Episodes

Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
You will get shot
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
Tuesday Feb 24, 2026
Garth Heckman
The David Alliance
What do you want for your kids? Happiness? Great life? Money? Health?
Proverbs 24:16 For a righteous person falls seven times and rises again,
Rising After the Fall: The Resilience of the Righteous
Scripture: “For though the righteous fall seven times, they rise again, but the wicked stumble when calamity strikes.”(Proverbs 24:16)
1. The Reality of the Fall - the gun will go off, someone will get shot
The first thing we notice in this verse is a sobering honesty: the righteous fall. Many people operate under the misconception that a life of faith is a life of perfection or a shield against gravity. But Solomon doesn’t say the righteous might fall; he says they fall "seven times." In biblical terms, the number seven often represents completeness. This suggests that the righteous will face complete, repeated, and sometimes exhausting setbacks.
- The Fall is not a Failure of Faith: Falling is simply part of the human condition. Whether it is a moral lapse, a financial collapse, or an emotional breakdown, being "righteous" does not mean being “bulletproof."
I love Mauy Thai because you get kicked and punched and elbowed and kneed and that is the real world… most people don’t like to fight because they don’t want to feel pain… but once you get over that you become deadly.
2. The Definition of Righteousness
If both the righteous and the wicked face "calamity," what is the difference between them?
The difference isn't found in the descent, but in the response.
- The Wicked: When they stumble, they stay down. Their foundation is built on circumstances, so when circumstances crumble, they are undone.
- The Righteous: Their righteousness isn't based on their ability to stand perfectly; it’s based on their relationship with the One who pulls them back up. Righteousness is a matter of orientation, not just performance.
3. The Grace of the "Again"
The power of this verse lies in two words: "rise again." This is the theology of the second chance (and the third, and the seventh). God is more interested in your recovery than your stumble. The "rising" is an act of grit fueled by grace. It implies that as long as there is breath in your lungs, the story isn't over.
"Failure is not the opposite of success; it is a stepping stone to it. In the Kingdom of God, failure is often the classroom where we learn the most about God's strength and our own weakness."
Application: How Do We Rise?
- Acknowledge the Fall: Don't waste energy pretending you didn't trip. Honesty is the first step toward upward mobility.
- Reject the Label: You may have fallen, but you are not "a failure." You are still "the righteous" because of whose you are.
- Lean on the Lifter: We don’t rise by our own bootstraps. We rise because we serve a God who reaches down into the pit.
Conclusion:
If you find yourself on the ground today—spiritually, mentally, or professionally—take heart. The "seven times" you’ve fallen are not a tally of your defeat, but a setup for your next rising. Dust yourself off; your Storyteller isn't done writing yet.
Would you like me to expand on this with some specific modern-day illustrations or perhaps draft a concluding prayer to go with it


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