Icebreaker Question:
What are the best
pieces of advice you have ever heard or the top mottos you try to live
by? If you could go back and offer your "younger self" some
advice, what would it be?
Open With Prayer
Read Lesson:
How many of us would like to be
wise? I’m sure all hands just went
up. Yet how many of us really know what
it takes to be wise? Here’s a hint: it’s
not going to school longer or getting a better degree or reading more. All of that is about finding more information,
more knowledge.
But if we want to find real wisdom,
there is a prerequisite, according to the Bible.
Psalm 111:10 says that the “fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.” If we
want wisdom, we need to fear Him. Yet
how easy is it to have more fear of everything else than of Him? At least it is for me. I fear losing control, failing, losing our
health, missing God’s Will for my life, making mistakes, etc. I fear everything sometimes . . . except Him!
But “the fear of the Lord” seems like such a lofty concept. What does it look like? How do we “do” it? Well, that answer is found in Proverbs
2. Verses 1-5 tell us how to go about
understanding what the “fear of the Lord” is:
32. Are there any other thoughts or questions you
want to add?
“My son, if you accept my words and
store up my commands within you, turning your ear to wisdom and applying your
heart to understanding, and if you call out for insight and cry aloud for
understanding, and if you look for it as for silver and search for it as for
hidden treasure, then you will understand the fear of the Lord and find the
knowledge of God.”
It goes on to say that you will have
wisdom, that knowledge will be pleasant to your soul, and that discretion will
protect you.
I have to wonder, How many of us
can really claim that we have “the fear of the Lord” when we look at all that
is required to understand it? Accept
His Words, store up His commands in our hearts and minds, listen for wisdom,
seek understanding and insight with tenacity and conviction. And then we will know the fear of the
Lord. And that will be the beginning of
true wisdom. I think many of us would
rather redefine the “fear of the Lord” as admiring and respecting Him a whole
bunch.
I think that one thing that is
critical to true wisdom and true fear of Him is immersing ourselves in the
Word. It is so crucial to a proper
understanding of Him, a proper relationship with Him, and a proper fear of
Him. It’s where we find His commands, His
words, and His wisdom. It’s where we
learn about who He says He is and who He says we are. (We will get more into this in a later
lesson.)
I fear that we, in our country, have
become so familiar and comfortable with the Bible that we don’t cherish it and
read it as much as we should. We live
like the Bible is optional reading in our daily Christian lives. We don’t know the glorious, deeply satisfying
feeling of hungering and thirsting for God’s Word . . . because we don’t dig
deeply into it, as though we were searching for buried treasure. Or maybe we do an equally troubling thing of
dissecting the Bible and piecing together the pieces to fit what we want to
hear. Or we read it and then walk away,
forget what we read, and fail to apply it.
Either way, we miss out on what God wants to tell us through it. And we miss out on true godly wisdom.
What do our lazy disciplines say
about us and about how we see the Lord?
Can we really claim that we fear Him if we do not want to make reading
His Word a priority?
Of course, reading the Bible and
praying and meditating on God do not, in and of themselves, earn us points or
gain us wisdom or help us live in His love.
Not when we treat them as mindless rituals or items on a To Do
list.
But the more that we pour our hearts
into these things – with the goal of finding Him, not just getting more
knowledge or brownie points - the more we will know His heart. And the more that we know what He is really
like (His love and His justness in proper balance), the more we will have a
healthy fear of Him. And the closer our
relationship with Him will be. It is
this closeness and the passionate pursuit of Him that He wants for us. And it’s what we need to live in the wisest,
most fruitful, godly way possible.
In our country, I fear that we are
failing at seeing God as He really is.
We are downplaying His justness and over-highlighting His love, turning
Him into a mushy, weak God who winks at sin and just wants us to be happy. And who would have any fear of or respect for
a God like that?
We think things and teach things
like this . . .
God would never send a famine or
economic distress to get our attention.
God would never send disease to open
our eyes to our bad choices and to call us to repentance.
God would never use wars or violence
to cause us to cry out to Him.
God would never use a tornado,
earthquake, or tsunami to draw our hearts back to Him.
God is not like that. He is a soft, squishy, feeble, all-loving,
ever-forgiving God who would never dream of punishing or disciplining or
causing any kind of pain for us. He’s
all about catering to our requests and pouring out His goodness on us and
allowing us to live life on our own terms, because we are the center of the
universe. We are the lords of our own
lives. Aren’t we?
Surely, in this day and age of
rampant sexual diseases, violent wars, economic recession, famines, natural
disasters, devastating consequences of our choices, etc., none of this has been
allowed by God (or caused by God) in order to drive us to our knees, to open
our eyes to our need for Him. God would
never do that!
