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Turn with me to the book of Proverbs. We are in chapter three, and
we are considering the lessons held out to us here in the introductory
chapters as beautiful poetry, various metaphors are used to
display the magnificence of wisdom, the power of wisdom, the promise
of wisdom, And the poetry has been arranged as it had originally
been written by Solomon in these various sections. As we learn
elsewhere in Proverbs, the scribes drew together the words of wisdom
inspired in an order to equip us for the pursuit of wisdom. And so we'll consider this week
chapter three, beginning at verse 21. If you'll stand with me,
I'll read in your hearing. Through verse 26, we'll consider
particularly verses 21 through 24 of Proverbs chapter three. This is God's very word, holy,
infallible, and inerrant in all its parts. Let us attend diligently
and reverently to the sacred word. Proverbs chapter three
at verse 21. My son, let them not depart from
your eyes. Keep sound wisdom and discretion. So there will be life to your
soul and grace to your neck. Then you will walk safely in
your way and your foot will not stumble. When you lie down, you
will not be afraid. Yes, you will lie down, and your
sleep will be sweet. Do not be afraid of sudden terror,
nor of trouble from the wicked when it comes, for the Lord will
be your confidence, and will keep your foot from being caught. Let's ask God's blessing on this,
his word as it's preached. Let's pray. Great God and merciful
Father, Holy One of Israel, we pray that we may feed upon the
nourishing word of our Savior, as it is revealed here in the
book of Proverbs. Strengthen us for your service,
we pray for the glory of Christ. Amen. You may be seated. Solomon, in the portion just
prior, has taught several important lessons that we've considered
in the past couple of weeks. First, he showed us the spiritual
nature of wisdom. Wisdom holds forth many practical
benefits and in the sweep of the course of wisdom in the natural
family into the spiritual family. There are very practical ways
that wisdom is lived out, is handed down. But so that we won't
misunderstand, time is spent impressing the truth that the
supreme value and nature of wisdom is its spiritual orientation. And so that informs all those
material blessings. that in God's appointments may
ordinarily flow from wisdom. Those things aren't the point
in themselves. They are a part of God's good order and naturally
come about in his providence. But the heart of wisdom focuses
on the spiritual realities of wisdom that are cultivated in
the life of faith. Wisdom provides the highest experience
of the blessedness of God, far surpassing, Solomon says, the
material benefits that may be compared to those spiritual blessings. Those material benefits will
be well-ordered when God appoints them in the life of wisdom, but
they point beyond themselves, whether they are materially present
or not, a far surpassing, incomparable value is that blessedness of
God experienced in the life of wisdom. And we are assured that
wisdom in its spiritual and moral fullness is baked into the reality
of God's world. We learned this last week considering
that encouraging word that spiritual sanity offered to us by way of
encouragement, that spiritual and moral nature is not something
superimposed upon a blank slate, as though the world had no inherent
purpose, as though the world were up for grabs, but God has
the best recipe for how to deal with it. No, it's far more basic
than that. Solomon shows us that wisdom,
understanding, and knowledge, those very things that we seek
in the life of faith, those things are from the character of God,
and we reflect them back to him. He, by those aspects of his character,
made the world and everything in it. And so the Lord built
creation, with wisdom, understanding, and knowledge are baked into
reality. So when we pursue them, when
we hold forth for them, we are owning reality. We are not pressing
some arbitrary mindset of our own, our preferred worldview
upon reality. other hapless folks trying to
come up with their own way of living in the world. No, no,
we are owning and holding forth boldly for the world as God made
it, to live in it according to reality. And we were encouraged
that the Lord, by His wisdom, sustains the world. His purposes are secure in His
creation. We recognize the bulwark against
the despair and spirit of tragedy that is held out to us in language
of emergency, that the world is out of control, that things
are broken, we've ruined it, and we have to take dramatic
action to rescue the world or it will be destroyed and man
will disappear. Such things. The way of wisdom
shows are lying sermons from the heart of unbelief. Rather, God made the world and
sustains the world. His purposes are built into his
world, and he is maintaining it. The effects of sin have certainly
warped and created damage, but they have not snatched the world
out of the Creator's hand. And so we may rest secure in
His wise purposes in the world. Creation is in His control. The
poetry held forth the full sweep of creation in the poetic language,
land, sea, sky. And we have a calling in that
world. It's not artificial. We're not
imposing it upon the world. It arises out of the creation
order. God made us to live in his world as his image bearers. So when we pursue wisdom, we
are seeking his nature, his character, in his created order. in a way
that, though broken, is not lost. We still are image bearers. We
still have a creation mandate. We still have a spiritual and
moral calling in God's world. That hasn't disappeared. Things
aren't up for grabs. We don't invent our own reality.
