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Category: Thursday Thought

Don’t Hate to Wait

Posted on March 5, 2026March 3, 2026 by Jon Gauger

You’re more impatient than you think you are.

Banking giant Fifth Third has the proof. They commissioned a survey and discovered that nearly 80 percent of respondents rated themselves as being patient, but in reality:

  • 96 percent of those surveyed will knowingly consume scorching food or drink that burns their mouth; 63 percent do so frequently.
  • More than half hang up the phone after being on hold for 1 minute or less.
  • 76 percent regularly drive faster than the speed limit to get to their destinations faster.
  • When waiting for a table at a restaurant, nearly a quarter of respondents ages 18-24 wait less than one minute before approaching the host again.

If you’re an impatient person (and most of us are), you’re not looking for another lecture or well-meaning friend to tell you to stop doing what comes naturally. What you need is a burst of something supernatural. And that’s precisely what David offers us in Psalm 27:14.

SOURCE: https://www.dnj.com/story/money/business/2015/02/23/survey-says-patience-longer-reality/23903981/#

It’s the self-talk he needed for the many unresolved conflicts in his life: “Wait for the LORD; Be strong and let your heart take courage; Yes, wait for the LORD.”

It feels counterintuitive, doesn’t it? “Just be patient and wait.” Isn’t that what you were told as a kid? Well, your mom and dad were right. After all, you get the chicken by hatching the egg, not by smashing it open.

“But isn’t there something I can do?” we ask. Actually, it’s not one thing but two.

After re-committing yourself to waiting, David says we should first “Be strong.” The Hebrew words for “Be strong” here and elsewhere in Scripture direct us to carry out repairs, become mighty, and collect strength.

If you believe the Bible is true, you have to believe that we are engaged in constant spiritual battles—and war always creates damage. Any chance some of your relationships are a bit frayed—damaged even? There’s some repair work that needs to be done.

What about your daily quiet time with God? You say, “I’ve been too busy lately,”—or “I haven’t gotten much out of it.” Time to make some repairs! 

Why not choose to “collect strength” by memorizing this very verse? If you learn it now, you’ll have it for later—when your self-talk foments and shouts at you to “Do something!”  Imagine calmly but forcefully speaking this wisdom to the screaming doubts that assail you. That’s what it means to “let your heart take courage!

For whatever reason, it’s much more helpful for me to say this verse out loud than to just read it silently. It’s like I’m verbally opposing the negative self-talk coursing through my brain. And so we must!

Fredrick William Faber says, “We must wait for God, long, meekly, in the wind and wet, in the thunder and lightning, in the cold and the dark. Wait, and he will come. He never comes to those who do not wait.”

Why not give it a try?

Next time your first instinct is to ram ahead and “do something,” reach for Psalm 27:14. Don’t hate to wait! Instead, be strong and let your heart take courage by waiting on the Lord.

Today’s blog is a sample from Powerful Self-Talk from the Psalms. Let this resource help you replace negative self-talk with Scripture.

Weird Weather Words

Posted on February 26, 2026February 25, 2026 by Jon Gauger

Have you noticed the trend toward snazzier, jacked-up weather words? This week, we were told a “bomb cyclone” hit New York City with the most snow it’s had in more than five years.

Not to minimize the troubles of our East Coast brothers and sisters, but think about it. We’re only talking five years here, not ten or twenty or fifty. Nevertheless, we were informed—with utter certainty—this (snow storm) was a “bomb cyclone.”

In 2019, experts labeled the extreme cold we experienced in the Midwest a “Polar Vortex.” But in decades past, we simply called this a “cold snap.”

In the emerging world of weird weather words, you’ll also encounter reports of a “Flash drought” or “Heatpocalypse.” Other relative newcomers include “Firenado,” “Derecho,” or “Heat Dome.”

While it’s true that today’s meteorologists have a larger suite of tools and a more refined capacity to analyze and label data, it’s tough to deny the penchant for newer, glitzier terms.

But there’s a problem with using inflated language. When we inject common words with the steroid of excess, a predictable addiction is sure to follow. Eventually, these hyped-up terms are no longer sufficiently hyped. And the language junkies of our culture will require something weirder and wilder.

