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cover of episode Day 156 (Proverbs 7-9) - Year 7

Day 156 (Proverbs 7-9) - Year 7

2025/6/5
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Tara Lee Cobble
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Tara Lee Cobble: 父亲的忠告贯穿于《箴言》中,他反复强调要避开淫妇的诱惑,追求智慧。我理解父亲的忠告不仅仅是避免字面意义上的通奸,更是要警惕一切可能引诱我们偏离正道的诱惑。父亲希望儿子将这些话语牢记在心,体现在行动上,因为眼睛、手和心是圣洁和纯洁的关键。我体会到,父亲的忠告是出于对儿子的爱,希望他能走在正确的道路上,获得真正的生命。他描述了淫妇的危险,以及智慧的益处,希望儿子能做出明智的选择。我仿佛看到了父亲的殷切期盼,希望儿子能明白,追求智慧才是通往幸福和成功的道路。我意识到,父亲的忠告也适用于我们每个人,我们需要警惕各种诱惑,努力追求智慧,才能活出有意义的人生。 Tara Lee Cobble: 智慧以人格化的形象出现,这让我印象深刻。她不像淫妇那样主动诱惑,而是以一种优雅的方式邀请人们去追求她。她描述了自己的美德和益处,仿佛在说:“选择我,你将获得真正的生命。”我体会到,智慧不仅仅是一种知识,更是一种生活方式。它包括了谨慎、知识、判断力等美德,能帮助我们做出正确的选择,避免走上歧途。我意识到,追求智慧需要付出努力,需要我们每天警醒,不断学习和思考。但只要我们坚持下去,就能获得智慧的祝福,活出充实而有意义的人生。 Tara Lee Cobble: 父亲的忠告可能源于他自己的经历,这让我深思。也许他曾经犯过错误,所以才如此强调要避开淫妇的诱惑;也许他通过追求智慧获得了巨大的益处,所以才如此鼓励儿子去追求智慧。无论是哪种情况,父亲的忠告都充满了爱和关怀。我体会到,父母的教诲往往是出于他们的人生经验,他们希望我们能少走弯路,获得幸福。因此,我们应该认真倾听父母的教诲,从中汲取智慧,指导自己的人生。当然,我们也要有自己的判断力,选择适合自己的道路。但无论如何,父母的爱和关怀都是我们人生中最宝贵的财富。

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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble, and I'm your host for The Bible Recap. Today we continue our progress through Proverbs, and we're still in the dad's advice to his son. He has more warnings about adultery. He wants these words to be in his son's line of sight and on his hands and in his heart. All three of those areas—eyes, hands, and heart—are important aspects of walking in holiness and purity.

If the son has this wisdom at the forefront of these places, he won't be drawn to the adulteress. By the way, it's easy to hear the words the adulteress and think of someone who's out to intentionally seduce this young man. And that's definitely possible. But it's not exclusive to that scenario. It could be someone he seeks out and pursues as well. Proverbs 7, 8 talks about the young man going out at night and walking to her house. She meets him on his way there, but he seems to go of his own volition.

And as this particular woman lays the flattery on thick, the fool falls for it. The dad warns his son repeatedly in all these chapters that this is the path to death. It's not a subtle warning. He repeats it over and over using different language and even violent language throughout the passage, just to make sure he gets the point across. In chapter 7, the dad describes the adulteress as a loud woman who sidles up to the son and probably lowers her voice to seduce him in the streets.

And in chapter 8, the dad illustrates another woman who also cries aloud in the street. This is wisdom personified. She raises her voice to call out too. She appeals to the fool and the simpletons to listen to what she has to say. She begins to describe herself, maybe like you would on a dating profile. Here's what she says. Her roommates are prudence, knowledge, and discretion, so she clearly keeps good company. A few of the things she hates are pride, arrogance, evil, and perverted speech.

She talks about the benefits she would offer to anyone in relationship with her. Counsel, sound wisdom, insight, strength, leadership, justice, love, riches, honor, enduring wealth, and righteousness. The person who matches with this woman has hit the jackpot. She does spill the beans that she's pretty old. In fact, she's been around forever, basically. She was a tool in the hand of God when he created the earth.

And just like the man who pursued the adulteress by going down the path to her house, the woman wisdom can be pursued in the same way. In chapter 8, verses 34 through 35, she says, Blessed is the one who listens to me, watching daily at my gates, waiting beside my doors. For whoever finds me finds life and obtains favor from the Lord. She doesn't tackle the son like the adulteress does or make a sneak attack. She asks to be pursued.

And while the adulteress is the path to death, wisdom promises, whoever finds me finds life. The juxtaposition is obvious and intentional. She also makes it clear in 8.13 that to love God is to hate evil. The dad is laying two options out for his son here, and he's clearly indicating which path is the right path. In chapter 9, we see wisdom and folly both personified. They both cry out to the simple-minded person.

In this chapter, folly sounds a lot like the adulterous from chapter 7. Wisdom offers the son something lasting, and the adulterous takes something lasting from him. Today, the father's advice is concluded, and it's interesting to realize what portion of his counsel was centered around encouraging the son to avoid sexual sin and pursue wisdom instead. It's also interesting to note how he juxtaposes those pursuits. You can't simultaneously pursue them both.

Not only that, but the results of those pursuits are juxtaposed too. The dad seems to know a lot about this. It almost makes me wonder if he's made this mistake in his own life, and that's why he's so emphatic about it in his advice to his son. Or maybe the dad pursued hard after wisdom and realized how beneficial it was to him. Or maybe both. Because Solomon is the one who wrote this. Solomon, the man who asked God for wisdom, and the man who had 700 wives and 300 concubines.

In his life, it seems like he learned both lessons, the value of wisdom and the foolishness of sexual sin. He's tested the world out, and he's come away with some advice based on his own experiences. He's hoping to spare his son from making the same mistakes he did. What was your God shot today? I was intrigued by some of the words in 8, 30-31. They describe wisdom, but some people believe they also point to Christ. So I did a little digging. First, here's what the passage says.

The Hebrew words used for rejoicing and delighting carry the connotations of playing and frolicking. Just as wisdom delights in mankind and creation, God delights in wisdom.

I'm trying to imagine what it's like for God to frolic, honestly, and it kind of makes me laugh. I picture Him giddy at creation. One of the commentaries I read even described Him as smiling with affection and amusement. Can you imagine that? That's how God feels about us and about wisdom and how wisdom feels about us. I love picturing how happy God is, jumping up and clicking the heels He doesn't have and smiling from non-existent ear to non-existent ear.

He's where the joy is.