Isaiah 4:5 "Then the LORD will create over all of Mount Zion and over those who assemble there a cloud of smoke by day and a glow of flaming fire by night; over all the glory will be a canopy."
Continuing on this theme of dirty women, it seems like seven of them (large numbers) will confront one man and demand that he make them legitimate...I suppose to give them children. Seems like not a bad deal if you were a man, except you'd be furthering yourself (and the women) from God, and intensifying God's anger. Bad times.
I think the branch of the LORD is his protection over those who chose to keep the covenant with Him. Can you imagine how hard it must have been while the rest of their society crumbled? You would begin to wonder what the point was. Why bother following God if it doesn't matter? But the message here is that they will be protected. They will survive this trial by fire, this scrubbing clean of the filth that encrusted Israel like dust and hair on a hot dog that fell behind the refrigerator 8 and a half months ago. He'll clean up, and he will bring back that pillar of fire and clouds that he used to lead Israel through the promised land. And he will protect his people again.
Smile!
Showing posts with label adultery. Show all posts
Showing posts with label adultery. Show all posts
Saturday, September 12, 2009
Tuesday, August 18, 2009
Pr. 30: Agur the Oracle Says
Proverbs 30:8 "Keep falsehood and lies far from me; give me neither poverty nor riches, but give me only my daily bread."
Agur sounds like that part in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure where they're reading Socrates (So-crates) and they read "The only true wisdom consists in knowing that you know nothing." This is the humble place where Agur starts Proverbs 30. He admits to not having wisdom, not having a great education. But there are still things he knows, based on what he doesn't know.
God binds up and controls the winds, the waters, the land. He holds absolute power, which is mind-blowing. There is no one capable of understanding this, let alone being capable of doing this.
This power leads him to say that every word of God is flawless.
It would be bad to add to the words God said. In other words, don't attribute to God words he didn't say. God's words are flawless, and anything, any "wisdom" man purports to attach to God is filth, tainting.
The oracle asks two things from God.
1. Keep falsehood and lies far from him. He wants to live in truth and honesty.
2. Give me neither poverty nor riches. He just wants to live his normal life. And it makes sense. Too much wealth, and a man grows arrogant, not needing God. Not enough, and a man steals, besmirching the God he claims to honor and love.
I don't know who will curse you, the servant or the master, when you slander the servant, but I could see grounds for both parties wanting to do that.
A leech is like the four things which are never satisfied...never sated: The grave (death), a barren womb (See: Rachel), a dry and thirsty land, and a raging fire. They all want more, and are never satisfied with more.
Four amazements:
1. how an eagle navigates the sky
2. how a snake navigates the land
3. how a ship navigates the ocean
4. how a man navigates a maiden.
I think he's going somewhere with that. The point is, why give up a faithful wife for adultery, or for a prostitute who offers her services, feigns love, then cleans up and says "Next?" It makes no sense.
Four things the earth shouldn't bear
1. A servant becoming king
2. A fool full of food
3. An unloved woman who is married (See: Leah)
4. A girlfriend displacing a wife.
Wisdom in small things.
1. Ants store up food for winter.
2. The hapless coney, who find protection in rocky hills
3. The leaderless locust, who advances in ranks, as one
4. The lizard, who is found in the king's court. Apparently not making a pest of himself
Stately in their stride.
1. Mighty lion
2. Strutting rooster
3. He-goat
4. A king with his army
Have evil planned? Shut your lips.
3 proven facts:
Churn milk = butter.
Twist the nose = blood.
Stir up anger = strife.
Agur sounds like that part in Bill and Ted's Excellent Adventure where they're reading Socrates (So-crates) and they read "The only true wisdom consists in knowing that you know nothing." This is the humble place where Agur starts Proverbs 30. He admits to not having wisdom, not having a great education. But there are still things he knows, based on what he doesn't know.
God binds up and controls the winds, the waters, the land. He holds absolute power, which is mind-blowing. There is no one capable of understanding this, let alone being capable of doing this.
This power leads him to say that every word of God is flawless.
It would be bad to add to the words God said. In other words, don't attribute to God words he didn't say. God's words are flawless, and anything, any "wisdom" man purports to attach to God is filth, tainting.
The oracle asks two things from God.
1. Keep falsehood and lies far from him. He wants to live in truth and honesty.
2. Give me neither poverty nor riches. He just wants to live his normal life. And it makes sense. Too much wealth, and a man grows arrogant, not needing God. Not enough, and a man steals, besmirching the God he claims to honor and love.
I don't know who will curse you, the servant or the master, when you slander the servant, but I could see grounds for both parties wanting to do that.
