Key Verse: “Rescue those who are unjustly sentenced
to die; save them as they stagger to their death.” (v.11)
Big Idea: Wisdom refuses to look away when life is on
the line.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rooftop garden was loud with wind.
Downtown traffic hummed five stories below us, and the late sun turned the glass towers into sheets of fire. I found Solomon already seated at the small iron table, linen shirt sleeves rolled up, silver-streaked hair tied back.
Silas and Elior stood near the railing, unusually quiet.
I wasn’t in a great mood. The news cycle had been brutal—war footage, court decisions, a debate about abortion that left my group chat in flames. I felt tired. Overwhelmed.
Solomon tapped the table lightly. “Today’s words,” he said, nodding toward Silas, “come from ‘The Wise.’ I gathered their sayings because they understood something about courage.”
Silas stepped forward. His voice was steady, but there was a tension in it.
“In this passage,” he began, “we warn against envying violent men, against partnering with evil. We remind you that wisdom builds a house, and understanding fills its rooms. We say that if you faint in the day of adversity, your strength is small.”
Elior leaned on the railing, eyes scanning the streets below. “And then,” he said quietly, “we say this: ‘Rescue those who are unjustly sentenced to die; save them as they stagger to their death.’”
The wind seemed to pause.
I shifted in my seat. “That’s… intense.”
“It is meant to be,” Elior replied.
Solomon finally opened his notebook and slid it toward me. A simple sketch filled the page: two figures. One bound, head down. The other standing a few feet away, hands in pockets.
“Most people imagine evil as something they would never do,” Solomon said gently. “But the proverb confronts something subtler—the sin of standing by.”
Silas nodded. “We wrote this in a world of corrupt courts and backroom deals. Innocent men condemned. The poor crushed because they lacked influence. The command is active: Rescue. Intervene. Step in.”
“Rescue in Proverbs 24:11 isn’t dramatic hero language. In Hebrew, the idea carries force, but it doesn’t require you to be a vigilante. It means intervene with intention when it comes to your attention that someone is being unfairly crushed.”
“And if we say, ‘We didn’t know’?” Elior added, quoting the next line. “The proverb answers that too. God weighs the heart. He knows.”
My stomach tightened. “So what does that look like now? I mean—we’re not exactly storming prisons.”
Elior turned to face me fully. “Sometimes we are.”
He let that hang, then continued. “It looks like advocating for the wrongly accused. Supporting organizations that fight human trafficking. Showing up when someone is being bullied, slandered, crushed.”
Silas’s voice softened. “And yes—it includes the unborn. Tiny image-bearers of God, scheduled quietly, clinically, for death by abortion. If they are unjustly sentenced, and they are, then this verse speaks for them too.”
The city noise rushed back into my ears.
I exhaled slowly. “That’s… pretty radical.”
“Truth often is,” Solomon said, not unkindly. “Remember Psalm 82: ‘Defend the weak and the fatherless; uphold the cause of the poor and the oppressed.’ The Creator has always leaned toward the vulnerable.”
Silas crouched, resting his forearms on his knees. “Rescuing doesn’t always mean shouting. Sometimes it means supporting a pregnancy resource center. Sometimes it means offering to babysit so a single mom can work. Sometimes it means walking with a scared teenager who feels trapped.”
Elior added, “Or voting. Or mentoring. Or opening your home. Or giving generously. Or simply refusing to joke about what destroys life.”
I felt resistance rise in me. “But what about the mother? Her fear? Her future?”
Solomon’s eyes softened. “Rescue includes her. Wisdom never chooses one life by discarding another. It asks, ‘How do we protect both?’”
The world seemed to slow again. A siren wailed somewhere far below.
“Strength,” Silas said quietly, “is not proven by how loudly you argue. It is proven by whether you step in when stepping in costs you something.”
Elior looked at me, searching. “If you faint in the day of adversity, your strength is small. That line wasn’t written to shame you. It was written to wake you.”
I swallowed. I’d been proud of staying “neutral.” Of not getting involved. Of scrolling past hard stories.
Solomon closed his notebook. “Wisdom does not merely avoid evil,” he said. “It actively protects life. The One who formed life in the womb sees every silent moment. And He will repay according to what we do with what we know.”
