Are you a wise son or daughter of God? And likewise, are the organizations of God’s true Church collectively wise sons and daughters of God the Father?
Sometimes, we claim the title of God’s children simply because we have the knowledge base of God’s Word. But is merely claiming that knowledge enough?
Remember, “…to him who knows to do good and does not do it, to him it is sin,” (James 4:17). A truly, biblically wise person would recognize and embrace the responsibility to constantly reflect the goodness and kindness of God’s way of life by faithfully living it!
Ultimate insight
The tenth chapter of Proverbs launches the third collection of God’s shorter statements of wisdom that form the Book of Proverbs. Commentators usually recognize nine of these proverbial collections.
Very often the Proverbs refer to God’s faithful followers as His sons and daughters. The historic, true Church of God is certainly the vital part of God’s true children in this age of history.
Blind to true wisdom
Yet traditional Christianity and Judaism also lay claim to the Proverbs and God’s Word generally. Although they are closer than the rank and file of pagan or secular mankind, they presently, and quite frankly, greatly misunderstand the eternal aspects of God’s wisdom.
Now this misunderstanding or “blindness” will be taken away by Christ at His second coming, but until that happens only the relative few of the spiritual Body of Christ actually have clear-minded access to the profound wisdom of God!
The veil of spiritual blindness refers to the Israelites of old who carnally rejected God’s way: “But their minds were blinded. For until this day the same veil remains unlifted in the reading of the Old Testament, because the veil is taken away in Christ. 15But even to this day, when Moses is read, a veil lies on their heart. 16Nevertheless when one turns to the Lord, the veil is taken away” (2 Cor. 3:14-15).
To the vast bulk of mankind, the true wisdom of God is simply not understood yet!
Of course, that’s obvious to us who have been (or are being) called by God to true repentance, baptism and spiritual conversion. We know that because we know God’s truth, we are divinely expected to obey and live by it!
Great expectation
It is a wonderful calling, a great calling and great expectation that God has given us!
We, by our actions, words and very thoughts represent the Kingdom of God on earth. God the Father expects us to be wise sons and daughters in the true faith of His Son. Seek the fathomless wisdom of God to truly be a spiritually wise son or daughter of the Most High God!
Originally written: March 6, 2021
*If you wish to reprint this commentary or learn more about how to do so, please contact me in the comments below. I reserve my rights to this content, it is not in the public domain for use or reprint without my permission.
**All images are property of Amanda Stiver, unless otherwise noted. Please do not re-use without permission.
We hosted a brunch at our house on a late Sunday morning many years ago near Elkhart, Indiana where I served as associate pastor in the late summer of 1983. The three guests of honor were three long-retired farmers from the local congregation.
These three men had begun farming before modern tractors were widely manufactured. Clyde grew up working with and training draft horses, and at the time he was 95 years of age. Bill had farmed with mules in northwestern Indiana and he was in his mid-80s. But Hoover grew up farming with oxen down South and was in his late 70s.
By personal contrast I’d grown up tractor farm-ranch operations in northwestern Nebraska and southwestern South Dakota. However, compared to their draft animal experience and wisdom, I was humbled and marveled at how little I knew. Their stories added considerably to my appreciation for old-time farming. I’ve recounted one of them before.
High-water
But our story today is about an adventure in which Hoover had to paddle his way safely out of danger during a high-water flood on the lower Mississippi River. His family’s farm was down in the northern part of the state of Mississippi on the shore of that mighty river.
During nearly every one of his growing up years Hoover’s family and their neighbors faced some level of river flooding on their farms. The year of this story was one of the big, high-water floods at a time when the science of major flood control was still in the developmental stage.
Then it started raining
Living along the southern section of America’s “Father of Waters” was not just about the rain coming down where you lived—but about what was flowing down from upstream. The flood was monitored in its early stages much further north along the upper Mississippi, the Missouri, and the Ohio Rivers.
As the rains came down, and the mighty Mississippi’s waters rose to flood their bottom lands, Hoover’s father moved their draft oxen and other livestock up the slopes nearer their house and barn. Over the next couple of days, the water moved up hill, too. Soon the floodwaters were creeping into the kitchen and living room.
It was clear that the flood had not crested. Hoover’s father gathered the family and laid out the plan. He and most of the family would haul as many belongings as could fit in the wagon. In the process they would also drive all the livestock ahead of them to safe, high ground. The camp they set up would be for the duration of the flood.
“Make a boat”
However, there was some concern about river looters who illegally used the pandemonium of big floods to steal whatever they could find in the temporarily vacated dwellings. Therefore, he instructed Hoover and his next younger brother that they would stay at the house to keep an eye on things. If the water got higher they were to move upstairs. But if the water kept rising, the boys were told to “make a boat and come on out to high ground”.
This was a load of responsibility for a 13-year-old! Hoover related that he and his brother felt some trepidation and were a little weepy-eyed watching their family disappear over the crest of the hill, livestock in tow.
Hoover explained to us that this was also when he began to comprehend the seriousness of sincere, believing prayer!