When we hold forth for the human calling, we're holding forth
for what God made us to be in His world. And that wisdom, understanding,
and knowledge is to be reflected by us and absorbed by us in God's
book of nature, informed by his book of scripture. It is reality. It is not superimposed upon a
blank slate. It is rather how things really
are. And all other visions and pursuits that claim to have some
grab or hold on the truth are lying. Those things, as God made
them, are the truth and reality. They are the foundation. And
so this empowers us to live boldly. We do not need to be moved to
the terror of helplessness that the world is out of control and
that we've destroyed it and that we no longer have any purpose
in life. All those things are lies. And if we will yield ourselves
to the one who by his own wisdom, understanding and knowledge has
made the world and us in, we will then be rightly ordered
in keeping with reality. And so this gives us strength
and boldness, confidence in God's world. The next section brings
back the familiar. Solomon spent a lot of time and
the scribes brought together a large section using the familial
language, the father speaking to the son. Here, that language
is taken up again. And as we mentioned before, The
idea is that what has been set out beautifully thus far holds
out a marvelous, a beautiful gem with many facets. And when
the scribes bring together these inspired words of Solomon and
hold up what looks to be a repetition, understand that as you examine
it and it is turned, we'll find that new emphases are being brought
forth. That's what happens here in the
passage before us this afternoon. The language of familial relationship
returns with familiar themes, but new emphases are held out. My son, let them not depart from
your eyes. Keep sound wisdom and discretion. Here, that language along with
the benefits that flow from that diligent pursuit, that sounds
very familiar. But the gem, the large and beautiful
gem, has been turned so that new light shines through additional
facets. Here, a very important piece
of instruction in our pursuit of wisdom and discretion is described. The emphasis is upon not letting
them out of our sight. It's upon such a diligent pursuit
that it maintains a discipline of attention. That's a newer
emphasis. The diligence of pursuit has
been there before, but the language of not letting it out of your
sight, hear what is said there again, keep sound wisdom and
discretion, let them not depart from your eyes. Now, the reason
why it's so important that this facet be turned towards us with
additional light shining through is because in our day particularly,
now this is a, a vulnerability of humanity in general. But in
our day particularly, there's an epidemic of distraction. We have found marvelously manifold
ways to distract ourselves. We have robbed ourselves by corrupting
our nature and making it more and more incapable of this very
necessity. The thing held out to us here
is the capacity to keep the eye on wisdom. The language sounds
as though wisdom will run away from us. Well, we have the equipment
of earlier instruction to know that wisdom is made available
to us. The departure of it is our fault. How do we not lose
that wisdom and discretion, that capacity to live well-ordered
in God's world according to his design? Solomon says it's going
to take deep concentration You're going to need to keep your eye
on that wisdom and discretion. What has been gained must be
attentively observed that it be not lost. What I am seeking
to add must be focused upon that I may actually lay hold of it
and keep it. And so we have to ask what disciplines
will help undo this loss in our day of the capacity to obey this. This requires personal disciplines. We're going to need to consider
those things in our day that actively destroy our capacity
to focus, to concentrate. The elephant in the room is electronic
devices. It has been demonstrated repeatedly
that they have a destructive impact when used as design for
social media and every other form of distraction to remove
our capacity for focus. Knowing that doesn't mean that
we always and necessarily must stop using electronic devices.
