It is no wonder that the prophet Samuel had such a great ministry. The mother of the prophet set a powerful example for her “covenantally chosen” son to follow in!

Jonathan Clark is an elder of Abundant Life Covenant Church and a physician in Springfield, Missouri.

CHOSEN
By Greg Sanders

When I was a kid, I didn’t go to church on a regular basis. My parents would take us kids to Sunday school if we wanted to go, but I remember preferring to stay home with dad and “help” him work around the house or in his shop. 

A friend invited me to Vacation Bible School when I was 12 years old, and I went. At the end of the week, they were going to award a Bible to someone. I was chosen to receive it. I was proud of that Bible, I guess because it was a new, expensive book, and I was the only person to get one. I had no desire or intention to become a Christian at that time and really didn’t care about the content of the book. 

During my teenage years, I became very rebellious. I started using alcohol and drugs. Although I did pretty well in school, I barely graduated due to a suspension I received for smoking at school. I was a very selfish and prideful person and seemed only to care about partying and having fun.  

About a year after high school graduation, I decided to go to a college in Kansas City, Missouri. I shared an apartment, and in my bedroom I kept the Bible I had received on my dresser as “room décor.” At times, usually when I was troubled or lonely, I would read in that Bible. I read the “red-letter” passages—feeling that those were the “important” parts of the book. At that time, I had no idea the profound effect those words would later have on my life. I was living a dedicated sinner’s lifestyle and continued to do so for several more years. However, through circumstances and relationships, God was changing (and humbling) me. 

I went from a high-paying job to a low-paying job; I lost my driver’s license due to (another) DWI; and I was feeling hurt in a relationship. As I was riding home in a Greyhound bus after visiting this person, I remembered the words from my Bible from Matthew 11:28-30:  

Come to Me, all you who labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest. Take My yoke upon you and learn from Me, for I am gentle and lowly in heart, and you will find rest for your souls. For My yoke is easy and My burden is light. 

I needed rest for my soul, and His Word comforted me. 

The next day at home, I was channel-hopping on the TV and stopped to watch a church service. They concluded with an altar call and, being deeply moved at the love of God, I asked Jesus to be my Lord. I was changed. I had new life—old things had passed away, and all things had become new. 

Soon afterward, I talked to my brother-in-law who had been a Christian for many years. I said, “Now I’m a Christian, but I don’t know what (denomination) I am—Catholic, Baptist, or other.” He suggested that I not worry about that for now and just start attending church with someone I knew and trusted. I went to church where he attended. The first Sunday I went forward and professed my salvation and was baptized right away. 

After my salvation experience, I began to realize how God had been at work revealing Himself to me for several years before I acknowledged Him. My salvation was His doing! We can’t know God unless he first reveals Himself to us—and when He does, His unconditional love, mercy, and grace make Him irresistible. God first put His Spirit in me, and as a result, I was able to “know” Him and receive Him. John 15:16 says, “You did not choose me, but I chose you.” Ephesians 1:4 declares that He “chose us in Him before the foundation of the world.” God started this work in me, and He is faithful to complete it and to conform me to the image of Jesus Christ. 

Greg Sanders is a biomedical equipment technician for Mercy Clinical Engineering Services at St. John’s Hospital in Springfield, Missouri.

FIXING MY FAULTY FOUNDATION
By Cheri Stark

Even though I was the daughter of a Baptist pastor, I had some “cracks in my foundation.” As I was growing up, I had a faulty view of God as well as myself. I didn’t think much of either one of us. I believed and meditated on negative things about myself. I was insecure and fearful. I thought God was angry with me because I felt I was a failure. Over the years, I allowed everything I learned to travel through these filters of untruths; therefore, my perceptions of God and myself continued to be negative. 

If a faulty foundation is never repaired, eventually the entire structure will collapse. Several years ago, God in His mercy began fixing my foundation. 

I had watched my sister Christi and her husband Rick live out their Christianity. It was different than what I had experienced. I wanted what they had. As I humbled myself to God and to them, God began to reveal Himself to me. I learned that He truly loves me and wants the best for me. He has established me to be successful.  

A few years ago when our senior pastor was starting to teach on deadly emotions, I thought, “I’m sure this will help some people, but I don’t have any emotional problems.” As he spoke, I realized that I have had all of them at some point in my life—anxiety, fear, inferiority, guilt, resentment, depression.  

As I continue to grow and think on the truth, my self-image improves—I am made in the image of Christ. The fears that have held me in bondage continue to fall away. God does not want me to put myself down. He desires me to have a life of righteousness, peace, and joy. As I continue to renew my mind and allow His thoughts to become my thoughts, my foundation is being rebuilt to one of security based on the faithfulness of God. 

