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A guardrail doesn't do any good if you build it at the point of crisis. You can't attach a guardrail to open air. You build it before the dangerous curve — in the place where a car can make contact and be redirected rather than going over the edge. That's exactly what wise counsel does. But it only works if you put it in place before you need it.
Wise counsel has two primary sources. The first is Scripture and the Holy Spirit — not as a magic formula, but as a slow, consistent practice of putting God's word in front of you and giving the Spirit something to work with. Read a passage. Memorize a verse. Put it on your dashboard and say it out loud. The second is a mentor: someone a little further down the road than you in the specific area where you need wisdom, someone you've sought out intentionally rather than waited for the right person to appear.
Two traps to avoid: the echo chamber — seeking counsel only from people in exactly the same position as you — and the search for vindication, where you look for someone who agrees with what you already think. Neither of those is wisdom. Real wisdom redirects the momentum of your life before it becomes unmanageable. And it's available to anyone willing to actually pursue it.
Support the mission of the Salty Pastor ministry! Visit our donations page at https://pushpay.com/g/thesaltypastor to help us continue sharing truth with a world in need. Visit thesaltypastor.com to sign up for our weekly email, designed to coach, inspire, and encourage you to a mature faith.
Discussion Questions
By Dr. Douglas Peake5
4949 ratings
A guardrail doesn't do any good if you build it at the point of crisis. You can't attach a guardrail to open air. You build it before the dangerous curve — in the place where a car can make contact and be redirected rather than going over the edge. That's exactly what wise counsel does. But it only works if you put it in place before you need it.
Wise counsel has two primary sources. The first is Scripture and the Holy Spirit — not as a magic formula, but as a slow, consistent practice of putting God's word in front of you and giving the Spirit something to work with. Read a passage. Memorize a verse. Put it on your dashboard and say it out loud. The second is a mentor: someone a little further down the road than you in the specific area where you need wisdom, someone you've sought out intentionally rather than waited for the right person to appear.
Two traps to avoid: the echo chamber — seeking counsel only from people in exactly the same position as you — and the search for vindication, where you look for someone who agrees with what you already think. Neither of those is wisdom. Real wisdom redirects the momentum of your life before it becomes unmanageable. And it's available to anyone willing to actually pursue it.
Support the mission of the Salty Pastor ministry! Visit our donations page at https://pushpay.com/g/thesaltypastor to help us continue sharing truth with a world in need. Visit thesaltypastor.com to sign up for our weekly email, designed to coach, inspire, and encourage you to a mature faith.
Discussion Questions

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