Key Verse: “You can go to bed without fear; you will
lie down and sleep soundly.” (v.24)
Big Idea:Wisdom builds a quiet confidence that
guards your mind when the lights go out.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The café was dimmer than usual, rain stippling the windows like impatient fingers. I arrived carrying the weight of a long day—emails unanswered, a conversation replaying itself with sharper edges each time. Even the chairs felt tired when I pulled one out.
Solomon was already there, silver-streaked hair tied back, linen shirt soft with age. He tapped the table once, a small greeting ritual, then smiled.
I glanced at the empty chair across from me—the one Rachel usually claimed by tossing her scarf over it like a flag. She’d texted earlier: Can’t meet today. Mom’s tests came back inconclusive. Sitting in a hospital hallway, trying not to panic.
The café felt uneven without her. Some conversations are easier when someone else is carrying the fear out loud.
“Rough day,” Solomon said—not a question.
I shrugged. “It’s night that gets me. Everything I can ignore during the day lines up when I try to sleep.”
He slid the notebook forward and opened it. Inside were careful diagrams—circles nested within circles, a horizon line drawn with steady patience. “That’s why I wrote this section the way I did,” he said. “Proverbs three isn’t about clever tricks. It’s about how the world is built—and where you fit inside it.”
He leaned back and gave me the bird’s-eye view. “In this passage, I talk about foundations. I mention how the world itself was formed with wisdom—order, restraint, intention. Then I bring it down to you: how that same wisdom steadies a person’s steps, keeps them from stumbling, even watches over them when they stop moving.”
Outside, a barista dropped a tray. The clatter rang too loud, then faded. The café seemed to slow as Solomon’s voice settled into the space.
“Wisdom,” he said, tapping the page, “isn’t information. It’s alignment. When your life lines up with how things actually are, fear loses its leverage.”
A woman at the counter caught his eye—late twenties, phone glowing in her palm, thumb scrolling furiously. She sighed, rubbed her temples, and asked for a refill she hadn’t finished. Solomon watched her gently.
“She’s borrowing tomorrow’s trouble,” he murmured. “Most of us do.”
Then he zeroed in. “The line you’re stuck on—the sleep one. I wrote that because night reveals what we trust. When you lie down, you stop managing. You stop defending. Fear loves that moment.”
He drew a small roof over a stick figure in the notebook. “I mention that you will not fear sudden disaster. Not because bad things never happen—but because wisdom teaches you where your safety actually comes from. Not your control. Not your plans. Something deeper. Something older than you. Stronger. Wiser.”
I felt a quiet conviction settle in. My nights weren’t restless because I cared too much—they were restless because I carried what wasn’t mine to carry.
Solomon closed the notebook. “When wisdom is your companion,” he said, leaning in, “even your unconscious learns to rest.”
The woman at the counter left, bell chiming softly. Her absence felt noticeable, like a pause in the room’s breathing.
Solomon stood, pulling on his handmade boots. “I’ve said enough for tonight.” He smiled, warm and humble. “Try sleeping with fewer arguments in your head.”
Then he was gone, rain swallowing his footsteps.
For the first time in days, the idea of bed didn’t feel like a battlefield.
What? True wisdom undergirds the world and offers real security, freeing us from fear—even in the quiet vulnerability of sleep.
So What? Modern life trains us to stay alert and anxious, but wisdom invites us to trust something sturdier than constant vigilance.
Now What? Before bed tonight, name one worry you’re carrying that isn’t yours to solve—and deliberately set it down.
Key Verse: “For wisdom is more profitable than
silver, and her wages are better than gold.” (v.14)
Big Idea:If you choose wisdom, every day is a
paycheck.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The café was already humming when I pushed the door open—milk steaming, cups clinking, the low thunder of conversation rolling like surf. I felt wrung out. It was payday, and my bank app had done that thing where the numbers look like they’re judging you. Again.
