Follow Him: A Come, Follow Me Podcast - Proverbs & Ecclesiastes • Part 1: Dr. Lincoln Blumell
Episode Date: August 27, 2022Would sage advice from a parent be worth treasuring? Dr. Lincoln Blumell explores the book of Proverbs and the book of Ecclesiastes and the nature of wisdom, grief, and what fearing God means for mode...rn and ancient readers.Please rate and review the podcast!Show Notes (English, French, Spanish, Portuguese): https://followhim.co/old-testament/Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/followhimpodcastInstagram: https://www.instagram.com/followhimpodcastYouTube: https://www.youtube.com/c/FollowHimOfficialChannelThanks to the follow HIM team:Steve & Shannon Sorensen: Executive Producers, SponsorsDavid & Verla Sorensen: SponsorsDr. Hank Smith: Co-hostJohn Bytheway: Co-hostDavid Perry: ProducerKyle Nelson: Marketing, SponsorLisa Spice: Client Relations, Editor, Show NotesJamie Neilson: Social Media, Graphic DesignWill Stoughton: Video EditorKrystal Roberts: Translation Team, English & French Transcripts, WebsiteAriel Cuadra: Spanish TranscriptsIgor Willians: Portuguese Transcripts"Let Zion in Her Beauty Rise" by Marshall McDonaldhttps://www.marshallmcdonaldmusic.com/products/let-zion-in-h
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Welcome to Follow Him, a weekly podcast dedicated to helping individuals and families with their
Come Follow Me study.
I'm Hank Smith, and I'm John, by the way, we love to learn, we love to laugh, we want to
learn and laugh with you.
As together, we follow him.
Hello my friends, welcome to another episode of Follow Him.
My name is Hank Smith. I am your host. I am here with my Mary
hearted co-host John, by the way. John, as I was reading Proverbs, preparing for this lesson, I hit
Proverbs 15, 13 and it said, a Mary heart make up the cheerful countenance. And I wrote John, by the way,
right there. This is a Mary Hartid podcast, I think.
Absolutely.
Hey, John, we have a Bible expert in the room with us.
Tell everybody who's joining.
So excited to have Dr. Lincoln Blumel with us.
And as I read the bio, I just, it's another time hang.
I'm just going, wow, we're so blessed to have these people with us. Lincoln
Blumel received a bachelor's with honors in classical and early Christian studies from
the University of Calgary, an MA from the University of Calgary in religious studies,
in ancient Christianity, specializing in that, an MSST from Oxford, Christ Church in Jewish studies, a PhD from the University
of Toronto in religious studies,
emphasizing early Christianity,
and before coming to BYU,
he held a visiting assistant professorship
in the Department of Classical Studies
at Tulane University in New Orleans.
His areas of expertise are New Testament,
Second Temple Judaism, History
of Ancient Christianity, until the Byzantine period. He was the editor of a book called
New Testament History, Culture, and Society, in which a lot of our, probably a lot of our
guests have written, right, Hank?
Yeah, there's quite a few of our guests in that book.
Yes, we'll be excited, especially next year up with new testament for that new testament history culture and study and his areas of
research include early Christianity in Egypt ancient Christian letters and
Greek. So we're really glad to have you today and so excited to hear how you can
help us with the book Proverbs and Ecclesiastes today. Welcome. Thank you so
much for that very generous mind introduction and great to meet you and
be with you both, John and Hank.
Lincoln you absolutely deserve it.
John Lincoln and I have worked together for 10 years and he's he was my mentor at BYU.
They assigned me a mentor and I think he was like, oh, you got to be kidding me, but
you've become friends over the years.
And I'll tell you that book, New Testament History, Culture and Society.
It is a big book and it is worth your time.
If you want to know about the New Testament, this will give you, I'm reading from Amazon.
Here's just a small sampling of the writers, Robert Millett, John Welch, Andrew Skinner,
Kent Jackson, Terry Ball,
Noel Reynolds, Frank Judd, just a myriad of other professors
in which Lincoln edited these chapters.
So if any of our listeners are interested,
look that up, New Testament History, Culture, and Society,
a background to the text of the New Testament came out in 2019.
Lincoln, it sounds like from your bio, you're well-traveled.
Yeah, you know, well, I try a new test-scent period
to work a lot on there.
And kind of been around with schools,
kind of to England, and then finally made a great stop
here in the greatest state of Utah.
I'm really happy to be here at BYU.
It's been great 10 years.
All right, Lincoln, how do we want to approach
these, what I've heard called the wisdom literature?
How do you approach proverbs and ecclesiastes?
That's a great question.
It's probably best to give a little bit of background to this that will help kind of frame
what wisdom literature is, and even within the Bible what wisdom literature is.
And so I'll talk about the A&E or the ancient Near East.
You have this tradition that is millennia old of collections of sayings,
proverbs, which is like a maxim or an aphorism.
They're short, pithy sayings that are communicated.
Typically, the standard format it takes
is not unlike the book of Proverbs,
where you have typically somebody addressing
a younger individual like an elder,
often a father to a son.
And what you have is basically communicating important wisdom
and it's transmitted on that will then help that individual
prosper in their life, have success.
I think of ancient wisdom literature kind of in general.
And this is maybe a little humorous,
but I think the analogy is apropos.
Kind of like the ancient,
how to win friends and influence people,
kind of literature that you get.
And it's kind of funny, but it really is in a lot of ways.
You have this Egyptian culture, right?
Sumerian cultures, these ancient years in culture
are of course, Israelite wisdom literature.
And it's how to be successful.
And we'll talk about Proverbs, it's unique,
because Israelites will have their own spin on this,
which we'll of course tie in with God.
But in a lot of wisdom literature, it's rather quite mundane, really quite general.
