Key Verse: “If your enemies are hungry, give them
food to eat. If they are thirsty, give them water to drink.” (v.21)
Big Idea: The most powerful way to defeat an enemy is
not revenge—but unexpected kindness.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The gym smelled like rubber mats and metal.
Someone dropped a barbell across the room and the clang echoed through the weight area. A couple of guys argued near the squat rack while the TVs overhead played muted sports highlights.
I wiped sweat from my forehead and spotted Solomon sitting on a bench near the stretching area, calm as a lake in the eye of a storm. Linen shirt sleeves rolled, silver-streaked hair tied back. His leather notebook rested beside him.
And next to him stood Azariah.
Azariah looked older than I remembered from a few days ago—deep lines around the eyes, the quiet presence of someone used to standing near kings without needing attention.
Solomon tapped the bench.
“Sit, Ethan.”
I dropped down, still breathing hard.
Solomon nodded toward the room. “Conflict everywhere. Competition. Pride. Wounded egos.” He smiled faintly. “Which makes today’s proverb especially useful.”
Azariah folded his hands.
“These,” he said gently, “are among the writings we recovered when King Hezekiah asked us to gather Solomon’s remaining proverbs.”
Solomon opened his notebook and slid it toward me. A simple diagram filled the page: two arrows.
One arrow pointed back. The other pointed forward.
“Most people,” Solomon said, “believe conflict moves in only one direction.”
He tapped the backward arrow. “Strike for strike. Insult for insult.”
Then he tapped the forward arrow. “But wisdom introduces a different move.”
He leaned forward slightly and quoted:
“If your enemies are hungry, give them food to eat. If they are thirsty, give them water to drink.”
I blinked.
“Wait! What ?! You’re telling me to help someone who hates me?”
“Precisely,” Solomon said.
I laughed under my breath. “That sounds like a great way to get taken advantage of.”
A guy across the gym slammed weights down again, muttering something angry.
Solomon nodded toward him.
“Watch.” The man’s workout partner walked away after a heated exchange. The angry guy sat there alone, staring at the floor.
Solomon lowered his voice.
“Hatred thrives on fuel. Anger expects retaliation.”
Azariah stepped in gently.
“When Solomon wrote these words,” he said, “he was confronting the ancient instinct for revenge. Every tribe, every nation believed honor required it.”
He paused.
“But Solomon saw something deeper.” Azariah added softly, “Sometimes the strongest move is refusing to return what was given to you.”
Solomon tapped the notebook again and quoted the next line. “You will heap burning coals of shame on their heads, and the Lord will reward you.” (v.22)
I frowned. “That part sounds so… violent.”
Azariah smiled slightly.
“A common misunderstanding.”
He crouched and drew a small circle on the notebook page.
“In our culture, fire was life—warmth, cooking, survival. If someone’s fire went out, they sometimes carried hot coals home in a clay pot balanced on their head.”
I stared at the drawing.
“So ‘heaping coals on their head’…”
“…means blessing them by restoring their fire,” Solomon finished.
“Exactly,” Azariah said. “Your kindness gives them the heat they lost.”
The gym suddenly felt quieter. Solomon leaned back. “Unexpected kindness does something strange to the human heart,” he said. “It confronts evil without becoming evil.”
I crossed my arms. “But what if they stay an enemy?”
Solomon shrugged lightly. “Sometimes they will, but you can’t control that.” Then he added, more serious now: “But you will not become one.”
“Centuries later, Jesus would take this same idea even further—telling His followers not only to feed their enemies, but to actually love them and pray for them.”
The words sat heavy.
I exhaled slowly. Images flashed through my mind—arguments, grudges, people I still quietly resented.
Across the gym, the angry guy stood up. His former partner walked back over and handed him a bottle of water. They didn’t speak. But the tension broke.
Solomon noticed. “See?” he said softly. The moment seemed to slow, like the world paused long enough to underline the point.
He closed the notebook. “Revenge spreads fire,” he said, “Kindness redirects it.”
Then he leaned back, letting the clatter of the gym fade around us. “Ethan,” he said, “people often assume personality is permanent… They say, ‘That’s just how I am.’”
I shifted uncomfortably.
“But Scripture consistently shows something different,” he continued, voice steady. “Even someone with a long habit of anger can grow into a person known for calm strength.”
He tapped the bench once. “It’s not instant. It’s practiced wisdom… and, most importantly, it’s God’s work inside a person over time.”
Azariah nodded quietly beside him.
“Brick by brick,” he added.
I sat there staring at the rubber floor.
Trying to imagine what my life would look like if I actually lived that way.