Solomon was at our usual corner table. He tapped the table once, like he was calling the room to order, then slid his weathered leather notebook toward the empty chair.
“You look like you checked your balance,” he said gently.
I laughed without humor and sat. “Is it that obvious?”
“Balances have a way of showing on faces,” he said. “So do bargains.”
Rachel arrived a minute later, breathless, scarf half-knotted, eyes tired but bright. She’s been with us the last couple of days—smart, sharp, carrying more weight than she admits. She ordered black coffee and rubbed her temples. She slumped into the chair and said, “If this is another one of those ‘you need to do it differently’ talks…I just might cry!”
Solomon leaned in, lowering his voice until the café noise dimmed, like someone turning a knob. ““Not ‘do it differently,’” he said gently, as if sharing a secret worth keeping. “Just… see it differently.”
He opened the notebook. The pages were crowded with diagrams—roots and branches, scales, a river feeding a city. He drew a wide arc across the top and wrote: Proverbs 3:13–18.
“Today’s passage is a song about happiness that doesn’t depend on circumstances. It compares wisdom to wealth—not to dishonor money, but to tell the truth about it. Wisdom is described as a person—her—because she relates. She gives long life, peace, favor. She’s called a tree of life—something ancient readers associated with flourishing, not survival. The whole section is saying: there’s a way of living that grows you from the inside out.”
A barista dropped off Rachel’s coffee. She thanked him, then stared into the cup. “I could use flourishing,” she said quietly. “I’m trying to do everything ‘right’ and still feel behind.”
Solomon nodded. “Context matters. These words were written to people building lives—families, work, communities—under pressure. The wisdom here isn’t ivory-tower stuff. It’s street-level. It’s asking: What actually pays off?”
He turned the page and drew a set of scales. On one side, he sketched coins. On the other, he drew a heart with a spine.
“Now we zoom in,” he said, tapping the key verse with his finger. “More profitable than silver. Better than gold. In Hebrew, the word for ‘profit’ is about surplus—what remains after costs. Not just income, but residue.”
I felt that land. The residue of my last promotion was anxiety. The residue of my last impulse buy was regret.
Rachel exhaled. “So what’s the plus side? Because wisdom sounds… slow.”
Solomon smiled, gently humorous. “Slow like compounding interest. Fast like avoiding cliffs.”
He leaned back, and the café noise faded again. I noticed a man at the counter arguing with his phone—voice tight, suit wrinkled, jaw clenched. Solomon glanced at him, then back to us. “There’s the cost side of money—stress, comparison, fear of losing it. Wisdom’s wages are different. Long life—not just years, but depth. Peace—not the absence of problems, but an unfractured soul. Favor—not popularity, but trust.”
He slid the notebook closer to Rachel. “The plus side is alignment. When your inner life and outer life stop fighting each other.”
Rachel traced the drawing of the tree with her finger. “Tree of life,” she read. “That sounds… solid.”
“It is,” Solomon said. “Trees don’t hustle. They grow where planted, draw from deep sources, and give shade they don’t charge for.”
I thought about my calendar, my notifications, the constant sense of chasing. “So wisdom pays,” I said, “just not in cash.”
“It pays in fewer apologies,” Solomon said. “Better sleep. Clearer decisions. Relationships that don’t feel like transactions.”
The man at the counter stormed out, leaving his coffee untouched. The absence felt loud. Rachel watched him go. “I don’t want that,” she said.
“Then choose what you’re paid in,” Solomon replied. “If you choose wisdom, every day is a paycheck.”
He closed the notebook and stood, boots whispering against the floor. “Three things to remember,” he said, tapping the table once more. “First: happiness grows from wisdom, not luck. Second: money measures income; wisdom measures residue. Third: hold onto wisdom like a living thing—it holds onto you.”
He smiled at Rachel, then at me, and slipped into the crowd, cedar trailing after him.
