Showing posts with label God's way. Show all posts
Showing posts with label God's way. Show all posts

Wednesday, November 24, 2021

Don't complicate the simple

 Read Proverbs 21

Solomon continues in his this way, not that way presentation, but for the second chapter in a row, he throws out a unique concept to us.

We don’t really understand our own understanding.

Last week in the first service, I touched on this provocation.  We think we understand our own understanding, but Solomon says, not so fast.

A person may think their own ways are right,

    but the Lord weighs the heart.

Only God knows the heart.  We can convince ourselves of many things thinking them to be best or right or acceptable, but we don’t really know enough to say with certainty, that we’ve got this figured out.

So what’s the point of study?  What’s the point of iron sharpening iron?  Why invest time seeking God’s wisdom?

To affirm our trust—our absolute trust in the Lord —that’s the why of this.  We must trust God with everything we have.  For all of our knowledge, skills, and abilities, without trust in the Lord, we often find ourselves building the Tower of Babel all over again.

This is hard to comprehend.  We think we know what is best.  We think that we know what is right.  We think that we have it figured out, but if it is not completely in agreement with what the Lord has told us, we missed the mark.

We get that God’s ways are higher than our ways and his thoughts are so much more than our own.  We get that.

But we are inclined to believe that what we think is the best course of action.  Solomon notes that our thinking is not always in concert with God’s direction. We are not always in step with the Lord.  We think that we are, but that’s not always the case.

The whole iron sharpens iron concept helps.  It’s good to talk things out with another believer.  It’s too easy to convince yourself that your way is the best way.  A biblically sound partner helps,  but often stalls in the red zone.

The quality of humility gives us pause to remember the sovereignty of God and lay our thoughts and plans and thinking before him, knowing that only he has perfect knowledge.  He knows the plans that he has for us and they are good plans.  They give us hope and a future.

Our hearts and minds need to be in sync with each other and more importantly with God’s will.

A person may think their own ways are right,

    but the Lord weighs the heart.

Sometimes we just need to give God credit for being God. We want to know the rules so we can follow them or seek an exception to them or figure out how to game the rules.  That’s just our nature.

Some search the rules and find ones they think are most important or most likable to them, but they do it to the exclusion of others.  It’s called cherry-picking and most have done this at some point.  Some still do, but cherry-picking attempts to fit God into our box, and he just doesn’t fit.

Cherry-picking thumbs its nose at the full biblical witness, saying that other stuff God said doesn’t matter.  Our minds will tell us that we are right, but God sees the heart and it is in rebellion.

But, we like to know the rules…

A goat takes care of this, and a pair of birds for that.  Bring in your sheath of wheat. Show up on this day.  Stay home on that day. Confess to the Lord.  Confess to one another. We think that we have got it all figured out, then discover that God has been talking to our hearts more than our minds.

To do what is right and just

    is more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice.

We know this thinking.

He has shown you, O mortal, what is good.

    And what does the Lord require of you?

To act justly and to love mercy

    and to walk humbly with your God.

This is not unfamiliar territory.

For I desire mercy, not sacrifice,

    and acknowledgment of God rather than burnt offerings.

We are finite creatures.  We like rules.  We don’t always like following the rules, but we like to know what they are. We like what we can understand, but do we really understand what we think we do?

We like the yellow line on the football field that marks the line to gain—the first down.  It’s not really there, but it lets us argue the spot more intensely when we think we know how close we are.  We like knowing the framework that we work within.

For all the mental faculties that we think we have, the Lord is more interested in our hearts.  He wants us to be humble and gentle and to love mercy.

Justice is important.  Mercy is essential.  We have all fallen short of God’s glory and rejoice in our redemption in Christ Jesus, but sometimes we forget that our blessings and favor followed God’s mercy that we did not deserve.

Sometimes the old creature sneaks back into the new creation and we look down on others who have fallen short.  We may think that we are right and just and justified in our condemnation, but God sees the heart.  God weighs the heart, and a condemning heart is not one that is seeking after the Lord, no matter what our mind tells us.

How can we condemn others when but for the grace of God, we would be them?

In the midst of do this and don’t do that or here are the consequences for laziness or wickedness or foolishness, Solomon warns us to watch out for our own thinking.  Watch out for what you think you understand.

Some of you are familiar with Calvin’s TULIP - (Total Depravity, Unconditional election, Limited Atonement, Irresistible grace, and Perseverance of the Saints).  It’s a five-point doctrinal scale.  You don’t have to agree with it, but most in the reformed tradition consider it and where we fall on the TULIP.  I will only look at the T today.  It is for the Total depravity of humankind.

Ouch!  That sounds mean, but what it means is that every person—every human—has been stained in some way by sin.  Nobody escaped.  We are all touched or stained or blemished by sin.  Most Christians agree with this.

I have addressed the TULIP before and may again.  Perhaps at that time I will do it as a Jeopardy game with the categories being the parts of the TULIP, but not today.

Our human disposition is to judge and condemn.  God gave us a judge, a personal judge, not one for us to use as we evaluate and condemn everyone else.  The word of God judges the thoughts and attitudes of the heart.

