The Way of Wisdom - Our lesson contains a series of
instructions addressed to "my son." The instructions, which form the first
section (1:1-9:18), take the same form: a call to take to heart the teaching given;
mention of the motive for heeding the instruction; counsel to choose wisdom and avoid
folly; and a prediction of the consequences that will follow ones choice. [1]
Everywhere But in the Pulpit - According to Alyce McKenzie, while
proclaimers avoid biblical proverbs, the rest of us "walk and drive by them on
billboards, T-shirts, coffee mugs, cartoons, magazine ads, bumper stickers, and
posters." [2] She argues for Proverbs as preaching fodder, reminding us that
"contemporary cultural proverbs show us the shape we are currently in and the shape
of things to come, while biblical proverbs are capable of shaping the identity of the
people of God." [3]
The Fear of the Lord - The theme, "the fear of the Lord,"
which is at the core of Proverbs 1, recurs throughout Proverbs. It is the beginning of
knowledge (1:7) and wisdom (9:10). The phrase describes a persons overall attitude
or character. Sometimes to fear the Lord means to hate evil (8:13); at other times it
leads to an instructive attitude (15:33) or to the knowledge of God (2:5) or to humility
(15:33; 22:4) or to loyalty and faithfulness (16:6), and fear of the king (24:21). In the
end, possession of the fear of the Lord results in riches, long life, and honor. [4]
Recall
the memorable proverbs that youve grown to value over the years. Why have these more
than others, stayed with you?
What makes proverbs difficult to proclaim is the fact that they are contextual-less
sayings that could be true or false based on a given context. Look up several proverbs and
supply ancient/modern contexts that would make those proverbs true and then supply
contexts that would make the same proverbs false.
Please
refer to the DPS archives for an earlier homily based on the them of
Wisdom in the book of Proverbs called "Go
for it" (based on Proverbs 8:1-4, 22-31)
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[1] Dianne Bergant Israels Wisdom Literature (Minneapolis: Fortress Press,
1997), p. 80.
[2] Alyce M. McKenzie, Preaching Proverbs (Louisville: Westminster John Knox Press, 1996),
p. xiv.
[3] Ibid., page xiv.
[4] The New Interpreters Study Bible (Abingdon Press, 2003), page 897.
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