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The Foolish Squander Wisdom

May 5, 2014 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

Rev5 Utah 2012 WorshipWhat does it mean to be wise? What does it mean to live rightly? What value is there in pursuing discernment and loving discipline? If none, then let each do as he desires; but if there is something to be gained for earnestly desiring wisdom, seeking to live wisely and inviting discernment and discipline upon our lives, then why do the foolish squander wisdom?

Could it be that the perspective of the foolish is skewed? If the most important thing in my life is me and the pursuit of my own pleasure, then I can understand why choosing the affection of a boy and forsaking the admonition of my community wins over chastity and contentment. Likewise, if all that matters are these momentary enticements and there is no greater future for me, I would choose video games, fairy tales and boyishness over maturity and manhood.

Let’s face it: discipline is hard; contentment is sacrificial; manhood is scary.

So why pursue these things? Why leave behind my childish ways in exchange for the virtues of adulthood?

Perspective. It’s all about perspective.

The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom, and knowledge of the Holy One is understanding.Proverbs 9:10

Wisdom accurately sees ourselves in relation to God. He is God (Lord of the earth, center of the universe, creator of all things), I am not. While God is gracious and extends his Hand to all — seeking intimate loving union with us — he is still “holy, holy, holy”. His “otherness” and awesomeness should inspire awe, wonder and humble submission in us.

Some people choose to confine themselves to walking daily in foolishness. “But each person is tempted when they are dragged away by their own evil desire and enticed. Then, after desire has conceived, it gives birth to sin; and sin, when it is full-grown, gives birth to death. (James 1:14-15)” When the pursuit of our own desires overtakes our minds and becomes the presiding goal of our hearts, our perspective has shifted — God is no longer God — we are.

This is foolishness. It is for the loss of proper perspective that the foolish squander wisdom.

Filed Under: Discipleship, Lordship, The Kingdom Centered Mind, Worship Tagged With: Foolishness, Perspective, wisdom

Our fleeting grasp of grace

April 1, 2014 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

Trembling, I stood before the judge in my crisp suit, trying to make the best impression. With eyes tearing and a quaky voice, I answered all of her questions. I hadn’t slept much the night before and had been shaky with fear for what her judgement would be.

The crime wasn’t really even my fault, yet I knew the responsibility lay on my shoulders and that there could be both expensive and potentially painful consequences.

We had invited a detoxing heroine addict to be a guest of our home. As he writhed in pain and overcame the terrible addiction, our hearts broke for him. I had allowed him to use my car to apply for a job, which had given opportunity for a drive downtown, a relapse, an arrest and eventually this court scene.

My car was impounded. Heroine needles had been found in my car and I was sure that somehow I was going to get pinned with this crime. I was paralyzed with fear and completely at the grace of this judge. Without ceasing, I prayed under my breath for mercy and that the judge would have wisdom to see the reality of the situation.


This fear that gripped me bears a striking resemblance to the fear that binds our hearts in regards to grace. So many of us Christians are striving, clutching — trying to maintain hold of our fleeting grasp of grace. We push so hard to earn God’s favor. When we feel we do, we can’t enjoy it, because the fear of losing it slips in.

What if we let go and invited God to take over… completely?

What if we forgave ourselves for the sins that God has already forgiven ourselves for?

What if we stopped trying to work for God’s approval? Do you believe He loves you just how you are… that he made an “as-is” purchase?


Friends, we are no longer slaves to sin. Nor are we slaves to guilt and shame.

We cannot earn our salvation. The moment we try, it is as if we clench our fists around a fleeting grasp of grace and try to muster up strength to keep hold of God’s favor. But Abba’s favor is more like floodwaters or torrential rain that pours over us. We cannot escape it, nor harness it as if we have earned it.

God’s grace towards us was purchased solely by His sacrifice of His son, Jesus Christ, on that Golgatha cross. Your good works didn’t raise Him from the dead — and they won’t free you from your guilt.

Christ’s life overcame death and He will free you from your guilt and striving. He calls you to relinquish your fleeting grasp of grace, stretch out your arms and bask in His Father’s torrential, loving downpour of grace.

Filed Under: Surrender Tagged With: Grace

Holding Camdyn For The First Time

You at your worst

January 31, 2014 by brianmichaelsteck Leave a Comment

Holding Camdyn For The First Time
Holding Camdyn For The First Time
I’m enjoying the incredible blessing of being a first-time father to a precious baby girl. She’s healthy, beautiful and giving us more rest than expected at this young age.

But there are moments when I forget the blessings that surround me and instead see things as if life were crashing down around me. These are the moments when I’m no longer patient or kind, but when the very worst comes out of me.

If you’ve experience these moments yourself, you may have noticed patterns in your thinking or behavior. For me, I blame. Something goes wrong — a delayed flight, a dropped call, an explosive diaper — and my initial response is “well, if they could just…” or “if they would just do it right, just this once…” But the truth is that, the problem doesn’t lie with others, it’s with me.

I’m the problem and Christ is the solution.

When I fail to realize this, I point fingers and place blame on just about anyone and anything around me; maybe outwardly, but most of the time this all takes place in my mind.

I had one of these moments this morning, during a middle-of-the-night diaper change, when a miraculous two outfits get soaked, as my daughter exercised her gift of waiting until the diaper is off to relieve herself. I reached into the diaper bag and the wipes were nowhere to be found; meanwhile, she’s squirming all through the mess on the changing pad. The disinfectant spray was empty and the pacifier would not stay in her mouth, no matter what I did (a small strip of duct tape did cross my mind).

In my mind, I blamed a half-dozen people for why all these problems were their fault.

And that’s when it hit me. It’s not about them. They had nothing to do with it. It’s about me and my heart.

God immediately made it apparent to me that it’s been several days without a solid devotional time with Him, and it was showing. So as I realize this, and try to draw away for a few moments before I go up to get my precious daughter for her morning bottle, I humble myself before you and show my cards.

None of us are perfect. Who are you when you’re at your worst? Where is Christ in the midst of that? May you find Him and cling to Him, no matter how many stinky diapers get thrown your way 😉

Filed Under: Surrender Tagged With: Blame, Humility

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