There are stings that of course remain in our time, like pretty basic stuff, like a
bow strung all day will lose its spring.
And so things like, okay, well, then I need to then unstring my bow when I'm done using
it.
And when you look at this wisdom literature literature and probably the closest parallels you find,
again, what we'll see in Proverbs is coming out of some Egyptian wisdom literature. You have
works like the saying, a man called Ankshishanki in Egypt, as well as others who have this, right?
For example, there's an Egyptian who lives, it's believed in the Ramacid period, which is 1300 BC to about 1100 BC, called
a Manimope, who leaves a text for his son. And there's some really fascinating parallels we'll
look at beginning in Proverbs 22. And so it's just communication that an elder will pass on to
typically younger and vigilant. So it's kind of framed in Proverbs, right? Like a father to a son,
to help them succeed in their life and a prosper, with the Israelite
case, of course, it will tie very intimately back to God.
And when you think of this wisdom in Proverbs and elsewhere, it might be attributed to
God's, but often it seems to be based on observation.
Just like based on life, here are wise sayings that you should abide by.
And if you follow these things,
there's a correlation then between the saying
and some kind of prosperity or success in life.
Okay.
So this is imparting wisdom,
life experience to the younger generation, John.
That's like me and you, you're the elder,
and I'm the younger of course.
And you impart all this wisdom to me.
Yes, you impart all this wisdom to me. Yes, you impart all this wisdom to me.
And I feel like you're the proverbial John, by the way.
proverbial.
Yeah.
Well, that's all this wisdom.
I was thinking of that.
I was an amateur verb, but I've gone pro.
So I'm a pro verb now.
I've left the amateur ranks.
I was gonna ask Lincoln about that
because I feel like some of these sound like
fatherly wisdom or motherly wisdom and I thought, I mean, there's not a thussay of the Lord in
these. When we look at these, it sounds more like there's a family motto that we've had passed down
or things like that. It's maybe a dangerous question to ask, do we hold the book of Proverbs
to the same level we might hold the book of Isaiah?
That's a great question. It's in the canon, and so we regard, as a standard works, as scripture.
When I look at Proverbs, you see Ecclesiastes, it's interesting that when you look at these two texts,
here's one way of kind of looking at this question. There's hardly any JSTs here. There's not
any Ecclesiastes, for example,
and there's a handful in Proverbs, not only one that really makes much of a difference to the
text in 18, we'll talk about probably the context when we get to Proverbs 31. And so,
even seems the JST doesn't spend a whole lot of time focusing on these texts. Because I look
at Proverbs, I think a lot of this is about why sayings hand it down and it talks about the whys or we could say sages
Here is what we've learned. Yeah, but there is no thus sayeth the Lord and I guess what is maybe to vindicate some of these sayings
I guess is some of the authority would be well if you do this then you will see the fruits of then doing this saying or
maximum aphorism
You do have the beginning here the attribution to Solomon in verse one.
Although as you read into the book, can you start moving through this?
You know, it becomes very clear that we have here's a composite work.
Solomon is not the only author here.
You get down into, for example, chapter 22.
And it now talks about, well, here are now sayings of the sages or the wise men. And it's clearly drawing upon some wisdom that has been passed on from Israel.
You then have in 25.
It talks about, well, you now have an array of Hezekiah.
So Hezekiah is now some two centuries after Solomon.
And they're now compiling this.
There's a red actor who's working with this.
Chapter 30, it talks about a man called Agar.
And then in chapter 31, a king called Lemuel.
We'll talk more about Lemuel.
And so it's kind of collected wisdom.
And so I think some of this wisdom, perhaps,
is probably even there before Solomon.
And you have right editors who then redact this
and bring this into a unit.
It's not entirely cohesive.
It's often you have these short sayings
that though it doesn't always clear why you have a grouping or one next to another.
Sometimes there's a kind of thematic, I'd call it a multiverse proverb, but this is related
on and it's kind of wisdom from the ages. And so I look at this here as more like it's
about probabilities. If you do this, this is probably what's going to happen to you.
And it's good counsel. If I were to write a new test one, I'll probably do this, this is probably what's going to happen to you. And it's good council.
If I were to release a new test, and I'll probably do this a lot, where Paul says in one Corinthians 15,
he says, I'm giving you my opinion. Nevertheless, I'm an apostle. You need to go and disregard that
opinion by Paul, but it's saying, I think he recognized Paul's careful there, you know, in one
Corinthians, where he does this, 15, but also especially in seven where he says, okay, the Lord says this, and he says, now I'm saying this, but remember I'm an apostle.
So I think with Proverbs, I've kind of taken it in that light. It's a valuable opinion.
If you do these things, I think part of when the Master of Proverbs is, generally, good things are going to happen.
You will have success, win friends, influence people, kind of thing, but your life will be more meaningful.
You can avoid pitfalls.
There's lots of worrying about pitfalls out there.
So that's how I would approach this book
and even Ecclesiastes in this kind of tradition.
Yeah, I feel like it sounds like advice
about your relationship with God.
It's not necessarily God talking,
but they're talking about how to choose good,
I mean, I love the ponder the path
of thy feet, things like that. And trust in the Lord, which is a youth theme this year.
In fact, there's an interesting statement in the manual. If we want to jump into the second book,
we're going to look at Ecclesiastes. This is from the first page in the Come Follow Me manual. It says,
Proverbs can be seen as a collection of wise sayings from a loving parent,
whose main message is that blessings of peace and prosperity come to those who seek wisdom,
particularly the kind of wisdom God offers. But Proverbs is followed by the book of Ecclesiastes,
which seems to say, it's not that simple. The preacher quoted in Ecclesiastes observed that
he gave his heart to no wisdom, but still
found vexation of spirit and much grief.
That was, I thought, a good way of framing it.
There's some great proverbs.