No, they are useful tools. We must bend them to a useful
purpose. We must not let them rob us of
our capacity to do what is so important here as this facet
is turned to us. The ability to concentrate, to
keep the eye upon wisdom and discretion, not letting them
out of our sight, The discipline that will give us this capacity
must be brought to the service of spiritual concerns. So others
in our day, recognizing the loss of ability to concentrate, and
I mean those who used to be able to read books now confess they
can't read books because they can't concentrate for a full
page. That is a tragic loss, and we
need to understand that it makes it impossible to do this necessary
thing, keeping the eye on wisdom. Where do we get the nurture necessary
in the life of faith for this wisdom and discretion? It's through
concentrated effort, really, to the Word, right? In the means
of grace, in private and public devotion. In our day, so many
things have been brought together to destroy that capacity. Some
recognizing that have taken measures to restore that capacity. That's
all good and fine. We should learn from the abilities
to restore that capacity. But not just because it's a good
thing to do. In general, certainly it is,
we have a spiritual and critical need for that capacity to be
restored. And so, We won't go through the litany
of things that will help, but they are recognizable. We've
heard them. There need to be times when the means of distraction
are set aside. That can be any form of entertainment. That can be the electronic devices
like we described, but it can be anything that diminishes our
capacity for our spiritual callings in the means of grace. we are
to be able and to cultivate the capacity for concentrating in
a word-centered way that shapes the soul. That means we need
the means of meditation. We need the means of concentration. And those have to be cultivated.
They have to be exercised like a muscle. Now, when we return
back to the portions where the father spoke to the son about
the training, we start to see that that's going to be a part
of the training. There are things that should
be a part of the natural order of growth in family context,
spiritual family, that will cultivate that. We should have times as
families where distractions are removed for the purpose of concentrated
fellowship. Mealtimes are one. The scriptures
are full of taking that for granted, that mealtimes are places where
fellowship is cultivated, and a gathering takes place with
a single purpose that cultivates graces. That's one example. But there are private examples
as well. There should be time when we
meditate upon what we've received, for example, in the worship service,
in all its parts. That may involve taking notes.
But at the very least, it involves the review, whether in notes
or in memory, of the things put forth to us as the means of grace
on the Lord's Day. And those things should be our
meditation, carried forward, as we learn in Deuteronomy 6,
day in, day out. As I'm walking, I'm meditating. I'm keeping my eye fixed. There's a concentration capacity
that we need to cultivate. The most obvious one in private
devotion is prayer. Again, there's a ready confession
on the part of God's people that this seems to be a very difficult
grace to cultivate. I set myself to pray, and within
30 seconds, my mind is wandering to anything other than my appeals
to my God. What's the solution? Abandon
the effort? No. Ask God to help you, and
then apply yourself to it again. Make it 45 seconds. And then
find that you need to be corrected. Appeal to God. Make it 60 seconds. There's a spiritual muscle that
involves the nature, the human nature, in application to spiritual
ends. we will be better human beings
in God's design, but the end is that we keep the eye fixed
upon wisdom and discretion. So prayer, ever-increasing lengths
of time before the throne of grace, where we're able to maintain
the flow of thought and the concentration. These are things needful as spiritual
graces, that will exercise those capacities necessary for what
Solomon describes here, for keeping sound wisdom and discretion,
not letting them out of the sight, keeping the eye fixed upon them,
always meditating upon the pursuits of the graces of God in the life
of wisdom. Our diminished capacities need
repair, and concentration upon the means of grace, Lord's day
by Lord's day carried into day by day devotion. is a remedy
to the loss of these abilities. We must apply ourselves to them.
