Today, I am reading and commenting on Proverbs 18-21.
When I started reading through the Book of Proverbs this year I intended to write each day about a summary lesson from the contents of the passage. I am finding it difficult to come up with a summary lesson from the sections, such as today’s and yesterday’s which are collections of short proverbs. I am going to try and go over the lessons which came to me as I went through today’s passage(not necessarily in the order they appear in the passage) and try to connect them to each other.
I am going to start by talking about the connection I see here between the ways in which fools (who are by definition in this context morally deficient) speak without thinking and do not have any desire to know what they do not know. Throughout the Book of Proverbs the writer warns us that only fools speak without thinking or listening. He also tells us that they do not desire knowledge or understanding. From looking at the world around me, I realized how many people fail to pay attention to what those who disagree with them actually think and then wonder why they cannot convince them to change their minds. These foolish ones spend a lot of time talking about why they think they are in the right, but refuse to listen to why their opposition thinks they are wrong. Let us remember to listen to what those we disagree with say that they actually believe. By doing so, we may learn that they are not so wrong, and/or we may learn how to show them a better way to attain their goal. Which leads me to another point the writer makes. Wisdom leads to patience, which makes one willing to overlook insult. Those whose gullibility inclines them to evil do not learn from their own suffering, but they may learn to be more cautious when they see others suffering from the results of their wicked ways. On the other hand those who seek knowledge and wisdom, learn when they are called out for their mistakes.
Early on in this passage we have these two short snippets:
The name of the Lord is a fortified tower;
the righteous run to it and are safe.
And:
The wealth of the rich is their fortified city;
they imagine it a wall too high to scale.
Usually when I read this passage I see these as two separate lessons. Today I realized that together they give us a better lesson than what can be gained from looking at them separately. Wealth does provide some protection from the vagaries of life, but relying on wealth leaves one open to trouble when those troubles rise higher than the wall of our wealth. On the other hand, if we instead run to the Lord and rely on Him for our protection, we will be safe. The storms of this life will never rise higher than the walls which God will put around us when we turn to Him.
I use the daily Bible reading schedule from “The Bible.net” for my daily Bible reading.