Thursday, December 23, 2021

Folly is Sin

 Read Proverbs 24

Do not envy the wicked aka It’s back to Billy Joel.  I’d rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints.  The sinners are much more fun.

Why would we envy the wicked if there was not some allure to the way they live?  Why?  We bought the package—the sinners are much more fun.

The problem with envying the wicked does not come from what the wicked do.  It comes from thinking that they are getting away with something and we are missing out.

This saying of the wise—which is very much in concert with what Solomon has been telling us for some time—is that the wicked are up to no good.  There is nothing but trouble in their hearts and trouble in store for you if you desire their company or long for their ways.

The next few sayings of the wise are wisdom metaphors.  Wisdom builds a fine house. Understanding anchors it to the solid rock.  Knowledge fills the rooms with the best treasures.

What did people value in Solomon’s time?  Surely large herds of fine cattle or sheep or goats, but not everyone was involved in agriculture.  Everyone did have a house and this quip of wisdom describes the finest of houses and compares it to wisdom.

We have been through other comparisons such as silver and gold.  This saying simply uses the imagery of a house to convey the value of gaining wisdom, knowledge, and understanding.  Don’t extend the metaphor.

Just understand that wise people fear the Lord and love knowledge, wisdom, understanding, and though not mentioned here, discipline.

The next saying shifts from the image of a house to one of strength.  What is one measure of strength?  It is surely the ability to wage and win wars.  Strong nations defeated their enemies.

You need strength but the best army can be cut to shreds without wisdom.  The wise leader maintains many counselors.

OBTW—those counselors must be as courageous as the first warrior into the fight.  Those who advise the leader must always speak the truth.  Tact may prompt you to speak privately with the leader, but sugar-coated counsel is treason.

To shift times and metaphors, a good counselor must be able to tell the emperor that he has no clothes.

This next nugget will be hard to swallow in our age of everyone is entitled to have a voice.  Wisdom says, except the fool.  The fool in the king’s court is there only for amusement.  He has no voice in matters of state.

Surely the fools need be given no voice in the assembly of God’s people.  The one who has declared in his heart that there is no God doesn’t have a say in the matters of God’s people.  We are foolish to give him one.

Here is an interesting saying. It’s number 24.

Whoever plots evil

    will be known as a schemer.

The schemes of folly are sin,

    and people detest a mocker.

I started with Billy Joel but will end with Dire Straits.

Oh, that ain't workin' that's the way you do it

Get your money for nothin', get your chicks for free

We have been down this road before.  Get rich quick schemes, trickery, bribery, money for nothing schemes are folly and folly is sin.

Let’s not wrestle with this.  Folly is sin.

Wasting time pursuing foolish schemes when God created us with purpose is sin.  It misses the mark.  It transgresses from the target.

In a life given to us with God-given purpose, living without purpose is sin.  Folly and foolishness and trying to shortcut wisdom is sin.

Sometimes we think of murder, adultery, and stealing as sin.  We should because they are, but sometimes we don’t think that just wasting our time amounts to sin.  It does.

Again, I remind you that rest is not sin.  We are designed to work and to rest.

Again, I remind you that spending time with God is not wasting time.  It is truly an investment in renewal.

Again, I remind you that there is no Sabbath to take in a life lived without purpose.

I believe that like the servants in the Parable of the Talents, we will answer a question when our Master returns.

What did you do with what I gave you?

I buried it in the ground.  I wasted the gift with which you trusted me.  I plotted and schemed but never put to work the gifts you gave me.  These will not be good answers.

Master, you gave me 2 talents.  See I have earned you 2 more are the investments that earn us a well done good and faithful servant.

To wrap up these few verses, the sinners are not much more fun and their schemes must not become ours.

We embrace wisdom, knowledge, instruction, and discipline.  We embrace the strength that comes from living in God’s wisdom.  We embrace living God’s way.

Amen.

Times That Try Men's Souls

 Read Proverbs 24

Thomas Paine once wrote that the Summer Patriot and the Sunshine Soldier would shrink from service.  When the going got tough, these men got going, but not towards the sounds of gunfire.  They bugged out the other way or just never showed up.

We see this all the time today.  Spend an hour on Facebook and you will see plenty of Sunshine Soldiers.  They have never known a shot fired in anger, the perilous nature of a minefield, or put their lives in the hands of other patriots; but they are so bold in their online bravado.

There are plenty of people who talk big online who don’t show up in person.  The bravado image can only be maintained by excuses that are in order and always at the ready.

OK, so there are a bunch of phonies out there.  What’s new and what does this have to do with the proverbs?  I went to school when they still taught American History.  Why does Thomas Paine rate time in the sermon?

