“Avoid foolish controversies and unprofitable arguments.”
Titus 3:9
In a world overflowing with noise and opinions, Paul’s words to Titus serve as a gentle but firm warning: not every debate is worth engaging in. “Avoid foolish controversies and unprofitable arguments,” he writes, reminding us that time spent in division is time stolen from devotion. The Christian life is not about winning arguments but about living love. As E. Stanley Jones observed, “Love is the law of life. When you break that law, life breaks you. When you keep it, life keeps you.” True spiritual productivity is measured not in how much we say, but in how deeply we love.
When we invest our time in blessing others—listening, praying, serving—we participate in God’s quiet work of renewal. Every act of goodness, no matter how small, carries eternal significance. “Let us not become weary in doing good,” Paul says elsewhere, “for at the proper time we will reap a harvest if we do not give up” (Galatians 6:9). The fruit of the Spirit grows not in the heat of argument but in the soil of humble service.
Charles Spurgeon once remarked, “Faith that works by love is the evidence of salvation.” To live productively in God’s kingdom is to let that love overflow into action. Avoiding unprofitable debates does not mean withdrawing from truth—it means embodying it. As we focus on what builds rather than what divides, we reflect the heart of Christ, who “went around doing good” (Acts 10:38), not merely talking about it.
🙏 Prayer
Lord Jesus, still my heart amid the noise. Guard me from unprofitable arguments and fill me with Your Spirit of love. Teach me to invest my time in what matters—serving, blessing, and building others up for Your glory. Amen.

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