The wind picked up again, tugging at our clothes.
As we packed up, Silas and Elior lingered at the railing, then eventually slipped down the stairwell ahead of us. Their absence felt intentional—like they had handed me something heavy and trusted me to carry it.
I looked over the edge at the tiny figures crossing the street below.
Rescue.
Maybe wisdom isn’t just about building a good life. Maybe it’s about protecting someone else’s.
And maybe silence isn’t as neutral as I’ve told myself it is.
What? This passage calls us to actively defend and rescue those who are unjustly facing harm or death, refusing passive indifference.
So What? In a world of quiet injustices—from the unborn to the exploited to the falsely accused—wisdom requires courageous, compassionate intervention.
Now What? Identify one vulnerable person or cause this week and take one concrete step: give, volunteer, speak up, or offer practical support.
Key Verse: “For in the end [wine] bites like a
poisonous snake; it stings like a viper.” (v.32)
Big Idea: What starts as comfort can quietly become
captivity when we ignore the cost at the end of the story.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met in a dim bowling alley on the edge of town.
Not exactly where I expected to talk about wisdom.
The air smelled like fryer grease and spilled beer. Neon lights hummed overhead. Laughter burst from a lane behind us, then dissolved into the crash of pins. It felt like Friday night trying too hard.
Maya had texted earlier—first week at her new job, swamped but hopeful. I smiled at that. She was finally free of her old boss. Elior, apparently, was out of town on business. And Solomon? Silas told me Solomon was meeting with someone privately—“one of those conversations that takes all day,” he’d said.
So it was just me and Silas today.
He didn’t carry Solomon’s leather notebook, but he had the same steady eyes. He slid into the booth across from me, hands wrapped around a sweating glass of soda water.
“Today,” he said, nodding toward the bar, “we’re sitting in the kind of real-life situation that we had in mind when we wrote our ‘wise sayings.’”
A woman at the counter laughed too loudly. A man beside her swayed slightly as he reached for another drink.
Silas opened his Bible app and read, “Don’t gaze at the wine, seeing how red it is,
how it sparkles in the cup, how smoothly it goes down. For in the end it bites like a poisonous snake; it stings like a viper.”
He let the word “end” hang there.
“We wrote this because we’d seen it so many times,” Silas whispered.
“This section starts differently than you expect. It talks about parents rejoicing in wise children. Pride. Joy. Legacy. Then it shifts to this warning about alcohol. Why?”
I shrugged. “Seems random.”
“It’s not,” he said gently. “A parent’s greatest joy is a child who walks wisely. One of the fastest ways to derail that walk is self-destruction disguised as celebration.”
Behind him, a guy in his thirties threw a strike and lifted both arms like he’d done something bigger than knocking down ten pins. His friends cheered. A waitress brought over a pitcher.
Silas leaned in. “We aren’t condemning wine itself. We’re exposing what happens when you stare at it too long. ‘Don’t gaze at the wine, seeing how red it is, how it sparkles in the cup, how smoothly it goes down.’”
He tapped the table.
“The Hebrew word there for ‘gaze’ carries the idea of fixation. Obsession. You’re not just sipping. You’re studying it. Wanting it. Thinking about it often.”
I swallowed. “So this is about addiction?”
“Partly. But it’s bigger. It’s about anything that promises relief and ends up owning you. Having power over you. As the Apostle Paul would later write, ‘I will not be brought under the power of anything.’” (1 Corinthians 6:12)
The bowling alley seemed to slow. The clatter softened. The laughter blurred.
Silas’s voice steadied. “The verse says, ‘You will see strange things, and you will say crazy things… You will stagger like a sailor tossed at sea.’ Then the line that chills me: ‘When will I wake up so I can look for another drink?’”
He looked at me carefully. Uncanny, like Solomon sometimes did.
“Notice the cycle. It bites. It stings. It wounds. And still—you want more. Very sad.”
I shifted in my seat. “But drinking’s normal. Everyone does it. It helps take the edge off.”
Silas nodded. “That might be the beginning of someone’s story. Today’s point is the end of that story.”
