"Go
For It"
a homily based on Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31
_____________________________________________________
by Rev. Thomas Hall
"Jumping into an argument that's none of your
business
is like grabbing a dog by the ears."
"Be slow in chusing a friend, slower in changing."
"A fault-finder complains even that the bride is too pretty."
Welcome to the world of proverbs. This book is a must read
for those who welcome advice or like to dish it out. Proverbs is one of those rare books
in the Bible that champions wisdom--pithy, witty sayings on how to manage our lives. Do
yourself a favor-sit down this afternoon and read through a few chapters of Proverbs.
Youll meet a great company of wise and feckless characters--sluggards, quarreling
spouses, smooth talkers, wise tongues, and crooked minds. Proverbs is Scriptures
Poor Richards Almanack of common sense.
What are some of the homespun proverbs that you have grown to value over the
years? Though most preachers view Proverbs as "a deserted stretch of highway between
Psalms and Ecclesiastes," the fact is, we all live by proverbs and succinct phrases
of wisdom. The lectionarys underrepresentation of proverbial passages and silence
from the pulpit keeps the myth going that proverbs are just a "tiresome collection of
self-evident moralisms." But just do a two-minute search on Amazon.com and you see
how much America still lives by proverbs.
Dont Sweat the Small Stuff (And Its All Small Stuff)
If Experience is Such a Good Teacher Why Do I Keep Repeating the Course?
Todays proverbs come to us airbrushed, glazed, printed, animated, ensconced,
and framed in our home. And they come in many forms-Murphys Laws, tee shirts,
billboards, cartoons, David Lettermans top ten lists, bumper stickers, and coffee
mugs. We live in a Proverbs kind of world; we all live by them. And since we live by
proverbs, the real question is, what kind of proverbs will we choose to live by?
In the opening lines of Proverbs 8, the writer describes what is at the very core
of proverbs-life. What might surprise us is that in this section of Proverbs there
isnt a single proverb to read! Instead, we are introduced to a wise woman whom we
might refer to as Lady Wisdom:
Do you hear Lady Wisdom calling?
Can you hear Madame Insight raising her voice?
Shes taken her stand at First and Main,
At the busiest intersection.
Right in the city square
Where the traffic is thickest, she shouts,
"You-Im talking to all of you,
everyone out here on the streets! . . .
Dont miss a word of this-Im telling you how to live
well,
Im telling you how to live at your best.
Wisdom in Scripture has a wide range of meaning. Sometimes wisdom refers to a
person's literary skill or to someone's acute sense of justice or to an exceptional grasp
of knowledge, or to someone who is clever and playful.
John Naisbitt, best-selling author of Megatrends says that everyday between 6,000
and 7,000 scientific articles are written and that because of the sheer number of
scientists and advanced retrieval systems, knowledge now doubles every twenty months. But
Naisbitt describes our decade and society as one in which we are drowning in information,
but starved for wisdom. We're drowning in information, but starved for wisdom.
What we need is more wisdom, not data, on how to manage our lives in a very
complex world. And that's where our lesson brings us--to the wisdom that shows us how to
live. A wise person may be quite clever and cunning, have knowledge, and may be able to
write or lead well, but real wisdom must also include honesty, diligence, trustworthiness,
the ability to control our passion, and to adopt an equitable view of poverty and wealth.
So wisdom emphasizes a way of thinking and living that draws on experience,
reasoning, and morality. Wisdom is our passport through life. When I taught in Latvia we
could never be sure when the police would pull our car over to check our passports.
Passports were our insurance, the ticket to our destination. Perhaps that's why one of the
favorite proverbs in Latvia is: Human beings consist of a body, a soul, and a passport.
Wisdom is the passport that leads us in the direction of God, and thus in the direction of
right living.
Wisdom assumes that we go through life only once. We need all the help we can get.
Remember the season of making and raising babies? We struggled, trying to do the right
things with our children; read the latest books on how to rear children; laughed and cried
in the same breath at their struggles-their good shortsighted choices.
And then, after we had finished with child-rearing, we wondered what we could have
said, lived, or done differently that would have helped our kids do even better.
Thats the wisdom that belongs to grandparents! We now have wisdom to pass it on to
the next generation-provided anyones listening!
Remember the first time you bought something to surprise your spouse; you'd been
spliced together for all of two months and so you are confident you can find just the
perfect dress, ring, tie, or suit that will fit your lover. After numerous exchanges and
ill fits over the years, Madam Wisdom gently instructs us that nourishment of soul comes
from heart-felt kindness shared more than anything we could buy at Macys.