What? Proverbs 25:21–28 teaches that responding to enemies with kindness, not revenge, reflects wisdom and requires strong self-control.
So What? Kindness disrupts cycles of anger and protects your own heart from becoming hardened by resentment.
Now What? Think of one person who has wronged you—and take one small step of unexpected kindness toward them this week.
Key Verse: “Singing cheerful songs to a person with a
heavy heart is like taking someone’s coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar in
a wound.” (v.20)
Big Idea: Wisdom knows that comfort must match the
season of a person’s heart.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rain had just stopped when I reached the hospital courtyard.
Everything smelled like wet concrete and antiseptic drifting through the open doors. A few families sat scattered on metal benches, speaking quietly or staring into nothing. The fountain in the middle splashed steadily, the only sound that seemed confident about what it was doing.
Solomon stood near the edge of the fountain, silver-streaked hair tied back, linen shirt sleeves rolled. His handmade boots were damp from the pavement.
Beside him stood Azariah—the same careful-eyed scribe I’d met a day earlier. He held a slim scroll and nodded when he saw me.
“Ah, Ethan,” Solomon said warmly. “You chose a fitting place for today.”
“I didn’t choose it,” I said. “You texted me the location.”
Solomon smiled faintly. “Even better.”
We sat on a bench facing the fountain.
Azariah unrolled the scroll slightly. “These are among the sayings we preserved during King Hezekiah’s reign,” he said. “Teachings Solomon wrote but never released.”
Solomon leaned forward, elbows on his knees.
“Today’s passage,” he said, “Speaks about how words land on people. A wise rebuke to a listening ear is like gold jewelry—precious, fitting. A faithful messenger refreshes like snow during harvest.”
He gestured around the courtyard.
“But then I address something more delicate.”
A nurse pushed through the hospital doors. Behind her walked a young man and woman. The woman’s face was blotchy from crying. The man tried to lighten the mood.
“Hey,” he said, forcing a laugh. “Could be worse, right? At least the cafeteria food isn’t lethal.”
She didn’t laugh. She just stared at the ground. The man kept talking. “You’ve always been strong. You’ll bounce back. Everything happens for a reason.”
Solomon watched quietly.
Then he turned to me and said gently, “Singing cheerful songs to a person with a heavy heart is like taking someone’s coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar in a wound.”
The courtyard seemed to quiet for a moment.
“That guy isn’t trying to hurt her,” I said.
“No,” Solomon said softly. “He’s trying to fix the pain with noise.”
Azariah folded his hands. “When we compiled these sayings,” he added, “this one stood out to me. It speaks not of cruelty—but of blindness.”
Solomon nodded.
“That man seems tone-deaf to the season of her soul.”
I watched the couple sit across the courtyard. The woman leaned forward, elbows on her knees. The man kept talking, filling the air with encouragement that seemed to float right past her.
“I’ve done that,” I admitted.
Solomon glanced at me knowingly.
“You want the pain to end,” he said. “So you rush to joy. But wisdom waits.”
He picked up a small leaf from the wet pavement and rolled it between his fingers.
“Comfort is like medicine. The wrong dose—even if it’s good medicine—can sting.”
“So what should he do instead?” I asked.
Solomon leaned back against the bench.
“First,” he said, “see the wound.”
“Second, sit in the cold with them.”
Azariah added quietly, “Our Scriptures say something similar elsewhere: ‘Weep with those who weep.’”
Solomon nodded. “Yes. That line was written many centuries after mine, but it carries the same wisdom.”
I watched the couple again.
The man had finally stopped talking. He simply put his hand on her back.
For the first time, she leaned into him.
“There,” Solomon said quietly. “Now comfort has the right shape.”
I let that sit for a moment.
“I guess I always thought positivity helped people,” I said.
“It sometimes does,” Solomon said. “But timing matters. Even joy must arrive in season.”
He tapped the bench lightly with two fingers.
“God Himself understands this. The Creator does not rush grief. He sits with it. That is why His comfort heals rather than stings.”
The courtyard breeze picked up, carrying the smell of rain again.
Solomon stood and looked back toward the hospital doors.
“Remember this, Ethan,” he said.
“Some hearts need laughter. Others need quiet. And wisdom,” he added softly, “knows the difference.”
As I walked away, I kept thinking about all the times I’d tried to fix someone’s pain with optimism instead of presence.
Maybe the wiser thing… is sometimes just to sit in the cold with them.
What? Words meant to encourage can wound when they ignore the emotional season someone is in. Wisdom matches comfort to the moment.