It doesn't mean life will be easy just because you know these proverbs.
You know what I think about scripture as we approach it.
Certainly, you know, our ancient scriptures is sometimes, I think it's useful to think about in this term.
There are things that can be more timely than timeless.
And I think this could apply to Proverbs.
There will be wisdom that they might have that say,
this might be a great piece of advice if you're living
in the ninth century BC.
Mine now works so well in the 21st century.
And so what I might say to those who are reading this text,
maybe struggling with some things I'd say,
are there principles behind it?
Because I think there's often principles behind it,
we can say yes, this principle resonates with us.
Even if maybe some of the specific advice,
we might not be as applicable for our day
or might do something different is,
what are they trying to communicate there?
And so look at the principle behind that.
And then say, okay, this is how then it might inform practice today and how we're then gonna apply that and so I think that's worth keeping in mind
I'm writing that down
Like in some things in scripture more timely than time less and and that's part of understanding culture
Part of understanding their worldview. Yeah, they're cosmology then you're able to extract the timeless
Is that make sense?
Yeah, there are principles there where yeah, we look and say,
there's some timeless principles where practices here may have changed.
Really, the premise of Proverbs seems to be the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge,
or actions. That's where it all starts with.
How do you then apply this in your daily life?
How could you group these three books, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and even Job as the wisdom literature?
I think you have to see them at least somewhat as a unit because Proverbs is going to give you one
end of wisdom. Ecclesiastes is going to give you another facet of wisdom while Job is going to even offer
another.
And if you don't take them together, you might miss something.
You think they're meant to be read together these three?
Well, I think we have them as a collection together.
And look at proverbs.
If you do these things, it will be well with you.
It will be blessed.
You even have be attitudes like what you find, right? The blessed is the person who does this. Happy are they. Yeah. In the
sort of the mountain. So it doesn't entertain the possibility that if you do this, it might
not go well. We're job then says, okay, you could be doing everything as best you can
your power and being a really upright life. And it might all still go to pot. And then
it will probe that question,
for example, right, we cook about theodicy.
Why does God allow bad things to happen to good people
in an age old question?
Proverbs doesn't engage with that.
Where Job now says, okay, what do we do now?
When you're doing things, and it doesn't turn out as planned.
And so then there's that discussion.
And of course, you have in Job,
then there's a restoration made at the end.
It probes on the wrangle.
And then Ecclesiastes seems to be more of a thing where,
okay, you can go and do good things,
and yet it can still be all vanity, right?
We'll talk about this, this Hebrew word, Hevel,
which is like breath, basically, this emptiness,
that at the end of the day, what you do here,
it may not turn out at all how you expected.
Although it does end with the trusting God,
it does have that at the end of the text,
but does recognize there are a lot more complexities
in this whole process in life that you think of in Deuteronomy.
If you follow me, you do this Israel, you will be blessed.
If you don't, you'll be cursed.
And that works that nicely,
but I think we can all think of our own lives or people where
you feel like you're doing some stuff and you're like,
well, I'm doing all I can, but it doesn't always work out.
I'm not seeing the blessings that are promised.
Yeah.
Yeah, Hank and I have talked about this before.
It's like the doctrine of retribution.
It sounds so mathematical and it works sometimes.
Right?
Yeah.
A minute I did everything right and suffered like Job.
Is that going to the New Testament a little bit?
The mindset when who did sin this man or his parents that he was born blind?
Yeah, John 9.
It's got to be a result of sin or else it wouldn't happen.
And that kind of thinking that Jesus had to fix with them sometime.
Those people that the Tower of Psylon fell on them,
do you think it was because,
and Jesus seemed to have to say,
yeah, this is great advice,
but sometimes things go badly.
I think that's where Ecclesiastes come in.
So it complexifies things.
It does say, nevertheless, have trust in God,
but one of these Ecclesiastes gets in
a little bit in the later chapters.
You don't know the mind of God.
It's almost like inscrutable.
Have this trust.
And yes, things can work out well,
but there are no guarantees.
What I would go back to Ecclesiastes
is even a proverbs,
I step back and say, right, with flancelvation.
Yes, you'll prosper, but I think Lord,
I would say this, eternally.
In the big scheme of thing, it will work out.
In the big, big picture, it's gonna work out,
but it may not work out here in this finite period of mortality, and you might do things right.
And again, I think generally right people will be blessed, but Ecclesiastes, kind of the
spectrum tends to open it up and say, okay, some of these things, there's maybe not quite
the correlation that seems to be elsewhere, that can be a bit more complex. And so it opens
that possibility up. And so you come back to Hank, you know, we can be a bit more complex. And so it opens that possibility up.
And so you come back to Hank,
we do kind of read these together.
The Hebrew canon, Ecclesiastes is actually separated.
It comes after lamentations.
You have these three wisdom books,
Israelites Jews are still writing more wisdom literature
that we have in the Apocryphal,
like the wisdom of Solomon or Syrac,
which is known as Ecclesiasticus or the wisdom of Ben Serah,
which actually the largest wisdom book we have from the ancient world, probably written
maybe around 200 BC thereabouts, which are still probing these questions. And we'll of course build
on this. This really occupies people's minds. You all want to succeed, you want to be blessed,
you want to have a successful life, buy you on the standards of society. And so try to convey some of that. Yes, there
is a correlation, but with Closiasis, yes, not always the case.
So I'm trying to process this in my mind. Proverbs is good things will happen to good people,
ecclesiasties and Job explorer, the question of what if that doesn't happen in your life,
what if that's not the case? What are you going to do? Life is much more complex maybe than proverb seems to say, but at the same time that doesn't mean we should throw out
proverbs. The probability is there. Like you said, good things happen to good people. This is
fascinating. So we have proverbs that says life is simple, and then we have ecclesiasties and
Job that say, hold on a second, it's not as simple as you might think, but yet trust in God.
