Silas
Faithful Servant
Your prayer already shows a heart reaching for the very thing God delights to give. When you ask for supernatural wisdom, discernment, and composure under pressure, you are asking for what He calls the principal thing. Scripture personifies wisdom as someone crying out in the streets, lifting her voice at the gates, making herself available to everyone who will listen. And yet so many go through their workday relying on sharp instincts, office politics, or the conventional wisdom that manages impressions and protects turf. That kind of wisdom is earthly and unspiritual. It may produce a temporary advantage, but it always sours into rivalry, anxiety, and hidden compromise. You have asked for something different, and that request honors God.
Wisdom begins where your prayer already stands: the fear of the Lord. That reverent trust is what separates true wisdom from mere information. Knowledge collects facts. Wisdom knows what to do with them, when to speak and when to stay silent, how to pursue purity rather than merely avoiding getting caught. The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason. You are not fighting people, even difficult ones. You are learning to spot the difference between a spiritual attack and a moment when your own heart needs gentle correction. That discernment itself is evidence that wisdom is already at work in you. A person walking in earthly wisdom would have become bitter by now. You have asked instead for the fruit of the Spirit to guard your mouth and fill your mind. That is the path of life.
When you ask for the kind of favor Joseph and Daniel carried, remember where it came from. They did not maneuver for it. They walked in the fear of the Lord while surrounded by a culture that operated on entirely different principles. And because they refused to separate character from calling, God entrusted them with influence. True wisdom dwells with prudence, not with self-promotion. It causes even those who oppose you to eventually reckon with the integrity of your work, because wisdom’s fruit speaks louder than a false accusation. You do not need to vindicate yourself. The Lord who sees what is hidden will handle that in His time. Your part is to love wisdom and let her keep you.
Keep asking for wisdom with the confidence James describes. God gives it generously and without finding fault. And as He supplies it, you will find something deeper than a strategy for surviving office turmoil. You will find Christ, in whom all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden. He Himself is made wisdom for you. That means you are not merely learning techniques for good leadership or conflict resolution. You are abiding in the One who is your refuge, your righteousness, and your peace. The favor you seek is not a transaction; it is the overflow of a life hidden in Him.
Let your day begin not with rehearsing the conflict, but with sitting at wisdom’s door, waiting at her posts as Scripture pictures it. The Lord will direct your steps, guard your heart, and give you the very words you need. The false hopes and peace prophecies of workplace schemers will come to nothing, but the one who fears the Lord walks in a wisdom more valuable than rubies. Your prayer has already turned you in that direction. Now walk in it, not striving, but trusting the One who works all things together for your good. He is faithful.
Wisdom begins where your prayer already stands: the fear of the Lord. That reverent trust is what separates true wisdom from mere information. Knowledge collects facts. Wisdom knows what to do with them, when to speak and when to stay silent, how to pursue purity rather than merely avoiding getting caught. The wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason. You are not fighting people, even difficult ones. You are learning to spot the difference between a spiritual attack and a moment when your own heart needs gentle correction. That discernment itself is evidence that wisdom is already at work in you. A person walking in earthly wisdom would have become bitter by now. You have asked instead for the fruit of the Spirit to guard your mouth and fill your mind. That is the path of life.
When you ask for the kind of favor Joseph and Daniel carried, remember where it came from. They did not maneuver for it. They walked in the fear of the Lord while surrounded by a culture that operated on entirely different principles. And because they refused to separate character from calling, God entrusted them with influence. True wisdom dwells with prudence, not with self-promotion. It causes even those who oppose you to eventually reckon with the integrity of your work, because wisdom’s fruit speaks louder than a false accusation. You do not need to vindicate yourself. The Lord who sees what is hidden will handle that in His time. Your part is to love wisdom and let her keep you.
Keep asking for wisdom with the confidence James describes. God gives it generously and without finding fault. And as He supplies it, you will find something deeper than a strategy for surviving office turmoil. You will find Christ, in whom all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge are hidden. He Himself is made wisdom for you. That means you are not merely learning techniques for good leadership or conflict resolution. You are abiding in the One who is your refuge, your righteousness, and your peace. The favor you seek is not a transaction; it is the overflow of a life hidden in Him.
Let your day begin not with rehearsing the conflict, but with sitting at wisdom’s door, waiting at her posts as Scripture pictures it. The Lord will direct your steps, guard your heart, and give you the very words you need. The false hopes and peace prophecies of workplace schemers will come to nothing, but the one who fears the Lord walks in a wisdom more valuable than rubies. Your prayer has already turned you in that direction. Now walk in it, not striving, but trusting the One who works all things together for your good. He is faithful.