So What? Many people try to fix grief with quick positivity, but real compassion begins with understanding and presence.
Now What? The next time someone shares pain, resist the urge to fix it—listen first, sit with them, and let empathy lead your response.
Key Verse: “It is God’s privilege to conceal things
and the king’s privilege to discover them.” (v.2)
Big Idea: God hides depth within His world, and wise
leaders humbly search it out.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met in the city archive building downtown — marble floors, tall windows, dust motes floating like slow-falling snow in late-afternoon light. The air smelled like paper and polish. It felt like a place where forgotten things waited to be remembered.
Solomon stood near a long oak table, linen shirt crisp, silver-streaked hair tied back. His leather notebook rested under his palm. But he wasn’t alone.
Beside him stood a man I hadn’t seen before. Slightly younger than Solomon, posture straight, beard trimmed close. His robe was simple but dignified, and he carried a bundle of rolled parchments tied with cord.
“Ethan,” Solomon said, tapping the table lightly, “meet Azariah. He served several centuries ago under King Hezekiah.”
Azariah inclined his head. “One of many royal advisers,” he said. His voice was calm, deliberate. “We were tasked with searching the royal archives for additional proverbs spoken by King Solomon.”
I blinked. “So… this section wasn’t in the original?”
Solomon smiled faintly. “I spoke thousands of proverbs. Not all were gathered at once. Some lived in court records. Some in instruction manuals for princes. Generations later, nearly 200 years, they were needed again.”
Today we enter a new section of Proverbs that begins with, “These are more proverbs of Solomon, collected by the advisers of King Hezekiah of Judah.”
Azariah untied the parchments carefully. “Judah was under threat. Assyria, a very strong enemy, pressed in. Reform was underway. Our king wanted ancient wisdom to steady present leadership.”
He looked at me directly. “We weren’t preserving poetry. We were fighting drift.”
The room felt quieter somehow. Solomon opened his notebook and slid it toward me. No diagrams this time — just a single line written boldly across the page.
He spoke it slowly, “It is God’s privilege to conceal things and the king’s privilege to discover them.”
“In these opening verses,” Solomon said, “I address kings — leaders — anyone entrusted with influence. I began with mystery.”
Azariah nodded. “The Hebrew word for ‘conceal’ doesn’t imply trickery. It implies depth. Weight. Glory.”
Solomon leaned in slightly. “God hides things the way a mountain hides gold. Not to frustrate you — but to invite you.”
I crossed my arms. “Why not just make everything obvious?”
Azariah’s lips curved almost imperceptibly. “If everything were obvious, nothing would require wisdom. Nor determination.”
Solomon continued. “The Creator builds layers into reality. He weaves consequences into choices. He buries insight beneath humility. A leader’s job — whether over a nation or a household — is to search it out carefully.”
He tapped the notebook again.
“This section,” he said, “speaks of removing dross from silver so a vessel can emerge. I speak of removing wicked advisors so a throne stands firm. I speak of not exalting yourself before a king, of waiting to be invited higher.”
Azariah added, “Reform requires refinement.”
The word hung there.
Outside the window, a siren wailed faintly in the distance. The city pulsed. Noise, pressure, ambition.
“Discovery,” Solomon said quietly, “requires restraint. You cannot discover what God conceals if you are loud, hurried, or self-promoting.”
I thought about how often I rush to conclusions. How quickly I defend myself. How rarely I pause long enough to search beneath the surface — of a conflict, a failure, even my own motives.
“So this isn’t just about kings?” I asked.
Azariah shook his head. “Anyone with responsibility must search out what’s really happening — beneath appearances, in between the lines.”
Solomon’s voice softened. “Jesus would later say, ‘Ask, and you will receive; seek, and you will find.’ And remember the words of the prophet, Jeremiah, ‘you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart.’” (Matthew 7:7, Jeremiah 29:13)
His eyes glistened for a moment, then he summed up, ‘The Father delights when His children pursue understanding.”
The room seemed to slow — dust floating, light stretching golden.
“God hides depth in people,” Azariah said. “In circumstances. In Scripture. But He also reveals His truths to the humble.”
Azariah carefully re-rolled the parchments. “Our generation needed these words again. Yours does too.”
For a moment, I imagined wisdom like buried treasure — not flashy, not trending, but waiting beneath noise and pride.
As we stepped out of the archive into the evening air, the city felt less chaotic and more layered. Like there were meanings beneath moments if I’d slow down enough to look.
Solomon walked beside me. “This section,” he said, “is about influence. About refinement. About learning to search before you speak.”
I nodded.