Generally, if you do good, you will prosper. Unlike Job and Ecclesiastes, which kind of entertains the opposite,
Proverbs doesn't really go to the opposite. And I like what you said. It's kind of like a timing thing. In the long run,
the outcomes that you want, the Proverbs are right. Trust in God. Don't lean to your non-understanding. In the long run,
Proverbs are right, trust in God. Don't lean to your non-understanding.
In the long run, there are great outcomes.
And what you said a second ago,
reminded me of in President Gordon B. Hinckley's biography
that Sherry Doe wrote that if you're around him,
you will hear him say things will work out.
Things will, he'll say he said that a lot.
But that could be a very long-term view, right?
So that kind of helps me with it.
It makes me think of what Section 122 of Dr. and Covenants,
what is it, verses 7-8, about, you know,
all these things happen.
They shall be for your good.
All these terrible, terrible things.
He lists these awful things.
Really hard, terrible things.
They'll be for your good.
And I can't but think, Lord's thinking,
well, in the eternal
perspective, the perspective that I have, this
experience should be very good. It's knowledge. And
again, proverbs all about knowledge, wisdom, it's
even used interchangeably. You will have these things. You
will understand.
Yeah, in those same Liberty Jail sections, there is
thy suffering and thy affliction will be, but a small
moment.
And I don't know, three or four months in Liberty jail
doesn't feel like a small moment.
But maybe it does in that eternal perspective.
When I think about this, you know,
Peter picks up on this in one Peter one seven
where he talks about your faith of trials.
Now, the King James will talk about temptations,
but it's clearly his trial.
They're saying, this will be for your good.
More probably these precious metals, things like that.
And I think if you take this bigger perspective and you look at like, well,
Ecclesiastes, life is a femoral.
It's going to have an end.
It's terminal, it's transitory.
So therefore, what is permanent?
And so these things that come along,
go for things for which
will be right eternal wisdom. We can carry knowledge out of this world. I think of DNC. I think
it's what 88, six that talks about this. Therefore, go after things which will be perpetual.
And this is why they then become so valuable as opposed to things that are just fleeting. And so
focus on what will actually last.
Life is temporary, wisdom is eternal.
That's why it's more valuable than money,
because money will end, but wisdom does not.
I heard a great quote.
You never see a U-Haul following a hearse,
because no one can take anything with them beyond.
And so that never actually happens.
And so the author here is saying,
do those things which will be of long lasting value
or eternal value?
And I like the Peter, of course, picking up
the same kind of imagery.
I'm here.
These trials can be for your good if you endure them well,
which then brings back to 122.
I was reading from a Bible scholar, not Latter-day Saint,
but a wonderful Bible scholar by the name of Christopher Wright. He wrote,
the most challenging difference between wisdom and the rest of the Old Testament arises when
the wisdom authors express doubts about or questions the validity of some of the main
line affirmations of other parts of the Bible. And yet this is precisely the purpose of this
material in the canon of Scripture. To compel us, I like this part, to compel us toward an
honest faith that is willing to acknowledge the presence of Scripture. To compel us, I like this part, to compel us toward an honest faith
that is willing to acknowledge the presence of doubts. We cannot dismiss and questions. We cannot
always fully answer given our human limitations. So it sounds like we're going to jump into
Proverbs here and hear the likelihood of doing good. Wonderful things are going to happen.
And the other books are going to question that validity, and it's important for us to
question that.
Does that sound right, Lincoln?
Proverbs about 26.
If you raise up your child in the Lord, when they're old, they will not depart from it.
Well, I think a lot of people think Book of Mormon would say, well, we did that.
It didn't work.
We did train up the child.
Yeah.
You know, I do think there's a probability of a correlation clearly by going and doing that. And again, children can always come back, but there's a correlation
there, but there's no guarantee. That's what I like, probabilities, but no guarantees.
Yeah, so only you might almost say here, the odds of the child being active in the gospel
is more likely if you teach them while they're young. A train up a child in the way should go,
and when he is old, he will not depart from it.
That's better than not training up a child and hoping that they choose the right.
So I can see what you're saying there.
There's always going to be exceptions.
There's an allowance for agency as well, but this is still the right thing to do.
I think that's really helpful to frame this before we jump in and I'm excited to jump in.
I remember a home evening once with my
father where we just sat at the table and read proverbs and some of them we laughed and
some of them we nodded and some of them we marked and what are some of your favorites?
The prologue here versus one to six Solomon talking to a young man, training children,
I can go back to Nephi and talk about his goodly parents learning in the language of his father having been taught.
Verse 7 is really, really key.
Because this seems to frame the book, it kind of begins the book.
So if you go down to 31-30, at the very end, this is then repeated.
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fooling spies wisdom and instruction.
And so starting off, if you really want to know something, it begins with the fear of the Lord.
When I look at fear here,
I wouldn't say we're terrified of Lord,
but I might think something like reverence,
acknowledging that.
There is a source beyond us
for which we can draw on for knowledge and power,
and then starting with that.
So we had bookend verses there,
Lincoln with Proverbs 1, 7,
the fear of the Lord.
You mentioned Proverbs 31, 30,
a woman that feareth the Lord,
she shall be praised.
I like that.
So here's our beginning verse
and our end verse,
like you said, that's framing
what we're going to get in the middle.
We're going to get wisdom and knowledge
between these two, right?
Yeah, the acquisition of this. And it does make it clear this does not come easily.
These are things that are hard one, kind of by your sweat of your brow, obtaining some
of this, but wisdom, instruction, right knowledge, and wisdom can be interchangeable, but really
the source of it is the Lord.