Consider Saying 25 from this 24th chapter. These are verses 10 and 11.

If you falter in a time of trouble,

    how small is your strength!

Rescue those being led away to death;

    hold back those staggering toward slaughter.

If you say, “But we knew nothing about this,”

    does not he who weighs the heart perceive it?

Does not he who guards your life know it?

    Will he not repay everyone according to what they have done?

Now it’s time for one more from Mr. Paine.  These are the times that try men’s souls.

If you are brave when things are going great but falter in times of trouble, wisdom asks:  How small is your strength?  It’s a rhetorical question.  Wisdom is calling you out. Wisdom is calling you a phony if you shrink back in times of trouble.

Has wisdom hit us squarely between the eyes?

I could talk American history and politics for quite a while and enjoy it immensely, but we will talk about following Jesus in these modern times instead.  That’s what should pique our interest as we read these words of wisdom.

Do we only follow Jesus when it is the easy thing to do? What am I talking about?  Camp, VBS, Women of Faith Conferences, and other things where it just seems so right to follow Jesus and we say we will do it all of the time.

Do we only follow Jesus when it is the easy thing to do?  Of course not, at least that’s what our minds tell us, but what does our personal history tell us?

We give out food.  It’s good food and we give out a lot of it, but do we deliver the gospel?

We give gifts, but do we also get to know those who receive them? Do we know them well enough that they will see the example of our lives and believe our words that there is life and life abundant and life eternal in the God that we know in Christ Jesus?

You may complain and moan and groan that you get tired of hearing this from me, but I’ve grown deaf over the years to moaning and groaning when I know that God has set this course.  When we accept being transactional over being transformational, we have faltered in times of trouble.

We live in a time of humanless transactions.  You get a voice menu when you call.  You are referred to the website or the app instead of talking with a real person.  You get a vending machine and make a transaction and we have become accustomed to this.

Do you long for the church to have an app so the preacher will shut up about connecting the disconnected?  Why must I talk with people?  Why is it my burden? Why don’t we have an app for that? Can’t we take the person-to-person part out of this and make it easier?

Wisdom charges us to rescue those headed towards slaughter and death.  Do we believe that there is life eternal in Christ Jesus and death eternal without him?  How many are being led away to death by this godless world?

Are we content to just watch?

But we have our excuses in order.  I didn’t know if they believed or not.  I didn’t want to intrude.  I didn’t want to be all preachy and all.  I didn’t know.

Does not the God of all creation know your heart?  Can you hide anything from him?  Will we not all stand before him one day, our sins washed away in his blood?

Will our excuses hold water when we stand in his presence?

Jesus told us that we would have trouble in the world.  He told us that to prepare us not to add to our bag of excuses.

He said, “Take heart—take courage.”  He overcame the world.  The suffering that we might know will be nothing compared to the glory to come.

We live in times that try men’s souls.  Most here are not engaged in physical combat.  Nobody is shooting at you on most days.  We don’t live in fear of the government catching us worshiping Jesus and nailing us to the cross for it, but we do live in a time when so many are headed to eternal death.

We must ask, how great or how small is our strength?

Do we spend so much time criticizing how each of us lives out our salvation that we forgot there are still those who are perishing?  Does the world see us bickering over how we worship or baptize or which day of the week is more important than another?

Does the world see us pointing fingers of condemnation at those who need to be rescued? 

These are times of trouble.  These are the times that try men’s souls.  Bullets may fly at some point in our future, but the trouble is here now and people are headed towards death.

Will we rescue them or will we be content to give them a tub of food? It’s good food but it is no substitute for the bread of life. Will we deliver the life-saving gospel to those who are headed towards death?

You may have begun this chapter thinking it’s just more wisdom.  I can take the week off as far as evangelism goes.  I pray that wisdom does not become a substitute for love.  Love and wisdom go hand in glove and this week, wisdom tells us to Christian Up and take the words of life to our neighbors.

If you falter in a time of trouble,

    how small is your strength!

We are not people who shy away from our calling and our commission!  We must not! We do not shrink back from what Christ has charged us to do because these are times of trouble.

We are not Summer Patriots and not Sunshine Soldiers when it come to our faith.  We may not move towards the sound of gunfire, but we must move to rescue those headed to eternal death.

Some are committed to wickedness.  Some have professed in their hearts that there is no God, but some are just lost and on the road to destruction.  Some are blinded by Satan and just need to know the truth to set them free.

We belong to a God of love.  Will we serve him or shrink back in times of trouble?

