Winning at Life: Trusting the Wisest Person in the Room
This week at The Journey, we explored what it means to live well by trusting the wisest person in the room—God Himself. The teaching invited us to stop relying only on our own understanding and instead learn to trust the wisest person in the room: our God who knows the whole track ahead. These practices aren’t about perfection—they’re about learning how to live with humility, trust, and freedom.
This Week’s Sermon: Game Plan for Winning in 2026
Key Takeaways
- Loyalty is not just a feeling but a practiced way of life that shapes who we become.
- Trusting God means choosing His wisdom over our instincts, even when it feels uncomfortable.
- Where we invest our resources often reveals—and reshapes—what our hearts truly trust.
- God’s correction is not rejection; it is loving guidance meant to help us grow.
- Lasting change happens when our hearts learn to trust God, not just our behavior.
Sermon Highlights: Loyalty, Control, and the Way We Try to Win at Life
Most of us want the same things: a good life, meaningful relationships, and a sense that we’re heading in the right direction. Yet so often, we try to achieve those things by relying on our instincts, our logic, or our experience alone. When things go wrong, our first impulse is often to grip the steering wheel tighter and try harder. Proverbs 3 reminds us that trusting the wisest person in the room means choosing God’s wisdom even when it contradicts our instincts.
This week at The Journey, we asked a different question: What if living well isn’t about trying harder, but about trusting deeper? What if the path to a full life begins with loyalty to God, humility about our limits, and a willingness to be guided?
The Big Idea of This Week’s Teaching
At the heart of this teaching was the invitation to stop relying only on ourselves and begin trusting the wisest person in the room in every decision. Proverbs 3 invites us to stop pretending we know best and instead learn how to follow a God who sees the whole picture. At the heart of this teaching was the invitation to stop relying only on ourselves and begin trusting the wisest person in the room in every decision.
This kind of trust isn’t passive. It’s practiced—through consistency, generosity, humility, and openness to correction.
Key Scriptures From the Teaching
- Proverbs 3:3–4 – We’re invited to bind love and faithfulness to our hearts, making loyalty part of who we are, not just something we do.
- Proverbs 3:5–6 – Trusting God with all our heart means letting go of the illusion that we fully understand the road ahead.
- Proverbs 3:9–10 – Honoring God with our resources becomes a tangible way to train our hearts to trust Him.
- Proverbs 3:11–12 – God’s correction is framed not as punishment, but as loving guidance from a Father who delights in His children.
1. Loyalty Above All
The sermon began with the idea that love—at its biblical core—is loyal, dependable faithfulness. Proverbs uses two Hebrew words often translated as love and faithfulness, but together they describe something deeper: relentless, dependable loyalty.
Loyalty isn’t just what we feel when it’s easy. It’s what we practice when it’s inconvenient. Over time, those practices shape our character. Showing up—again and again—forms us into people who are reliable, trustworthy, and present.
“Loyalty isn’t just something we feel—it’s something we practice until it becomes who we are.”
When loyalty becomes part of our identity, it spills into every area of life: friendships, work, family, and faith. It’s not about being perfect; it’s about being someone who keeps showing up.
2. Trusting the Wisest Person in the Room: Why Trusting God’s Wisdom Changes Everything
Proverbs 3 reminds us that trusting the wisest person in the room means choosing God’s wisdom even when it contradicts our instincts. The sermon illustrated this with the image of a rookie racer trusting a seasoned coach—someone who knows the track, the terrain, and the hidden dangers ahead.
In our own lives, we often act like we’re the wisest person in the room. We rely on logic, instinct, and past experience. But Scripture reminds us that God is not just present—He is wise beyond anything we can see or calculate.
Trusting God means choosing humility. It means believing that the Creator of the universe might actually know something we don’t.
3. Investing in God and His Kingdom
One of the most practical—and challenging—parts of the teaching focused on money. Proverbs connects trust in God directly to generosity, because money has a powerful way of revealing and shaping our hearts.
Jesus taught the same principle: where we place our treasure, our hearts tend to follow. Investing in what God is doing isn’t about earning favor or checking a box—it’s about training our hearts to trust Him.
When we give intentionally and first, we’re reminded that our security doesn’t come from what we store up, but from the God who provides.
4. Learning to Appreciate Course Corrections
Finally, the sermon addressed God’s discipline—those moments when we feel nudged, corrected, or redirected. These moments can sting. They challenge our pride and disrupt our plans.
“God’s correction is not rejection; it’s loving guidance from a Father who wants us to thrive.”
But Proverbs reframes correction as love. A good coach corrects because they want us to win. A loving Father guides because He wants us to thrive.
Learning to accept correction without resentment is heart work. It’s a daily practice of reminding ourselves that God’s guidance is not meant to restrict us, but to lead us toward life.
Practicing This Week
- Notice where loyalty shows up—or is lacking—in your everyday commitments.
- Ask yourself who you’re trusting most when making decisions: yourself or God.
- Reflect on where your money goes and what it reveals about your priorities.
- When you sense correction or conviction, pause and remind yourself that God’s guidance is rooted in love.
- Practice repeating truth when resentment or resistance rises in your heart.
Questions for Reflection
- Where do you find it hardest to trust God instead of yourself?
- What practices have shaped your character over time—for better or worse?
- How does generosity affect your sense of trust and security?
- When you experience correction, what emotions surface first?
- What would it look like to trust God with the unknown parts of this year?
As we practice trusting the wisest person in the room, we learn to release control and receive the life God is leading us toward. Following Jesus isn’t about having everything figured out—it’s about learning to trust the One who does. God doesn’t invite us into a life of control, but into a life of freedom shaped by loyalty, humility, and grace. As we practice trusting the wisest person in the room, we learn to release control and receive the life God is leading us toward.