A leech is like the four things which are never satisfied...never sated: The grave (death), a barren womb (See: Rachel), a dry and thirsty land, and a raging fire. They all want more, and are never satisfied with more.
Four amazements:
1. how an eagle navigates the sky
2. how a snake navigates the land
3. how a ship navigates the ocean
4. how a man navigates a maiden.
I think he's going somewhere with that. The point is, why give up a faithful wife for adultery, or for a prostitute who offers her services, feigns love, then cleans up and says "Next?" It makes no sense.
Four things the earth shouldn't bear
1. A servant becoming king
2. A fool full of food
3. An unloved woman who is married (See: Leah)
4. A girlfriend displacing a wife.
Wisdom in small things.
1. Ants store up food for winter.
2. The hapless coney, who find protection in rocky hills
3. The leaderless locust, who advances in ranks, as one
4. The lizard, who is found in the king's court. Apparently not making a pest of himself
Stately in their stride.
1. Mighty lion
2. Strutting rooster
3. He-goat
4. A king with his army
Have evil planned? Shut your lips.
3 proven facts:
Churn milk = butter.
Twist the nose = blood.
Stir up anger = strife.
Sunday, July 26, 2009
Pr. 7: More Whores
Proverbs 7:22 "All at once he followed her like an ox going to the slaughter, like a deer stepping into a noose..."
Who is this seductress? The narrative in Proverbs 7 demonstrates the kind of smooth talking sexy walking woman that a man lacking wisdom, lacking judgement may encounter. You know, young guys just walking around at night, looking for something to catch them, to ensnare them. She makes a compelling case to this total stranger, saying that she was out looking for him. For him! It sounds special, doesn't it? This particular woman was brazen, just up and kissing his face. Hello!
Verse 14. She has her fellowship offerings at home. She has fulfilled her vows? Is this like the sinner who goes to church in the morning, drops a c-note in the offering plate, and considers his sins undone?
So that is convincing. Also her will-decorated bed and sweet-smelling women smelly things that they use like lotion and cinnamon and stuff. It will be a total sensory delight.
Drink of love till morning, huh? That's the distortion in sex. Whore sex isn't love. Like that movie Yours, Mine and Hours, where Frank Beardsley describes to his stepdaughter what love is.
"Life isn't a love in, it's the dishes and the orthodontist and the shoe repairman and... ground round instead of roast beef. And I'll tell you something else: it isn't going to a bed with a man that proves you're in love with him; it's getting up in the morning and facing the drab, miserable, wonderful everyday world with him that counts."
Something tells me that's not what she intended to drink of all night. Well, maybe for one night, but certainly not the everyday world.
But her husband's gone and everything, so it seems like all signs point to this kid spending the night with the prostitute. Its a highway to the grave though, its destruction, bodily and reputationally.
Saturday, July 25, 2009
Pr. 6: Practical Warnings
Proverbs 6:5 "Free yourself, like a gazelle from the hand of the hunter, like a bird from the snare of the fowler."
Here is some more practical advice. The first section is a caution against debt. Being in debt itself doesn't appear to be a sin, but if a person is so deep into hock that it is detrimental and dangerous to himself, the command is given to free oneself. And not tomorrow, now! (Allow no sleep to your eyes, v. 4) Being in bad debt is being in a trap, and you must escape. Not by just bagging it and abandoning everything, which would become theft, but to plead your case to the person you owe.
Laziness takes a hit here too, as the writer considers the ant, who works all day without an overseer, without a slavedriver. Driven by nothing more than the will to survive, ensuring it's own survival, not counting on the ant next to him to share with him. Sure, we'll encounter charity, and possibly be on the receiving end of it, but it shouldn't be for lack of effort. Slothfulness begets poverty and scarcity.
Plotting evil in secret leads to disaster. Secret signals and unspoken cues are necessary when you are planning to waylay some poor soul. You can't just plot evil out in the open...the wise will be onto you.
God hates six things...no wait, seven things.
- haughty eyes
- a lying tongue
- hands that shed innocent blood
- a heart that devises wicked schemes
- feet that are quick to rush into evil
- a false witness who pours out lies
- a man who stirs up dissension among brothers.
That is a list that seems ok by me. I'll hate it too. And I pray I'm never a part of those things. Peronsally, I think I have the most trouble with devising wicked schemes. My neighbor's dog barks a lot. I have plotted many a wicked scheme, most of which involved separating the dog from it's life. Never followed through on them. I just think my neighbor is old and frail and can't hear or doesn't realize her dog is barking. Like the rest of the neighborhood does. That's not to make excuses, I shouldn't plot like that.
