Job 28:20-28, “From where then does wisdom come? And where is the place of understanding? It is hidden from the eyes of all living, and concealed from the birds of the air. Destruction and Death say, ‘We have heard a report about it with our ears.’ God understands its way, and He knows its place. For He looks to the ends of the earth, and sees under the whole heavens, to establish a weight for the wind, and apportion the waters by measure. When He made a law for the rain, and a path for the thunderbolt, then He saw wisdom and declared it; He prepared it, indeed, He searched it out. And to man He said, ‘Behold, the fear of the Lord, that is wisdom, and to depart from evil is understanding.’”
If the twenty-eight
chapter of Job were a song, from where does wisdom come, and where is the place
of understanding would be the chorus that repeats between each verse. It is the
defining question of this chapter, and Job asks it rhetorically because he
already knew the answer to this most pressing question.
Given that Job
insists that wisdom is hidden from the eyes of all living, what we deem as
wisdom is but a muddled approximation rather than the real thing if God is not
the source, the wellspring, and the cornerstone of it.
Believing oneself
wise isn’t the same as being wise, and as Paul points out, there are many who,
having professed to be wise, became fools. How so? Because their wisdom was a
byproduct of their inner thoughts, their own minds, and their wicked hearts,
having nothing to do with anything outside themselves and their desires. True
wisdom comes from outside ourselves. Its source must be external, its nature
divine, and its purpose to reveal the glory of God.
The further one gets from the source of something, the greater the chance it will be diluted or contain impurities. There’s a bottled water company whose claim to fame is that it is bottled at the source, directly from some aquifer in Fiji, and because of this one reason, they charge three times what other waters cost, and still manage to have a loyal clientele who shell out the extra money for the privilege. Whether or not it's worth it is debatable, but at least for some people it is, and they’re willing to pay the extra cost.
When it comes to
true wisdom, one can only find it at the source, and unlike the aforementioned
water, it is always worth acquiring, no matter the effort it takes.
Rather than chase
after men who claim to have what is, at best, second-hand wisdom, why not go
straight to the source? Why not tap into the spring itself rather than get a
water jug that’s been sitting in a hot truck from a third party?
Are you saying we
should all fly to Fiji to drink directly from the Viti Levu aquifer? No, that
would be impractical. What I am saying is that we can go to God and gain wisdom
directly from Him. Just like the water, if you want wisdom straight from the source,
it will not come to you; you must go to it. You must make the effort to seek it
out and assign enough value to it that you will not balk at the effort required
to attain it.
But you don’t
understand; the second-hand wisdom has added flavors and electrolytes, comes in
a fancy bottle with a mountain etched into it, and the only effort it requires
is that I log on to Facebook to acquire it. I can get all the second-hand
wisdom I could ever consume from the comfort of my own home while in my pajamas.
There are so many varieties to pick from, so many favors to sample, and the
effort I’m required to put in is minimal. True enough, but the only question
you should be asking, the only question that matters, is whether or not it’s
pure. Is what men are claiming to be true wisdom really that, or is it just a
fancy bottle filled to the brim with bath water and a pinch of lemon to mask
its bitter taste?
There is no doubt
as to the purity of the wisdom when God is the source. There is no wondering if
anything is missing, or if there’s too much of one thing or another, because
you know that what He gives is perfect, lacking nothing, and abundant in its
benefits.
You may not know
this, but some people will go to great lengths to complicate what should be
simple. They will do their utmost to put their spin on wisdom, add to it,
massage it, sometimes twist it to the point that it’s no longer what it claims
to be, far from it in fact.
Thankfully, it
hasn’t made its way stateside, at least that I’m aware of, but while visiting
the homeland a couple of years ago, I ran into something that threatened to
make me wretch right there in the grocery store aisle. It was called aloe vera
water, and yes, it looked as disgusting as it sounds. It was water with
globules of aloe vera floating in it, looking like some failed science
experiment, but as I stood there with a grossed-out look on my face, no less
than three people picked up a bottle.
Whatever it was,
however it had started out, what was in those bottles could no longer be
defined as water. Call it what you will, but don’t call it what it isn’t. When
you combine sugar, lemons, and water, it’s no longer water but lemonade. When
you attempt to mix feelings, emotions, cultural ethos, and personal opinion
with divine wisdom, it’s no longer wisdom.
We were given a
glimpse of what the world will look like in these last days, and among the many
signs heralding the return of Christ, we were told there would be a
disproportionate number of souls turning their ears from the truth and turning
aside to fables. We must be ever wary that we are not counted among them, and
the only way we can ensure it is to go to the source of truth, the source of
wisdom, the source of direction for the path we trod and submit to His authority
in all things.
Yes, going to the
source may be more time-consuming than lapping up whatever is on offer as the
day’s special, but it is well worth the effort, and the only means by which
true wisdom is attained.
With love in Christ,
Michael Boldea, Jr.
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