Unsurprisingly, the Word of God has something to say about inflated speech. In Matthew 5:37, Jesus warned, “But make sure your statement is, ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘No, no’; anything beyond these is of evil origin.”

Maybe it’s time we did a self-assessment of our speech patterns. Are we guilty of exaggeration, manipulation or inflation? Do we inject oversized adjectives and adverbs in our conversations to create emotional responses that outscale the truth?

Hear Jesus again: “Make sure your statement is, ‘Yes, yes’ or ‘No, no’; anything beyond these is of evil origin.”

Honest words may not be snazzy, but there’s something remarkably refreshing about them in an age of linguistic distortion: truth.

An Open Letter to Noah

Posted on February 19, 2026February 18, 2026 by Jon Gauger

Dear Noah—

What happened?

In reading about your ark experience, it says of you:

  • That you “walked with God.”
  • That you were “a righteous man.”
  • That you “did all the Lord commanded” you.

Amazing!

I’m humbled by the long track record of your complete obedience and in awe of your guts and grit in building that ark. Such a long track record of good and godly faithfulness—and all of it lived in full view of your three sons and their wives.

After spending nearly a year in that ark enjoying God’s supernatural protection and provision, Noah, you got drunk and behaved badly. For whatever reason, your son Ham made light of your foolish (and naked) state, which is a story of its own.

Yet my concern is not so much about what Ham did, but about what you did. What happened that you let down your guard? Why allow this stain on your character?

Please understand that I’m in no position to judge. I wouldn’t want my sins recorded in a book for all to read, either. It’s just that you were doing so well.

I see a lesson here:

Great men with a great record of righteous obedience are yet capable of a great fall. So, take great care of your soul, great care of your heart, and great care of your actions.

That’s it for now, Noah. I’m going to talk with God.

O, Lord,

I am warned by Noah.

A great accomplishment for God in the past does not negate or even minimize my capacity for failure in the future. Truly, I must be sober, vigilant.

O God, help me in the guarding of my endlessly wayward soul.

Amen!

Be sober-minded; be watchful. Your adversary, the devil, prowls around like a roaring lion, seeking someone to devour.

1 Peter 5:8

Pixabay Image by joseweslley899

Fragile Rewards

Posted on February 12, 2026February 11, 2026 by Jon Gauger

Have you heard about the trouble they’re having at the Milan Cortina Winter Olympics?

A Wall Street Journal headline says it best: “The Olympics have just begun. Olympic medals are already falling apart.”

Apparently, the ribbons are not staying fastened to the medals, and several have fallen off. As of the writing of this blog, at least six Olympians have had their medals break—and some of those during the actual medal award ceremony!

Olympic organizers are said to be investigating with “maximum attention.” You don’t say.

But fragile rewards are hardly an isolated problem in the sports world.

Formula 1 driver Isack Hadjar accidentally broke his third-place trophy during celebrations at the 2025 Dutch Grand Prix. According to observers, he accidentally snapped the handmade Delft Blue trophy during team photos. Thankfully, the award was replaced.

Then there’s Vice President JD Vance, who ended the Ohio State football team’s visit to the White House by fumbling the team’s national championship trophy. He didn’t realize the trophy’s golden top was designed to separate from the base, and the Vice President ultimately lost his grip on both.

Back to that problem with the Olympic medals. Imagine investing years of drive, dedication, and discipline to get to the Olympics. Imagine the surge of adrenaline at winning—only to watch your medal jangle down to the floor. Isn’t that just about the ultimate disappointment?

Actually, it’s not. A far greater disappointment awaits believers who get so thoroughly sucked up into this world that they don’t “compete” for the rewards of the world to come. So, we end up in heaven with little or nothing to show for our time here on earth. No return on the talents Christ has loaned us.

Unlike those flimsy Olympic medals, heavenly rewards, we’re assured, are beyond breakage. Shouldn’t this truth sober us, motivate us? Like those Olympic organizers, it’s time you and I investigate our souls with “maximum attention.”

“Everyone who competes in the games exercises self-control in all things. So they do it to obtain a perishable wreath, but we an imperishable.”

1 Corinthians 9:25

Image by kalhh from Pixabay

No Discounts for Disciples

Posted on February 5, 2026February 4, 2026 by Jon Gauger

Discounts are the secret sauce in retail marketing. But there’s such a thing as asking for too much, as I was unexpectedly reminded the other day.