The man at the counter fumbled his wallet and dropped it. He laughed, but his eyes looked tired. Not happy—tired.
“In the end,” Silas repeated softly, “it bites like a snake.”
“Why a snake?” I asked.
“Because snakes don’t announce their venom. The bite can feel small at first. Then it spreads.”
He paused. “This isn’t just about alcohol, Ethan. It’s about what you run to when you’re stressed. Lonely. Angry. Bored. The question is simple: does it heal you—or hollow you? Does it free you—or enslave you?”
I stared at the lanes. My week had been brutal. I’d already told myself I deserved something to take the edge off tonight.
Silas continued, “One secret of wisdom is learning to project forward. Ask: Where does this path lead if I keep walking it? Does it make me someone my future self will thank? Someone my friends and family will rejoice over?—or someone others would grieve?”
He let the noise of the alley fill the space.
I exhaled slowly.
“So what do I do?” I asked.
“Start by being honest about your ‘sparkling cup.’ Name it. Then build rhythms that actually restore you instead of sedate you. The Creator designed you for clarity, not chemical escape.”
The game behind us ended. The cheering died down. A new group took their place.
Silas stood. “Pleasure isn’t the enemy. Poison is.”
As I walked to my car, the neon glow fading behind me, I realized how often I’d confused the two.
What? Proverbs 23 warns that what looks pleasurable at first can become destructive when we fixate on it and ignore its long-term consequences.
So What? In a culture that normalizes escape, wisdom asks us to consider where our coping habits are actually leading us.
Now What? Identify one habit you use to “take the edge off” and honestly ask: If I continue this for five years, who will I become?
Key Verse: “Get the truth and never sell it; also get
wisdom, discipline, and good judgment.” (v.23)
Big Idea: Truth will cost you—but selling it will
cost you far more.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met in the city museum today.
Sunlight streamed through the vaulted glass ceiling, warming the marble floors and casting long geometric shadows across exhibits of ancient trade routes. Bronze coins. Clay tablets. Scales for weighing silver. Every artifact whispered the same story: everything has a price.
Solomon stood near a display of weathered contracts etched into stone. His silver-streaked hair was tied back, linen shirt loose at the collar, handmade boots silent against the floor. The faint scent of cedar followed him as he stepped aside.
“This section,” he said, gesturing lightly, “comes from what I called the ‘Sayings of the Wise.’ Seasoned voices. Not just mine.” He folded his arms and grew still. “Let them speak.”
Silas began, “Proverbs 23:12–23 is about formation. Instruction. Correction. Resisting envy. Refusing shortcuts. It warns against numbing yourself with indulgence or chasing the glitter of easy gain.”
Elior nodded. “It’s about trajectory. The slow shaping of a life.”
Maya stood beside me, quiet but attentive. Since confronting her boss about falsifying records—and HR deciding the situation wasn’t sustainable—she’d carried both resolve and uncertainty in her eyes.
Silas continued, “The passage urges us not to envy sinners. Not to crave their quick rewards. Not to abandon discipline when it feels restrictive.”
He paused, then read slowly, clearly:
“Get the truth and never sell it; also get wisdom, discipline, and good judgment.”
The museum seemed to hush around us.
Elior spoke softly. “The word ‘get’ implies acquisition at cost. Purchase. Invest deeply. Truth isn’t stumbled upon—it’s pursued.”
“And ‘never sell it,’” Silas added, “means don’t put it back on the shelf when a better offer comes along.”
I stared at the ancient scales behind the glass. “What do people usually sell it for?”
Elior glanced at her, then at me. “Sometimes we sell truth in small installments. We stay silent when we should speak. We blur a line. We call compromise ‘strategy.’”
Solomon leaned forward slightly, voice calm but carrying weight. “When Proverbs speak of wisdom, it describes alignment with the Creator’s design. Truth is not merely information. It is reality as He shaped it.”
He tapped the glass once. “And reality does not bend for long. You can distort the truth for a season… but you can’t permanently rewrite how the world actually works.”
The world seemed to slow—the shuffle of tourists fading, footsteps muffled.
Maya cleared her throat. “HR is transferring me,” she said. “Another office. Out of town. They said staying wasn’t tenable.”
The words hung between us.