Pursuit of private and public means of grace, prayer and meditation
upon God's word. Now there are promised benefits
held out to us here for keeping the eye fixed, not losing sight
of the goal of wisdom and discretion. What are those benefits? When
you lie down, Solomon says, you will not be afraid. I'm sorry,
one verse back. These benefits go together. Then
you will walk safely. I just need to go one more verse
back, sorry. I'm getting ahead of myself.
So they will be life to your soul and grace to your neck.
Here's that familiar description of the benefit. That benefit
will not be had apart from that concentration. And then further
benefits. arise in safety and stability
in our active pursuits and safety and provision in our passive
pursuits. Let's look at these as we consider
the benefits held out. We need that character development,
for the spiritual ending view that allows us to concentrate
on this and not lose sight of it, laying hold and holding fast,
and then the benefits that flow, life and grace. That is, again,
that fullness and abundance of life, favor with God and with
man, finding his ways of wisdom. These things are, we're being
reminded of them from previous times that the gem of wisdom
was held out to us and turned. So we're familiar with those
from before. Here, particularly, those active
and passive pursuits give new light to the facets of the gem. We are said to have safety in
the way. Remember that Solomon holds out
in the path of wisdom those alternative paths, right? when we have been
trained and with concentration may choose the path of wisdom,
avoiding the path of destruction, we are still in need of wisdom's
work on God's path. And this recognizes that and
holds out our security in that path in discerning step-by-step
the way we should walk in that path. and the safety provided
to us by the provisions of wisdom. Solomon says, then you will walk
safely in your way. That path of wisdom has pitfalls
for us where we misstep, where we do not apply ourselves to
the proper path. Keeping the eye concentrated,
continually making that our effort to pursue God's ways will provide
the very security we desire, that we need for staying steady
on that path. We are prone to stumble. and
fall in that path. And we're assured that having
this capacity to concentrate, to focus upon the wisdom that
has been provided, keeping it so that we don't lose it, and
the wisdom that we're seeking, this will give stability to the
foot. We'll not stumble, the Hebrew
there is that striking of the foot. so that we fall over and
risk harm. This concentration helps us avoid
that very stumbling. We'll stay safely in the path,
not striking the foot, falling over and becoming injured. That's
exactly what we hope for. And these cultivated capacities,
concentration upon The light of faith and cultivating wisdom
will preserve us in the path from striking the foot and faltering. We will be, by this, equipped
for our calling in life. But there's also the realization
that we don't have the divine capacity of never sleeping. and never being vulnerable. That
is right and good to recognize that I am not sufficient to myself. This pursuit with concentration
is a cultivation of what God has called me to be, but there
are limitations. I'm not always active. There
are times when I must be passive. It's a part of the human design. Those are times of a natural
vulnerability, and so The poetry here holds forth the example
of that, and it's a fruitful example. There is divine watchfulness
for us when we are not able, through right purposes, through
right causes, to have the I fixed, to be concentrated. There are times when we are not
active, when we are in a passive mode. When you lie down, verse
24, you will not be afraid. We have the assurance in appropriate
times of vulnerability that we will be kept by God. Now, the example of sleep is
a perfect example in many ways, but what's held out to us in
this example goes beyond simply sleep. That is itself a practical
and real example of our need for God's provision. When we
take a right access to restorative pursuits. The Lord provides for
us in those times. The thing being held out in that
picture is that the Lord is watchful for those who are watchful for
him, right? As we are seeking to pursue wisdom
and not lose sight of it, There are times when things are beyond
our current capacity. That reminds us of something
that Solomon taught us earlier. The Lord, in the course of wisdom,
will be watching out for us in our training. He's not simply
leaving us unprotected. In our pursuit of wisdom, in
our places of vulnerability as we're growing, He provides watchfulness,
He provides care for us in our natural vulnerability. We don't
know everything at once. We haven't become fully mature
and wise instantly. In that course of growing, the
