Week Six & Seven: Experience God and His Wisdom

When we completed Chronicles, we entered readings that each are set or written sometime within the history we have already traveled through – from creation through the rebuilding of the temple after the Babylonian exile.

Characters and Character of God / Esther and Job
 
The stories of Esther and Job that we read in week six span the timeframe we have covered in our previous readings to date. One tells the story of a woman, Esther, who prevents the killing of her people during the time of exile, near the end of the history we have just traveled through. The other tells the story of a man, Job, who tries to understand the character of God when all that he holds dear in life is destroyed. Job is thought to be set in the same time as that of Abraham, the earliest part of the history of our ancestors in faith.

Experiences of God/ Psalms

The psalms, also, span much of the history of the readings we have covered.

Many are identified as psalms of David and retell his experiences in song/psalm.

A few are identified as psalms of Moses, retelling the Exodus story.

Other psalms, retell stories and events we have now experienced in our reading.

In each case, the author is attempting to explain his personal relationship with God and to understand God’s role in the events of life.

Some are psalms of praise; others are psalms of lament.

Here are some things to notice along the way.

1. When you complete Psalm 134, you are halfway through The Bible in 90 Days. As the psalm itself says: Praise the Lord!

2. In Samuel, we read in detail about the events of David’s life and rule. Many of the psalms recount these details as his personal experience of God. In Psalm 51, we hear David seek forgiveness and mercy from God after his acts against Bathsheba’s husband. It contains the familiar request: Create in me a clean heart…

Bonus: Which psalm teaches the Hebrew alphabet?
 
Words of Wisdom for Daily Life / Proverbs

Tradition holds that these sayings are proverbs of Solomon, and they are written in that tradition. Scholars differ over the actual authorship, but the text reflects the wisdom of Solomon and other wise leaders. You may recall that 1 Kings noted that Solomon was responsible for more than 3,000 proverbs. These are part of the wisdom literature within the Bible and offer lessons for ways to achieve wisdom.

Here are some things to notice along the way.

1. What does the opening of the Book of Proverbs assert as its purpose?

2. Chapter 31 is an ode to wisdom, personified as a wife of noble character.

Bonus: What do these proverbs contrast with wisdom?

Words of Wisdom for All Life/ Ecclesiastes

Another book of wisdom literature, Ecclesiastes attempts to discover the meaning of life from one person’s perspective over the course of life. Again, wisdom is seen as something to be gained for a well-lived life, yet the author has a realistic perspective of the ambiguities and challenges of life.

Here are some things to notice along the way.

1.The most commonly quoted scripture from Ecclesiastes is Chapter 3, which begins: There is a time for everything…

2.The narrator of Ecclesiastes has a somewhat pessimistic viewpoint, yet he offers wisdom. What wisdom do you see about times in life that are difficult?

Bonus: Where do we find the instruction to eat, drink and be merry?

Words of Wisdom for Love / Song of Songs
 
Song of Songs is more wisdom literature attributed to Solomon and, at its core, it is beautiful poetry about loving relationship, some of it so detailed it is rarely read in church. It was more likely recorded in the time after the exile, when the people who returned to Jerusalem would be celebrating God’s love for them.
 
Here are some things to notice along the way.

1. Many of the images in this poem are similes. The lovers are described as be like a mare, like a gazelle, like a sachet of myrrh.

2. While this is clearly love poetry, it is also viewed as an allegory of God’s love for God’s people. Which verses describe the way you experience God’s love?

Bonus: What romantic act is described in the very first verses?

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