Nine-year old Ava enjoys imitating her mom, who answers phones for a garage door service company. Because I love messing with the grandkids, I decided to “join” Ava for one of her pretend phone calls.

“Thanks for calling the garage door service company,” Ava chirps. “How may I help you?”

“My garage door is broken,” I growl in a cranky voice. “And I need you guys to come fix it.”

“We’re happy to help, sir,” offers the affable Ava. “Is this an emergency call or can it wait until tomorrow?

“It’s an emergency!” I insist. “But I don’t want to pay more than ten dollars to get it fixed!”

The unfazed Ava replies courteously, “Well, sir, this is a garage door company—not a Dollar Tree.” Meaning, my discount request is not merely inappropriate, it’s ridiculous.

When you think about it, it’s amazing how many who call themselves Christ-followers want an equally inappropriate discount on their faith journey.

We punch in and punch out for Sunday (or Saturday night) church service. We crack open the Bible once in a while…pray a few minutes most days—and declare this discounted lifestyle as an acceptable faith. Truthfully, we prefer a Christianity that resembles our favorite hotel bed: warm, fluffy, and restful—at a price that’s deeply discounted.

But authentic Christianity doesn’t offer any discounts. Jesus has always expected us to take up our cross daily and follow Him. He seeks whole-hearted, full-time followers, not part-time praisers.

Jesus paid the price in full. Which means there is nothing cheap about real Christianity.

Let’s be reminded: there is no such thing as a crown without a cross.

Therefore, I urge you, brothers and sisters, by the mercies of God, to present your bodies as a living and holy sacrifice, acceptable to God, which is your spiritual service of worship.

-Romans 12:1

Photo by Alberto Bigoni on Unsplash

Inventory

Posted on January 29, 2026 by Jon Gauger

Do you have too many clothes?

I do. Shirts, more than pants.

So, several years ago, we undertook an inventory. I yanked every T-shirt, dress shirt, work shirt (and other shirts) off the racks and shelves. We even hauled stuff down from the attic. With the help of Tim and Beth—our son and daughter-in-law—we launched a full-blown blitz.

Every shirt was scrutinized, and most were tried on. In one amazing hour, we went through everything. Rising up from the kitchen table: an impressive mountain headed for the resale store. And honestly, the process felt strangely freeing.

But if it’s healthy to take an inventory of our shirts, what about an inventory of our souls?

Working through that mound of shirts, we asked questions like

  • Does it still fit?
  • Is it worn out?
  • Does it make me look better—or worse?

Shouldn’t we ask similar questions of our souls?

  • Does this hobby or binge show of mine fit someone headed for heaven?
  • Is my walk with Christ worn out in some areas?
  • Do the habits I’ve taken on make Jesus look better—or worse?

There’s a lot to inventory: time, money, prayer, Bible reading, hobbies, relationships, possessions, and conversations. Trying to assess even one of those could be daunting. But avoiding the decluttering process is like avoiding the doctor, believing that will somehow keep bad news away.

I don’t know about you, but I’ve got a lot more inventorying to do. Here’s to decluttering the closets of our souls!

Search me, God, and know my heart; Put me to the test and know my anxious thoughts; And see if there is any hurtful way in me and lead me in the everlasting way.

-Psalms 139:23,24

Photo by Linus Belanger on Unsplash

America’s Neighbor Problem

Posted on January 22, 2026January 21, 2026 by Jon Gauger

America has a neighbor problem.

A survey of more than 1,000 Americans uncovered:

  • Nearly 40% of people aged 18-29 rarely or never interact with their neighbors.
  • Only 17% of Americans trust their neighbor with a house key.

More than two-thirds of respondents report hiding from their neighbors at least once. They do this by:

  • Pretending you don’t see them (37%).
  • Staying inside when you’re outside (34%).
  • Acting like you’re not home (26%).
  • Wearing headphones while outside (21%).
  • Acting like they’re on the phone (21%).

Younger generations are nearly twice as likely to avoid their neighbors as people over 60:

  • 75% of 18–29-year-olds avoid their neighbors.
  • 74% of 30–44-year-olds avoid their neighbors.
  • 70% of 45–60-year-olds avoid their neighbors.
  • 38% of 60-plus year-olds avoid their neighbors.

