Answers to Life's Questions

Mar 29, 2006 at 17:06 o\clock

Wisdom from God

Wisdom from the Proverbs

The second chapter of Proverbs speaks about the value of wisdom. The first five verses read:

My son, if you receive my words
and treasure up my commandments with you,
making your ear attentive to wisdom
and inclining your heart to understanding;
yes, if you call out for insight
and raise your voice for understanding,
if you seek it like silver
and search for it as for hidden treasures,
then you will understand the fear of the LORD
and find the knowledge of God
.

This section shows that if I diligently search for wisdom, if I apply my heart to understanding and if I regard wisdom as something precious, then I will come to understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God. The second verse speaks of the heart, which in the Old Testament was seen as the seat of both will and reason. So what this passage says is that I need to understand God with more than just my mind. I need to know and understand Him with my whole life; I need to know Him in a deep and personal way. The knowledge of God, who is perfect in every respect, is the basis for all morality. The more I come to know and understand God the more I will be able to discern right from wrong.

In this passage we see both human responsibility to search for knowledge and God’s grace to grant it. God is the one who gives wisdom and the one who helps preserve those who are wise. When I diligently search for His wisdom He will provide it, helping me to understand “righteousness and justice and equity, every good path.”

Verses 10 through 22 speak of what will happen when wisdom fills my heart and mind and when it becomes pleasant to my soul. Discretion will preserve me as I learn to use my understanding to make right decisions. I will be able to discern evil and turn from it before it has a chance to consume me. Understanding will protect me from people who would seek to lead me in a way that leads me from God. It will protect me from immortal relationships which lead to death. Death, of course, does not refer to physical death but to a departure from the road the leads to life. It refers to the inevitability of spiritual death if I continue on the path.

The final three verses speak briefly about the blessings of a life of wisdom and obedience. Using language that Jewish people, familiar with God’s covenants with His people would understand, it reads “For the upright will inhabit the land, and those with integrity will remain in it, but the wicked will be cut off from the land, and the treacherous will be rooted out of it.” Throughout the Old Testament God blesses His people with land which foreshadows heaven. When God says someone will be cut off from the land, He indicates that they will have no inheritance in heaven. So this passage does not speak about earthly wealth and blessings but about rewards in heaven.

Conclusion

The objective for this study is to learn godly wisdom and discernment. Based on this chapter, here is what I have learned from Proverbs 2:

  • Wisdom is a choice. There is a human element to it whereby we are responsible to search for it.
  • Wisdom is a blessing. There is a divine element to it whereby God will dispense wisdom to those who diligently seek it. Wisdom belongs to God as He is the ultimate source of all wisdom.
  • Wisdom allows me to understand God. I need to understand Him with my heart, my mind and every part of my life.
  • Wisdom will grant me understanding and discernment to know good from evil and to keep my way straight. A life of wisdom will ensure me heavenly blessings.

The third chapter of Proverbs continues the theme of the blessings wisdom can provide. The first few verses indicate that wisdom will give to me “length of days and years of life and peace.” It will help me “find favor and good success in the sight of God and man.” Clearly wisdom is something God wishes to provide to His people so they can enjoy lives that are pleasing to Him. Wisdom allows me to find favor in the eyes of God.

Verses 5 and 6 are well known and I know many people who rely on these verses for guidance and inspiration throughout their lives. “Trust in the LORD with all your heart, and do not lean on your own understanding. In all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make straight your paths.” What awesome truth is contained in those verses! If I trust in the Lord with my whole heart, my will my reason and all that I am, while refusing to depend on my human understanding, God will direct my way. He will provide the guidance and the godly wisdom I need to make right decisions and to live a life that is pleasing to Him. Every Christian would do well to understand, memorize and believe these verses! They can be such comfort in times of trial and in times where we do not know if we should turn to the right or to the left. Trust the Lord, seek His wisdom and know that His wisdom will help you choose the path you should take.

The passage continues with showing the benefits of wisdom. We are told that wisdom will be “healing to your flesh and refreshment to your bones.” If we honor the Lord with our possessions He will provide for us financially for “your barns will be filled with plenty, and your vats will be bursting with wine.” Of course we can see all around us that this is not always the case for often those who seek God’s wisdom are not healthy and wealthy, so how are we to understand this?

What we find is that a long life, prosperity and health are the normal expectations for a life of wisdom. This does not mean that they will definitely be given to us. If we do not receive them in this life we can rest assured that we will be given them and more in the world to come. We also read in verses 11 and 12 that we are not to despise the Lord’s correction and discipline. It may be that if we are not experiencing these things God could be correcting some sinful behavior. However, this is not always the case as we see, for example, in the life of Job. He was faithful to God and sought wisdom, yet for a time had prosperity, health and happiness taken from Him. We are left with no choice but to follow Job in submitting to God’s design and plan for our lives.

Blessed is the one who finds wisdom, and the one who gets understanding, for the gain from her is better than gain from silver and her profit better than gold. She is more precious than jewels, and nothing you desire can compare with her.” Nothing I can seek or desire can be more important and more valuable than wisdom. If there is anything I seek in life it should not be wealth or happiness or popularity; it should be wisdom!

In verse 19 we read “The LORD by wisdom founded the earth; by understanding he established the heavens; by his knowledge the deeps broke open, and the clouds drop down the dew.” We see that wisdom is what God used to create the world and everything in it. This displays the power of God’s perfect wisdom. If God’s wisdom can create something so great and so magnificent, should we not do all we can to attain the wisdom that He offers? To seek for wisdom and to take hold of it is to imitate God.

The chapter closes with an exhortation not to envy evildoers. The Word tells us that perverse and devious people are an abomination to God and are not worthy of our envy, for God chooses to take into His confidence those who are upright. Where He curses those who are wicked, He blesses those who are righteous. In the end it is the wise who will inherit great honor while the wicked will be put to shame. The New King James translates this thought as “shame shall be the legacy of fools.” Who would ever want their legacy to be one of foolishness? I pray that God would allow me to leave behind a legacy of godliness and wisdom.

Conclusions

The objective for this study is to learn godly wisdom and discernment. Based on the third chapters of Proverbs, here is what I have learned:

  • God blesses those who seek wisdom with peace and favor.
  • Wisdom helps me understand when, how and why God is chastening me and disciplining me as a loving father disciplines his child.
  • Nothing in all the world compares to the value of wisdom. Nothing I could desire can compare to her value.
  • I am to strive to attain wisdom seeing the beauty and value of wisdom in the world around me.
  • I am not to envy foolish people, for in the end God blesses only the wise. If I continue to seek wisdom I will leave a legacy of grace rather than shame.

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