Boat building
Right away the two boys gathered all the boards they thought they’d need to build a makeshift, flood-worthy, flat-bottom boat that would carry themselves, their little dog, some food, rope, tools and a few other odds and ends.
You don’t have to look for motivation when it’s time to escape a big flood! The boat was finished and floating the next morning with the boys on the housetop loading food supplies and extra siding for repairs. Before launching their craft, they released the chickens, ducks and geese to fend for themselves.
With a prayer and some trepidation, Hoover and his younger brother shoved off their raft-boat into the rising waters using paddles made from shorter pieces of barn planks.
Finally, the brothers were making slow but steady headway toward safety. Hoover said it reminded him of the Adventures of Huckleberry Finn which he had read in school. It was almost a grand adventure as they used their push pole and paddles to make slow but steady progress toward high ground. But it wouldn’t be an uninterrupted trip!
Neighborly rescue
What with fighting the current and rising waters, the boys figured they’d made close to a mile toward safety when they heard the frantic call for help! It was their rather stout, elderly neighbor lady standing on her rooftop. For our purposes we’ll call her Grandma Smith.
Her call for help was a call to duty so the boys made for her house. They paddled up alongside the rooftop and helped her get aboard with her little dog. To balance the load both boys moved to the front and paddled from there. Happily, however, their neighbor had brought a basket of food aboard which helped the boys’ energy levels.
Yet another load
Laboring hard at the oars for another half mile or so, Hoover saw something swimming toward their boat. It looked smaller than a large turtle, maybe a beaver? But it was making straight for their boat. Finally, they could see that it was yet another neighbor’s dog, but this one was a Great Dane!
Grandma Smith began calling to the huge dog encouraging it forward, and Hoover began shouting orders to “Kill that dog! Kill that dog, or he gonna swamp us!” A tough call for a young fellow, but one more animal aboard their raft would swamp it and drown them all.
Hoover lost the argument, however, and a compromise was achieved. Grandma Smith, seated aft on the boat, got the dog’s head and front paws on the rear edge of the raft and held on to its collar as it paddled along behind. And onward the boys toiled at the oars.
Hailed by the Law
By late afternoon Hoover, his brother, their dog, their neighbor Grandma Smith with her little dog and a very large rescue dog were still making slow but sure headway to safety where the Woods’ family and livestock were camped.
The current carried our young rescuers around the curve of the slope leading to the high, dry ground for which they hoped. Then they heard the throaty rumble of a boat motor. As Hoover expected, it was the sheriff’s large motor launch.
The sheriff recognized the Woods boys and immediately call out, “Hoover, do you all need to be rescued?”
Hoover called back across the water, “No sir, Sheriff. We be fine here. We’re headed to high ground where the family has taken our livestock. You all go on ahead and rescue the folks what need’s rescuin’.”
Reassured, the sheriff motored on to do exactly that. Hoover and his brother, their neighbor lady, and all three dogs paddled on to a safe and happy rendezvous with their family long about dark.
The lesson
Hoover summed up the lesson from his farm adventure. When trouble comes your way: “Pray for God’s help. Gather your necessities. Help others in need. And then put your shoulder to the oars and make for high ground!” Don’t be afraid when trials come your way. Do what you know is right to do, and trust that God will provide what you lack.
*If you wish to reprint this commentary or learn more about how to do so, please contact me in the comments below. I reserve my rights to this content, it is not in the public domain for use or reprint without my permission.
**All images are property of Amanda Stiver, unless otherwise noted. Please do not re-use without permission.
Please puzzle this perplexing passage of Proverbs:
The leech has two daughters—Give and Give! There are three things that are never satisfied, four never say, “Enough!”: The grave, The barren womb, The earth that is not satisfied with water— And the fire never says “Enough!” (Proverbs 30:15-16).
God personally inspired the writers of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes (mostly King Solomon himself) to produce a collection of boiled-down-to-the-essence, powerful, pronouncements of divine wisdom.
The Proverbs weren’t just sage observations of itinerant wise men! They were God’s own inspired, authoritative statements of His divine wisdom making clear the wise and true action in any situation. What an incredible example of spiritual and physical success—if only Israel had correctly acted on God’s Word!
Don’t let yourself make their mistakes!
Wisdom was meant to spread
In the process of Jesus’ first coming He gave His life as a sacrifice for the sins of all persons, peoples and nations.
With His resurrection by God the Father, Jesus Christ launched the true biblical and historical Church God. He had prepared it’s launch during His ministry by calling and training the 12 Apostles as His true Church’s initial human leadership.
The true, divine wisdom of God’s spiritual calling and understanding His way of life was and continues to be spread in anticipation of His second coming. The great challenge has always been getting the truth past the lies and false religions, paganism and false Christianity included, that permeate the world.
Back to the beginning
The third chapter of Genesis demonstrates that from the get-go in the Garden of Eden mankind has teetered on the verge of self-imposed disaster! We find there the lying serpent—none other than Satan the Devil manifesting himself as a snake, but who had originally been a holy angel until his rebellion. The devil tempted the original couple to eat of the forbidden (by God) tree and Adam and Eve succumbed to Satan’s lies, which set in motion active evil thinking in the culture of humanity.
