The wise of heart will receive commands, but a babbling fool will be thrown down.
Message: Don't make excuses, receive your orders
Time: Proverbs records multiple individuals as its author with Solomon as the principal author. Solomon died in 931 BC though most think the book was likely in its final form sometime before the end of Hezekiah’s reign in 686 BC. It is a book that instructs people on the path of wisdom. It speaks to all of life and living our lives under the authority and direction of God.
What the Lord is Saying: In this verse is a new idea. Thus far in these verses of chapter 10, the primary focus has been on righteousness alone. All proverbs I think will in some way though deal with that subject because overall that is the point of a proverb - to compare righteous behavior with unrighteous. But the proverbs have thus far have been more about how we earn our possessions and how wisdom is to be our focus. This verse presents the idea of the heart. In addition, it speaks to the idea of receiving. Everything else that has been thus far is generally an action that the wise person has done (e.g. "a wise son makes" in verse 1, "the hand" in verse 4, "he who gathers" in verse 5) or what that wise person's life now looks like after all of those actions (e.g. "memory" in verse 7 and "blessings" in verse 6).
For the wise person, it is not only what they do, but also how they receive. To me, this verse is saying that the wise person will accept commands. The wise person can be told what to do. The wise person accepts direction, instruction, correction.
I had a situation at work happen last week in which I told an employee something about their work life and what they need to do differently. It was in regards to their work hours and reminding them they are on salary and with being on salary they can be at times asked to do things on their day off. They were thinking that if asked to do something on their day off, then they should be able to make up that time with personal time off. They offered a solution and I told them that solution was not acceptable and they would need to work without getting anything in return. I was instructing them about something that was different from what they were expecting. And I was asking for their obedience. She received it, but she was not happy. And so things were initially stressful with her, but fortunately things have improved and she is going to adapt.
Very often in our world, we often do not see things the way we should or need correction. We need commands to show us the right way and therefore to avoid the wrong way. But I notice more and more that we are driven by emotions and what we want and what we are comfortable with and many are not willing to accept those commands. Instead they babble. They give all the reasons why the command won't, how it is out of line. There needs to be trust.
Trust I think is often just this. Trust is not knowing the entire story but going forward with it anyway. It is going beyond understanding. It is taking a leap.
In my conversations with people online, I have a man I have been speaking with that wants everything in life to check his box. He wants it all to line up perfectly. He says he believes Jesus lived, died, rose again and he believes he is a sinner, but he is not willing to accept that his sin resulted in Jesus dying. He does not believe the reason for Jesus' death was necessary.
The Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-Day Saints says that Jesus' death and resurrection begins their new life but man is still accountable for carrying out his sanctification. In essence, Jesus only covers a persons sins if the person lives their life in an acceptable manner. But that doesn't actually require any real trust. Jesus is not a stepping stone. Jesus is everything that we need to get us to God. The good life that we live following His death and payment for our sins is a response to what He did. It is not being lived to pay off what he did or ensure that we get it. We live holy lives because God is holy and we should be a people that are like Him. But Jesus' death on the cross needs to mean something. And this is where I think the CJCLDS gets it wrong. They are not really trusting in what Jesus has done. They are trusting that they are carrying it out well. There is a distinction. There is a difference.
Romans 8:13 - "For if you live according to the flesh you will die, but if by the Spirit you put to death the deeds of the body, you will live." It is the Spirit in person who has trusted in Christ that will provide the means for them to be a new creature. A falling away can occur in a person's life, and this can be short period of time or long periods of time, but the goal in those times is to bring that person back to the live they lived before. It is to correct and teach them. But the Spirit continues to live in that person. And that is evident throughout our history.
I titled this lesson - "Don't make excuses, receive your orders." We need to receive the orders that God gives us and follow those commands. We are not to start babbling that we do not need them. We trust in God.
Prayer: Lord, thank you for your direction. Thank you for showing me that in my life I need to trust You. I need to learn things that are true outside of what I think I know. I am to be obedient to Your commands, your orders on my life. Forgive me for making excuses, for thinking of ways to avoid that command. Forgive me for finding ways to justify my own behavior rather than simply believing You. Forgive me for thinking that I know the right way to live. I do this Lord. I do not accept willingly the message that even my boss wants to convey to people. Right now that message is to be positive where I think one needs to be pragmatic and real. Correct me Lord.
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