“Is that what you want?” I asked.
She gave a small, steady smile. “It’s what integrity requires.”
Silas nodded with quiet approval.
Elior said gently, “Sometimes the price of truth is relocation. Sometimes it’s reputation. Sometimes it’s comfort. But the return is your soul intact.”
Solomon remained mostly silent, watching her with an expression that held both gravity and pride.
“I kept thinking about this line,” Maya continued. “‘Never sell it.’ I realized I was being offered safety in exchange for silence. I couldn’t do it.”
Her voice didn’t tremble now.
We stood there a moment longer, surrounded by artifacts of ancient bargains.
Then she hugged me. Holding back a tear, she said, “Goodbye, Ethan. Take care of yourself.”
And just like that, she walked toward the museum exit, sunlight spilling over her as the doors opened. The absence was immediate. Real.
Silas broke the quiet. “You will face offers this week.”
Elior finished, “They won’t look like bribes. They’ll look like relief.”
Solomon finally spoke again, voice low and clear. “Pay whatever it costs to obtain wisdom. But never auction off your integrity for temporary peace.”
As I stepped outside into the warm afternoon, I realized how often I negotiate with myself. How easily I justify small compromises.
Everything has a price.
The question is whether I’m willing to protect what should never be sold.
What? Proverbs 23:12–23 calls us to pursue truth, wisdom, discipline, and good judgment—and to refuse to trade them away for temporary gain.
So What? In modern life, integrity often costs comfort or opportunity. But selling truth costs something far deeper: your character and future.
Now What? Identify one situation where you’ve been tempted to compromise. Decide today that your integrity is not for sale.
Key Verse: “Don’t wear yourself out trying to get
rich. Be wise enough to know when to quit.” (v.4)
Big Idea: The pursuit of “more” can quietly master
you—wisdom knows where enough is.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The waterfront was alive today—sunlight skimming across the harbor like shattered glass, gulls slicing the air, the briny smell of salt water drifting from the marina. Boats rocked lazily against their slips, expensive ones mostly. The kind with polished chrome railings and names etched in gold lettering: "Second Wind." "No Regrets." "Sun Seeker." "Knot a Care."
Maya stood beside me, sunglasses pushed into her curls, quiet but attentive.
Silas and Elior leaned against the wooden railing, sleeves rolled up, wind tugging at their shirts. A few yards away, Solomon sat on a bench beneath a shade tree. Silver-streaked hair tied back. He had his weathered leather notebook open on his lap but wasn’t writing. Just listening. The faint scent of cedar drifted our way when the breeze shifted.
“We’re in the section,” Silas began, tapping the railing like Solomon sometimes taps a table, “that people call the ‘Sayings of the Wise.’ Not just Solomon’s voice now—though he gathered us. These are collected observations, street-level wisdom.”
Elior nodded toward the yachts. “Look at this place. This setting embodies the temptations Proverbs 23 is warning about.”
He quoted it slowly. “‘When you sit down with a ruler, consider carefully what is before you… Don’t desire all the delicacies, for he might be trying to trick you.’” He glanced at me. “It’s about appetite. And not just for food.”
Maya crossed her arms. “So… ambition is bad?”
Silas smiled gently. “No. But unchecked appetite is dangerous.”
Elior picked up the key verse, his voice steady over the lap of water against dock posts. “It says, ‘Don’t wear yourself out trying to get rich. Be wise enough to know when to quit.’”
The words hung in the air.
A man in a fitted polo walked past us talking loudly into his phone. “No, push it through. I don’t care what it costs.” He paced, jaw tight, eyes flicking toward one of the larger yachts like it was a finish line. When he ended the call, he stayed there staring at it, not smiling.
Silas watched him, then lowered his voice. “The Hebrew behind ‘wear yourself out’ carries the idea of exhausting your soul. Grinding yourself down.”
I felt that one. I’d been calculating things at 2 a.m. again—investments, side projects, how to “get ahead.” I call it planning. But if I’m honest, it feels like chasing.
Elior continued, “The passage goes on—‘Riches disappear in the blink of an eye; wealth sprouts wings and flies away like an eagle.’” He motioned to the sky as a gull swooped overhead. “It’s not saying money is evil. It’s saying it’s unstable. You can’t build your identity on something with feathers.”