God sees the heart.  God knows the heart. We think that we know what is best but if our heart is not in accord with God, we missed the boat no matter how good our thinking sounds to us, and our thinking will always sound good to us.

Sometimes we think ourselves out of accord with God.  C’mon God, you gave me this mind.  Don’t you want me to use it?

I touched on this last week.  The most intelligent, the wisest, the most productive thing that we can do with our mind is to trust God.  Trust God with everything we have.

Trust in the Lord with all your heart

    and lean not on your own understanding;

in all your ways submit to him,

    and he will make your paths straight.

I think you remember there is God’s way and there is everything else.  God says give me your heart—all of it—and do it my way.  I have already figured out the consequences and sequels to what I have directed your to do.

I have my own personal mantra that I put forth sometimes.  It’s don’t complicate the simple.

Don’t complicate the simple.

It’s along the lines of the Law of Parsimony.  You probably know it as Ockham’s Razor.  Tom’s version is don’t complicate the simple.

Our nature is to say this is what God says, but…

Solomon tells us this is what God says, now put away your other conditions.  No ifs, ands, or buts if you will.  God has already computed the consequences and sequels to what he has directed us to do.

Just do it.  God has factored in what we can and cannot understand and just told us the right answer. He has directed our steps without us having to resolve all the possible contingencies.

I’m going to coopt Frank Sinatra’s lyrics here.

I faced it all and I stood tall

And did it God’s way

Paul wrote a promise to the church in Philippi.  If they would stop being anxious and turn everything over to God in prayer and petition and if they would do it in a spirit of thanksgiving, they would receive peace that went beyond their understanding that peace from God would guard their hearts and minds in Christ Jesus.

That promise is for us too. Our hearts and minds are linked, but the heart must govern and it must lead the mind to do things God’s way.  God sees the heart. God knows our hearts and is not influenced by what we think is better than his way.

What is Solomon’s point here?  Don’t talk yourself out of—think yourself out of doing what God has led your heart to do. Don’t try to outthink God.  Don’t look for some unique perspective in what God has made plain.  Don’t complicate the simple.  Trust God with everything that you are and you have and you will be.

Don’t think yourself out of God’s way into the everything else.  Trust in the Lord with everything you have—with all of your heart.  It is just that simple.

Amen.

 

Thursday, August 19, 2021

More precious than Rubies

 Read Proverbs 8

We are eight chapters into the Proverbs and still Solomon is making an introduction to Lady Wisdom.  There are plenty of nuggets to come, but Solomon finds it fitting to consider the value of gaining wisdom once again.

First, God has not hidden wisdom from the world.  Wisdom calls out in the open for people to respond.  Wisdom is not found at the end of some Indiana Jones quest and then stored in some massive warehouse never to be seen again. 

Wisdom calls out.  Understanding shouts and not just a voice in the wilderness as with John the Baptist.  Wisdom presents herself at the high traffic points—crossroads, gates, and entrances. 

Wisdom is like the clever Girl Scout Troops that sets us a cookie stand next to the Marijuana dispensary.  It’s location, location, location.

What’s the point of these figurative depictions?  Wisdom is there for the taking.  God wants us to receive his wisdom.  He has not hidden his wisdom from those who truly seek him.

You don’t have to scale a high mountain in the Himalayas to get wisdom.

For those seeking a magic elixir, that’s another story; but for those truly seeking God and his kingdom and his righteousness, wisdom is offered generously.

It is not only offered to us, it is measured as more valuable than silver, gold, and rubies.  This is Solomon once again telling us to pay attention.  Wisdom is worth it.  The wisdom of this chapter is to seek and gain and embrace wisdom.

It’s sort of a sales pitch.  Think to how the salesperson keeps coming back to things you agreed with earlier.  Solomon is still doing his best to sell you on wisdom.

There is God’s way and there is everything else.  God’s way comes with blessings.  Everything else comes with peril. This sales pitch is not a con job.

God’s way—blessings, everything else—peril:  It’s just that simple.

An occasional misstep is to be expected, but our sights must be set on wisdom.  Think to Michael Jordan.  For those who don’t know, he is the NBA GOAT.  You can disagree, but you will just be wrong.

Michael Jordan missed more shots than I ever tried to make.  He didn’t miss because he was looking at the cheerleaders or smiling for the cameras or he wanted something from the concession stand.  Sometimes you just miss. But his focus was always on the basket.  He was not distracted.

OBTW—he also scored more points than I could in a lifetime even if I was not defended.

Our focus must be on God, his kingdom, and his righteousness.  Wisdom keeps us pointed in that direction.  Wisdom is one of the most valuable things that we will ever possess.

We will miss the mark sometimes, but we never lose focus.  Wisdom is always front and center in our lives.

Silver, gold, and rubies are valuable but not as valuable as wisdom.  Solomon goes beyond these tangible commodities to say that nothing that you can desire compares to wisdom.

We want to seek God and his kingdom and his righteousness and Solomon tells us to invest in wisdom so that we can find our way.

We will get to specific nuggets of wisdom, but 8 chapters into the Proverbs Solomon still felt it necessary to convince you that this is a worthwhile journey.