I now know that God’s Word is truer than my feelings, so I continually meditate on His truth. 

…He is also Mediator of a better covenant, which was established on better promises (Heb. 8:6).

 

I have been crucified with Christ; it is no longer I who live, but Christ lives in me; and the life which I now live in the flesh I live by faith in the Son of God, who loved me and gave Himself for me (Gal. 2:20).

 

For you died and your life is hidden with Christ in God (Col. 3:3).

 

And do not be conformed to this world, but be transformed by the renewing of your mind, that you may prove what is that good and acceptable and perfect will of God (Rom. 12:2). 

Cheri Stark is an assistant nurse manager for Cox Health Systems in Springfield, Missouri.

Learning to Give 
By Angie Gibson 

My parents gave me a good start to becoming a giving person. They taught me to tithe and, above that, give offerings as I believed God was leading me. I also gleaned from my parents that proper management of one’s finances (among other valuable things like time) was key to being able to help others.  

We lived a comfortable life, but there were many things that were “cool” or “in” that we never got or got at a much later time. Even though I was sad about that at times, inside I knew the reason was a good one. In our everyday lives, I saw the frugality of my parents enable them to give liberally when the opportunity or the need arose. While I saw their giving on many occasions, there were two instances, involving me directly, that made quite an impact on how I think today. 

The first was during my high school years. My French teacher, who was always sharing some of her personal life with us, told us how she had finally been able to purchase the car of her dreams, a Mercury Cougar. She was very proud to own it and looked so happy driving it. One day, as we walked into class, she was in tears and shared how her car had been vandalized by some students—denting it in several places. Her insurance would pay for the damage, but she had a $300 deductible to pay, and she didn’t know where she would get the money. My heart went out to her. That night I had a serious conversation with my dad. I told him the story and somewhat timidly (knowing how careful he was with money) told him I believed we needed to give her the money. To my amazement, without hesitation, he sat back in his chair, looked me right in the eyes, and said he would get the money the next day. He said we would give it anonymously, and we did. 

The second instance happened during my college years at a private university. My parents were prepared to pay all of my educational costs, but as we talked with my RA (resident assistant in the residence halls) that first day, we found out that the payment for being an RA was room and board. (I think I saw my dad’s eyebrows rise at that very moment.) With my parents’ interest in mind, I applied to become an RA for my second year of college. I knew it would take a lot of time and energy, but I went through the whole rigorous interview process and was excited to join the team when asked. 

As my sophomore year approached, my dad really floored me. He told me that because he had already planned to pay for my room and board, and since I had been willing to become an RA to be a good steward of his money, he was going to put the amount equivalent to the room and board into my bank account. Again, I was amazed and deeply touched by his generosity. 

Through my life experiences, I have seen the truth that God is both frugal and generous. He wants me to be frugal and generous as well. Ephesians 4:28b says: 

…but rather let him labor, working with his hands what is good, that he may have something to give him who has need. 

Good stewardship is what God expects from me. Because of this, I am dependent upon Him to show me where He wants me to invest that which He has entrusted to me. With these values and priorities, my husband and I are learning to give so that God can make all grace abound toward us, that we, always having all sufficiency in all things, may have an abundance for every good work (2 Cor. 9:6-8). 

Angie Gibson and her husband Ed are leaders in the Heirborn Children’s Ministry of Abundant Life Covenant Church.

Human Cloning and Embryonic Stem Cell Research
By A. Wilson Phillips 

Many sincere scientists and Bible scholars are endeavoring to educate us about stem cell research. Our public servants in civil government have taken the initiative, through our constitutional form of government, to regulate stem cell research. Only God knows the motivation of these spiritual and civic leaders. It does appear that an unhealthy fear has gripped the hearts and minds of Americans through the media concerning these issues. The questions in the debates: “Who is the giver of life? How is life sustained? Who are we accountable to?” 

In a pastoral letter to Timothy, Apostle Paul wrote that all life comes from God.  

I urge you in the sight of God who gives life to all things, and before Christ Jesus who witnessed the good confession before Pontius Pilate, that you keep this commandment without spot, blameless until our Lord Jesus Christ’s appearing, which He will manifest in His own time, He who is the blessed and only Potentate (sovereign), the King of kings and Lord of lords, who alone has immortality, dwelling in unapproachable light, whom no man has seen or can see, to whom be honor and everlasting power (1 Tim. 6:13-16).  

In short, the unseen sovereign God is the source and sustainer of all His creation.

God created mankind in His image and likeness and has given us the responsibility to obey His speaking voice. God has given us both His written Word and Spirit to guide us in our postmodern world with stem cell research. Individually and corporately, we are responsible to use our technology for His glory and honor. 