So starting with that premise, and then moving from there seems
to be how the book really begins and focusing on the Lord. And then what you have as you
get into talking about wisdom and its acquisition for in chapter one here, you get down to something
like verse 19, which it starts talking about wisdom being now personified. It's lady wisdom that is being about here.
It's in the feminine lady wisdom.
Proverbs eight talks more about that.
My wife might want that name.
In Greek it was a nice one.
Sophia writes wisdom in Greek.
What you have this kind of comes from the Lord.
It comes out and this is what you are acquiring
but it's then personified.
And even the book of Mormon picks up on this.
Mosiah 820, Limhai, the time is people, they don't seek wisdom.
Neither they desire that she should rule over them.
It sucks what the blessings are at when you allow wisdom to take over and govern your
life.
It tends to be that good things can then follow.
When you think about wisdom, this is a good thing, requiring wisdom.
But if I were to like, bit of an interplay here,
if you get to one Corinthians, Paul warns all about wisdom, like says,
well, but where are that wisdom? And you're like, wait a second, what's going on
here? There are different kinds of wisdoms. Paul saying, well,
the wisdom people are seeking is that not of God, but it comes after the world,
which at times the wisdom of the world can be quite different. And this
is why I think then Proverbs in 17 says, we'll start with the Lord.
You recognize the Lord and then your wisdom then will proceed from that.
That will then dictate, predicate upon what you value as wisdom.
And that's kind of the source of that.
Lincoln, when it starts in verse 7, the fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge.
My kids are going to hear that and think they're supposed to be scared of the Lord. What does the word fear there mean? You can use the word fear here, but I think
good will be something better is reverence, piety. The phrase fear of the Lord appears about 14
times in Proverbs. And so I think starting with a reverence for God. Reference or humility.
This is a big topic in Proverbs because one of the synchial say between the wise person the fool is the wise person is humbled enough they can listen when the Lord or an elder chastises them the KJB puts give them
Reproof and this is right through Proverbs. They can be humble enough. They can accept you know chastisement and they can then learn and grow from that.
You're willing to be taught. Is that, can I say it that way? In verse seven,
if I reverence the Lord, if I fear the Lord, I'm willing to be taught,
I'm humble enough to be taught. There's the beginning. The door is open.
As you recognize, there's a higher source and say, I will submit and be
humble to that. And then if there is somebody speaking to that source,
I will then submit and I will listen to their reproof. Probably was 31 30 and what it says there is, but a woman that fear
of the Lord and the footnote says, or reveres the Lord. So there's our footnote using the same
rever or references. Well, he's that phrase a lot. These are God fearing people. I mean, we don't
mean they're piting in fear, but they're. These are God fearing
folks. Where are they? They're over and running away. No, they're very varying. They respect
God. The idea here is the beginning of knowledge is the fact that you realize you don't have
it all. I kind of like, you know, the passage you're, where to be learned is good if you
harken to the councils of God. There's one thing about pride here, right? I've got pride comeeth before
the fall that I think if people say, look, I don't know it all, I can learn, I can be corrected.
Well, then the wise can then help you, right? And the wise Lord can really help you and
you can progress. And one of the things that Proverbs does and just kind of build upon this is it talks about jumping to three
12 for a moment. It talks about for whom the Lord loveeth he correcteth
Even as a father the son in whom he delighteth. If you love somebody, right, you really do you care enough to actually correct them
And if they're humble enough, they're like, damn wisdom. They can receive that
It sounds like me as a parent.
I'm teaching you this because I love you
and I want you to be a successful adult.
I don't know how many times I've said that exact phrase.
I want you to be a successful adult.
If I didn't love you, I would just let you keep going this way.
That really is.
If you don't love something
and you don't do anything about it.
If you really love something or somebody,
you tell them hard things.
Proverbs is a type of scripture that is somewhat easy to read. I remember being in high school
and really liking Proverbs. I understood what it was saying. At some points, there's other books
of scripture I would read and go, I have no idea what they're talking about. But this one I could,
they were short enough and simple enough for my sophomore mind to grasp, and then I would mark them because I thought, that's, I still remember finding a merry heart do with good, like a medicine, but a broken
spirit dry off the bones. I still remember that. I was in high school when I first read that,
and it's short enough to memorize, and it stuck with me all these years.
You have this title to book, right? To go back to this. The Hebrew word is ma'Shal. The Greek and even Latin, you get Proverbs, but Greek
sometimes as parables. These things side by side, short, pithy
sayings, like aphorisms that you don't have to read the entire
book of Proverbs to get it. You can go and read a few verses
here and there. It might have a distinct unit on something. So
oh, okay, I can see how that can help. And so I think in that
regard, as you said, they're right, you're younger, you can take time and read a few verses and say, okay, okay, I can see how that can help. And so I think in that regard, as you said, you're younger, you can take time and if you versus
and say, okay, there's something for me
that I can improve on or that I can take to heart.
Yeah, they are really bite size, aren't they?
There's not long stories.
Sometimes there's three or four versus kind of rehearsing
a theme or parallelism.
Yeah, I think for the most part, right?
They are bite size. Some are it's a single verse. Some you get a multiverse where you might have a theme or parallelisms. Yeah, I think from the most part, right, they are bites.
I some are it's a single verse.
Some you get a multiverse,
where you might have a theme for three or four verses,
where the same theme is kind of kept up,
but they're kind of these distinct clusters
that are then kind of strung together.
I think they're so helpful because you can remember that.
You don't have to remember a verse at diverse.
You can remember a couple of verses.
Okay, why don't we walk through this?
Just start in Proverbs chapter 1, 2, 3. Let's just take
them in order and highlight the verses that you want to highlight Lincoln. There's no way we could
hit it all. Let's look at the ones that you want to focus on. Again, I think verse 7 is really key.
The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and instructions. This
is kind of really the starting point for acquisition of wisdom and knowledge.