Get wisdom. It’s worth it!

Amen.

Thursday, July 1, 2021

God's way and everything else

 

Read Proverbs 1

We begin the study of Proverbs in the third chapter of 1st Kings.  Before the temple and the palace and the wall around the great city were built, Solomon went to Gibeon, the most important high place of that time and he made many sacrifices.

God came to Solomon in a dream and asked this new king what he desired.  Solomon was forthright.  He said I am a kid ruling more people than I can count.  I’m not my dad.  I need help.  I need wisdom.  I need a discerning heart.

God was pleased that Solomon didn’t ask for wealth or to destroy his enemies or other self-gratifying things.  Solomon desired to rule with wisdom.

God granted his request and much more. He made Solomon the wisest man in the history of the world.  He said that none wiser would come after him.

Solomon did not hoard his wealth of wisdom.  He authored over 3000 proverbs and chose to share about a third of them in this collection.  The Proverbs are the product of much of that wisdom.  Solomon is not the author of all the proverbs, but he is surely the editor of godly wisdom when other proverbs are included in this collection.

The Proverbs as we know them today were likely not completed until 200 years later.

For some, this will be your second journey through Proverbs with this congregation.  For those of you who have been down this road with me before, much will be familiar, but I am certain much will be as if you have encountered it for the first time. 

For those embarking upon this voyage for the first time, I will cut to the chase.  I won’t bury the lead.  I will give you the answer to the test question upfront.

There is God’s way and there is everything else.

Proverbs is about wisdom. In the course of our journey, wisdom will be described as a lady.  Wisdom will note its presence at the foundation of the world.  Wisdom is desired by all who earnestly seek God.

Wisdom walks in broad daylight unlike those who despise it and work in secret. You might think that all would desire wisdom, but that is not the case.

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,

    but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

In Hebrew literature—most noted in Psalms and Proverbs—there is parallelism in many forms.  The coupling of lines often entails stating one thing directly and then again less directly or defining an idea or concept using opposites.  Here is a homespun example.

You must walk on the right.  You must not walk on the left.

The Hebrew authors finessed their words a bit more, but you get the concept.

We see such definition in this proverb.

The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,

    but fools despise wisdom and instruction.

The person who fears God seeks knowledge but the person who can’t stand wisdom, discipline, and instruction is a fool.  Thus, the person of God fears God and receives knowledge and concurrently desires wisdom, discipline, and instruction.

Those who don’t want to do things God’s way are labeled fools.

There are the wise and there are the foolish.

There are the righteous and there are the wicked.

There are the industrious and there are the lazy.

There are those who live in the light and those who scheme in the dark.

These are not statements of a deterministic nature.  They don’t say that your genes or your environment determine your life.  Consider the beginning of the Proverbs and this chapter.

The Proverbs are for gaining knowledge, understanding, prudence, and wisdom.  They are not a smorgasbord of choices, but a complete offering. What is the whole here?

There is God’s way and there is everything else.

For some reason—surely rooted in our sinful nature—some will reject God and his wisdom and plot against those who seek him and his gifts.  This chapter speaks to the futility of opposing God.  Nothing is hidden from God.  God sees the heart.

Those who are young should be brought up in the way of the Lord and the way of his wisdom.  Those without understanding can benefit from instruction in wisdom.  Those already on the road to wisdom will grow even more, but some will reject the Lord’s offer to be generous with his wisdom.

There is God’s way and there is everything else.

Solomon—the wisest man in the history of humankind and author of this first section—used another literary tool—personification.  He presented Wisdom in the form of a person.  Listen now to wisdom’s personified account.

Out in the open wisdom calls aloud,

    she raises her voice in the public square;

 on top of the wall she cries out,

    at the city gate she makes her speech:

 “How long will you who are simple love your simple ways?

    How long will mockers delight in mockery

    and fools hate knowledge?

 Repent at my rebuke!

    Then I will pour out my thoughts to you,

    I will make known to you my teachings.

 But since you refuse to listen when I call

    and no one pays attention when I stretch out my hand,

 since you disregard all my advice

    and do not accept my rebuke,

 I in turn will laugh when disaster strikes you;

    I will mock when calamity overtakes you—

 when calamity overtakes you like a storm,

    when disaster sweeps over you like a whirlwind,

    when distress and trouble overwhelm you.

 “Then they will call to me but I will not answer;

    they will look for me but will not find me,

 since they hated knowledge

    and did not choose to fear the Lord.

 Since they would not accept my advice

    and spurned my rebuke,

 they will eat the fruit of their ways

    and be filled with the fruit of their schemes.

 For the waywardness of the simple will kill them,

    and the complacency of fools will destroy them;

 but whoever listens to me will live in safety

    and be at ease, without fear of harm.”

The Forrest Gump summary is Mama always said, stupid is as stupid does.

Solomon has introduced us to a lady.  Her name and her persona are wisdom.  She will not be ignored or scorned without consequence—harsh consequences.

Though less stylish than Solomon's words, the take-home nugget of my composition for this message is simple.

There is God’s way and there is everything else.

We have been introduced to Lady Wisdom.  Let’s get to know her better over the coming weeks.

Amen.