Maybe I’ve been reacting to life instead of discovering it.
What? God intentionally builds depth and mystery into the world, and wise leaders humbly search out truth rather than reacting impulsively.
So What? If you don’t slow down to seek understanding, you’ll lead — and live — on the surface, missing what truly matters.
Now What? In your next conflict or decision, pause and ask: What might God be revealing beneath the surface that I need to search out before I respond?
Key Verse: “A little extra sleep, a little more
slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest—then poverty will pounce on you
like a bandit.” (v.33–34)
Big Idea: Small, repeated choices of neglect
eventually produce large, unavoidable consequences.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met on a mountain trail this time—the same one where the city shrinks into toy blocks below and the wind smells like dry sage and sun-warmed dust. I was already sweating when I saw them.
Solomon stood a few feet off the path, linen shirt catching the light, silver-streaked hair tied back, cedar scent faint but familiar. His leather notebook rested under one arm. Silas and Elior were with him—my unofficial tutors the past few days. Silas leaned on a hiking stick, quiet and observant. Elior scanned the valley like he could read it.
“This is the last of our collected proverbs I called, ‘Sayings of the Wise’,” Solomon said, tapping the notebook against his palm. “I collected these from some very wise people. Today, my friends will bring it into focus.”
Elior nodded. “We begin with justice,” he said, referencing the earlier verses—about not showing favoritism in court, about honest rebuke being better than flattery, about finishing your work in the field before building your house. “These proverbs are about integrity in public and discipline in private.”
Silas added, “It’s tempting to think wisdom is mostly about big moral crossroads. But we wrote this section to show how wisdom lives in the ordinary.”
I kicked a rock down the trail. Ordinary was exactly where I’d been slipping—skipping workouts, pushing off writing deadlines, telling myself I’d “start fresh Monday.” Monday had become a myth.
Elior stopped walking. “Then comes this picture... The field of the lazy person. Thorns everywhere. The stone wall broken down," he said softly.
The wind quieted, or maybe I just stopped hearing it.
Silas looked at me. “No one sets out to let their field look like that. It happens by inches.”
Solomon finally spoke, voice low and steady. “They wrote it this way on purpose: ‘A little extra sleep, a little more slumber, a little folding of the hands to rest—then poverty will pounce on you like a bandit.’”
He let the words hang in the air.
“Notice,” he continued, “it’s not rebellion. It’s not open defiance. It’s ‘a little.’ The Hebrew repeats it like a whisper you agree with again and again.”
Elior pointed down the slope where a neglected fence sagged around a scrubby patch of land. “That field didn’t collapse overnight. Weeds don’t explode—they creep.”
I felt defensive. “Rest isn’t wrong,” I said. “Burnout is real.”
Silas smiled gently. “Rest is a gift from God. Laziness is neglect disguised as self-care.”
That stung.
Solomon stepped closer, leaning in the way he does when he sees straight through me. “The Creator designed rhythms—work and Sabbath. But when rest becomes avoidance, the wall begins to crack.”
I thought of emails unanswered. Conversations postponed. Apologies unsaid. Laundry unwashed. Devotions ignored.
Elior crouched and ran his fingers through the dust. “Neglect compounds. In finances. In marriage. In faith. In health. You don’t wake up bankrupt in a day—relationally or materially.”
A couple hikers passed us, laughing, their pace steady. For a second, I imagined two futures: one disciplined, steady; the other overgrown and apologizing to itself.
Silas straightened. “This was our final reminder in these sayings. Justice in public. Diligence in private. Because your private field eventually becomes your public life.”
Solomon closed his notebook. “And remember—this isn’t about earning God’s approval. It’s about aligning with reality. The world He built runs on sowing and reaping. Even Paul would later echo it: ‘You harvest what you plant.’”
The breeze returned, lifting the edge of his shirt.
Silas extended his hand to me. “We’ve enjoyed these days. Thank you for listening.”
“No, thank you for sharing,” I uttered.
Elior clasped my shoulder. “Guard your field,” he said.
There was no dramatic exit. They simply continued up the trail and, after a bend in the path, they were gone. Their absence felt heavier than I expected.
Solomon stayed beside me. “Small faithfulness,” he said quietly. “That’s the antidote. Not grand vows. Daily tending.”
We began walking down the mountain together.
And for the first time in a while, I didn’t feel crushed by the weeds. I just felt responsible for them.
What? Neglect in small, repeated doses leads to inevitable loss; diligence in small, steady acts preserves life and integrity.
So What? The “little” habits you excuse today quietly shape your future—financially, relationally, spiritually.
