"The unfolding of your words gives light ..." (Psalm 119:130a)

Category: Wisdom (Page 1 of 2)

Give Peace a Chance

“But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, open to reason, full of mercy and good fruits, impartial and sincere. And a harvest of righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace.” (James 3:17-18)

Yep. Yes. I agree. Wholeheartedly. Do it. Now. Always. Give peace a chance.

But I must also ask, “How’d that work out, James?”

James set forth what true, God-given wisdom looks like. Let us receive it for what it is—the word of God.

Let’s also ask, does that wisdom work? I guess it depends on how you define the word work.

In Acts 21 the Apostle Paul arrived in Jerusalem with an offering received from Gentile believers and designated for the poor of Judea. He walked into a tinderbox that was ready to ignite into a firestorm. The Jewish-Gentile tensions were so taut they were about to snap. And Paul was at the center of it all. Paul, it was said, taught Jews outside of Judea to forsake the law of Moses (Acts 21:21). It was a falsehood but rumors run on airtime, not actuality.

In view of the times, James counseled a scheme where Paul would go to the Temple with some Jewish men who were under an oath. The apostle would join them in the Temple, pay their expenses, and join them in making sacrifice (Acts 21:23-24a). “Thus all will know that there is nothing in what they have been told about you, but that you yourself also live in observance of the law” (v.24b). Let’s give peace a chance.

Did it work? Did it produce “a harvest of righteousness . . . sown in peace”?

No. At least not like James seemed to picture it.

On the final day of James’ scheme, a riot started in the Temple over Paul. The Jews there tried to kill him (Acts 21:27-31).

None of that discounts the truthfulness of what James taught about wisdom. It does remind us, however, of something Paul had himself recently written: “If possible, so far as it depends on you, live peaceably with all” (Rom. 12:18).

Make every legitimate effort to live at peace. Yes, and amen! But living at peace takes two parties. Even if you try, it doesn’t guarantee the other party will try also.

Sometimes righteousness works itself out in less than peaceful circumstances. “The God of peace” (Rom. 15:33; 16:20; Phil. 4:9; 1 Thess. 5:23) knows how to work his righteousness with or without willing parties (Psa. 75:11). May he always find us willing, even when not all in our circle of relationships are cooperative.

Proverbs: A Mentor Commentary — Arabic

I recently received word that my Proverbs: A Mentor Commentary was just published in the Arabic language. I’m told that three thousand copies were printed. Currently, 70 Arabic-speaking students are using it as their textbook in their seminary course on  Proverbs. Pray with me that God will be glorified in each student and reader of the commentary–that a new fear of the Lord and knowledge of God will lay the foundation for a lifetime of walking in wisdom (Proverbs 9:10).

The Fear of the Lord #6

See the previous posts in this series here, here, here, here, and here.

Approaching the conclusion of our reflections, let’s recap. You desire success? You’ll need wisdom. To have wisdom, you’ll have to embrace the fear of the Lord. You’ll never embrace the fear of the Lord apart from God’s revelation of Himself to us, supremely in Jesus as held before us in the pages of the Bible.

We come then to the third movement in the fear of the Lord. The fear of the Lord is evidenced by obedience to God.

How do I know whether I fear the Lord? There’s only one answer: Am I currently walking in obedience to God?

How do I know if someone else (maybe someone I love deeply) fears the Lord? Same answer – are they walking in obedience to God?

The Bible underscores this repeatedly. Here are just a few samples:

  • “The fear of the LORD is hatred of evil.” (Proverbs 8:13a)
  • “… by the fear of the LORD one turns away from evil.” (Proverbs 16:6b)
  • “Let not your heart envy sinners, but continue in the fear of the LORD all the day.” (Proverbs 23:17)

The evidence of whether one fears the Lord is not how passionate one feels during corporate worship, how much passion arises within one over certain issues, nor how many Bible verses one can quote. There is only one test – obedience to God.

