Today's Scripture Reading (December 13, 2025): Proverbs 1
Solomon addresses this to his son and
says that these proverbs are meant to help the simple think through life's
issues. The wise can always add their thoughts, but this book is for the simple
and the young. And it is not something we like to think about, but here is the
truth: we are all simple-minded. More importantly, we all need to hear the
messages in this Book of Proverbs, even if we have to struggle and compare its
words with the rest of the Bible. One of the advantages of Proverbs is that the
book gives us a lot of short, pithy sayings that are easily understood.
Need proof that we need this advice to
the simple? Again, let's look at what Paul says about wisdom.
And so it was with me, brothers and sisters. When
I came to you, I did not come with eloquence or human wisdom as I
proclaimed to you the testimony about God. For I resolved
to know nothing while I was with you except Jesus Christ and him crucified. I came to you in weakness with great fear and trembling. My message and my preaching were not with wise and persuasive
words, but with a demonstration of the Spirit's power, so that your faith might not rest on human wisdom, but on God's
power (1 Corinthians 2:1-5).
I came to you simply, with a simple mind.
A story is told of a church that
had a wonderful stained-glass portrait of Jesus at the front of the sanctuary.
If you came into the church in the morning, looking toward the front, this
image of Jesus glowed as the sun shone through the pieces of colored glass. But
the platform was high, and the pastor was a reasonably large man, kind of like
me. So, if you wanted to see the glowing Jesus, you had to come into the church
when a service wasn't in session; on Sunday mornings, the image was hidden
behind the pastor as he delivered his morning message.
One Sunday, the pastor was away,
and in his place stood a much smaller man. And as he spoke, this beautiful
image of Jesus peeked out over his head.
Amongst the congregation listening
to the morning message was a little girl. And as she looked up from her play,
she noticed that something was different at the front of the church. Finally,
she figured out what it was and cautiously leaned over to whisper a question
into her mother's ear. "What happened to the man who usually stands there
so that we can't see Jesus?"
It is a challenge for all
Christians: how do we reveal Jesus with our lives? More importantly, how do we
refrain from hiding him? It was a question that Bob Hartman of Petra asked in
the early 1980s.
They don't need no more elevated
speeches
We're keeping Jesus just beyond their reaches.
Can't see the forest for all of the trees
They won't see Jesus till we fall on our knees
(Lift Him Up, Bob Hartman, 1983).
There seems to be no doubt that Paul
was well-trained in the art of making philosophical arguments. He had made
them, persuading many, when he was an enemy of the church. Paul knew how a
great debater could sway people from one side to the other. He also knew that
the best orator is not necessarily the one in a position of truth. As Paul
preached to the Corinthians, he wanted to leave that behind. His purpose was
not to come as a salesman, selling people on Jesus. He was a witness. He
understood that the "Jews demand signs and
Greeks look for wisdom" (1 Corinthians 1:22), but Paul was committed to
not giving his audience what they wanted. He wanted to be the messenger and not
the message. And the message he intended to preach was about Jesus. Paul would
do everything within his power to ensure he did not stand in the way of the
message. He intended to lift Jesus up and firmly believed that that was all
that was necessary.
Hartman agrees. In the chorus of his
1983 song, he writes.
Lift Him up, higher and higher
Lift Him up, set the world on fire
It doesn't take much theology
Just lift Him up so the world can see
Lift Him up, tell the gospel story
Lift Him up, let them see His glory
It doesn't take any Bible degree
Just lift Him up so the world can see (Lift Him
Up, Bob Hartman, 1983).
We don't need eloquence, and
sometimes, to preach Jesus, all any of us need is a willingness to get out of
the way. If the simple can understand, then everyone can understand.
Tomorrow's Scripture Reading:
Proverbs 2
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