Both Rachel and I sat there longer than usual, watching steam rise, thinking about what I was actually earning with my choices.
What? Proverbs 3:13–18 teaches that wisdom brings a kind of profit money can’t—peace, stability, and a life that flourishes.
So What? Chasing only financial gain often leaves hidden costs; choosing wisdom reshapes what remains after the hustle—your sleep, relationships, and inner calm.
Now What? Today, before one decision (a purchase, a reply, a plan), pause and ask: What residue will this leave? Choose the option that pays you in peace.
Key Verse: “Trust in the LORD with all your heart; do
not depend on your own understanding. Seek his will in all you do, and he will
show you which path to take.” (v.5-6)
Big Idea: When your own understanding runs out,
wisdom begins by trusting the Guide instead.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The waterfront was washed in winter light, the kind
that makes everything feel honest. Gray-blue water slapped the pilings with a
patient rhythm. A gull cried somewhere overhead. I came early, hands shoved in
my jacket pockets, mind louder than the waves. Trust had been a sore word
lately—something I wanted to believe in but didn’t quite know how to do without
feeling foolish.
Solomon was already there, sitting on a weathered
bench near the railing. Silver-streaked hair tied back. Linen shirt catching
the light. Handmade boots scuffed like they’d seen more road than rest. When I
got close, I caught the faint scent of cedar, like an old workshop warmed by
sun.
“You look like someone who followed a map that
stopped making sense,” he said, gently amused.
I laughed despite myself. “I didn’t know maps
expired.”
“Most of them do,” he said, tapping the bench
beside him. “Especially the ones we draw ourselves.”
Rachel was there too. I hadn’t expected that. She
stood a few steps away, staring out at the water, arms folded tight like she
was holding herself together. Yesterday’s conversation—her wrong turns, the
fallout with her family—still felt raw. When she turned and saw me, her eyes
softened, then dropped again.
Solomon greeted her like this was the most natural
thing in the world. “I’m glad you came.”
She shrugged. “Didn’t know where else to go.”
He slid his weathered leather notebook onto his
knee and opened it. Pages thick with use. Diagrams, arrows, symbols layered
like a city map drawn by hand.
“Today’s passage,” he said, leaning in, voice
steady, “is Proverbs 3:1–12.”
The world seemed to slow. Even the gulls quieted,
like they were listening.
He sketched a long road across the page. “This
section is a father talking to a child. Not lecturing. Inviting. He says: Don’t
forget what I’ve taught you. Let loyalty and truth hang close to your heart.
Let wisdom shape how you walk.”
He added small symbols along the road—heart,
house, path, hand. “Here I talk about life that lasts, relationships that hold,
a reputation that doesn’t rot. Then I turn the corner and say something…
dangerous.”
Rachel glanced over. “Dangerous how?”
“Because it asks for surrender,” Solomon said. He
tapped the notebook once, twice. “Trust. With all your heart. Not half. Not
with a backup plan hidden in your pocket.”
He wrote the words slowly, like he wanted them to
breathe: "Trust in the Lord with all your heart; do not depend on your own understanding."
“That word ‘trust,’” he said, “comes from a Hebrew
root that means to lean your full weight on something. Not test it. Not tap it
with your toe. Lean. Be supported by. Prop yourself up upon it.”
I watched a couple pass behind us—mid-thirties,
arguing quietly. The woman wiped her eyes. The man stared straight ahead. They
walked on, leaving a pocket of tension in their wake. Solomon noticed them too.
His eyes followed until they were gone, then returned to us.
Solomon paused, eyes following the tide as it
pulled away from the shore. “And don’t misunderstand this,” he said. “This
isn’t just for moments when everything’s blown up—when the wrong turn is
obvious and the damage is loud. This kind of trust matters just as much on
quiet Tuesdays. When the choices seem small. When the path looks fine. When
you’re doing okay but not really sure why. “
He went on, “Most drift doesn’t come from
rebellion—it comes from autopilot. We trust ourselves not because we’re
defiant, but because we’re busy. And over time, that’s enough to slowly aim a
life in the wrong direction.”