If you obey God’s Word, you fear Him. If you, at any point, do not obey God’s Word, at that point you fear something or someone more than your fear the Lord. That thing is your god, whatever else you may say.

In C.S. Lewis’s masterpieces known as The Chronicles of Narnia there is a passage in the opening book that sets before us this matter of the fear of the Lord.

In the account the children Lucy, Susan, and Edmund have entered into the make believe world of Narnia. Mr. and Mrs. Beaver were showing them about and have begun to tell them of Aslan.  He is a mighty lion, who represents the figure of Christ in the story. They described Aslan’s might, power, wisdom, and awesome presence. Yet the children did not seem to grasp who he was. Finally Mr. Beaver said, “You’ll understand when you see him.”

“But shall we see him?,” asked Susan.

“Why, Daughter of Eve, that’s what I brought you here for.  I’m to lead you to where you shall meet him,” said Mr. Beaver.

“Is, is he a man?”, asked Lucy?

“Aslan a man!” said Mr. Beaver sternly. “Certainly, not. I tell you he is the King of the wood and the son of the great Emperor-Beyond-the-Sea. Don’t you know who is the King of Beasts? Aslan is a lion—the Lion, the great Lion.”

“Ooh!” said Susan, “I’d thought he was a man.  Is he—quiet safe? I shall feel rather nervous about meeting a lion.”

“That you will dearie, and make no mistake,” said Mrs. Beaver. “If there’s anyone who can appear before Aslan without their knees knocking, they’re either braver than most or else just silly.”

“Then he isn’t safe?,” said Lucy.

“Safe?” said Mr. Beaver. “Don’t you hear what Mrs. Beaver tells you? Who said anything about safe ‘Course he isn’t safe. But he’s good.”

Therein lies the heart of the matter. The fear of the Lord is not the opposite of love for God. The fear of the Lord is love in full blossom. And love for God is the fear of the Lord at its designed zenith.

Fear of the Lord #5

See the previous posts in this series here, here, here, and here.

Let me pause to ask, are you hung up on the word “fear”? Someone may object, “Doesn’t  the Bible say ‘Perfect love casts out fear’?” It does. In 1 John 4:18. Love casts out that servile, ugly, deadening fear that follows close on the heels of sin and independence. But loving God and fearing God are not mutually exclusive. In fact, they are one.

How can that be?

Did you know that the Crayola Crayon Company manufactures twenty-three varieties of red crayons? All are crayons. All are red. But each one is a progressively different hue of that one color.

Did you know there are progressive hues of the fear of the Lord?

Ed Welch has written helpfully on this theme. He sets out the fear of the Lord as a continuum.Consider with me, in the light of God’s revelation of Himself to us, the appropriateness of each hue of the fear of the Lord set out in this way.

God is utterly holy. Holy, at its root, speaks of otherness. God is over, beyond, higher, deeper, wider, and different than anything we can imagine. Indeed, our imagination cannot take in all that God is in His holiness. He is righteous in the most absolute sense. By the way, I am not. And neither are you. “God is a consuming fire” (Deut. 4:24; Heb. 12:29). Terror is not inappropriate.

Not only is God holy, righteous, and a consuming fire, He possesses infinite power. He cannot be resisted. Dread is not an inappropriate response.

This God—holy, righteous, consuming, all-powerful—holds “In his hand … the life of every living thing and the breath of all mankind” (Job 12:10). This God holds my next breath and heartbeat. He dispenses them to me at His pleasure. He will one day withhold them in His wisdom. I am at His mercy. Each moment I remain animate and alive, is a gift from His hand. Trembling before Him is not an inappropriate response.

The great marvel is that this God continues to dispense to me breaths, heartbeats, and brainwaves. Why? Each morning my eyes open to a new day—why? Each time I set down to a meal—why? In God’s kindness He continues to drop breadcrumbs of grace along my path. We discover that “God’s kindness is meant to lead you to repentance” (Romans 2:4). Astonishment is appropriate.

