Friday
BIBLE
READING: Proverbs 30-31
As we did for Proverbs 27 - 29,
we're looking at an outline of the Proverbs for today.
Proverbs 30 -
Agur Gets Existential
- This next
section is entitled "Sayings of Agur, Son of Jakeh" (no one
knows who Agur was, but he may have been a non-Israelite, representing
Near-Eastern wisdom in a more general way).
- It begins with
a confession of human ignorance—the speaker admits that he doesn't know
anything, doesn't understand how the world was made, or how the universe
was structured. He lacks wisdom, he says, but ends by saying to God that
God knows all.
- He says that
everything God says comes true, and people shouldn't falsely attribute
statements to the divine.
- In life, Agur
says he only wants to be free from falsehood and lying, and to have just
enough to live—being free from both poverty and wealth. He asks God for
these gifts and says he won't be able to live an upright moral life
without them.
Agur's Rogues Gallery
- Don't slander
servants to their masters, says Agur.
- Also, Agur
catalogues all the bad guys out there: people who curse their parents,
people who think they lack sin but are actually sinful, people who oppress
the poor and steal money and goods from them.
- People who are
leeches end up having their own children prey on them (though the meaning
of this passage in Hebrew is unclear).
- Agur continues
to catalogue different sets of things: four things that are never
satisfied—a barren womb, Sheol, the dry earth thirsty for water, and some
sort of raging fire that keeps consuming everything.
- Out of nowhere,
he says that an eye that mocks father and mother will be picked out by
crows.
When a Man Loves a Woman… It's
Really Confusing to Agur
- Then he goes
back to cataloguing stuff. Agur says three things are too wonderful for
him, and four he doesn't understand. The three things that are too
wonderful are an eagle in the sky, a snake crawling on a rock, and a ship
sailing the sea. The fourth is the way of a man with a woman.
- He says, again
just off-handedly, that an adulteress commits adultery as simply as
someone who eats and wipes his or her mouth and says that they've done no
wrong.
- Three things make the earth
tremble, and the fourth knocks it out of sorts entirely: a slave who becomes
king, a fool who's eaten too much, an unloved woman who gets a husband,
and a maid who succeeds her mistress as the new head of household.
Proverbs 31 -
Just
Ask Mom
This
chapter begins with an oracle that King Lemuel (possibly some otherwise unknown
non-Israelite king) learned from his mother.
She
tells him not to give his strength to women (by having too much sex) and not to
drink wine, because it will lead him into making unjust decisions and violating
his citizens' rights.
- She says wine and strong drink are good
for people who are dying or are in distress, to ease their pain and help
them forget their misery.
- She ends by urging him to defend the
rights of the poor and the needy, and to judge righteously.
Betty Crocker Meets Rosie the Riveter
- This next section isn't from King Lemuel
or his mom, apparently. It's an ode to the ideal, capable wife from
another source.
- Basically, capable wives are really
great—they benefit their husbands endlessly, bring in food from far away,
and know how to work with wool and flax to make clothing.
- The capable
wife rises up early in the morning and makes sure all the servant-girls
are doing chores and that the household is running correctly.
- She considers
and buys a field by herself, and plants a vineyard with money she's
earned.
- She grows
physically strong, sells profitable merchandise, and is constantly
industrious.
- The capable
wife gives to the poor and doesn't have to worry about winter, since
everyone in her household is richly clothed thanks to her efforts. Oh, and
she's got some fine outfits, as well.
- Her husband
becomes a revered member of the council of elders, and she teaches
kindness and wisdom to her children and others.
- She's never
idle, never has to fear the future, and always takes care of her
household.
- Her kids and
husband all praise her and appreciate how happy and capable she is.
- A woman who
fears God is way preferable to one with mere charm or beauty.
- If you give
her a share of the money she's earned, she'll use it in works that earn
her praise in the city.
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