icon__search

The Fool and the Wise – The Righteous and the Wicked

Proverbs 10:1-14

July 20, 2020 • Jim Pool • Proverbs 10:1–14

1 Corinthians 1:30 says that In Christ comes wisdom and righteousness from God. Living the skilled life of Proverbs finds its source in our new life in and with Christ. Making decisions moment by moment reveals whether we are trusting God for His gift of Wisdom and Righteousness, or not. Examples of the contrast in these verses include:

Wise – makes a father glad
Fool – grief to his mother
Righteous – will not hunger
Wicked – hunger will be rejected
Negligent – will be poor
Diligent – will be made rich
Gathers in summer – acts wisely
Sleeps in harvest – acts shamefully
Righteous – blessings
Wicked – conceal violence
Righteous – remembered well
Wicked – not remembered well

Proverbs: Recommendations & Principles to Remember

August 31, 2020 • Don den Hartog

Recommendations: 1. Read one chapter of Proverbs per day according to the date of the month. 2. Memorize one verse of Proverbs per week. 3. Remember that Proverbs is not as disjointed as it appears. Look for themes and common denominators in sections, especially chapters. Observations: 1. The applicability of Proverbs is not limited to a previous dispensation. 2. Proverbs provides practical wisdom for practical issues in daily living. It is a neglected resource for skillful living. 3. Take opportunity to disciple/mentor young people, using the book of Proverbs. 4. Proverbs gives particular wisdom for just and righteous leadership and discernment regarding injustice in all contexts of life. 5. Remember that the subject of a proverb may be figurative to a greater principle. Discover that principle and consider practical ways it applies in current life situations.

The Woman Who Fears the Lord

August 24, 2020 • Dennis McNutt • Proverbs 31:10–31

Proverbs 31 has long been treated as the ultimate characteristics of a excellent, valent women. A deeper look reveals it to be the capstone of the wisdom in the book -- the embodiment of wisdom itself reflected in previous chapters. Too, the chapter's chiastic and poetic structure makes the husband the intended focus and beneficiary of an intimate relationship with wisdom. Christ is the embodiment of wisdom (see John chapter 1). He and we mutually benefit from relationship attained by position and union at salvation.

The Words of Agur

August 17, 2020 • Jim Pool • Proverbs 30:1–6

Agur was probably a contemporary of Solomon, but all we really know about him is derived from what he wrote in Proverbs 30. What we do know about Agur, we need to emulate: 1) have the humility to admit we need wisdom, 2) admit God's word is the answer.