Maya shifted beside me. “But what’s the alternative? Just… settle?”
Solomon finally spoke, his voice calm, almost carried on the wind. “It’s not about settling.” He leaned forward slightly, notebook sliding shut. “It’s about knowing when enough is enough.”
The world seemed to slow for a second—the creak of dock ropes, the rhythm of water, even the distant hum of engines fading into the background.
“I’ve seen palaces,” he continued quietly. “I’ve tasted wealth most people only imagine. And I’ve watched it slip through fingers like sand. The appetite always grows. Unless you decide where it stops.”
He went silent again.
Elior picked up the thread. “Verses 10 and 11 talk about not exploiting the vulnerable—moving boundary markers, taking from the fatherless. Why? Because the drive for more doesn’t stay internal. It spills onto others.”
Silas added, “If ‘more’ is your master, people become stepping stones.”
That stung.
The businessman by the yacht finally walked away, shoulders slumped. The boat stayed where it was, gleaming, indifferent.
Maya exhaled slowly. “So wisdom is knowing your limit.”
Solomon gave the slightest nod, then said, “Overcoming the pull toward ‘more’ starts by recognizing what it’s really about—often security, significance, or fear rather than money itself.”
Silas added, “Define what ‘enough’ looks like before comparison shifts the goalposts, practice gratitude to recalibrate your heart, and build generosity into your life to loosen accumulation’s grip.”
He went on, “True wisdom is putting limits on inputs that fuel comparison, create rhythms of stopping, and anchor your identity somewhere deeper than net worth—because when your worth is secure, ambition becomes healthy and ‘more’ loses its control.”
As we left the marina, I felt exposed. Not because I’m rich. I’m not. But because I’m restless. Always calculating the next upgrade—career, house, reputation. I call it motivation. But maybe sometimes it’s fear. Fear of not mattering. Fear of not having enough.
The harbor water kept moving whether anyone owned a yacht or not.
And maybe that was the point.
What? Proverbs 23:1–11 warns against exhausting yourself chasing wealth and appetites that never satisfy, reminding us that riches are unstable and can lead to exploiting others.
So What? In a culture obsessed with hustle and accumulation, wisdom means recognizing when ambition turns into soul-weariness and choosing contentment over endless striving.
Now What? Identify one area where you’re chasing “more” out of fear, and set a clear, healthy boundary this week—define what “enough” looks like for you.
Key Verse: “For it is good to keep these sayings in
your heart and always ready on your lips.” (v.18)
Big Idea: Wisdom isn’t decorative—it’s survival gear
for real life.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rooftop garden was loud with bees and distant traffic, sunlight flashing off downtown glass. No rain today. Just heat rising off brick and the sharp scent of rosemary when the wind moved.
Maya was already there, elbows on the railing, jaw tight. I could tell. The situation with her boss hadn’t cooled. If anything, it had calcified.
Solomon arrived with two men I’d never seen before. Older. Strong. One was broad, solid, sun-browned arms with faint scars, faded indigo work shirt, worn jeans and scuffed boots. The other, leaner, taller, charcoal jacket over white shirt, tailored trousers, polished brown shoes, salt-and-pepper hair, wire-frame glasses, thoughtful, precise—like a careful craftsman.
“Today,” Solomon said, “I step back.”
He gestured to the two men.
“These are friends of mine, Silas and Elior. You could call them ‘The Wise.’ In this section”—he slid his weathered leather notebook forward—“I gathered their sayings. Field notes. Observations forged in bruises.”
Silas, broad-shouldered, eyes steady, leaned forward. “Proverbs 22:17–21 is the doorway,” he said. “It’s an invitation. ‘Listen to the words of the wise; apply your heart to my instruction.’ This isn’t trivia. It’s training.”
Elior smiled gently at Maya. “And verse 18 is the hinge, he said: ‘For it is good to keep these sayings in your heart and always ready on your lips.’”
The world seemed to slow for a second. A bee hovered midair. A siren faded.
“Why the heart and the lips?” I asked.