“Most of our trouble,” he said softly, “comes from
leaning on explanations instead of a Guide.”
Rachel’s voice cracked. “I thought I was being
smart. Independent. I had reasons for everything I did.” She swallowed. “Now my
family won’t even answer my calls.”
Solomon turned the notebook toward her. He had
drawn a fork in the road. One side labeled My Understanding. The other, His
Way.
“This passage doesn’t say your understanding is
useless,” he said. “It says it’s limited. Like using a flashlight to navigate
an ocean.”
He drew a small stick figure at the fork. “When
you trusted your own map, you weren’t evil. You were human. But now—” he tapped
the other path “—the invitation is to acknowledge God in all your ways. Not
just the parts that make sense.”
Rachel wiped her cheek with the sleeve of her
hoodie. “So what do I do next? I can’t undo what I did.”
“No,” Solomon said, kindly. “But you can choose
how you walk forward.”
He flipped the page and drew a hand pruning a
vine. “The passage ends with something people skip. Discipline. Correction. Not
punishment. Training. Like a gardener who cuts back a branch so it can live.”
Rachel exhaled, long and shaky. “So this pain…
isn’t the end?”
He met her eyes, uncanny in his clarity. “It’s an
intersection.”
She nodded slowly. After a moment, her arms folded
in, as if to give herself a hug, then she stepped back. “I needed that,” she
said, glancing between them.
And then she was gone, footsteps fading along the
boardwalk. Her absence felt loud.
Solomon closed the notebook.
“Three-part summary,” he said, standing.
“First: Wisdom isn’t information; it’s a way of
walking with God over time.”
“Second: Trust means leaning your whole weight on
Him, especially when your logic runs out.”
“Third: When correction comes, it’s not
rejection—it’s care.”
He gave a small smile, warm and steady.
“Tomorrow,” he said, already turning away, “We’ll talk about peace, clarity,
and a life that holds together... Let's meet back at the café."
What?Real life
grows from trusting God fully, letting His wisdom guide our steps, and
receiving correction as care—not condemnation.
So What? We live
in a world obsessed with self-reliance, but our understanding has limits;
trusting God reshapes our paths, our relationships, and how we interpret pain.
Now What? Today,
name one area where you’ve been leaning on your own explanation—and
intentionally ask God to guide your next step instead.
Key Verse: “So follow the steps of the good, and stay
on the paths of the righteous.” (v.20)
Big Idea: No one plans to ruin their life—it happens
by drifting onto the wrong path and staying there too long.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
I arrived groggier than usual that morning, like
I’d slept under water. The café felt brighter than I wanted it to—sunlight
spilling across the floor, the smell of fresh espresso hanging warm and sweet
in the air. People laughed. A grinder roared. Life was loud and moving forward,
while I felt… paused.
Solomon was already seated near the window, boots
planted, linen shirt sleeves rolled up. He looked up from his coffee, smiled
with that calm familiarity that always felt like he could see ten steps ahead
of me.
“You look like someone standing at a crossroads,”
he said gently.
He slid his weathered leather notebook toward me
and opened it. Two paths filled the page. One curved gently downhill, wide and
smooth. The other was narrower, uneven, marked by footprints worn deep into the
ground.
“Proverbs two,” he said. “isn’t about
temptation—it’s about destinations.”
He leaned back, tapping the table once.
“Solomon—me—wrote this to explain how lives actually unravel. Not suddenly.
Gradually. Desire whispers. Compromise negotiates. And before you know it,
you’re far from where you meant to be.”
The café door opened, and a woman stepped inside
like she wasn’t sure she belonged anywhere. Rachel. Her eyes scanned the room,
tired and guarded. Solomon noticed her instantly.