Let’s turn the interrogative of the proverb around and ask, “How great is your strength?”

Remember that He who is in you is greater than he who is in the world.  We should never doubt how great our strength is. Like Joshua, God calls us to be strong and courageous.

As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord and the world will never know how small my strength is for it is God’s strength that works in me.

We will not falter in times of trouble.

God sees the heart and I pray he sees a heart of service and strength in each of you.

I might ask “Will we, rescue those who are perishing?” Instead, I will make an affirmation that We will stand before the Lord without regrets. Regrets about what? That we did not rescue those who were perishing.

We will be strong and courageous and do our best to rescue those who are headed towards an eternity of being separated from God.

As for me and my house, we will serve the Lord and the world will see how great our strength is in times of trouble.

These are the times that try men’s souls.

We will not watch from the sidelines.  We will rescue.

We will not squabble among ourselves straining out gnats and swallowing camels.  We will rescue.

We will not simply quote scripture.  We will not confine scripture to a box that we wear on our forehead. We will put the words of our Master into practice.  We will rescue.

We have been rescued from sin and death.  It’s time that we Christian up and rescue many who are headed towards death.

As for me and my house we will serve the Lord!

Amen.

Thursday, December 16, 2021

Cigarettes, Whiskey, and Wild, Wild Women

 Read Proverbs 23

 

If you pick up at verse 22, you might think you had turned back the pages to the beginning of proverbs. 

Listen to your mother and father.

Get the truth.  It’s worth it.

Get wisdom, discipline, and understanding.

Parents take joy in children living God’s way.

Make your parents proud.

Stick to God’s way.  Stay out of the everything else.

What’s in the minefields of everything else?

A man named Tim Spencer wrote a song that most of you young ones probably never heard.  The Sons of the Pioneers (of which Spencer was a member), Buck Owens, and even Jim Croce sang it at one time. 

Cigareets and whuskey and wild wild women

They'll drive you crazy they'll drive you insane

Cigareets and whuskey and wild wild women

They'll drive you crazy they'll drive you insane

Once I was happy and had a good wife I had enough money to last me for life

I met with a gal and we went on a spree she taught me to smoke and drink whusky

Cigareets and whuskey...

And now I'm feeble and broken with age

The lines on my face make a well written page

 I'm leavin' this story how sad but how true

On women and whusky and what they will do

Cigareets and whuskey...

Write on the cross at the head of my grave

For women and whusky here lies a poor slave

Take warning dear stranger take warning dear friend

Then write in big letters these words at the end

Cigareets and whuskey...

They'll drive you crazy they'll drive you insane

Before I bring us back to Solomon and the Sayings of the Wise, here is a short rabbit trail on Tim Spencer. 

Tim Spencer’s life epitomized the song I just shared.

Then one day in a hotel in Hazelton, Pennsylvania, Tim opened a letter from his wife. Included was a verse of Scripture. Picking up a nearby Gideon Bible, Tim read the passage and realized he needed a change in his life. In prayer he yielded his life to the Lordship of Christ.

Tim Spencer later established a Gospel Music publishing company, Manna Music, and a few years later his college-age son, Hal, brought him a song from a student missionary conference. Tim contacted the author of the words, Stuart Hine, and published the song.

Tim Spencer introduced How Great Thou Art to the modern world. Back to the Proverbs.

Solomon didn’t sing it, but the counsel in the last few sayings of the wise that close the chapter deliver something close to the same. If you are keeping score at home, these are sayings 18 and 19.

My son, give me your heart

    and let your eyes delight in my ways,

for an adulterous woman is a deep pit,

    and a wayward wife is a narrow well.

Like a bandit she lies in wait

    and multiplies the unfaithful among men.

Who has woe? Who has sorrow?

    Who has strife? Who has complaints?

    Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes?

Those who linger over wine,

    who go to sample bowls of mixed wine.

Do not gaze at wine when it is red,

    when it sparkles in the cup,

    when it goes down smoothly!

In the end it bites like a snake

    and poisons like a viper.

Your eyes will see strange sights,

    and your mind will imagine confusing things.

You will be like one sleeping on the high seas,

    lying on top of the rigging.

“They hit me,” you will say, “but I’m not hurt!

    They beat me, but I don’t feel it!

When will I wake up

    so I can find another drink?”

There is nothing wrong with wine.  There is nothing wrong with women, but watch out for the woman who has too much experience with men.

Watch out that you don’t crave wine—that you don’t’ live for your next drink. Think to the sayings of the recovered alcoholic:  One drink is too many and a thousand is never enough.

Sometimes the wine leads to the women that you might have steered clear of if you were sober.