Remember when you first discovered the destructive power of words? The first time
you responded to an angry word by throwing your own angry words right back into their
face? Over time, you met the wise Madam and made the profound discovery that "a soft
answer turns away wrath," and learned that the power of death-and life-are as close
as an open mouth.
As a requirement for ordination, I once spent six hours of psychological testing.
The psychologist described a specific kind of question that we ask ourselves during the
first half of our career, the achievement questions-what must I do to succeed at the
office? Will I be a good parent? How can I earn a higher salary? Will my relationships
grow? But in the second half of our career, we increasingly ask a different kind of
question, the meaning questions-What is the meaning of my life? Has my life counted for
something? Is this world a better place because Ive lived?
Interesting - before 40 we're impatient, anxious to get on with life; driven to
finally become our own person, land a successful job, make good money, begin a family.
Were lost in the energy of chasing our dreams, getting adjusted to routine, going to
the office, going to the kitchen, going to school, going home, going to the family
reunion; we want to get there, to get to our destination. No time to stop and smell the
flowers or watch the sunset; they only keep us from achieving our goals.
But after 40 -- the stark reality hits us that at our age, we'll never reach some
of the goals that we once placed on our short list. I'll never make the Boston Red Sox-not
even their farm team; too late, my knees creak. I'll never make it into a symphony, never
be a rock star, and never make my first million before the age of 30. Madame Wisdom lets
us peer down that long corridor and for just a moment to see our end. She gently reminds
us that we'll pass on and pass away without ever accomplishing all of our goals.
Thats wisdom.
So our focus changes from the destination to the journey; we now look for meaning
in life rather than using life as a means to gain our objectives. This shift is evident
among the top executives when they were asked how would they do things differently if they
could begin all over again. Virtually all of them responded that they would spend more
time with their kids and spouses. Lady Wisdom comes to us with great clarity and we
discover that its not all about money or possessions after all.
So we come to Lady Wisdom this morning:
Can you hear Madame Insight raising her voice?
Shes taken her stand at First and Main,
At the busiest intersection.
Right in the city square . . .
Notice where she parks her van? Where she seeks to be noticed? Not off in some
corner bar or in some think tank in DC or in some frat house for the cool crowd. Wisdom
stands at the intersection of all the First and Main streets of the world. She stands atop
mountains, walks along congested sidewalks, sits in high school cafeterias, leans against
signs saying, "Entering city of _______." Wherever people live and die, there,
Lady Wisdom tries to attract our attention.
The final part of our lesson in Proverbs reminds us that the Madame has been
around for a long time. She is not a young woman who sends playful glances our way; wisdom
is an old woman with timeworn creases. Like an old lady rocking on her porch, she calls
out to each generation that passes her house. She has lots and lots of memories, valued
words and advice to give us.
Old Lady Wisdom is almost timeless. She precedes our history, our experience, our
sense of life; no matter if we had lived many thousands of years ago or if we are yet to
be born, Wisdom both precedes and follows us. But what if we could ride some time reversal
machine and rewind all the way back to Wisdoms origin? We would find ourselves
standing in a primeval moment before time was even measured, a time when matter was not
yet in its final form; a pre-history world of chaos and void.
Before Earth got its start,
Before the Ocean, Springs, Rivers, and Lakes,
Before Mountains were sculpted or Hills,
Before God stretched out Earths horizons,
Before the Sky was set in place,
Before the wild Ocean had borders,
No matter our age and experience-Madame goes further back and further forward than
any human being's history. The woman is godly but not a goddess. In her wisdom she
acknowledges her finiteness, her own creation at the hands of God.
As great as Madam Wisdom is, as marvelous as the proverbs are, even she bends the
knee to a Mystery greater than her wisdom. Trinity Sunday joins with Madam Wisdom and
worships the mysterious Three-in-one God.
Like an ancient sage, we cup our ear to hear what special words this strange,
ancient woman will tell us; we've climbed up the mountain and finally reached the summit
where wisdom sits like a fat Buddha with a Mona Lisa smile. There, running throughout
Proverbs, is her foundational wisdom:
The Fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom.
True wisdom begins with a humble acknowledgement of the God who creates us. In the
Christian Scriptures, we learn that God stands behind Wisdom as its architect that leads
us through a very dark world back to the God who is light. Proverbs begins with advice,
but like a passport, finally leads us to a Person. In him is true wisdom and honor and
glory. Forever and ever, world without end. Amen.