“Rachel,” he said, standing. “Come sit with us.”
She hesitated, then nodded. Her hands trembled
slightly as she wrapped them around her cup. Silence stretched.
“I didn’t mean for any of this to happen,” she
finally said, obviously flabbergasted. “I wasn’t trying to destroy my marriage.
Or myself.”
Solomon didn’t interrupt. He waited.
“It started small,” she continued. “A
conversation. Feeling seen. Feeling alive again.” Her voice cracked. “Then came
the flirting. Then secrecy. Then intimacy.”
“I thought I was choosing happiness. I kept
telling myself I could stop anytime.”
Solomon turned the notebook toward her. “That’s
exactly what this passage describes,” he said softly. “The path never
advertises the ending. It promises connection, relief, pleasure, fulfillment.
And it delivers—at first.”
The world seemed to slow. Cups clinked in the
distance. Steam drifted upward like time had decided to pause.
“But if the door isn’t closed,” he continued, “the
path keeps walking you. And eventually, it leads to loss—trust, peace,
self-respect, sometimes everything.”
Rachel stared at the page. “I wish I’d known when
to stop.”
“You did know,” Solomon said kindly. “You just
didn’t comply.”
He pointed to verse twenty. So follow the steps of
the good, and stay on the paths of the righteous.
“Notice the word,” he said. “Stay. Wisdom isn’t a
dramatic rescue at the edge of a cliff. It’s choosing the same faithful
direction again and again—especially when another road looks easier. Staying
for the long haul.”
He glanced at me. “This isn’t about men or women.
It’s about humans. Desire isn’t evil. But unguarded desire is impatient. And
impatience always charges interest.”
Rachel wiped her eyes. “Now my husband barely
looks at me. My kids don’t trust me. And the man I thought cared?” She shook
her head, “Gone!”
“Is there a way back?” she whispered..
Solomon smiled—not triumphant, but tender. “There
always is. But the further you drift, the more painful the return.”
She stood a few minutes later, thanking him
quietly, then slipped out. Her empty chair felt louder than the grinder.
Solomon closed the notebook.
“Three things to remember,” he said, rising.
“First—no one plans destruction. Second—wisdom works best before the fall.
Third—the life you end up with depends on the path you stay on, not the
intentions you started with.”
Then he was gone.
What? Proverbs
2:16–22 teaches that unwise paths lure us slowly with false promises, while
steady faithfulness leads to life.
So What? Because
most pain isn’t caused by one reckless choice, but by small compromises left
unchecked.
Now What? Identify
one door in your life that needs to be firmly closed—and take a concrete step
today to close it. Tight.
Key Verse: “Wise choices will watch over you.
Understanding will keep you safe.” (v.11)
Big Idea: Wisdom doesn’t just show you the right
path—it quietly stands between you and the wrong one.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
I almost didn’t come that morning.
Not because I was busy—but because I already knew
what the conversation might touch. There was a decision hovering in my life
like low fog. Nothing dramatic. No sirens. Just options. All of them
reasonable. All of them defensible. And that, somehow, made it worse.
The café felt overstimulated—music a notch too
loud, the smell of scorched espresso beans, the sticky table edge under my
palm. I sat down restless, leg bouncing, mind already arguing both sides of a
choice I hadn’t named out loud.
Solomon arrived quietly. Linen shirt. Handmade
boots. He set his mug down and tapped the table once—steady, grounding—then
slid his leather notebook toward me.
“You’re not lost,” he said, without preamble.
“You’re just standing at a fork.”
How did he know that?, I wondered.
“Let’s start wide,” he continued, opening the
notebook. The page held a hillside drawn from above—paths weaving, splitting,
narrowing. “Proverbs 2:9–15 tells you what wisdom does over time.”
He traced one of the paths with his finger.
“Wisdom teaches you what’s right, fair, and good. That’s alignment—learning how
things are meant to work.” He traced another. “Then it talks about
discernment—recognizing paths that feel right but bend slowly away from the
light.”