The Bible does not teach that consumption of alcohol is bad or evil or even foolish.  Drunkenness—whatever point it is in your metabolism that surrenders your sound mind to foolishness—is to be avoided.

Jesus turned water into wine at a wedding where the guests already had too much to drink.  So was he promoting drunkenness? No, the use of your sound mind is still required. If you are at a party where nobody is driving home, that’s one thing.

If you go to a bar and drink too much that you don’t know to call a taxi or in today’s world an Uber, that’s another.  The Bible does not define surrendering your sound mind by blood-alcohol level. The state does.

What’s the counsel?

Don’t surrender your sound mind for pleasures of the flesh.  If you are not sure what your drinking limit is, don’t find out someplace where you have to drive home. If you know what it is, stay within it.

But know this, as your approach your limit, your sound mind does not resist as much.  Don’t desire alcoholic beverages so much that you will put good things in your life at risk.

If she is not the girl that you would bring home to mom, she’s also not the girl for tonight.  Remember, she was somebody else’s girl last night and the night before.

It seems that we get the same counsel from Solomon, from this collection of the sayings of the wise, and I would imagine from your parents as well.  Must be good stuff.

Amen.

Sayings of the Wise for the Wise

 Read Proverbs 22:17-29

Read Proverbs 23

The Proverbs are sayings that much like parables make comparisons. We have seen many dichotomies.  We have seen the A-B structure.  We have seen statements that are provocations to deeper insight—they give us pause to think.

Most, perhaps all, of what we have read thus far were authored by Solomon.  Now we venture into what we believe were proverbs that Solomon collected and thought worthy of sharing.  Most of your Bibles label them the sayings of the wise.

These sayings begin in the second half of chapter 22.  They begin in much the same way that the first chapter began.  Pay attention not only with your senses but with your heart. Have a teachable spirit and be ready to speak the truth.

I’m thinking that Solomon wrote this first of these sayings as an introduction to the others.  But what are these sayings? We look back to chapter 22.

Don’t exploit the poor.  You will set yourself in opposition to the Lord.

Watch out for friendships with people who are quick to anger.  You might just get into trouble that you would have never ventured near on your own.  Paul would later say that bad company corrupts good character.  Your parents probably said, choose your friends wisely.

We come to a place where we have been already with Solomon.  It’s this whole business of putting up security for another, especially someone you don’t know.  We have been through the borrower is slave to the lender.  That’s good counsel for us to watch our personal debt.  Why, then, would we take on the debt of another that we don’t even know?

Don’t move ancient boundary stones is along the lines of dishonest weights and measures.  This shows up again in the next chapter. Integrity counts with God.  Don’t think that God doesn’t see your heart when you are trying to cheat your neighbor.

Here is one set in positive terms.  You see that person who has studied and labored to develop good skills.  They get the best jobs.  Work and study pay off.

This brings me to one of my questions that you should take care in your answer.  Does practice make perfect?

No.  Perfect practice makes perfect.  If you practice the wrong things or the right things the wrong way, you don’t gain knowledge, skills, and abilities.

If you don’t believe me, you should see my golf swing.  I put a lot of practice into it once upon a time.  I practiced most of the worst swings that you can imagine and I perfected a terrible swing.

Perfect practice makes perfect.  What you study, learn, and put into practice matters. They payoff.  Not only do you not go hungry, but you are also well paid for your knowledge, skills, and abilities.

We begin chapter 23 with a warning against gluttony, especially public gluttony.  Delicacies are nice, but don’t crave them. 

Don’t make the purpose of life to be getting rich.  Earthly riches are fleeting.  Remember to seek God, his kingdom, and his righteousness first and he will provide the things that the godless have made into their gods.  The godless seek riches and lose them but you are to seek God and he will provide more than you need.

Watch out for those who invite you to share their riches but have no interest in a true friendship.  They are bribing you and will ask for something later.  When that happens, the delicacies that you enjoyed won’t taste as good as they once did.

Here is one that should sound familiar.  Don’t talk with fools.  You are wasting your time.  I would add that your have purposeful things to do with your time and your life and talking with someone who has declared in their heart that there is no God is not purposeful. There is no conversation to be had.  The seeds that you thought you were planting fell upon terrible, rocky soil.

It’s not just enough to learn, we need to apply what we have gained in knowledge, wisdom, and instruction.

Apply your heart to instruction

    and your ears to words of knowledge.

Here’s one that will get me banned online.

Do not withhold discipline from a child;

    if you punish them with the rod, they will not die.

Punish them with the rod

    and save them from death.

