Skip to main content

Solomon's words on and of wisdom...

Proverbs 2:1-5
"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 an dfind the knowledge of God."

I've been pondering this passage for the last hour or so and have been amazed at what God has spoken through these verses to me. The first four verses are what we are called to do and the fifth verse is what will result from our obedience. Let's take a deeper look at the text.

Verse 1 says tells us that we need to receive God's Word and treasure His commandments. Receive the free gift of God's Word and treasure His commands above all else. John 1:12-13 states that "But to all who did receive him, who believed in his name, he gave the right to become children of God, who were born, not of blood nor of the will of the flesh nor of the will of man, but God." So when we receive God's Word and we receive Jesus Christ, we are given the right to become children of God! In John 14:15, Jesus says that if we love Him we will keep His commandments. This is a pretty amazing truth that we are given the right to become adopted into God's family. What love! This compells me to want to love God and keep His commands.

Verse 2 tells us to make our ears attentive to wisdom and incline our hearts to understanding. Until we receive God's Word, our ears cannot be attentive to wisdom. Until we receive God's Word, our hearts cannot begin to understand why we should treasure God above all else. So it is necessary to receive the Word before we can be receptive to God's wisdom. For me, the more I read Scripture, the more my heart desires God and the more attentive my ears become to receiving His truth. It is a wonderful thing!

Verse 3 shows us that we need to call out for insight and raise our voices for understanding. Need a better reason to pray? This gives a definite reason for prayer. Scripture tells us to ask and it will be given. James 1:5 says "if any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God, who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given him." God wants us to ask Him for wisdom and understanding. We should do it with confidence and expectancy waiting for God to bless us with His wisdom!

Verse 4 speaks of just how significant God's wisdom is. We should seek it like silver and search for it as a hidden treasure. I'm reminded of the parables in Matthew 13:44-46. A man found a treasure in a field and sold all he had and bought the field. In the same way, the kingdom of God is like the a fine pearl that a merchant would sell everything in order to possess. How much do we desire the kingdom of God and God's wisdom? Enough to give up everything we own in order to gain Christ and His wisdom? Enough to suffer persecution or a modest life? According to God's Word, we should seek God's wisdom more than the finest pearl or the greatest of all hidden treasures! What a task. Praise God that He gives us all we need in order to seek His wisdom!

So what is the result of what these four verses require of us? Verse 5 tells us that we will then understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God. As I consider what it means to fear the Lord, I remember the words of Hebrews 12 regarding Noah, a man who reverently feared God (that's for you Jim and Clint). This fear shouldn't make us cower or hide. It isn't that type of fear. Rather it is a fear that should cause us to marvel at the greatness of God and revere His commands to the point of obedience. The second chapter of Colossians tells us that the riches of full assurance of understanding and the knowledge of god's mystery is found in Jesus Christ. In Christ are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge.

In light of these things, let's do our best to receive God's Word with an open heart and attentive ear calling upon God to deliver us into all knowledge and understanding so that we may treasure and possess the wisdom of God!

Comments

  1. Great entry. I am very encouraged by these verses. I especially like the part about crying out for wisdom and understading. God is faithful to answer anything we ask of Him and I`m so thankful. He cares about me and my ministry.

    ReplyDelete

Post a Comment

Popular posts from this blog

  “Where grace exists, it reigns.”   C. H. Spurgeon I’m scared of grace.   And this realization comes in the midst of a journey I’ve been on that has the fingerprints of God all over it.   If we were to gather 50 Christians in the same room and invite people to share adjectives that come to mind when trying to describe “grace,” I doubt “scary” would be anyone’s answer.   (It probably wouldn’t be mine either, in case anyone is thinking I’m exalting this term in some sort of holier-than-thou way.)   We’d hear things like amazing, undeserved, free, kind, love.   Of course, it’s inevitable that the crucifixion of Jesus is vocalized in some way.   Essentially, we’d have a huge list of very positive and affirming adjectives that rightly depict the wonderful activity and riches of God’s grace.   What if we asked a slightly different question?   How would we answer, “how does a person obtain grace?”   I’m guessing we’d start throwing out an...

A Convicting And Compelling Gospel

Which adjective in the title more closely aligns with your predisposed way of thinking about and speaking the gospel to yourself and others?   Are you more likely to present a gospel that is heavy on the convicting realities of sin, righteousness and judgment?   Or do you find yourself more readily appealing to the benefits of following Jesus?   If you think about it, neither adjective fully encapsulates the message of Jesus.   It’s right to compel people using the promises of God and the joy filled benefits of a life submitted to Jesus.   But it’s also right to warn of the consequences of rejecting Him.   Since we’re all naturally inclined to emphasize one, we need to allow the other to constrain us, to balance us from taking our natural disposition to the extreme, which may confuse the gospel and the Jesus we wish to present.   Let me attempt to illustrate one example of an unconstrained leaning toward each in turn.   A compelling gospel that is...

Walking Like Christ

If I could only choose one book of the Bible and vote it "Most Convicting" I just might choose 1 John. I have been studying 1 John for a couple of weeks now, and I'm almost half way through chapter 2! :) John's pattern so far has been alternating between statements of light and statements of darkness. So far, my study has caused me to pause several times and consider how my life "stacks up" when compared to John's clear and frank approach to the Christian life. This morning, 1 John 2:6 really stood out to me. It reads: whoever says he abides in Him ought to walk in the same way in which He walked. How did Christ walk? As I reflected on the life of Jesus as told in the Gospels, a lot of events came to my mind. Often, I think Christians have a tendency to view Jesus as compassionate and gentle while forgetting the passion and aggression that He displayed at times. He made a whip and drove the vendors out of the temple. He spoke with adulterers, a...