In my view, we must discern the difference between two Greek words that are translated “life”—psuche (psoo-khay'), which means natural human life, and zoē (dzo-ay'), which means eternal life or God’s life. This zoē life has been ignored by scientists and modern thinkers in every discipline of life

Greek scholar W.E. Vine has written,  

Zoē, as used in the New Testament, is life as a principle, life in the absolute sense, life as God has it, that which the Father has in Himself, and which He gave to the Incarnate Son to have in Himself (John 5:26), and which the Son manifested in the world (1 John 1:2). 

As a consequence of the fall, man became alienated from this life (Eph. 4:18), and men become partakers of this life through faith in the Lord Jesus Christ. 

God imparts His life to men/women through the new birth or baptism into Christ. They are new creation people—partakers of God’s divine nature, the very sons and daughters of God. They are to glorify God in their spirits and bodies which belong to God (2 Pet. 1:4; 1 Cor. 6:17-19). 

The spiritual kingdom of God worldwide must grasp the truth that stem cell research and the modern technology of cloning a human being can only reproduce natural life (psuche). However, only the divine Creator can give men/women His divine nature and eternal life through the new birth. That life is in His Son. “…God has given us eternal life, and this life is in His Son (1 John 5:11).  

If He should set His heart on it,

If He should gather to Himself His Spirit and His breath (spirit),

All flesh would perish together,

And man would return to dust (Job 34:14-15).

 

Look to Me, and be saved (made whole),

All you ends of the earth!

For I am God, and there is no other (Is. 45:22).

WISDOM—THE PRINCIPAL THING

 

…you are in Christ Jesus, who became for us wisdom from God… (1 Cor. 1:30). 

…wisdom is justified by her children (Matt. 11:19; Luke 7:35).

 

Our youth have been studying the Proverbs and finding that “Wisdom is the principal thing” (Prov. 4:7).
 

The Proverbs have been showing me about my anger towards my sisters. I would always get mad at the smallest of things, and I got used to doing it all the time. Then today I read Proverbs 16:32, which says, “He that is slow to anger is better than the mighty, and he that rules his spirit than he that takes a city.” This has been helping me to act better towards my sisters. 

Tim Clark, 7th grader at Pershing Middle School in Springfield, Missouri
 

(As school started this year) my youngest brother left for college. I really didn’t think it would be that hard on me to have my brother leave… I was wrong.  

Everyone says that your junior year is going to be your hardest, but I still underestimated what this year was going to be like. I took on a heavy course load, mostly honors classes… I am an A student so I thought this year would be hard but I would get through it just like everyone else. I came home the first day and just cried. My brother…had always told me how to handle certain classes, but now he wasn’t here… I talked to a lot of my friends—we were all stressed out.  

I prayed all night for God to help me make the right choices…and not stress myself out by worrying about the future. My next two days of school turned out to be much better, and I know it was because God was there for me.  

I read the book of Proverbs keeping school in mind… “Then you will understand what is right, just, and fair, and you will know how to find the right course of action every time” (Prov. 2:9.) Wisdom will help me make the right choices in life… God is there for me always, and I know that even though I may be the only child left in my house, I am never alone. God is always here for me.

Hannah Sparkman, 11th grader at Republic High School in Republic, Missouri
 

I need to seek wisdom with passion. Proverbs 2:4-5 explains: 

If you seek her (wisdom) as silver,

And search for her as for hidden treasures;

Then you will understand the fear of the Lord,

And find the knowledge of God. 

Wisdom is showing me that if I seek her with passion at school I will find the knowledge I need to do well in all my classes. 

Proverbs 3:26 says, “For the Lord will be your confidence and will keep your foot from being caught.” … I need to have confidence in everything I do. Now I understand that the Lord should always be my confidence, whether I am in a class or playing a sport. 

One last thing that wisdom has been teaching me comes from Proverbs 4:8-9: 

Exalt her, and she will promote you…

She will place on your head an ornament of grace;

A crown of glory she will deliver to you. 

In other words, she will make it known to everyone that I have her… She can make us stand out to others in such a great way that they want to be around us and want to be involved in gaining our wisdom.

Brad Cook, 10th grader at Greenwood High School in Springfield, Missouri.


 I feel like what wisdom says to me about school is to hang out with the right crowd, not to be lazy, and to not be mad when I get corrected. 

Jenna Bieber, 7th grader at Cherokee Middle School in Springfield, Missouri
  

God has put this scripture on my heart: 

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,

But fools despise wisdom and instruction (Prov. 1:7). 

In school there are a lot of kids who do not want to be told what to do, and therefore they are foolish…If I respond to instruction with a good attitude, I have the fear of the Lord. So this year I am going to work on my attitude towards instruction.

Natalie Davis, 7th grader at  Carver Middle School in Springfield, Missouri