Ironically, people are spending more time than ever at home, but they’re not spending it interacting with their neighbors. According to the survey, 48% of people interact with their neighbors monthly or less, and nearly a third rarely interact with them at all.

Jesus commanded us, “Love your neighbor as yourself,” a directive regarded as the second greatest commandment. But how can we love our neighbors if we’ve never met them? Or maybe we’ve met them, but we’re never with them? (SOURCE: https://toprailfences.com/blog/insights/people-hiding-from-neigbors/)

In the age of FaceTime, getting actual face time with our neighbors may be difficult, but that doesn’t mean it’s impossible.

Wanna talk to neighbors you know—and meet ones you don’t? Get outside. Regularly. Intentionally. It’s amazing how God will time things so you just “happen” to bump into a neighbor.

Want to meet new neighbors? Don’t just stare at the buttons when you’re riding the elevator up and down at your apartment or condo. Notice the people with you—and talk to them! 

America might have a neighbor problem, but followers of Christ are the answer.

Loving our neighbors starts with meeting our neighbors. And this is God’s will for you, for me, for all of us!

“Love your neighbor as yourself.”

Mark 12:31

Photo by Nina Strehl on Unsplash

We’re All Broken

Posted on January 15, 2026January 14, 2026 by Jon Gauger

How can you resist a sale offering 90% off?

We couldn’t. So, there we were at Hobby Lobby, scanning the aisle that promised unsold Christmas ornaments, wreaths, and ribbons. But what we found were decimations rather than decorations.

There were trees missing trunks and reindeer missing limbs. We saw stars without their points, and holly without berries. A lady in the same aisle we ambled down was heard to mutter: “If it’s not broken, it’s not here!” She wasn’t wrong.

We saw lacquer that was lacking, gold foil that had failed, and untold numbers of things unglued. To prove my lack of exaggeration, I created a grouping from just a few items at arm’s length and snagged a snapshot. So pathetic, it was almost comical.

But I found unexpected meaning in the mishmash when my eye landed upon a church ornament. White and porcelain, the bottom corner of the church was entirely missing—cracked off.

Instantly, I was reminded that in some way, this aisle was a picture of the world. We are all broken, sinful, trashed. In fact, the Bible says, “We are all infected and impure with sin. When we display our righteous deeds, they are nothing but filthy rags” (Isaiah 64:6).

But thank God, He didn’t walk down the aisle of our brokenness, shake His head, and walk away. He sent Jesus to die in our place, pay for our sins, and make it possible to be restored to God. Broken no more.

If you have never come to God and asked Him to forgive you—and make you whole, do it now! And don’t let your personal mess keep you back, as if you are a disaster too great for Him.

Spurgeon says, “Your ruin is your argument for mercy; your poverty is your plea for heavenly alms; and your need is the motive for heavenly goodness. Go as you are and let your miseries plead for you.”

We’re all broken. But we don’t have to stay that way.

If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness.  -1 John 1:9

At Your Right Hand

Posted on January 8, 2026January 7, 2026 by Jon Gauger

I don’t know about you, but I confess to being easily shaken up. A critical email, a negative text, tension at work—it doesn’t take much, and I’m all shaken up. At times like these, many of us revert to unhelpful self-talk. Meaning, we bash ourselves.

I can read the thought bubble in your mind. You’re saying, “Yeah, I’m easily upset by people and problems that oppose me, but that’s just who I am.” Maybe. But that isn’t who you have to be.

David addresses this soul sickness when he invites us to better self-talk in Psalm 16:8. His personal testimony—his coping strategy—is this: “I have set the Lord continually before me; because He is at my right hand, I will not be shaken.”

In Bible times, the expression, “at my right hand,” spoke of favor and importance. Note that Scripture often speaks of Jesus being at the right hand of God—again, the highest place of honor and significance.

Does your Outlook calendar and your daily routine place Christ at the highest place of honor and significance? Here are three keys that will help unlock a more biblical self-talk.

Key #1—You Choose to Set Him Before You

Setting the Lord before you doesn’t happen by default or accident. It’s a choice. David said, “I have set,” not “the Lord set.” No competent bricklayer just “happened” to build a straight wall. And no one ever “happened” to become a piano virtuoso the day of their first lesson. These things begin with a decision. We set our mind and heart on a goal—and then we follow through over time.