Apparently chapter 5 wasn't enough of a warning against adultery, so it's ill effects are compunded here in the 6th chapter. Adultery leads to destruction. A prostitute reduces you to a loaf of bread. You are her food, her sustenance. Nothing more. Its not a relationship, its subhuman. There are consequences to adultery, and I love the coals-in-the-lap thing, kind of like an STD? Also, when you lust after the neighbor's wife, watch out for the jealous husband, he will get his measure of revenge on you. Someone bedding your wife is just about the most serious thing that can happen to a man, at least here in Proverbs. All you want is vengeance, and no bribe or compensation will allay that rage.
Friday, July 24, 2009
Pr. 5: Adultery is Childish
Proverbs 5:18 "May your fountain be blessed, and may you rejoice in the wife of your youth."
Here is a warning against the hollow spirit of adultery. Yes, it is a commandment. But here we get a little deeper into the more practical side of sticking with a commitment, keeping a promise. There appears to be no deeper human relationship than that of a man and his wife.
This isn't to discount or ignore the initial draw of adultery. Her lips drip honey, and her speech is smoother than oil. Who wouldn't be taken in by that? Some wandering heart, who doesn't think he hears his wife say "I love you" in the things that she does and the way that she lives? It sounds nice, enticing. But the end is bitter as gall. Piss. Death. Unfulfilling. Anyone who has used pornography and regretted it knows the empty feeling and the guilt from giving into that printed or electronic temptation. The Proverbs say that the adulteress isn't into giving life. Only death and destruction. Robbing a man of his spirit, his "essence."
What a man has with his wife isn't meant to be shared, as that relationship grows deeper and more intimate. Drink water from your own cistern, it says. That is the only water that quenches thirst. How much greater it is to enjoy your life with your one-and-only, the "wife of your youth" as the Proverb says. That serious depth of intimacy will always be more fulfilling and real than useless flings with the adulteress.
Tuesday, July 21, 2009
Pr. 2: Wisdom is Life
Proverbs 2:12 "Wisdom will save you from the ways of wicked men, from men whose words are perverse..."
This second chapter of Proverbs makes me think that Psalms and Proverbs are very tightly connected. In Psalms, David solely relied on God to preserve his life. In Proverbs, it appears that wisdom, resulting in the choices a man makes will preserve his life. Through God. So it's all about life. Don't you get the sense in reading Psalms and Proverbs that God is a God who wants his beloved people to have life? And not just breath in their lungs, and blood in their veins, but true, safe, abundant, blessed life?
The language in the second chapter of Proverbs is all about protection. A shield, a victory, guarding, protecting. But wisdom is a conscious pursuit. It doesn't appear that God just tosses wisdom on a person, and suddenly that person is giftedly wise. In just the first two chapters, God makes it clear that a man's own discernment is critical for acquiring and properly using wisdom.
The world wants to seduce men, and the world makes a lot of things that are in truth dark seem wholly "ok" to pursue. I think that's why the object lesson of adultery is so powerful here in verses 16-19. On the surface, it seems victimless. Even approved. But who is man "cheating on" in sin? Not the one whose paths lead to destruction. God is the one who is disregarded and rejected when unwise choices are made. Wise people see through these "options," they are the ones who manage to avoid the net spread in full view of them (Pr. 1:17).
This second chapter of Proverbs makes me think that Psalms and Proverbs are very tightly connected. In Psalms, David solely relied on God to preserve his life. In Proverbs, it appears that wisdom, resulting in the choices a man makes will preserve his life. Through God. So it's all about life. Don't you get the sense in reading Psalms and Proverbs that God is a God who wants his beloved people to have life? And not just breath in their lungs, and blood in their veins, but true, safe, abundant, blessed life?
The language in the second chapter of Proverbs is all about protection. A shield, a victory, guarding, protecting. But wisdom is a conscious pursuit. It doesn't appear that God just tosses wisdom on a person, and suddenly that person is giftedly wise. In just the first two chapters, God makes it clear that a man's own discernment is critical for acquiring and properly using wisdom.
The world wants to seduce men, and the world makes a lot of things that are in truth dark seem wholly "ok" to pursue. I think that's why the object lesson of adultery is so powerful here in verses 16-19. On the surface, it seems victimless. Even approved. But who is man "cheating on" in sin? Not the one whose paths lead to destruction. God is the one who is disregarded and rejected when unwise choices are made. Wise people see through these "options," they are the ones who manage to avoid the net spread in full view of them (Pr. 1:17).
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