So if you're a fool, you'll stop reading now, right?
Yes, you stop.
That's it.
This begins there in seven.
You then have, it warns about,
don't try to be wise in your own eyes
for rely on the Lord.
And it warns about, go, try to obtain wisdom and even the simple
people. And this is when he goes back to come in earlier, even your even simple people
can do this. They can obtain shrewdness, sagacity. And I really think kind of chapter one, if
I was going to give a theme there, not looking at every single verse is that if you want
to obtain wisdom, you're willing to be corrected.
You're willing to be quote unquote chastised.
And so there's just kind of discipline
that goes with that.
Yeah, and also they introduce wisdom as a woman.
She uttered her voice in the street.
She cries in the chief place of the concourse
and the opening of the gates.
You can find her.
It sounds like you can find her anywhere.
Called and he refused in verse 24.
I want to come to you, wisdom wants to come to you,
but you're refusing her sometimes.
I guess the humility that you mentioned before,
do we have this, or we self-reflective?
Do we listen to, quote unquote,
wise people of our day, right?
I think apostles and prophets.
The wisdom they impart from life experience.
Yeah, it's not like it's hard to find, especially these days.
It's readily available to us, but we turn from it.
I have stretched out my hand and no man regarded an apostle is speaking and you're not listening.
Is that same?
Does it continue into chapter two?
Is you get into two?
It's kind of here again with wisdom.
What is this path to wisdom like?
And again, it requires work over four if they thou seekest her a silver and search for as for head treasurer
Then verse five thou shall understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of God to requires work
So you got to seek after wisdom as much as you seek after money
Yeah, I think people can relate to going and doing this
I like here the parable of the Pearl Great Price, right?
In Matthew 13, was it 45 and 46?
Where the kingdom of heaven is like a merchant man seeking goodly pearls.
And we saw it all he had when he found it, to purchase that pearl. And so, to go and to seek it takes work.
Six kind of, again, he takes work. I think six is really key.
For Lord give it the wisdom out of His mouth, come with knowledge understanding.
To pick up the Lord is the one giving wisdom, James 1.5. If you lack wisdom, what do you do?
Go to God. Give all people, doesn't upgrade. And so I think we're seeing this kind of picked up.
Prober says, yes, you can do this, but it's a path. You really got to search.
He layeth up sound wisdom for the righteous. So it's there for the taking. Is that what I'm supposed to hear there?
If you will just listen and seek.
Even today, right? Some of the distractions are willing to kind of put things down, quiet down,
and really listen and seek and ask the source of all wisdom.
This is one of those that families can sit down together and read,
and even children can understand quite a bit of this.
In verse 4, Hank, you mentioned that, and searches for her as for hid treasures.
I mean, imagine the tenacity and the focus if you think you've got a hidden treasure,
and we could have that same kind of tenacity and focus to seek for wisdom.
So I like that comparison that you made.
It reminds me when Jesus says,
blessed are they who hunger and thirst and you think,
and that's me.
And he says, after righteousness, you're like,
oh, there's not very many bending machines
dispensing righteousness.
As naturally as I seek after cash,
I'm supposed to take that same longing for it
and go after wisdom.
Look, wisdom is a treasure.
Fill your bank account with wisdom instead of silver.
One of the things we'll see in later, chapter says it's very thing, right? It's actually, you'll say, better to have a little look at wisdom as a treasure. Fill your bank account with wisdom instead of silver.
One of the things we'll see in later,
chapter says it's very thing, right?
It's actually, you'll say better to have a little
and yet have wisdom or peace than to have a lot
and not have that.
This is something that in the big scheme of things
is a far more value.
And I think something that we can maybe step back
and try to take an eternal perspective.
Yes, we have to have the cares of the world
and both our routine and do what we need to do.
Provide for ourselves, our families, all those things.
But are we doing eternally what's of most importance?
And here it's saying, okay, make sure you're seeking
after this because this is so important
at the end of the day to go and acquire this in progress.
Lincoln, as we're going through these first two,
three chapters here, I'm sensing that proverbs
to in order to read it correctly, you have to do a lot of self-reflection.
Kind of like almaphye.
Are you thinking through this?
Because he says in chapter three, let not mercy and truth forsake thee.
Bind them around thy neck, write them upon the table of thine heart.
That takes a lot of reflection to our mercy and truth written on my heart.
It is something that you can go through and really assess.
I kind of like this because there's a lot of interesting reference to James in the New
Testament.
It's really like that.
The James you've often say, am I doing this?
And so it's a great text to kind of go and kind of self-assess how you are doing.
So yes, I'm doing this or I can improve.
The lifetime of self-reflection right there. Do I have mercy and truth written on my heart?
Yeah, this table or tablet of your heart. This phrase, of course, appears elsewhere,
right in Jeremiah, you know, Paul picks up on this in second Corinthians. If it's there,
then it's really a part of you. It's your most inward core. So you've really taken it on.
And then of course, you're just going down just two verses from that. Some of my favorite
it on. And then of course he was going down just two verses from that, some of my favorite verses in all of Proverbs is there in 5 and 6 and 3. Trust in the Lord with all thine heart.
So it's come in there and have this lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways
acknowledge him and he shall direct thy paths. This is the youth theme at this year.
Really trust in the Lord, right? You fear it, well, you'll trust in God. Just a tweak
there on on verse six, because you could even transit as this. Look at the Hebrew. In all thy ways,
I would say it's acknowledge him or know him. So if everything you do know him, and he shall direct
thy paths, or you could even say, and he shall basically make your path straight. That's excellent.
In all they ways know him or maybe involve him. In all
they ways involve him and he shall direct thy paths. Making it straight will help. And I think
that's in a sense a blessing. I'm trying to say, here's a good thing. If you do this, your
past will be straight because it talks about the way of the wickedness crooked. They're all over,
but you can move forward. I think in verse five, where the writer says,
trust in the Lord with all that in heart,
lean not until I know an understanding.
