Welcome to this year's project, a term that came to my mind in prayer- The Wisdom Truck! What I want to do is follow the trail of wisdom from one end of the Bible to the other. The first thing I learned is there are three Hebrew words involved (I haven't looked into the New Testament's Greek yet). Two of them are used for God's idea of wisdom, the other for a more man-based wisdom. We kind of saw that in our tour of Solomon- how he used his God-given wisdom to look into man's wisdom- which even he admitted was closely tied to folly. What my plan is, is to take the words as they come up in the Bible, and look at each case to see what we can apply to us.
Our opening verse is a familiar one...
Gen 3:6 So when the woman saw that the tree was good for food, and that it was a delight to the eyes, and that the tree was to be desired to make one wise, she took of its fruit and ate, and she also gave some to her husband who was with her, and he ate.
One thing I had pointed out to me recently is that the author meant no disrespect in calling Eve "the woman"- it was only AFTER the fall that Adam named her, because it was only AFTER the fall that they had the concept of reproduction explained to them. Eve means, "Mother of all living", and it was only after God said the word, "childbirth", that they realized that was to be her function. And that gift- and the attached curse of labor- was proof that even after the fall, God loved them.
But the word wise in this one is man's wisdom, and very much connected to folly. Let's look at her reasoning process. Another topic we've hit before was that Adam as the head of the family, received instruction from God- and somehow Eve was getting some kind of disconnect. Remember, God told Adam, do not eat from the tree, but Eve added, "Or even touch it". Adam (whose failure is another issue), might not have fallen for the serpent's lies and half truths; but Eve, somehow was not as connected to God's word and was vulnerable.
At this point, Eve really needed the advice on Satan's tricks that we have in 1 John:
1Jn 2:16 For all that is in the world, the lust of the flesh and the lust of the eyes and the vainglory of life, is not of the Father, but is of the world.
She didn't have it, though, and her disconnect let her fall for all three.
First, the lust of the flesh- she saw that the tree was good for food. The garden was FULL of any kind of food she could want- and probably some that tasted better. Now, we don't know that- and neither did she! It could have tasted like broccoli, for all we know. She just never asked herself why she wanted it.
Second, the lust of the eyes- and that it was a delight to the eyes- let's think about this. Do you buy a fruit because of how it looks? Only if you already know how it TASTES. Man's wisdom takes in appearances, but never works from KNOWLEDGE.
Third, and most pertinent here, the pride of life- it was desirable to make one wise- the biggest mistake of all. She had contact with GOD- and thought she would gain more from something that, as Jesus said,
Mat 15:17 Do you not see that whatever goes into the mouth passes into the stomach and is expelled?
Here you see how tightly human wisdom binds with folly. Solomon up there in the truck, he figured it out at length- and his trying to do it his way ripped a rich, prosperous nation in two. Eve did it, and it tore man and God in two.
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