Silas answered. “Because what you store internally determines what you say—and what you say shapes what you do. In Hebrew thinking, the ‘heart’ is your control center. Your will. Your desires. The very center of your identity.”
Solomon nodded but stayed quiet, hands folded.
Maya exhaled. “So this is about memorizing slogans?”
Elior chuckled. “No. It’s about rehearsing reality. Look at the sayings that follow.”
He ticked them off on his fingers.
“Don’t exploit the poor because they’re poor. Don’t make friends with hot-tempered people. Don’t move ancient boundary markers. Don’t wear yourself out trying to get rich. Don’t guarantee loans for people you barely know. And if you’re skilled? You’ll stand before kings.”
“That’s… random,” I said.
“It’s comprehensive,” he corrected. “Money. Anger. Integrity. Work. Justice. Influence. These are the fault lines of a complicated world.”
Maya stared at the skyline. “What about when your boss falsifies records and threatens you?”
Silence.
Then Solomon leaned in, finally speaking. “One of the sayings warns against exploiting the vulnerable because the Lord defends them. When power is abused, heaven notices.”
He looked at Maya with that unsettling, precise compassion. “Keeping these sayings in your heart means you don’t let fear rewrite your values.”
Silas added, “And being careful about partnerships—financial or relational—protects your future. Pressure makes people sign things they shouldn’t. Say things they regret.”
I felt that. The credit card balance. The half-formed plan to chase a quick investment tip.
“Why the emphasis on speaking it?” I asked. “Always ready on your lips?”
Elior answered softly. “Because in the moment of temptation, you don’t rise to your ideals. You fall to your rehearsals. If wisdom is already in your mouth, it interrupts foolishness.”
Maya nodded slowly. “So it’s like a script for crisis.”
“Exactly,” he said. “A field manual.”
Solomon finally opened his notebook. Inside were rough sketches—boundary stones, a scale balancing justice, a hand gripping a coin too tightly until it cracked.
“I wrote many proverbs,” he said quietly. “But I also honored these men by preserving theirs. Even I needed reminders. Wisdom is communal. Borrowed. Shared. Reinforced.”
The wind shifted. Someone laughed below us. Life went on.
Solomon’s eyes warmed. “That’s why you need to let these sayings sink down deeply into your heart where they will become part of who you are.”
As we packed up, Silas and Elior shook our hands and left without ceremony. Their absence felt noticeable—like scaffolding removed after a structure stands.
Solomon lingered beside me.
“Ethan,” he said, tapping the table lightly, “complicated world. Simple anchors. Keep them close.”
I watched Maya head toward the stairs, shoulders still tense—but steadier.
Maybe wisdom isn’t about having every answer. Maybe it’s about carrying the right ones before the questions come.
What? Proverbs 22:17–29 gathers practical sayings that serve as a field manual for navigating money, power, anger, integrity, and influence. Wisdom must be stored internally and spoken readily.
So What? In moments of pressure, fear, or temptation, you act on what you’ve rehearsed. If wisdom isn’t already in your heart and on your lips, something else will take its place.
Now What? Choose one saying from this passage and write it somewhere visible today. Read it out loud each morning this week until it becomes part of your reflex.
Key Verse: “Throw out the mocker, and fighting goes,
too. Quarrels and insults will disappear.” (v.10)
Big Idea: Some conflicts don’t end with better
communication—they end with removing the corrosive voice that fuels them.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met at the public library this time.
Tall glass windows poured in late-morning sun, dust floating like slow-falling ash in the light. The smell of paper and polished wood wrapped around us. Quiet, but not fragile—more like the kind of quiet that protects truth.
Maya sat at one of the long oak tables, fingers laced tightly together. Her coffee sat untouched.
Solomon approached with his weathered leather notebook tucked beneath his arm. He looked at her—not with curiosity, but with knowing.
“Tell us,” he said gently.
Maya exhaled through her nose. “After I confronted him about the falsified numbers… he didn’t yell. He didn’t joke.” Her jaw tightened. “He smiled.”
A chill slid through me.
“He said things like, ‘You’re still new here. It would be unfortunate if your future got complicated.’ He mentioned performance reviews. Promotion cycles. Loyalty.”
She swallowed. “Nothing explicit. Just enough.”