He might be saying implicit in that statement,
might be you're not going to understand.
You're gonna try, you're not gonna be able to see
what the Lord is able to see.
So maybe the writer of Proverbs here is saying,
yeah, there might be something might happen
where you don't understand, but still trust
the Lord when that happens. I think the Abraham really, he wanted me to go and take Isaac, you know,
Genesis 22, what are you doing here? It doesn't make sense until after the fact. I like to put your
brought up hand that sometimes things will not make sense, but you got it here to that trust, maybe
it's only after the fact, we're going to see, okay, this trust was really born out because I did that.
It might be a short time, it might be actually quite a long time
before you actually see that.
Yeah, and your own understanding was,
well, I think I know how to solve this,
or I think I know how to do this or negotiate this,
but trust God, he's got a better way.
I like I said make his path straight
because that's like a John the Baptist phrase.
From Isaiah 40, it's actually very similar to that.
Yes, and so can I make him straight?
Proverbs 35 and 6 is one of those that I think Elder Scott would say, you memorize and
it becomes a friend to you because you need a friend in those difficult times where you
feel like things went wrong, you need a friend there to say, keep trusting in the Lord. He can see things
you don't see. What was it last year, John? You cannot be hold with your natural eyes for
the present time, the design of your God.
Concerning the things which will come here after, there's that long term thing again.
I think another thing, Hank, that many of our young adult listeners were. My mission calls said I was going here, but then I went here and then COVID hit and that
just came home and then I got reassigned here.
What's that from the Lord?
We had a kid in our ward who was called to South Africa and then was called home and then
went to Farmington, New Mexico or something and then got called home again.
And then it was so great because his last line in his homecoming talk was my mission did not
unfold the way I expected, but it turned out to be more beautiful than I had planned. And he kind
of personified that for me. Yeah, it was out there, and I was over here and over there,
but it turned out more beautiful than I planned,
and it's because he had that trust.
Kind of piggyback on that story.
Paul has a plan that he outlines in Romans,
writing on his thermatism court, and saying,
look, I'm gonna go back to Jerusalem, drop off these goods,
and I'm gonna come and preach the gospel in Rome.
That's my plan.
By the way, it's a good thing, right? You want to go preach the gospel there. But he gets back to
Jerusalem. He gets arrested. He's put in jail for two years, but he had to act 26, 27. He eventually
makes it to Rome under a different set of circumstances. And the Lord said, okay, you're gonna go there
and then get to Philippians, which is a prison in Pistols. He says, you know what? Me begin chains
has really served to further the gospel.
Those in the Praetorium are hearing all about the gospel.
And so I said there, John,
well, no, it's got to be this way.
You're a Paul think, okay, I got to go to Rome.
So even a righteous desire, but Lord says,
now there's going to be another way.
And in fact, leave them be better if you can do it this way.
But it's going to require some hardship and some real trust.
You really got to trust.
So many stories, so many testimony meetings
are full of stories where, wait, why did this happen?
And then, oh, okay, testimonies are born every Sunday
about that sort of thing, where I thought it was this
and Hank, you and I have talked in previous podcasts
about Jesus on the road that you may ask.
Well, we had thought he was the one
that was gonna redeem Israel.
See, it wasn't what they expected or Zion's camp. Well, I thought we were going to do this and Zion's camp turned out to be this,
but God was doing something else and you just have to have to trust him.
John, these verses here remind me of your book when it doesn't make sense.
Is that kind of why you wrote it? This idea of trust the Lord, when it doesn't make sense.
In fact, the story I just mentioned about young friend Cole, I put that in a chapter about
modified missions, well I was called here and I went here and writing about these young
people that had discovered that trusting in the Lord was exactly what they had to do.
I had one missionary who I quoted in there
who said, my mission president helped me so much to know
that the success of a mission was not going exactly
where my mission called said.
The success of a mission was how I connected
to the Savior during that time
and how I strengthened my relationship with Christ
during that time.
That was a better measure of success
than whether everything unfolded the way I thought.
And that means you can go anywhere. The success was, have you had a connection to the Savior?
Has your conversion deepened because you served? And I thought it was such a great comment.
This young man made, he's actually my nephew, that started out in Panama and ended up in Southern California and had such a wonderful
epiphany about. My mission is to be fully converted to Christ.
Well, I think I would add here on this really great discussion. When I think of kind of,
you know, maybe as a acknowledgement or know him, I kind of think of covenants here.
And the reason I picked this up is if you go back to this verse one, it says, my son, forget not my law. And law here in Hebrew is Torah. What verse was that?
That's that's three one. So just a few verses before, right? Forget on my law and the law
here is Torah, which is scripture. Yeah. So it's a scripture. I think of kind of covenant
language here. And again, go back to 22, keeping in mind chapter divisions are totally artificial.
These are all added later on after this is written.
And 22, the wicked will be cut off.
Well, that's covenant language.
That's 22 and you go right into, remember, you know, don't be cut off.
Remember my law, know me.
And it seems that we know through covenants, you obtain knowledge, it's through keeping
covenants.
I think we can kind of expand this.
And you trust in your covenants when you come down to verse five, you trust in your covenants.
You trust in it.
And so you have that in one and then in two twenty two.
And it says in verse eight, it shall be health to thy navel and marrow to thy bones.
And then in two even, you'll have length of days and a long life.
You find this already in the law.
There's some things you will get by keeping these covenants. And so I think you do this covenant language right embedded in this, in this
section. We could spend the rest of our time on chapter 35 and 6 because so many people go through
things that they that they did not see coming. How many of our listeners are going, yeah, I did not
see that coming. I didn't see a divorce coming. yeah, I did not see that coming. I didn't see a divorce coming.
