The Fear of the Lord Is Wisdom

Day 27 · Job 28:23, 28

📖 TODAY’S SCRIPTURE

Job 28:23, 28 (NIV)

“God understands the way to it and he alone knows where it dwells… And he said to the human race, ‘The fear of the Lord — that is wisdom, and to shun evil is understanding.'”

Today’s John 15 thread: True wisdom doesn’t come from acquiring information — it flows from connection. The branch that remains in the Vine has access to what the branch that cuts itself off can never reach. Abiding in Jesus is not just devotional practice. It is the source of wisdom itself.



✍️ REFLECTION

The whole of chapter 28 in Job is a meditation on one question: where does wisdom come from?

Job searches through every conceivable source. The depths of the earth. The place where silver is mined and gold refined. The hidden caverns no bird’s eye has ever seen. He asks the deep and the sea, and they say: “Wisdom is not in us.” Destruction and Death say: “We have only heard a rumour of it.”

Wisdom cannot be bought. It cannot be excavated. It cannot be found in any created thing.

And then God answers. Quietly, definitively. Wisdom belongs to Me — and the entry point, the beginning of it, is the fear of the Lord.

Q1: Where do you tend to look for wisdom first — advice from people you respect, books, your own reasoning, or prayer? Be honest. What does that reveal about where you think wisdom actually lives?

Now, fear here is not the kind that makes you cower. It is not terror. It is awe. Reverence. The conscious, ongoing awareness that God is holy, that He is powerful beyond anything I can conceive, that He is worthy of my full orientation — every decision, every relationship, every ambition.

When we live with that kind of awareness, something happens. It becomes very difficult to continue in patterns of self-deception and sin. The fear of the Lord creates an internal gravity that keeps us rightly aligned. Not by trying harder — through awareness. The more clearly I see who God is, the more clearly I see what I am and what I need. That is the beginning of wisdom.

Job arrived at this understanding after losing everything. Not before. The suffering — the stripping away — drove him to the conclusion that no comfortable life had ever produced: wisdom begins with God, and nowhere else.

Q2: Has a hard season ever brought you to a clarity about God — or about yourself — that you couldn’t have reached any other way? What did it produce in you?

Romans 8:28 says that in all things God works for the good of those who love Him. Job is a living case study in this. Bad things happened. Terrible things. And yet — at the end of the story, not the middle — everything was restored. God was working even in the silence.

I have seen this in my own life. The things I thought were the hardest things I’ve been through, looking back, were the very seasons where God was doing the most. I am a living testimony to Romans 8:28. Not because everything turned out perfectly — but because nothing was wasted.

And that is what the fear of the Lord produces in you, over time. Not a tidy life. Not a guaranteed outcome. But a deep, unshakeable orientation toward God that holds — even when the silence stretches long and the reasons don’t come.



🌿 REMAIN IN HIM

Take a moment before you move on. This isn’t a to-do. It’s an invitation to stay.

Reflect honestly: Do you live with a genuine awareness of God’s holiness — not as guilt or fear of punishment, but as reverence that actually shapes your choices? When was the last time the reality of who God is changed what you were about to do?

Bring it to Jesus: Ask Him honestly: “Where has my fear of You faded into familiarity? Where have I stopped treating You with the awe You deserve?” Sit with that. Don’t rush past it.

Trust the Gardener: The Gardener who creates the pruning seasons also holds the Romans 8:28 promise. Nothing is wasted. Nothing is random. The wisdom of God is at work in every season — even the ones you cannot interpret. Trust the Gardener.



🙏 PRAYER

Father, thank You for speaking through Your Word today. You alone know where wisdom dwells. I confess I’ve often looked for it in the wrong places — in advice, in books, in my own reasoning. But wisdom starts with You. Restore in me a healthy reverence — not fear that makes me run from You, but awe that makes me run to You. And where I am currently in a season I don’t understand, help me to trust that You are working in all things. In Jesus’ name, Amen.



💡 MEMORY VERSE

Romans 8:28 (NIV) — “And we know that in all things God works for the good of those who love him, who have been called according to his purpose.”



This post is part of the Abide in Him Daily devotional series — reading Scripture through the lens of John 15:1–17. The branch doesn’t manufacture the fruit. It bears it because it stays connected to the Vine.

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