The air in the library felt heavier.
“I reported it,” she continued. “Both the records and the threats. HR is investigating. He’s been ‘placed on leave.’”
Solomon pulled out a chair and sat slowly. For a moment he just rested his hands on the notebook.
“In this passage,” he began, voice low but clear, “I move through warnings about injustice. I speak of exploiting the poor. Of bending power to crush the vulnerable. Of how the borrower becomes slave to the lender. I am describing systems where power intimidates integrity.”
He looked directly at Maya.
“And I begin with this: ‘Throw out the mocker, and fighting goes, too. Quarrels and insults will disappear.’”
Maya frowned slightly. “He’s not a mocker.”
Solomon nodded. “Not in the shallow sense. But understand this—the mocker is the one who scorns truth and correction. He ridicules accountability. He weaponizes pride.”
He tapped the table lightly.
“When someone falsifies records and then veils threats to protect themselves, they are scorning both truth and justice. And their presence guarantees turmoil.”
I felt the weight of that.
“So throwing him out…” I began carefully. “That’s not revenge?”
“No,” Solomon said. “It is protection.”
He opened his notebook and turned it toward us. A simple sketch: a scale tipped sharply to one side. On the heavy side he had written “Power.” On the lighter side: “Truth.”
“When power outweighs truth,” he said, “fear fills the room. But when truth is restored, peace returns.”
Maya stared at the drawing. “I was afraid,” she admitted. “Still am. What if this ruins my career?”
Solomon’s eyes softened, but his voice carried steel.
“In verse 16, I warn that those who oppress the poor to enrich themselves will end in poverty. Corruption carries a countdown clock. It may tick quietly—but it ticks.”
The world seemed to narrow around his words.
“God sees intimidation,” he added. “He does not shrug at it. Throughout human history, He stands against those who use power to crush the upright. Integrity may look vulnerable in the moment—but it is anchored to something stronger than a quarterly review.”
Maya’s breathing slowed.
“I kept wondering if I should’ve just stayed quiet,” she said. “It would’ve been so much easier.”
“And the numbers?” Solomon asked.
“They would’ve stayed false.”
“And your soul?” he asked gently.
She didn’t answer. She didn’t need to.
The silence between us wasn’t empty—it was clarifying.
“Peace,” Solomon continued, “does not come by accommodating corruption. It comes by removing its influence. Sometimes that removal happens through reporting. Sometimes through legal consequence. Sometimes through exposure.”
He closed the notebook softly.
“You did not throw a man away. You threw deceit into the light.”
The tension in my chest shifted. I realized how often I redefine peace as “avoiding fallout.”
Maya finally picked up her coffee. “It’s strange,” she said quietly. “I’m scared. But I also feel… clean.”
Solomon smiled, just slightly.
“That is what integrity feels like.”
As we stood to leave, he added, almost casually, “Tomorrow we begin a new section. I did not compose those sayings alone. I may bring a friend or two—the Wise have voices you need to hear.”
Maya glanced at me. “After this week? I’ll take all the wisdom I can get.”
We stepped back into the sunlight.
And for the first time since she uncovered the falsified records, her shoulders weren’t carrying the whole weight alone.
What? Proverbs 22:10–16 teaches that mocking, injustice, and intimidation thrive when left unchecked, but peace returns when corrupt influence is removed and truth is upheld.
So What? Integrity often invites pressure—but silence enables harm. Confronting corruption protects more than your job; it protects your soul and others around you.
Now What? Where are you tempted to stay quiet to avoid fallout? Take one concrete step toward honesty—even if it costs you comfort.
Key Verse: “A prudent person foresees danger and
takes precautions. The simpleton goes blindly on and suffers the consequences.”
(v.3)
Big Idea: Wisdom doesn’t just react to trouble—it
recognizes it early and chooses courage over comfort.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The waterfront was bright today. No rain. No gray skies. The sun scattered diamonds across the water, and sailboats leaned into the wind like they trusted it.
I didn’t.
Maya had finally done it.
She gathered the documentation—emails, timestamps, expense records. She confronted her boss discreetly, door closed. Calm voice. Professional tone.
His response?
Controlled. Tight smile.