Key #2—You Make a Daily Decision

Setting the Lord before you is not a one-time thing. It’s a daily, moment-by-moment action. Note the word “continually.” Many of us pay a whole lot of money for subscription plans: internet, phone, meal prep, music and movie streams, cloud storage, and on it goes. We set up auto-pay for our bills, autofill for our prescriptions, and even auto-order pet supplies. But there’s no “auto plan” for setting the Lord continually before you. It’s something you do every day.

Key #3—You Invite His Presence to Be with You

Setting the Lord before you continually invites the Lord’s continual presence to be in your life. David says, “Because He is at my right hand, I will not be shaken.” I’m so glad David doesn’t say, “I’m pretty sure God will show up to protect me when I need Him most.” He reminds himself that God is—already (right now and today and tomorrow)—“at my right hand.”

Invite the Lord to help you call this verse to mind the moment that stress comes knocking. In fact, I encourage you to say Psalm 16:8 out loud the very next instant you feel tense. I promise you that trouble will loosen its grip even as you sense God tightening His grip on you. This habit, this lifestyle, is the self-talk we need!

“I have set the Lord continually before me; because He is at my right hand, I will not be shaken.”

—Psalm 16:8

NOTE:

You’ve just read a tiny sliver of the hope you’ll encounter in the book, “Powerful Self-Talk from the Psalms.” For a free sample chapter, email me at Jon.gauger@moody.edu. “Send me the chapter!” It’s perfect for anyone who knows what it means to lie down…but not get to sleep!

Make More of Heaven

Posted on January 1, 2026December 31, 2025 by Jon Gauger

It’s official.

Expedia’s latest data now reveals 2026’s most sought-after travel destinations. One can’t help but wonder if these nominations are somehow connected with the airlines whose tickets Expedia sells. But all of that aside, here’s what’s apparently in for the globe-trotting set.

Occupying the number one Expedia destination spot is Big Sky, Montana, which features an “artsy vibe and frontier spirit.” Not to mention some awesome scenery.

The second-place award goes to Okinawa, Japan, offering “an archipelago of semi-tropical islands.” You can almost see yourself immersed in the turquoise water.

In third place is Sardinia, Italy, the “understated gem of Italy.” Pass the risotto alla Milanese, please.

Phu Quoc, Vietnam, is an up-and-coming destination for travelers in search of “tropical serenity with a splash of adventure.”

Number five on the list is Savole, France, which looks like the most magical winter postcard you’ve ever laid eyes on.

https://www.expedia.com/unpack26/destinations-of-the-year

Any one of the five nominations sounds nice, right? But as idyllic as they might be, they wither in comparison to the destination soon to be enjoyed by every follower of Christ. Ponder the wonder of heaven!

Startlingly Beautiful. Imagine streets of gold…a crystal-clear river of life…twelve city gates each made from a single pearl…a city foundation of precious stones. And that’s just for starters!

Supremely Secure. Nothing unholy will ever enter heaven. There will be no “serpent-in-the-garden-version-2.0” to tempt us. No robbers, no impostors. No possibility that you and I will ever sin again.

Sublimely Satisfying. No selfishness, sickness, sorrow, or suffering. No more broken legs. Or broken marriages. Never an unkind word or even the hint of a scowl. Farewell to funerals—all of them! And hello to Jesus—all of Him!

Imagine: unbroken, unstoppable, unending, unashamed life lived every spectacular second in the shadow of our Triune God—who Himself will be our light!

The new year is upon us, statistically guaranteeing we are closer to the wonder we call heaven. That said, shouldn’t we resolve this year to make more of heaven?

Other things—lesser things—will vie and cry for our attention. After all, life here on earth must go on. Somebody has to pay the bills, clean the toilets, and go buy groceries. But surely, we can and must keep heaven front and center.

So, for 2026, let’s…

  • Think about heaven
  • Speak about heaven
  • Dream about heaven
  • Live for heaven
  • Long for heaven
  • Invest in heaven
  • Anticipate heaven
  • Urge others to join us in heaven!

“No eye has seen, no ear has heard, and no mind has imagined what God has prepared for those who love him.”-1 Corinthians 2:9

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Jon Gauger
Jon Gauger

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