Do you remember bring up a child in the way he should go?  I hope so, it was in the last chapter. We need to understand that Solomon speaks of punishment under the umbrella of discipline.  If your child goes off course, you direct them back.  It’s that simple.

There is an eternal punishment that we who follow Jesus as Lord do not fear.  We are saved from that, but we should gratefully receive discipline and we should deliver discipline to our children for the same reason the Lord disciplines us.  We love our children.

Some of these are just too simple.  We rejoice when our kids are on and stay on the right track.  When they are living in God’s way, we are happy.

For those who are keeping score at home, we are up to saying 15 and it says that Billy Joel has good music, but you can’t always trust the lyrics.

I’d rather laugh with the sinners than cry with the saints.  The sinners are much more fun, only the good die young.

Why don’t you laugh with the saints?  Because the world has sold you a bill of goods that says the sinners are much more fun.

There is hope in living God’s way.  God has good plans for you!

I will wrap up this message with saying 16.  It blends some counsel that we have received thus far.

Listen, my son, and be wise,

    and set your heart on the right path:

Do not join those who drink too much wine

    or gorge themselves on meat,

for drunkards and gluttons become poor,

    and drowsiness clothes them in rags.

Be wise.  Live God’s way.  God sees the heart and weighs the heart and will set your heart on the right path if you will just trust him, listen to his instruction, and follow him.

Beware of too much.  Too much what?  Too much of anything that comes of your carnal desire.  Sure, you need to eat.  You don’t need to eat too much.

A glass or two of wine is no problem for most.  Too much is a problem for all.

Too much television, time on the couch, time on Facebook or Tok-Tok-Poppycock or whatever it is, or too much binge-watching on Netflix leads to laziness and poverty.  Remember, work is good and laziness is bad.

There is God’s way and there is everything else and don’t let the world sell you on the sinners are much more fun.  Solomon continues the sayings of the wise, but we pause here to consider the pairings we have discussed so far.

God’s way – Everything else

Blessings – Minefields

Wisdom – Foolishness

Righteous – Wicked

Industrious – Lazy

Life – Death

God’s way – Everything else

We could stop here with my charge to you to think on these things, but I will prime the pump a little first.  ‘Tis the season to…

Spend a little too much and perhaps venture into debt.

Drink a little too much and put many things at risk.

Eat a little too much and crowd out the Holy Spirit from the temple that is our body and pay for those excesses in the months ahead.

Work too much for earthly riches and miss the riches of enjoying our families.

Spend too much time online talking with those who are not inclined to learn.

Discipline our children too little thinking this to be love.

Most people learn from their experiences.  The wisest people also learn from the experience of others.  The sayings of the wise are shared experiences from which we may learn.

There is God’s way and there is everything else and don’t let the world sell you on the sinners are much more fun.  Solomon continues the sayings of the wise, but we pause here to consider the pairings we have discussed so far.

God’s way – Everything else

Blessings – Minefields

Wisdom – Foolishness

Righteous – Wicked

Industrious – Lazy

Life – Death

God’s way – Everything else

Amen.

Saturday, December 11, 2021

The Generous will be Blessed

 Read Proverbs 22

Rules, guides, dichotomies—this way or that—the Proverbs would make a great PowerPoint presentation with all sorts of graphs and graphics.

Of course, you have to have a video of me in your PowerPoint doing God’s way and everything else.

I think you could make a good video game from the Proverbs.  Anyone old enough to play Frogger.  You had to get the frog across the road without getting run over by cars and trucks.

It would be the same concept.  You start on one side of the road and have to dodge fools and the wicked as you crossed 31 lanes.  Watch out, the adulterous woman might subtly take your out.  The woman folly is right behind her.

Anger, selfish pride, and putting up security for a stranger come at differing speeds.  Watch out!  There is a gossip going the wrong way in traffic and aiming for you.

Wisdom, knowledge, and understanding move us deliberately across dangerous lanes of traffic.

 Of course, we have to be on the lookout for the sluggard.  No, we don’t. It will take a week for the slothful to even get close.

For those who are investment-minded, I will give you a week or two to think it over, then I’m launching Proverbs the Game, coming to video stores near you.

I’m thinking it will be the merchandising that will make me the big bucks.  Who doesn’t want a Sluggard Drinking Bottle?  Your favorite drink goes down slow if you can manage to get the bottle to your lips.

How about a quarrelsome wife on the corner of the roof T-shirts?

I’m having some fun here with things that are mainly serious, but we should lighten up a little and understand that we are not just a bunch of rule followers.  There must be more.  There is and here’s an example.

