Well, hello again! A very Merry Christmas to you! And a lovely, wonderful New Year.
I came across this line while I was terribly bored at Christmas Eve service - a guest pastor preached and performed quite terribly. I tried not to be offended by the message. :) Anyway, I took the opportunity to pray through Psalm 32 (since I'm 32 years old,) and to re-read 1st Corinthians. It was God's Holy Spirit that drew me for I found this line that makes total sense in regard to the "Wisdom of Solomon" having been written by a Hellenic Jew.
1 Corinthians 1:22 "Jews demand miraculous signs and Greeks look for wisdom..."
Doesn't this put the whole thing into perspective? Amazing how the Bible knows itself and tells on other pieces of literature that aren't authentic. We must be well-versed in being able to tell the difference and listen to varying opinions about history and interpretation, letting God's Holy Spirit reveal His truth.
On a semi-related side note, I'm thinking of blogging the Psalms next year - praying through them "aloud" as a demonstration of my approach to them. Amazing literature. I read them through a couple summers ago - one a day - it was great practice. I have a friend, Bruce, who reads five a day and a Chapter of Proverbs - every day! I'll have to work up to that.
Let's look at Chapter 15 - only a few more to go!
The first three verses remind me of 2nd Peter and Romans.
2 Peter 1:3 "His divine power has given us everything we need for life and godliness through our knowledge of him who called us by his own glory and goodness."
Romans 6:15 "What then? Shall we sin because we are not under law but under grace? By no means!"
Remarkable, this trickery of sin that we may not realize we are involved in until it is too late and our weak flesh presses forward into it. There were times I knew I was moving toward sin and felt myself walking further out on a thin limb of a tree - feeling myself very alone. Thankfully that has caused me to take precautions and move back, away from the edge. He has spoken to me repeatedly, warning me of pending danger and whispering His desires for me in my ear. Oh how He knows me and cares for me!
Verse four and the following verses are a bunny trail about idolatry again. I think we get the point. There is one line of note - verse eight where he talks about an idol being made of the same material that he is made of - earth. This is a good argument for those who think God is in everything around us. How can someone create something from scratch that he is already made of? The latter end of that line is somewhat strange and unbiblical - "required to return the soul that was lent him." Makes you think of all sorts of strange arguments. If the soul is not the personality, what is? Of course we are fashioned by God, but having been given free will and autonomy, surely we do not have our souls on loan, having these bodies on loan is a more popular argument.
A beautiful line about the lifelessness of someone who does not believe in the fullness of the one true living God, "His heart is ashes, his hope is cheaper than dirt, and his life is of less worth than clay, because he failed to know the one who formed him and inspired him with an active soul and breathed into him a living spirit." (Verses 10 & 11.) This is purely poetic, but we appreciate it very much.
I do like the metaphor also in verse 12 about our existance being considered an idle game. Some days it does seem like that. It is only when we are actively engaged in His work that we have our usefulness and our joyful purpose, whatever He set us to do.
Verse 16 also talks about a borrowed spirit. I see the poetic imagery, but let us not delve into facts here. Interesting discussion may ensue, however, about the basis of the personality - spirit, soul & body or just soul & body...my pastors are divided on the issue. Paul feeling it is the two and Alex feeling it is the three. Paul mentioned he was so disappointed to discover Alex's thoughts on the subject. I'm glad they don't always agree and have active dialogue.
An excellent and beautiful idea there too, at the end of 16, "no man can form a god which is like himself." That is an argument for those who feel God is "made up." Of all the gods that have ever been made up, who compares to the true living God who makes up Himself? One can not devise the mysterious nor fashion anything that is not a reflection of Himself. So if we are honest, could we have truly fashioned the Lord God and His gift of Jesus? That is hardly a reflection of the ways of man. Truly, His ways were not our ways, so how could we possibly have made Him up?
The last verse is somewhat confusing - about less desirable animals not having the blessing of God. We do say something about, "having been blessed with good looks." It was the weak and poor that the Lord blessed - the cripple son of the predecessor of David, the bleeding woman, the prostitutes and tax collectors. Every "gift" has its responsibility. For those of us who know our weakness, the greater gifts are given.