Lessons from the Fool & the Sluggard

Be wise

Prov 25-26 The Fool and the Lazy Sluggard

Wouldn’t it have been fun to be a fly on the wall in the Palace when Solomon faced both the fools and the lazy? Solomon wrote these chapters on what he gleaned, and we have those before us in these chapters. He observed, then interpreted, and then made applications. We are far richer from what he saw and experienced.

He left us with three very valid questions: (1) Why would you take counsel from the fool? To do so is your folly. (2) Why would you try to train the fool by trying to lead him or counsel him? He only learns the hard way (by whip or rod). [Seems to me that I heard that refrain more often in my childhood than any other as my mother often shook her head at me and said you only learn the hard way. Maybe she was right; I don’t know. but her words ring forth from eternity to me even today.] (3) Why would you send the fool on a journey with a message when you know that it will either be lost or rehearsed incorrectly? The bottom line is that we can learn much about fools in these chapters so that we do not become a fool.

Then there is the sluggard or the lazy. They are lazy and refuse to work! Paul later said that he who is lazy and won’t work should not benefit from the toil of others. These people are habitually lazy! Hard work never hurt anyone and, in fact, teaches us much about character development. There will always be the workers and the shirkers. Which are you?

So today, look at your decisions and then determine if you are wise or foolish busy about work, or lazy.

What Can We Learn from a Fool?

King Solomon has taught from chapter 1 how we might observe and learn to be wise. Today in chapter 26 his focus is on the fool. “The dullard or fool is not merely a man of low intelligence. He is the kind of fool who is obtuse [that is not quick or alert in perception] because of smug overconfidence.” [Jewish Study Bible] So why spend time studying the “fool or dullard?”  “Just as our Lord did not forbid us from discerning the character of fools, the Book of Proverbs commends this assessment as a necessity for those who would be wise.” [Bob Deffinbaugh]

Who is this person? He is the one that says there is no God and thus he responds according to his folly. A fool considers himself to be wise in his own eyes and is blind to the ways of truth and the giver of wisdom “Each…does what he considers to be right…in their own eyes. ”[Judges 21 They are noted by their argumentative spirit, blameshifting, ox stubbornness and when reproved lack discernment that they might learn from their mistakes. The fool is characterized by the quote: “fools rush in where angels fear to tread.”

Principle to glean:  We should look in the mirror. If we see the warning signs of a fool don’t walk away but learn and change! [James 1]

prov 3 trustaThe bottom line?  “Trust in the Lord with all your heart, and do not rely on your own understanding.” [Prov 3]

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