Wise and foolish, rich and poor, wicked and righteous all say something about us and the world in which we live, but here’s a truth-teller about who we really are.

The generous will themselves be blessed,

    for they share their food with the poor.

Are we generous?  Do we help the poor?  Is it our nature to share our blessings? Are we rich towards God?

I think most here can answer in the affirmative.  We help people all the time.  Sometimes it’s an effort coordinated through the congregation or it’s a mission of the church.

Sometimes, it’s people in the community that come together to help someone.  Sometimes you just walk across the street with a gallon of milk or a freshly cooked pie.  Sometimes, you just say, “I’ll give you’re a ride.”

Sometimes we are working the social media to get boys trousers size 12 or girls shoes size 6. I know you.  You are generous.

We are also wise.  It’s probably less than one-percent of the time that we ever hand anyone money.  Most of the people that we help don’t manage money very well and people don’t want their money buying drugs

As a result, I know how to buy a bus ticket or pay an electric bill or water bill with no cash changing hands.  We are generous, not naïve.

We don’t do sign-ups for most things.  People still call wondering about getting free turkeys.  I tell them we don’t have a sign-up for turkeys, but if they are hungry—if your family needs food—come and see me.  We feed hungry people all the time.

Yes, I am going to talk to you about God, God’s love, and God’s family and invite you to live God’s way, but regardless of whether you are interested in God or not, I’m not going to let you go hungry. We help the poor and we feed the hungry.

We are generous.

You know that I don’t like transactional.  I call it the vending machine.  I like connections.  I like relationships that are transformational.

Ever since I have been on this transformational over transactional bandwagon if you will, we have given out more food each year.

The proverb says that we will be blessed.  How?  There’s the treasure in heaven perspective and there is the fact that the more we try to make this about making connections with people that might just lead them to God, the more food we have received in donations.

The more we make this about a transformational relationship with Christ Jesus, the more we are blessed to help someone else.

The generous will themselves be blessed,

    for they share their food with the poor.

So, what do we do with this information as we study the Proverbs?

Gain knowledge.

Gain wisdom.

Gain understanding.

Grow in the Lord’s discipline and as his disciples.

Be known by his love.

Be generous, especially with those who have so little.

There is God’s way and there is everything else and generosity is part of God’s way.  God’s people are generous.

Be generous.

Amen.

The Borrower is Slave to the Lender

 Read Proverbs 22

In the second half of this chapter, there is a section that is called the sayings of the wise.  We won’t address it today, but it will be our focus for the two weeks to follow.  For now, we will start with a little verse by verse.

There is God’s Way and there is everything else:  blessings-minefields, wise-foolish, righteous—wicked, press on towards the goal—wander aimlessly. Let’s not forget life—death. Narrow and wide.

Solomon prompts us to consider many dichotomies, but he is not exclusively an either/or sort of guy.  He has some literary versatility.  Sometimes he does the A-B statements. It’s a one thing builds upon, sets us up for, or intensifies the argument with another statement.

Here’s one thing that builds upon another.

A good name is more desirable than great riches;

    to be esteemed is better than silver or gold.

We have been here before.  Wisdom is good.  It is more desirable than silver or gold. We have seen that thought built upon several times thus far.

We understand that God sees the heart, but people see your example.  We have talked earlier about how the simple see the negative example of the wicked and foolish to include some very severe punishment, and they notice the positive examples of the wise as well.  The simple are not lost.  They can learn.

We have used other terms for the simple—naïve and vulnerable.  They were likely not brought up in the way they should go, but they are not lost either.

They probably were not brought up in the way they should go, but they see our examples. We have been down this road before, but this quip of wisdom tells us that our good example brings us blessings as well. 

Our good example is not only for the simple, but a blessing for us as well.

While our esteem is truly vested in the Lord and who he made us to be; living as the person he made us to be reinforces this Christlike model.  When someone mentions your name and the words godly, loving, righteous, wise, generous, truthful, or other such attributes are attached, that reinforces the self-esteem that we know in being a child of God.

It’s an affirmation that we are on the right track.  Here is one that’s hard to debate.

Rich and poor have this in common:

    The Lord is the Maker of them all.

The Hebrew language falls short in that it doesn’t have a word for Duh.  Solomon threw out some easy ones here and there. The Lord is maker of them all.

The thought can be pursued to reinforce our understanding of God’s sovereignty, but for most who are pursuing wisdom, that’s not an issue. We have long accepted God’s sovereignty.

Solomon can’t go too long without proffering another dichotomy.

The prudent see danger and take refuge,

    but the simple keep going and pay the penalty.

