Tuesday, March 17, 2026

Seek It Out: The Discipline of a Wise Heart

 

Seek It Out: The Discipline of a Wise Heart

By Carl Mathis | Faith & Personal Growth


“The heart of the discerning acquires knowledge, for the ears of the wise seek it out.” — Proverbs 18:15

In a world saturated with information, the real issue is no longer access—it’s discernment.

We are constantly exposed to opinions, content, and voices competing for our attention. But Scripture draws a clear distinction: the wise don’t just receive information—they pursue truth intentionally.

A Heart That Acquires

The verse begins with the “heart of the discerning.” This is not referring to emotion alone, but to the inner decision-making center—the place where values, convictions, and understanding are formed.

A discerning heart:

  • Filters what it hears

  • Evaluates what it receives

  • Aligns knowledge with truth

This kind of heart does not passively absorb everything. It acquires knowledge—meaning it is active, disciplined, and intentional.

Ears That Seek

The second half of the verse sharpens the message:

“the ears of the wise seek it out.”

Wisdom is not accidental. It is the result of pursuit.

Wise people:

  • Ask questions

  • Listen carefully

  • Seek counsel

  • Stay teachable

They are not satisfied with surface-level understanding. They dig deeper.

In today’s terms, this means not believing everything you hear, not reacting to every headline, and not allowing emotions to replace truth. Instead, wisdom requires intentional listening with purpose.

The Discipline of Growth

Spiritual and personal growth both demand the same principle: you must seek what you want to become.

If you want wisdom:

  • You must pursue it

  • You must protect your inputs

  • You must remain teachable

Growth does not happen by accident. It happens through consistent exposure to truth and the discipline to apply it.

Application: What Are You Feeding Your Mind?

Take a moment to evaluate:

  • What voices are influencing you daily?

  • Are you seeking truth—or just consuming content?

  • Are you growing, or just staying informed?

There is a difference.

Information can fill your mind, but only discernment transforms your life.

Final Thought

A wise life is not built on what you hear—it is built on what you seek, what you filter, and what you apply.

If you want to grow, don’t wait for knowledge to come to you.

Go after it. Seek it. Live it.


Author Bio



Carl Mathis writes on faith, leadership, and personal growth, equipping others to live with discipline, purpose, and spiritual clarity.

Wednesday, March 11, 2026

Overcoming Evil with Good

 


“Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” — Romans 12:21


In a world that often seems filled with conflict, hostility, and division, the Apostle Paul gives believers a powerful and countercultural instruction: do not allow evil to overcome you. Instead, we are called to rise above it and respond with good.


At first glance, this teaching may seem difficult. When someone wrongs us, our natural response is often retaliation. Human instinct says to return insult with insult, hurt with hurt, and injustice with revenge. Yet Scripture calls us to something higher.


The Battle Within


Evil does not only exist in the world around us; it also tries to take root within our hearts. Bitterness, anger, resentment, and hatred are the subtle ways evil begins to overcome us. When we allow these emotions to control our responses, we may unknowingly become part of the very cycle we are called to break.


Paul reminds believers that victory over evil is not achieved through aggression but through goodness. When we choose patience instead of anger, forgiveness instead of revenge, and kindness instead of hostility, we refuse to allow evil to shape our character.


The Power of Good


Responding with good is not weakness—it is spiritual strength. Goodness has the power to disarm hostility and transform situations that might otherwise spiral into greater harm.


Consider how Jesus Himself modeled this principle. When He was insulted, He did not retaliate. When He was falsely accused, He did not respond with hatred. Even while suffering on the cross, He prayed for those who persecuted Him.


This is the ultimate example of overcoming evil with good.


Breaking the Cycle


One of the greatest victories a believer can experience is refusing to continue the cycle of wrongdoing. When someone speaks harshly, choosing gentleness breaks the chain. When someone acts unfairly, responding with integrity demonstrates a different standard.


Overcoming evil with good means living with intentional character. It means allowing our actions to reflect Christ even when circumstances tempt us otherwise.


This kind of response requires spiritual discipline, prayer, and humility. It is not always easy, but it is always powerful.


Living the Principle Daily


Every day presents opportunities to practice this biblical principle. It may be in the workplace, within relationships, or even in simple interactions with strangers. Each moment gives us the choice: will we react according to human instinct, or will we respond according to God’s wisdom?


Choosing good does not mean ignoring injustice or pretending wrong does not exist. Rather, it means refusing to allow evil to dictate our behavior or corrupt our spirit.


When believers consistently respond with goodness, patience, and grace, they become living examples of Christ’s character in the world.


Final Thought


Romans 12:21 reminds us that goodness is not passive—it is victorious. Evil may try to provoke anger, division, and retaliation, but the believer has a greater weapon: the power of good.


When we choose kindness over cruelty, forgiveness over resentment, and love over hatred, we demonstrate that evil does not have the final word.


Goodness does.


Carl Mathis

Faith & Personal Growth Writer


Carl Mathis writes about Christian faith, personal growth, and spiritual discipline, encouraging others to pursue a life anchored in biblical principles and lasting integrity



Seek It Out: The Discipline of a Wise Heart

  Seek It Out: The Discipline of a Wise Heart By Carl Mathis | Faith & Personal Growth “The heart of the discerning acquires knowledge,...