Now What? Choose one neglected area of your life and take one concrete step today to tend it—send the email, make the call, do the work. Small faithfulness starts now.
Key Verse: “The godly may trip seven times, but they
will get up again.” (v.16)
Big Idea: Righteousness isn’t about never
falling—it’s about trusting your Creator to lift you back up.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The boxing gym smelled like rubber mats and old sweat. Fluorescent lights hummed overhead. A heavy bag swayed on its chain, thudding in steady rhythm like a heartbeat that refused to quit.
I was already there when Solomon arrived—linen shirt sleeves rolled, silver-streaked hair tied back. The faint cedar scent reached me before his voice did.
But tonight, he didn’t start.
Silas stepped forward, carrying Solomon’s weathered leather notebook. Elior leaned against the ring ropes, arms folded, studying me.
“You look like a man who lost more than a sparring match,” Elior said.
I rubbed my jaw. “I’m tired of failing the same way.”
Silas opened the notebook. “We’re still in the Sayings of the Wise,” he said. “These weren’t originally Solomon’s words, but he gathered them because truth is truth, and it doesn’t lose value.”
Solomon nodded from behind them. “Wisdom survives its authors.”
Silas read the passage aloud—about honey being sweet and good for you, about hope for a future, about not celebrating when your enemy falls. At first it felt scattered. Then Elior pointed to the center.
“This is the hinge,” he said, and read slowly:
“The godly may trip seven times, but they will get up again.”
The heavy bag slammed once more behind us. Thud.
“Seven times?” I muttered. “That’s optimistic.”
Silas smiled. “In Hebrew thought, seven means fullness. It’s not counting failures. It’s saying—even if failure feels complete, even if it feels like the whole story—it isn’t.”
“I’m not sure that applies to me,” I said. “At some point, you just become the guy who can’t get it together.”
Elior stepped into the ring and steadied the swinging bag. “The text doesn’t say the righteous don’t fall,” he replied. “It says they rise. That’s the difference.”
Solomon moved closer, forearms resting on the ring apron. “Righteousness isn’t perfection,” he said gently. “It’s orientation. Direction. Who you turn toward when you hit the mat.”
I looked away. “Sometimes I don’t turn anywhere. I just sit there.”
A young boxer climbed into the ring behind us, ducking through the ropes to spar with a taller opponent already circling at center canvas. He threw a combination, slipped on his own footwork, and hit the canvas. His coach didn’t yell. Just said, “Reset. Again.”
The kid stood up.
Silas tapped the notebook. “Notice the contrast. ‘The wicked will be destroyed by their calamity.’ The difference isn’t that they stumble less. It’s that they collapse inward. They detach from God. From humility. From the One who elevates the fallen.”
Solomon’s voice softened. “When I assembled these sayings, I understood something about collapse. I made choices that fractured things. What pulled me back wasn’t pride. It was the fear of the Lord—deep, steady reverence for the Creator. Knowing He sees. Knowing He disciplines. Knowing He restores.”
Elior looked at me. “You think staying down is humility. It’s not. It’s surrender to shame.”
That hit.
The gym noise seemed to fade as Solomon leaned in. “God is not surprised by your stumbles. He is invested in your rising. The whole passage points to hope—honey, future, restraint, trust. Even the warning not to rejoice when your enemy falls reminds you: vengeance isn’t yours. God handles justice. You focus on getting up.”
The kid in the ring stumbled again. Sweat dripped off his chin.
“Again,” the coach said.
He stood.
I exhaled slowly. “So what does getting up look like? Practically.”
Silas closed the notebook. “Quick confession. Humble repentance. No delay.”
Elior added, “Repair what you can. Apologize if needed. Change one small behavior.”
Solomon met my eyes. “And trust that the One who began shaping you isn’t finished. Rising isn’t denial of failure—it’s faith in God’s patience.”
The bell rang. The round ended. The kid climbed out of the ring exhausted, but upright.
Outside, the cool night air felt clean in my lungs. The gym door shut behind us, and the world felt quieter.
“Remember this,” Solomon said before we parted. “Falling proves you’re human. Rising proves you belong to God.”
I drove home thinking about how often I’ve let shame finish the story. Maybe resilience isn’t pretending I’m strong.
Maybe it’s believing He helps me stand.
What? Even repeated failure does not define the godly; what defines them is their willingness to rise again in trust and reverence for God.
So What? Shame tempts us to stay down, but real strength is found in turning back to God and stepping forward after we fall.
Now What? The next time you fail, confess it immediately, make one concrete repair, and take one small step forward instead of withdrawing.
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?