Sunday, July 28, 2013

The NAIVE Wins!

This past week in the class, many people chose (including me) to focus on the portrait in Proverbs of the naive.  I'm wondering why that was?  Maybe there is a part of us that longs for a time when we didn't know as much about the world and didn't catch all the innuendos and doomsday predictions.  Staying naive about what is evil could get one into trouble, however, we're told in Romans 16 that we're to be innocent of evil.  Maybe innocent and naive are not the same, but, to me there is some similarity.

Thursday, July 18, 2013

Choosing Words Carefully!

This week in the Proverbs class we're looking at what comes out of our mouths.  Not only does WHAT we say matter, but HOW we say it.  As James in the NT mentions (James 3:3-12), words can start fires like a rudder can turn a ship.  But, as Proverbs 15:1,2 state, we are wise to craft our statements and corrections and conversations in a way that helps, not hurts relationships.  This can apply even to hard topics and correction.  We can be gentle and sensitive rather than harsh, blunt and hurtful.  We can 'adorn' our words so that we build up, not tear down!

Fasting for Spiritual Growth

On day 4 now of the 'Daniel Fast' where the diet is attempting to follow the food requested by Daniel back in Babylon.  His actions seem to be in line with Proverbs 23:1-3 where there is a warning about fine food and a mixed motive ruler:  "When you sit to dine with a ruler,  note well what[a] is before you, and put a knife to your throat if you are given to gluttony.  Do not crave his delicacies, for that food is deceptive."  Daniel and his associates, fellow Jewish exiles taken captive from their home in Judah in the 580's B.C., were striving to honor God with their food and diet (Daniel 1:6-16).  This may have seemed crazy for the Babylonians for them to desire fruits & vegetables rather than choice meats and sweets and simple water over fine wines.  So, my wife and I took on this similar fast to honor God and grow in our faith and trust.  Even though going without coffee is really tough, it feels great to sacrifice even in small ways to give God glory.  As Proverbs reads, I think many of us lean toward gluttony and crave the sweet stuff and the tasty, decadent food (2005, Waltke, NICOT, 239).  Rather than simply being satisfied with what we need, we crave and desire more and better.  May God help us embrace moderation with more diligence!

Saturday, July 13, 2013

Work and Personal Integrity

This week we've been wrestling with what Proverbs says to work and diligence.  I've been thinking that this may in the running for my big capstone paper due to the discussions that have ensued.  This is a big issue.  Our work takes up a majority of our time and energy.  It provides for our financial needs.  It gives us some of our identity and our purpose, and, in many ways, HOW we work is a reflection on our own personal character.  The Bible has much to say about work and money.  Maybe a good dose of Solomon wisdom surrounding work could be helpful for each of us and the people we minister to in our community.

UPDATE - saw this today on the The Onion...fits the theme here:


Wednesday, July 3, 2013

My 'Either/Or' Quandary

After reading Proverbs 10-31 a few times through, I'm finding myself polarizing between the good and the bad, the righteous and the evil, the wise and the fool.  The black and white, either/or parallelism starts to push me toward extremes.  The righteous, wise, upright, good person is clearly the desired posture, however, humans have a sin issue, a bent toward evil, and a rebellious disease buried deep.  As  the Apostle Paul writes in Romans 7, we're a mixed bag of motives, emotions and behaviors.  How do we reconcile this with the antithetical parallelism that dominates Proverbs (Zuck 1995, page 155)?

Monday, July 1, 2013

A Stand-out Proverb

I am reading Proverbs a bit differently now as I'm being exposed to ancient poetry styles and grouping similar themed verses together topically.  Its like having some new lenses to view the Scriptures from.  There are many verses that can be paired up and arranged together, however, there is one particular verse of interest that seems to stand alone: Proverbs 16:6.  Although it ends with the recurring idea of 'the fear of the Lord' and the benefits therein, its a bit of a stand out phrase.  It struck me because it speaks of getting sin removed and paid for way in advance of Jesus Christ's ministry.  Here there is no mention of either animal sacrifices nor ritual cleansing.  The word in Hebrew for atoned gives the idea of a protective covering over something.  Its only used once in Proverbs so it tends to stand out to me.  I'm now excited to study this concept through...