Lord is providing watchfulness for us. The Lord's wisdom guides
us in our times of vulnerability. And so, What we're encouraged
to do with that understanding is to avoid anxiety by our faith
in our Heavenly Father. And wisdom will not only keep
the soul from becoming anxious, but I don't know enough, but
I haven't learned enough, but I can't be sure of my next step. The Lord knows. His watchfulness
watches over our times of vulnerability. So this should remove anxiety
as we follow this instruction. But also, we avoid the causes
of our own making in those vulnerabilities, right? Wisdom will show us the
right way to grow and to take time for that growth. Where there's
natural vulnerability, the Lord watches for us. The watchfulness
that we have and the reliance upon God will help us avoid creating
presumptuous occasions where we say, well, God will take care
of it. Well, apply yourself to your calling and rest without
anxiety in His watchfulness. That's what's being held out
before us, not a presumption. And so the example used is that
example of the sweetness of sleep. It speaks of our need for restoration,
which God alone can give. Those are times of vulnerability,
and they are to be received as provided from God with no guilt. In the example of sleep, We are
at our most vulnerable. That's why that's the one held
out here. There can be a sleep that comes
with guilt, right? The Proverbs will hold out later,
the one who is lazy, who turns on his bed like a door on a hinge,
right? There's another example of taking
rest in the wrong time. Peter's rest when Christ called
him under the providential circumstances of what was set before Christ.
Christ called him forego a good thing for a more important thing. Wisdom, keeping the eye fixed,
can discern the difference between the right time for that restoration,
that good, and a time to set it aside for something more important. These are restorative provisions
from God in the course of wisdom. This sweetness of sleep that's
held out When received in the course of wisdom with attentiveness
upon our duties, we may receive those provisions resting upon
God's provision without a feeling of guilt. Wisdom finds God's
provisions for God's purposes and receives them in their restorative
capacity with no guilt, but with sweet, sweet rest, and absence
of anxiety. Wisdom avoids, then, simple excesses,
and it pursues and promotes wholesome propriety in the way of restoration. Do we need that restoration?
Yes, that's why sleep is used. You cannot go without sleep.
And then you're at your most vulnerable. And so Solomon holds
out here that God provides. in those contexts of our right
vulnerability. Be free of anxiety, resting upon
Him, not shirking duty, but in the course of wisdom, applying
oneself to one's duty, and then resting in God's provisions for
restoration, that He will watch over us when we cannot be watchful. And so we have assurance and
help encouragement in our active pursuits and in our passive pursuits,
that in the course of wisdom, the eye trained to be fixed upon
wisdom will not lose it. It will stay in view. And as
we grow, we may rest upon God, who will be watchful for us while
we learn. Watchfulness. We have much set
before us in these few verses. We need to cultivate that principle
set out at the very beginning, this watchfulness, so that these
things that are so necessary to the life of faith will not
be lost. They will stay in view. We will
lay hold of them then, keeping the eye upon them and not lose
them. Let's pray that God will work
these graces in our life with the freedom and fullness that
he holds out to us. Let's pray. Heavenly Father,
this is a beautiful picture set out for us in the poetry of the
book of Proverbs of our calling to watchfulness, to have the
disciplined eye. Yet we acknowledge that we are
indisposed to that. Naturally, we need training in
that watchfulness. And in our own day, we have much
that militates against that watchfulness. And so we pray that we may, with
all diligence, exercise those graces of attentiveness that
are called for here, that we in the life of faith may lay
hold of wisdom, that we will not lose it, that we will keep
wisdom and discretion. Watch over us then, teach us
when we may take of that time where we are vulnerable, and
know that you are watchful for us as a loving father, and help
us not to be presumptuous, but rather, resting in your provisions,
may we grow in the grace of this diligence. And so, cause us then
to grow in wisdom, and to be an honor to the one who has made
us for this calling. We ask these things in Christ's
holy name. Amen.
Watchfulness in Wisdom
Series Proverbs
| Sermon ID | 11422227122301 |
| Duration | 34:31 |
| Date | |
| Category | Sunday - PM |
| Bible Text | Proverbs 3:21-24 |
| Language | English |
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