“Be careful. People who make accusations like this often find their careers… complicated. I’d hate for that to happen to you.”
Not loud. Not explosive.
Just… careful.
The threat wasn’t in the words. It was in the air afterward.
Maya wasn’t at the waterfront today because she needed space to steady herself after the confrontation.
I found Solomon seated on a weathered bench near the marina, sleeves rolled, linen shirt catching the breeze. His silver-streaked hair was tied back, boots planted firmly on the concrete. He smelled faintly of cedar and saltwater. His leather notebook rested beside him.
“You look like someone who just saw the weather shift,” he said gently.
I sat down. “It’s happening. Maya stepped forward. And now it’s not just anxiety in her head—it’s pressure from him.”
Solomon nodded slowly. “In this passage,” he said, tapping the notebook once, “I speak about reputation, generosity, humility—and discernment. Wisdom isn’t naïve. It knows that light exposes things. And exposed things push back.”
He opened the notebook and sketched two small stick figures walking toward a cliff. One stopped. One didn’t.
“I wrote,” he said, looking up at me, “‘A prudent person foresees danger and takes precautions. The simpleton goes blindly on and suffers the consequences.’”
The world around us seemed to slow—the gulls quieter, the slap of ropes against masts softer.
“Prudent,” he continued, “means shrewd in the right way. Not paranoid. Not fearful. Aware. The Hebrew word carries the idea of discernment—seeing what others dismiss.”
I frowned. “So… are you saying Maya should’ve stayed quiet?”
He leaned in. “No. I’m saying she is using wisdom and prudence to protect herself from the future consequences of being complicit in his wrongdoing. Silence without wisdom becomes complicity.”
That hit.
He gestured toward the boats. “See how they adjust their sails? Sailors don’t curse the wind. They account for it.”
“So what does that look like?” I asked. “Because right now it feels like she stepped into danger.”
“She did,” Solomon said calmly. “But not blindly. She gathered documentation. She spoke discreetly. That is prudence. The simpleton barges in fueled by outrage. The prudent prepare.”
I rubbed my hands together. “But he threatened her.”
“Yes.” Solomon’s voice lowered. “And now the tension shifts. Internal fear becomes external pressure. This is where many fold.”
He closed the notebook gently.
“Foreseeing danger doesn’t always mean avoiding action. Sometimes it means preparing for the backlash.”
He studied me for a moment, eyes unnervingly perceptive. “You’re afraid this will cost her.”
“Yeah.”
“It might,” he said plainly. “Wisdom does not promise ease. It promises clarity.”
A jet ski roared past. The wake rocked the boats.
“The unwise,” Solomon continued, “keep walking because they refuse to imagine consequences. They say, ‘It’ll be fine.’ Or worse, ‘It won’t happen to me.’ But the prudent ask, ‘If this escalates, what next?’ They build support. They document. They pray. They seek counsel.”
He paused.
“And they remember that the Lord sees.”
There it was again—that gentle reminder of God not as a concept, but as a Presence. As a Person.
“God isn’t surprised by power plays,” Solomon said quietly. “He is not intimidated by controlled threats spoken behind closed doors. The fear of the Lord”—he met my eyes—“that deep awareness of His reality—is what steadies a person when human authority tries to intimidate.”
I swallowed.
“So prudence isn’t cowardice,” I said slowly.
“No. It is courage with eyes open.”
He stood, brushing dust from his boots. “Tell Maya to widen her circle. Trusted counsel. HR policy. Legal awareness if needed. Light grows stronger when it is not alone.”
As we began to walk, I realized something.
Yesterday the anxiety lived inside her.
Today the pressure lives outside her.
But somehow, she feels steadier.
Because she’s not blind anymore.
And maybe neither am I.
What? Proverbs 22 teaches that wisdom values character, generosity, humility—and foresight. The prudent person sees danger early and prepares rather than pretending it isn’t there.
So What? In real life, courage without preparation can wreck you. But ignoring warning signs is worse. Wisdom means facing hard things with clear eyes and steady faith.
Now What? Identify one area where you sense potential trouble—at work, in a relationship, in your habits—and take one concrete precaution this week instead of hoping it resolves itself.