Through them the Devil cleverly lied to all their descendants (including us today) as well as however many people are still to come before Christ returns.
Sin was not the invention of Eve or Adam. God’s plan required that each of the His created spirit being helpers [angels] must also personally choose the way of good and reject the way of evil. That test of truth has taken place and fully one third of the angels, let by Satan, rejected honest good and deliberately chose deceptive evil.
Ultimately, every human must also choose good and reject evil. But before the final form of that test can be taken by mankind each must have his or her mind opened by God to know specifically what good is and what evil is. God Himself defines both.
The Devil’s nasty work in our age
Satan deserves the lion’s share of guilt for introducing a culture of lies and deception. After beguiling and convincing first Eve and then Adam to reject God’s command, and then to eat of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil (see Genesis 3). No doubt he convinced them that the fruit of the tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil would open their minds to even greater wonders! The “wonders” of depravity and destruction.
Sadly, that immoral sales pitch still works! In its twisted way modern man still symbolically consumes the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. Continuing to feed the fires of sin, evil, and violence that resulted in almost continuous warfare for nearly 6,000 years of human history.
What God’s faithful should do today?
Stand your guard. Listen and beware of the spouting of evil – the false values of life that drive society today.
Read and study God’s Word. Highlight the foundational truths that undergird godly wisdom: God’s law, His plan of salvation pictured through the annual holydays, the value God put on human life when Jesus Christ gave His life to pay for the sins of humankind.
Actively seek the true values (God’s true ways of living). Ask God to open your mind and sharpen your awareness of and moral resistance to the evil ways and false reasoning driving today’s world.
– Commentary by Randy Stiver
*If you wish to reprint this commentary or learn more about how to do so, please contact me in the comments below. I reserve my rights to this content, it is not in the public domain for use or reprint without my permission.
Every culture on the face of the earth has its own wise sayings or proverbs. Some sayings appear in multiple cultures, although the wording may be varied. Here are several timeless wise sayings:
“A stitch in time saves nine.”
“A fool and his money are soon parted.”
“Too soon old, too late smart.”
“A bird in hand is worth two in the bush.”
The strength of God’s wisdom
Wise sayings are also called “proverbs.” They are typically gems of insight that wise men and women coined through alert observation. Sometimes a saying rhymed in the language of origin, but not always. Over time the actual wisdom of a people (tribal or national) accumulated into their particular storehouse of proverbial wisdom.
However, not all of what ancient Israel (or any other nation) called wisdom was true wisdom. Only the sayings that were directly based in word or principle on the true wisdom of the Bible carried the strength of divine truth.
That last statement is important. Always analyze any culture’s “wisdom” in the light of God’s Word.
Recording true wisdom
Some cultures and nations grew to be wiser than others. For instance, ancient Greece and Israel were famous for their recorded wisdom.
In ancient Israel, wisdom flourished during the reigns of Kings David and Solomon (approximately 1000 to 900 BC). God, specifically Jesus Christ before His human birth, directly inspired that wisdom to be recorded in Scripture as proverbs or sometimes in the longer form of psalms, such as the books of Proverbs and Ecclesiastes.
Later Christ inspired the New Testament where more wisdom statements were sprinkled throughout the gospel accounts and the Epistles (of Paul and others).
The earlier divine collections of God-inspired wisdom remain a dynamic part of God’s holy Word for us today and for those to be called in the Millennium and Great White Throne Judgment. Collected together, the psalms and proverbs can have a tremendous impact on our minds and in our lives!
Applying true wisdom
Having free access to such literally-divine wisdom is wonderful! However, actively using that wisdom for guidance in your personal life, or in Israel’s case – their national life, can be another matter altogether! It’s too easy to exchange the true wisdom of God for the false wisdom of “this, present, evil world” or “age” (Galatians 1:4).
If only they had used that God-given wisdom more often during ancient Israel’s history! Would that the modern, western world (where the Bible was preserved and published) had wisely followed its guidance through the centuries and especially now, during this modern time of chaos and confusion!
Making the Plan
There is a fitting proverb that came to us from the Scottish poet Robert Burns: “Among the best laid plans of mice and men, things often go awry!” The plans of humanity have failed continuously since Adam and Eve ate the forbidden fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil.
But, critically important, God’s plans do not go awry (i.e. “fail to work or function).”
We can count on God’s plan, and especially His Kingdom to come to pass. Jesus Christ will return and there will be a future of peace for all nations. No more chaos, no more confusion in even the most basic facets of life, and no more aimless violence and tragedy. Mankind was designed to thrive within God-inspired structure and guidelines that lead to a thriving, vital life of purposefulness and peace.
Keep your eyes on God’s best laid plans….His soon-coming Kingdom!
*This originally appeared as a weekly note sent to my local congregation. If you wish to reprint this commentary or learn more about how to do so, please contact me in the comments below. I reserve my rights to this content, it is not in the public domain for use or reprint without my permission.