A chair scraped nearby. A man at the counter
snapped at the barista about foam temperature. Solomon watched him for a
moment—not judgmental, just attentive.
“Pressure,” Solomon said softly, “reveals
direction.”
He added small symbols to the drawing—smooth
stones labeled easy, crooked arrows labeled clever, a darker slope marked no
return. “The passage warns about people who don’t just wander—they enjoy
twisting things. They normalize shortcuts. They celebrate what’s bent.”
I felt that tightening in my chest again. Not
because I knew people like that—but because I’d listened to them before.
Sometimes I’d been one.
Then Solomon slowed everything down.
He underlined a single sentence and leaned in,
voice dropping. “Now the center of gravity.” His finger rested on the words of
verse 9. “Wise choices will watch over you.”
“Watch,” he repeated. “That’s the key. Wisdom
doesn’t just shout. It stands guard.”
He flipped the page. A simple sketch this time—a
road at night with guardrails on either side. No headlights. Just moonlight.
“You don’t wake up grateful for guardrails,” he
said. “You notice them when you drift. When you’re tired. When visibility
drops.”
“A guardrail doesn’t suddenly appear at the moment
of disaster. It’s already there, quietly shaping the road.”
“In real life, wisdom’s guardrails rarely feel
dramatic—they show up as pauses, hesitations, closed doors, or uncomfortable
questions that slow you down before you make a choice you can’t undo.”
Clearing his throat, he went on… “And here’s the
key point… Wisdom’s guardrails only work if they’re constructed in
advance—before the pressure, before the temptation, before the decision shows
up unannounced.”
“Guardrails,” he continued, “are not there to
limit your freedom but to protect you from a drop you can’t yet see.”
Looking up with a warm glance, he said, “Often,
you don’t notice these guardrails in the moment—you recognize them later, with
gratitude, realizing you were kept safe without ever hearing an alarm.”
I thought about late-night decisions. Texts sent
too fast. Yeses given on impulse. Clicks I wished I could undo. No alarms had
gone off. Just consequences—quiet ones.
Solomon nodded, as if he’d been walking those
memories with me. “Understanding keeps you,” he added. “This carries the idea
of being deployed—like a sentry. A guard. Wisdom stations itself where you’re
weakest.”
At the counter, the barista finally exhaled. The
man left. The noise faded. The absence of tension was louder than the tension
had been.
Solomon closed the notebook.
“Three things,” he said, standing.
“First: wisdom clarifies what’s right, not just
what’s popular.”
“Second: wisdom protects you from persuasive
darkness, not obvious evil.”
“And third: wisdom stands watch when you’re too
tired to stand yourself.”
He gave that familiar, gentle smile. “Tomorrow, we
talk about what happens when people ignore the guardrails.”
Then he was gone—leaving the café quieter, and my
decision heavier in the best possible way.
What? Wisdom teaches what is right and fair, and it actively guards us from paths and voices that subtly lead away from good.
So What? Most harm
doesn’t come from obvious evil but from reasonable shortcuts and confident
voices that bend truth just enough to feel safe.
Now What?Before
your next decision, ask: Is this path straight—or just smooth? Then pause long
enough to let wisdom stand watch.
Key Verse: “Search for them as you would for silver;
seek them like hidden treasures.” (v.4)
Big Idea:Wisdom doesn’t drift into your
life—you have to pursue it like something you can’t afford to lose.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
I showed up tired.
Not sleepy-tired—decision-tired. The kind that
comes from carrying too many half-finished thoughts, too many unresolved
tensions, too many I’ll deal with it later moments stacked on top of each
other.
Solomon had chosen the library today. An old one.
Stone steps worn smooth by decades of footsteps. Tall windows letting in soft,
angled light. The smell of paper and dust and quiet effort hung in the air.
