(Me, climbing the big dune at Warren Dunes State Park, in Michigan) |
The beginning of wisdom is this: Get wisdom.
Though it cost all you have, get understanding.
Proverbs 4:7
I begin this day by opening up the Bible to Proverbs. I slow-cook in it. To acquire wisdom you have to marinate in God's slow-cooker.
This is why, in 1970, I changed my college major to philosophy. The word "philosophy" means "the love of wisdom" (philo-sophia).
As a philosopher, I read the world's wisdom literature. This is what philosophers do. I have read Plato and Aristotle, Augustine and Kant, Descartes and Hume, Anselm and Aquinas, the Buddha and Confucius, the Upanishads and the Koran, Nietzsche and Kierkegaard, Camus and Sartre, Russell and Wittgenstein, Foucault and Derrida, Merton and Nouwen, and you name it over the past fifty years. (!!!) I read philosophy when driving the car. It is my bathroom reading. I study it. Scholars have taught me.
Many are wiser than I. I learn from them. But, I do love wisdom. I treasure it. It has supreme value to me. I am always going after it.
Many are wiser than I. I learn from them. But, I do love wisdom. I treasure it. It has supreme value to me. I am always going after it.
The love of wisdom is not a claim to be wise. Saying "I have become wise" is an indicator of foolishness. But, you won't be wise without having a core desire for wisdom.
Above all else, desire wisdom.
Above all else, desire wisdom.
Have you seen those cartoons, where someone seeking wisdom struggles to the top of a mountain, to ask a white-bearded man with long grey hair a question? For me, the book of Proverbs lies open on summit. God meets me, on the mountain, this morning.
"Above all else," I am told, "get wisdom."
Above everything else?
Above money?
Above fame?
Above beauty?
Above possessions?
Yes! To understand this is to be wise. To think otherwise is to be an ordinary fool.
This morning I'm after some more wisdom. I collect it like diamonds, and mount them in my journal. I polish them by reading, and re-reading them.
I am reading Proverbs in Eugene Peterson's The Message. Peterson writes a beautiful introduction to Proverbs on its core theme.
Wisdom is different from knowledge. Wisdom may contain knowledge; knowledge may have no wisdom.
"“Wisdom” is the biblical term for this on-earth-as-it-is-in-heaven everyday living. Wisdom is the art of living skillfully in whatever actual conditions we find ourselves. It has virtually nothing to do with information as such, with knowledge as such." (Peterson, The Message Remix 2.0: The Bible In Contemporary Language, p. 870)
Peterson writes:
- Wisdom has to do with becoming skillful in honoring our parents and raising our children,
- and handling our money,
- skillful in conducting our sexual lives,
- and going to work,
- skillful in exercising leadership,
- and using words well,
- skillful in treating friends kindly,
- and eating and drinking healthily,
- and cultivating emotions within ourselves and attitudes toward others that make for peace,
- Skillful in living well, and in robust sanity.
- Threaded through all these items is the insistence that the way we think of and respond to God is the most practical thing we do. In matters of everyday practicality, nothing, absolutely nothing, takes precedence over God. (Ib.)
"These are the wise sayings of Solomon, David's son, Israel's king -
written down so we'll know how to live well and right,
to understand what life means and where it's going."
Proverbs 1:1