The experienced point man immediately notices the terrain ahead that has great potential for ambush.  He stops the patrol and awaits orders from the patrol leader.

The inexperienced point man just knows that nobody is shooting at him now, not realizing that he is heading for the kill zone.  In fact, he may start singing a song as he walks into a very bad situation.

I know that I promised more car wreck and stroke examples in my sermons, but I got this one as a Black Friday special.

The simple can’t see existential risk.  They are vulnerable to the adulterous woman, the woman known as Folly, and danger in general.

Solomon does offer a parallel for the wicked.

In the paths of the wicked are snares and pitfalls,

    but those who would preserve their life stay far from them.

God’s way – Everything else

Blessings - Minefields

It’s the whole concept of all of the minefields are in the everything else.  There may be struggles and even suffering in doing things God’s way.  Jesus told us ahead of time that we would have trouble in the world.  Being persecuted for following Christ reminds us that the world knows that we have chosen Christ and rejected the evil that governs the world.

Jesus said when we find ourselves being persecuted by the world, we find ourselves in good company.  The prophets were in the same boat.

Now it’s back to another A-B statement.  You may or may not have noticed but you are very familiar with this concept of the A-B statement.  We faithfully say one aloud every Sunday.

What am I talking about? We will jump to John 3.

The background is that Jesus has been lecturing Nicodemus.  He told him that everyone who believes in the Son of Man may have eternal life in him.  We get that.  But it is the follow-on that we know best.  It begins with the Greek word Gar.

It’s a word that tells us a thought is continued.  In the context of this gospel, the thought intensifies.  You know it.

For God so loved the world that he gave his one and only Son, that whoever believes in him shall not perish but have eternal life.

Now for some of you, you might realize that Tom is not as crazy as you thought.  Others will never be convinced, but consider the next verse.  What’s the first word?  It’s Gar. It’s For.

For God did not send his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world through him.

You know this A-B pattern.  You have seen a lot of couplings.  You see them in the Psalms some but you find many in the proverbs.  Some are dichotomies given in a positive coupled with a negative.  You got these from the beginning.

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,

    but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

Considering the proverbs in full context, the wise love knowledge, wisdom, instruction, and discipline.  Fools don’t.

Those are what we have seen the most of, but Solomon has some more of the A-B couplings.  Here’s one.

Humility is the fear of the Lord;

    its wages are riches and honor and life.

We know the fear of the Lord brings us to knowledge, wisdom, discipline, and instruction.  It’s good stuff.  We know that the fear of the Lord is the beginning, not the destination, but if we start out on God’s way, we will get to perfect love casts out fear.

Solomon goes on to note that our fear of the Lord will be manifest in our humility. Because we know the Lord is sovereign—there are none that are like him or come close to him—we are humble.  God made us and loved us more than we can comprehend, and when we had fallen, he redeemed us. 

We have talked many times about thankfulness being a part of who we are as this new creation in Christ.  Now consider that while we are bold in our faith and ministry, we remain humble knowing all that the Lord has done for us, even when we didn’t deserve it.

As is often the case in our relationship with God, humbling ourselves before him produces a bounty for us.

its wages are riches and honor and life.

We know this concept.

But seek first his kingdom and his righteousness, and all these things will be given to you as well.

When we put God first in all things, he blesses us with things that the godless people have made into their gods. I have given you the theological term for that before—cool beans.

Now we come to 2 verses that our American society has skipped or glossed over or just ignored on purpose. You know them.  You are blessed to know them.  Your children are blessed that you know them.

Start children off on the way they should go,

    and even when they are old they will not turn from it.

The rich rule over the poor,

    and the borrower is slave to the lender.

Many of us have lived through the I will let the kids decide for themselves if they will go to worship or Sunday school.  I will let them decide for themselves.  It’s their lives, right?

Yes, these are their lives but for a time those lives have been entrusted to you.

Many of you were blessed to have gone through drug programs as a child.  Your parents drug to Sunday school. They drug to worship.  You were drug to VBS.

Yes, I know the correct tense is dragged, but we don’t have drag programs.

The promise for bringing up a child in the way he or she should go is later on they will be on the right path.  Later on, they will be living in the God’s way and not the everything else.

That doesn’t mean that they get to skip the teenage years.   We have read many proverbs about how our children are such blessings and how living in God’s way honors us and how they are our joy.  For those whose children live in the everything else, they can also bring trouble to our households.

The benefit of this proverb is not only for our children but for us as well. Living out this proverb gets a little tougher each year.  When my kids were in their formative years, nobody would have dared to say, let them pick their own gender.

