Standing in Awe

When Reverence Becomes Wisdom

“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom.”
Proverbs 9:10

The opening hours of the day often arrive quietly, before demands and responsibilities fully find their voice. It is in this gentle threshold between rest and resolve that Scripture invites us to orient our hearts rightly. Proverbs 9:10 offers not merely a moral instruction but a posture of the soul. The “fear of the LORD” is not anxiety or dread, but reverence—what the Hebrew tradition calls yir’ah, a word that carries the sense of awe-filled attentiveness. To fear God is to recognize reality as it truly is: God is Creator, Sustainer, and Redeemer, and we are not. Wisdom begins when we stop pretending otherwise.

This reverence grows from an honest awareness of who God is. Scripture consistently presents the Lord as omniscient, omnipotent, and omnipresent—knowing all things, able to do all things, and present in all moments. Yet Scripture also testifies that this same God bends low toward humanity in covenantal love. To stand in awe is to be struck by this holy tension: that the One who “has all authority” also chooses mercy, forgiveness, and grace. As Old Testament scholar Tremper Longman observes, wisdom literature teaches us “how to live well in God’s ordered world,” and that order begins with recognizing God’s rightful place at the center.

As the day unfolds, reverence becomes deeply practical. Awe recalibrates our decisions, our words, and our responses. When we remember that God alone holds final authority, we are freed from the illusion that everything rests on us. Reverence quiets impatience, softens pride, and steadies fear. It allows us to approach challenges not with frantic control but with thoughtful trust. Standing in awe does not remove responsibility; it places responsibility within the care of a faithful God. In this way, reverence becomes wisdom lived out—an inner alignment that shapes how we move through the ordinary moments of the day.


Triune Prayer

Most High (El Elyon),
I begin this day acknowledging Your supreme authority and holiness. You are exalted above all things, yet You invite me into Your presence with grace. I confess how easily I rush into my day without pausing to remember who You are. Teach my heart to stand in awe of You—not with fear of punishment, but with reverent trust. Shape my thoughts so that wisdom begins where You belong: at the center. I thank You for Your sustaining care and for the assurance that nothing in this day escapes Your loving oversight.

Jesus, Christ, Son of God,
I give thanks that You have revealed the heart of the Father to us. In You, divine authority is clothed in humility, and holiness is expressed through mercy. As I walk through this day, help me to learn wisdom from Your life—Your obedience, Your compassion, Your faithfulness. When I am tempted to rely on my own understanding, remind me to follow Your way instead. Let reverence for You shape my actions so that others may glimpse Your grace through how I live and speak.

Holy Spirit, Spirit of Truth,
I ask for Your guiding presence as this day unfolds. Teach me to recognize moments where awe should replace anxiety and trust should replace control. Illuminate my heart so that reverence becomes a daily discipline, not a passing thought. Strengthen me to walk wisely, listening for Your gentle correction and encouragement. I welcome Your work within me, trusting You to form a life that reflects the wisdom that comes from God alone.


Thought for the Day

Begin each decision today by quietly remembering who God is—and who you are not. Let reverence set the tone before action follows.

For further reflection on biblical wisdom and reverence, see this article from Bible Project:
https://bibleproject.com/articles/fear-of-the-lord/

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