But more astonishing yet is the discovery that before I ever existed (indeed, before anything but God existed), God set His love on me. He did so not because I am holy, for I am not. He did so not because I am righteous, because I am not. He knew ahead of time that I would prove unholy and unrighteous. Yet then and there He determined He would deal with me according to His love. He set His love on me not because of something in me, but because of something in Himself. God set things up so that the ground of His love for me would never be in my performance, but in His person. He remains holy, righteous, and a consuming fire and yet in all of that He is love. Awe would be a good word to describe the response of one who is beginning to see.

So much so did God determine to deal with me in His love that “at the right time” (Romans 5:6) He stepped into time and space in a human body and with a sinless human nature in the person of Jesus. He came, He said, to seek and to save what was lost. That was me. He secured me to His Father forever by dying my death and becoming my life. Such sacrificial love calls forth reverence within us.

All this God did “so that in the coming ages he might show the immeasurable riches of his grace in kindness to us in Christ” (Ephesians 2:7). Who would not yield to and commit themselves to one so powerful and yet so determined to deal with us in grace? Yes, complete devotion is the right response.

Indeed, in view of God’s mercies to us in Jesus, we offer up our bodies to Him as living sacrifices (Romans 12:2). Trust is the inevitable extension in our growing relationship to this God.

This life of trusting obedience becomes our “reasonable service” of worship (Romans 12:2) before one so utterly holy, completely righteous, committedly loving, and enduringly gracious.

Love of God and fear of the Lord are not mutually exclusive. In fact, the more we know the Lord, the deeper we move into relationship with Him in both fear and love.

Fear of the Lord #4

See the previous posts in this series here, here, and here

The fear of the Lord is indispensable. But how do we come by it?

Answering brings us to the second movement in the fear of the Lord: The fear of the Lord arises from the revelation of God.

We cannot know anything about God unless He reveals Himself to us. We are dependent upon God’s initiative in revelation.

Psalm 19 holds before us two forums in which God has disclosed Himself to us. The first is what is often called general revelation. Thus the psalm begins: “The heavens declare the glory of God, and the sky above proclaims his handiwork” (v.1). It continues to hold before us God as revealed in the majesty of His created world (vv.1-6). Through God’s physical creation His “voice goes out through all the earth” (v.4). There is nowhere that is exempt. No one can arise to say they have not heard. God’s “invisible attributes, namely, his eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly perceived, ever since the creation of the world, in the things that have been made” (Romans 1:20).

But then the psalm takes a turn. The theme is still God’s revelation of Himself to humanity. But the forum in which He makes His self-disclosure is different: “The law of the LORD is perfect, reviving the soul; the testimony of the LORD is sure, making wise the simple; the precepts of the LORD are right, rejoicing the heart; the commandment of the LORD is pure, enlightening the eyes; the fear of the LORD is clean, enduring forever; the rules of the LORD are true, and righteous altogether” (Psalm 19:7-9). This is no longer the physical world around us, but the written word before us. The “law,” “testimony,” “precepts,” “commandment,” and “rules” are what makes up the Bible.

Did you notice that tucked in amid all these synonyms for the Bible is listed “the fear of the LORD”? The fear of the Lord is so intimately related to the written revelation of God that it is paralleled and held next to the law, testimony, precepts, commandment, and rules of the Bible. What truly instills the fear of the Lord is not simply a trip to the mountains or an evening spent gazing upon the ocean. It is when the same God who created these speaks to me out of His written word and by the Holy Spirit opens my eyes to the wonder of who He is, supremely held before us in the person of Jesus Christ.

A pattern is beginning to appear: Want success? That will require wisdom. So you desire this wisdom? Well, then you must have the fear of the Lord. Need to find the fear of the Lord? You must encounter God in the person of His Son, held before us in the written the revelation that is the Bible.

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