He was already seated at a long oak table, linen
shirt sleeves rolled up, silver-streaked hair tied back. His leather notebook
lay open, diagrams scattered across the page like a map mid-journey.
“You look like someone who’s been skimming the
surface,” he said gently.
I exhaled. “I feel like I’m doing a lot… without
actually getting anywhere.”
He slid the notebook toward me. “That’s exactly
who Proverbs 2 is written for.”
A man a few tables over cleared his throat loudly,
frustration bleeding into the silence as he rubbed his temples and stared at a
stack of textbooks. Solomon glanced at him, then back to me.
“Let’s zoom out first,” he said. “Bird’s-eye
view.”
He tapped the page.
“This chapter is about pursuit. Not rules. Not
shortcuts. A process. If you receive wisdom, store it, listen for it, lean
toward it, cry out for it, and search for it—then clarity comes.”
“That’s a lot of effort,” I said.
Solomon smiled. “Yes. That’s the point.”
He leaned back as the room seemed to slow—pages
turning softer, footsteps fading into the background.
“Most people want wisdom the way they want Wi-Fi,”
he said. “Automatic. Free. Always on. Proverbs says wisdom works more like
mining.”
He drew a simple image: a shovel, dirt layers, a
small glint buried deep.
“Silver doesn’t sit on the surface,” he continued.
“Treasure doesn’t announce itself. You don’t stumble into wisdom by accident.
You pursue it because you’ve decided it’s worth the cost.”
My chest tightened. I thought about how much
energy I give to scrolling, worrying, reacting—how little to actually seeking
anything that might steady me.
“And verses 1 through 8,” Solomon said, tapping
the notebook, “show the payoff. Discernment. Protection. Guardrails you didn’t
even know you needed. Wisdom doesn’t just inform you—it keeps you.”
The student nearby slammed his book shut and stood
abruptly, shoulders sagging as he walked out. The empty chair felt loud after
he left.
“Some people quit digging,” Solomon said quietly.
“Not because there’s nothing there—but because the ground got hard.”
He turned the notebook so the key verse faced me.
“Verse 4 is the hinge:” he said…“Search for wisdom
as you would for silver or buried treasure.” He paused, “Search. Seek. Dig.
Like your life depends on it—because eventually, it does.”
I swallowed. “So wisdom isn’t passive.”
“No,” he said softly. “But it is faithful. Wisdom
doesn’t hide to keep it from you—it hides so you’ll value it.”
That sentence settled deep.
Solomon closed the notebook and stood, the faint
cedar scent rising as he did.
“Tomorrow,” he said, “we’ll talk about where paths
actually lead—and why direction matters more than speed.”
He left the library quietly.
I stayed, hands resting on the table, realizing
something simple and unsettling:
I’d been hoping for clarity… without doing the
digging.
What? Proverbs 2
teaches that wisdom must be actively pursued and deeply valued—it is discovered
through intentional seeking, not passive interest.
So What? In a
world built on shortcuts and speed, wisdom still requires effort—but it rewards
those who dig with clarity, protection, and steadiness.
Now What? Choose
one intentional moment today—five or ten quiet minutes, one hard question, one
pause before reacting—and dig instead of drifting.
Key Verse: “Wisdom cries aloud in the street” (v.20)
Big Idea:Wisdom isn’t silent—you just need to
listen.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
Mara wasn’t there that morning.
I noticed it right away—her usual seat empty, her
coffee missing, the space at the table strangely louder without her. Solomon
arrived alone, leather satchel slung over one shoulder, the faint cedar scent
trailing behind him like always.
“She needed a day,” he said before I could ask.
“Wisdom sometimes stirs things that require solitude.”
That felt fair. And honest.
Instead of sitting, Solomon nodded toward the
door. “Walk with me.”
We strolled that morning to the edge of the park,
fog lifting slowly as the city woke up. Shoes scuffed on pavement. A delivery
truck rattled past. Somewhere, a siren faded into the distance. Life happening
at full volume.