This thought process has not overtaken us, but the fact that it is given a voice in the public domain is disturbing.

For those raising children now or who know they will be in the near future, this proverb requires your commitment now.  I know that sometimes children are a surprise, but the commitment to bring them up in the way they should go is something you need to embrace now.

If I haven’t offended anyone yet, standby.

The rich rule over the poor,

    and the borrower is slave to the lender.

The rich ruling over the poor sounds so mean.  Why does Solomon want the rich to rule over the poor?  He is not advocating.  He is simply communicating a fact of life.

We have talked before that there is nothing wrong with money.  The love of money leads to all sorts of problems that get you out of the living God’s way mode into the everything else, but money is just money.

It’s sort of like the admonitions against drunkenness.  There is nothing evil about alcohol.  Jesus enjoyed wine with his close friends.  He made the best wine ever when his mom put him on the spot.

It’s not the alcohol.  It’s the relationship with alcohol.  Who is the master?

It’s the same question for money.  Who is the master?

Solomon is saying here’s a fact of life.  Money gives you influence.  More money gives you more influence.  Money talks. Watch a crime show:  Follow the money.  Wonder how your politician voted the way he did:  follow the money.  Money talks. It’s not a modern concept.

Now we come to another fact of life that we have ignored for too long.  The borrower is slave to the lender.

We don’t talk about slavery anymore.  That’s old news.  Nobody can own another person.  If that’s what you believe then know that you have been brainwashed.  People own people even in this modern century.  It’s considered indentured servitude, but essentially people have sold themselves into slavery.

Want to see it in person?  Go to an oil-rich country in the Middle East and see who the servants are.  Now after a dozen years or so of being a servant, they might be set free to make it on their own, if their owners were so inclined.  It’s real, but that is not really our application of this verse.

In this country, we are addicted to debt.  We want it now and we get it now.  Credit cards and store accounts are easy ways to get things that we can’t afford and they have been around for decades.

We want something and we want it now and then suddenly it's no longer a want, but our minds have turned it into a need.  Oh, I need that.  We need that. We don’t have the money to get it but we have a credit card.

I have counseled people with 3 payday loans who were angry that they couldn’t get another one.  How could anyone make a regulation as to how many payday loans you can have? They were not angry at me, at least at first.  They were angry that someone had imposed a restriction on their easy money.

Easy money is all around us and we can lose sight that one day, someone will come to collect, yes, with interest. 

Throw student loans on top of that and let the fun begin.  I am not against student loans.  They can be helpful.  When I went to college, I took out a loan from my hometown bank and paid my tuition.  I paid off the loan by the end of the semester and then took a new one and by the time I graduated, I had no debt when I graduated.

Today, we see kids with $50,000, $100,000 and a quarter million dollars of student loan debt.  How can they have so much debt?  It was too easy to get.  There was no sanity check on either end.

Did the lender even check to see that the student’s degree was in Underwater Basket Weaving?

The problem is that the lender wants his money back with interest and from what I have seen the rates are not that great, but the loan is easy to get.

Credit cards are just as bad.  If you max out one card, just use another, and another, and another. It’s easy money, until it’s time to pay up.

It’s the same question.  Who is master?  If you are not master over your money, it will master you.  Debt will enslave you. 

The only debt we must have is to God and he tells us to repay it by loving one another.

We must understand that there is liberty in desiring less.  We don’t desire less righteousness.  We don’t desire less wisdom.  We don’t desire less mercy and favor.

We desire less selfishness.  We desire to be less self-centered and more self-controlled.  We want the liberty that comes from desiring what we need to meet our needs, tithe, and bless others.  We want to put immediate gratification behind us.  It is too often that first step towards debt.

Sometimes, just when you think you are the master in your relationship with money and don’t buy things you can’t afford, you come to that Amazon One-Click button.  It’s just so easy.

We desire a heart that seeks God and his kingdom and his righteousness and trusts God to bless us for seeking him above anything else in our lives.

We desire less of the things that the godless have made into their gods and more of what God has called us to seek.  There is liberty in seeking less of the world and more of God, and just for good measure, God throws in those worldly blessings anyway.

Here is what I want you to chew on over lunch today.  Is there a relationship between these 2 proverbs similar to what we have seen elsewhere or are they just stand-alone quips of wisdom?

Start children off on the way they should go,

    and even when they are old they will not turn from it.

The rich rule over the poor,

    and the borrower is slave to the lender.

By the fact that I challenge you with this, you might think that I suspect there is a strong relationship between bringing up a child God’s way and the godly mastery of money—which includes debt. 

Think on it.  Pray on it.  Act on it.

Amen.