I didn't see a mental illness coming.
I didn't see a death in the family coming.
I did not see this coming.
And now I'm in it.
What do I do?
Trust.
Trust the Lord that He knows you, that He knows where what's happening, and that He is directing
your path,
even though you can't see it now.
Because so many things do make sense in the gospel,
we want everything to make sense.
And I just think we'll go to our death
with unanswered questions, all of us will.
But as we've talked about,
you trust in the Lord and lean not to your own understanding
That is the best path for maximum joy and happiness even though there will be
setbacks
Lincoln, what do you want to do next? We've just started three and seven
Don't be wise in your own eyes probably the 11 and 12 which we touch on a bit is just
taking
Chastisement again, you'll see this throughout. Receiving that from the Lord,
from the wise. Again, when you're chastised by the Lord, it's not a sign that he doesn't love you.
As in verse 12, it's the very opposite. Again, I would say to your kids, it's when you're chastised by a
parent, it's not because they don't love you. It's the very opposite because they love you dearly.
And they want the best for you.
You do this even as a father does this to his son.
And Hebrews kind of picks up on that.
If God does this, then you really are a child.
Once you do this, you get on this path of wisdom 13,
happy as the man.
It's a beattitude.
So you get on this and you're blessed when you find it.
Then you get on this and you're blessed when you find it. Then you get understanding.
And as he says, be not weary of his correction.
John, you've talked to me about an airplane being constantly corrected.
And that's how it reaches its destination.
Yeah, Elder Eugdorf who pointed it out, they'll put this huge jet right on the numbers on the
runway that crossed an ocean and was off course most of the time
But it just keeps keeps correcting makes these tiny corrections and it lands exactly when and where it's supposed to because
It's correct and you know what else I thought I was we've had brother S Michael Wilcox on here
And I remember him saying once that Peter was constantly getting corrected in the New Testament
because the Lord loved him and knew he was going to take over and he was constantly getting
correct. And then as you you think about it, that wasn't a sign of that he didn't love him,
that was a sign that he loved him so much, he was willing to correct him and helpful way to look at it.
Yeah, I think that's really helpful and Lincoln, what you said is that when you feel the spirit giving you that divine discontent,
it's not out of hatred, it's not out of even disgust or it's out of love.
You're better than this.
I might be watching Netflix and the show comes on and I keep watching it and those spirits
says, you're not, this isn't for you.
I shouldn't take that as a sign of,
I'm evil, I'm bad and God is good and He hates me.
It should be whom the Lord loved, he correct it.
You guys are like, what are you watching on Netflix, Inc?
Yeah.
Well, and I'm just thinking, and what a blessing
that you have a divine discontent.
What a blessing that there is something
that is trying to turn you.
I mean, what if that were gone? I mean, we're so grateful that there is something that's
saying, you shouldn't be here.
Right. It reminds me of one of my students once. We have any conversation. I said, doesn't
that music that you listen to? It sounds kind of dark. And she said, yeah, I felt really
bad when I first listened to it, but I just kept listening and eventually that feeling went away. I don't think that's a good thing, right?
I think how important wisdom is treasure. So 1415, you seek it. You have more precious than
rubies. And this is interesting that in proverb something's really precious, it's more precious than
rubies. And so we'll actually get to a woman, right?
At the very end again, has wisdom is more precious than rubies.
The kind of the ideal companion, we'll get to that in 31, but try and
size is the importance of the acquisition of this.
And even say, look, the Lord used wisdom to create the earth, 19.
And so what you're getting here is you know wisdom is great things. And
what is it? I think 18 will be interesting. It's a tree of life. You come there and you get this
tree of life, which is it repeated about four other times to go there and to partake of that. You
lay hold on there and you're happy and blessed. She is a tree of life to them that lay hold upon her.
Yeah, that's pretty cool. That's definitely a Book of Mormon language.
Lay hold upon the iron rod, right?
It'll take you to the tree.
And it's funny because you do this, and how do you lay hold upon it when you keep on
the straight paths?
I think you kind of, you kind of just interplay between this and what you have in first
Nephi.
You stay on that, you press forward, and you don't let go.
Even when it talks about those who are working, they have crooked paths, they're perverting the course, no, you stay on the straight path,
the Lord direction straight path, and you get to that tree.
President Nelson gave us that advice recently. One of his five points, I think, was
get on the covenant path and stay there. Do you remember that?
Yeah. That sounds the same thing. The covenant path is the iron rod is the weight of the tree of life.
This is really helpful. So here is Alma coming out of
Emma Naiha waiting through tribulation anguish of soul because of the wickedness of the people in the city of Emma Naiha
While Bama was thus weighed down with sorrow and angel the Lord appeared unto him saying bless it art thou
Alma therefore lift up thy head and rejoice Thou hast great cause to rejoice.
And I kind of think right there, he could have said,
why?
You know, they didn't like me.
For Thou has been faithful in keeping the commandments
of God from the time which Thou received us
thy first message from him.
And then a whole another topic, how cool is this?
The angel says, behold, I am He that delivered it unto you.
Remember back in Milsiah 27 when I knocked it over, that was me, right? The angel saying, you are
doing so well. Lift up your head and rejoice. He's not talking about the action of the people.
He's saying, you did what you were asked. And those missionaries that had their mission
cut shorter for whatever, you have great cause to rejoice because you did what you were asked. And that is not from me, that's from an angel talking to Alma,
whose mission in Ammonaiha at least was not what he expected.
So I love that little story right there.
I would add, John, that we could do modified marriages as well,
that sometimes by no fall of your own, your marriage ends,
and you did what you were asked.
And we could say that about many
areas of life that things change.
Please join us for part two of this podcast.
you