Solomon spread his hands toward the noise.
He opened his notebook as we walked. The pages
were dense today—intersections sketched over one another, arrows looping back,
figures passing open doors.
“Proverbs 1:20–33 is a street scene,” he
continued. “Wisdom isn’t whispering from a mountaintop. She’s in public
spaces—markets, intersections, crowded places—calling out while people are busy
living.”
He slowed near a crosswalk where people gathered,
eyes locked on phones, fingers twitching with impatience. When the light
changed, they surged forward without looking.
“This passage shows three movements,” he said.
“First, wisdom calls. Loudly. Clearly. Repeatedly. Second, people refuse. Not
angrily—just casually. They brush her off, delay, assume they’ll listen later.”
He tapped the page.
“And third—consequence. Not punishment.
Consequence. When trouble comes, they panic—not because wisdom disappeared, but
because they trained themselves not to hear her.”
That landed heavier than I expected.
“So wisdom isn’t mad,” I said. “She’s warning.”
“Exactly,” Solomon replied. “This chapter isn’t
about her enjoying judgment. It’s about the tragedy of ignored clarity.”
We walked a few steps in silence.
“There’s something I’ve been meaning to ask,” I
said finally. “You keep saying she. Wisdom is always ‘she.’ Why?”
Solomon smiled, like he’d been waiting for the
question.
“In Hebrew,” he said, “the word for wisdom—ḥokmah—is
feminine. But that’s not the whole reason.”
He stopped near a bench and turned his notebook
toward me. He sketched two quick figures. One stood rigid, arms crossed. The
other stood open-handed, calling out.
“Wisdom isn’t portrayed as an object to be
analyzed or a force to overpower,” he said. “She’s portrayed as someone with
personality and individual traits who must be received.”
I frowned. “Meaning?”
“Meaning wisdom doesn’t coerce,” Solomon said.
“She invites. She warns. She pleads. She waits. You can ignore her. You can
walk past her. You can silence her without ever disproving her.”
He tapped the page again. “That’s why she’s not
shouting orders from a throne. She’s calling from the street.”
“So it’s relational,” I said slowly.
“Yes,” he replied. “Wisdom is personal.
Responsive. Near. She engages the heart, not just the intellect. And like many
voices people take for granted, she’s often dismissed precisely because she’s
gentle.”
I thought about how often I ignore quiet
warnings—my body tightening before a bad decision, that subtle sense of don’t
do this I usually talk myself out of.
“And later in the passage,” I said, “she sounds…
different. Almost grieved.”
“She is,” Solomon said softly. “Not because she’s
petty—but because patience has limits. Ignore wisdom long enough, and the voice
that could steady you feels unfamiliar when you need it most.”
“That’s the warning,” he said. “A life conditioned
to ignore wisdom eventually panics when clarity is most needed.”
I swallowed. “What if I’ve already done that?”
Solomon stopped walking. The city noise softened,
like it had been turned down a notch.
“The fact that you’re asking means she’s still
calling,” he said. “Wisdom doesn’t abandon easily. But she does require
effort.”
He closed the notebook and slid it back into the
satchel.
“Tomorrow,” he said, “we’ll talk about that
effort—about digging for wisdom the way you’d dig for something that could save
your life.”
He turned down the path leading out of the park,
cedar scent lingering in the cool air.
I stayed where I was—listening.
Not for something dramatic.
But for the quieter signals I usually ignore. The
pause before a decision. The discomfort before a shortcut. The nudge to slow
down instead of push through.
What?Wisdom
openly calls out in everyday life, offering insight, direction, and life to
anyone willing to listen.
So What? Ignoring
wisdom doesn’t silence life—it makes consequences louder when they arrive.
Now What? Create
space today to listen: pause before reacting, question urgency, and pay
attention to the quiet warnings you usually rush past.