Or
would He?
Of course bad things do happen in a
fallen world, because of mankind’s sin and bad choices. So a lot of what happens might happen mostly because
of us, not because God specifically allows it or causes it for a reason. But . . .
“I gave you empty stomachs in every city and lack of bread in
every town, yet you have not returned to me,” declares the Lord.
“I also withheld rain from you when
the harvest was still three months away. . . People staggered from town to town
for water but did not get enough to drink, yet you have not returned to me,”
declares the Lord.
“Many times I struck your gardens
and vineyards, I struck them with blight and mildew. Locusts devoured your figs and olive trees,
yet you have not returned to me,” declares the Lord.
“I sent plagues among you . . .
killed your young men with the sword . . . overthrew some of you as I overthrew
Sodom and Gomorrah . . . yet you have not returned to me,” declares the Lord.
“Therefore this is what I will do to
you, Israel, and because I will do this to you, prepare to meet your God, O
Israel.” (Amos 4:6-12)
We have forgotten what God is
capable of. We have shrunk Him. We don’t fear Him anymore. We have kicked Him off the throne. We are fearing everything else but Him. And we are not returning to Him. And look at the problems it is causing in our
society and world. Are you ready to meet
your God?
“Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the
soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who
can destroy both soul and body in hell.”
(Matthew
10:28)
“It is a dreadful thing to fall into the hands of the living
God.” (Hebrews 10:31)
Jeremiah
To gain a healthy fear of the Lord
and to truly understand what kind of big, magnificent, powerful, just God He
is, let’s look at one of the most terrifying books of the Bible: Jeremiah.
Okay, there are other terrifying
parts of the Bible, particularly when hell is talked about - being separated
from God forever, eternal fire, weeping and gnashing of teeth and all
that. But Jeremiah has got to be one of
the most terrifying books there is.
Because it blows our Western idea of God’s mushy love and unending patience
out of the water.
Of course, we all know that God is
love and that His love is unending. And
we know that He is incredibly patient, pursuing sinners over lifetimes and
history so that He can draw as many people as possible to Him. But we – especially in America – seem
completely unaware of God’s justness. We
are all about His grace and mercy, yet we forget His wrath and discipline. And we are taking His grace and mercy and
love for granted.
The thing is, we want to live the
way we want to live, yet be able to call out to Him when things get too rough
for us. We want Him to step in at the
last minute and save us, after we have had all the ungodly fun we could
have. And we think that this is really
the way God works. That because His love
is so great, He will always step in when we call out to Him, regardless of our
attitude toward Him.
Now, let me say that, yes, He is
always ready to forgive and to reach down and rescue those who sincerely call
out to Him, those who genuinely turn from their sins and who open their hearts
to Him. He promises this, that anyone
who calls on the name of the Lord shall be saved. (Romans 10:9-13)
But what about those who really
don’t want to turn their hearts to Him but only want to use Him as a
last-minute life-preserver? The ones who
don’t want Him but only want the protection He offers? The ones who want to continue to live in
rebellion toward God yet want to be spared the consequences of doing so?
This is how it was in Judah during
Jeremiah’s time. The people wanted to
follow idols and they rebelled against God, refusing to obey Him or keep His
laws. And so God sent Jeremiah to
proclaim judgment on them over and over again, to call them to repentance. And yet they wouldn’t listen. They continued in their stubborn ways, even
surrounding themselves with lying prophets who told them what they wanted to
hear. And they thought they were godly
enough. They couldn’t imagine that there
was anything that they should be punished for, so they brushed off Jeremiah’s
warnings.
Besides, they could always call on
God last minute to come save them, to spare them from some terrible
consequences, no matter how they lived or rebelled, right? After all, isn’t He a soft, mushy God who is
so loving that He will always jump in and rescue them from anything bad happening? Isn’t He so patient that He waits around for
years for people to call out to Him in their time of distress, just so He can
reach down and make everything all better?
Doesn’t He overlook any and all offenses because His love is so great
and because He is all about mercy and grace?
He never punishes or lets people get what they deserve because He is all
about the love. Right?
Jeremiah 7:16: (God says to Jeremiah . . .) “So do not pray for this people nor offer any plea or petition
for them; do not plead with me, for I will not listen to you.”
Jeremiah 9:13-16: “The Lord said, ‘It is
because they have forsaken my law, which I set before them; they have not
obeyed me or followed my law. Instead,
they have followed the stubbornness of their hearts . . .’ Therefore, this is what the Lord Almighty,
the God of Israel, says: ‘See, I will make this people eat bitter food and
drink poisoned water. I will scatter
them among the nations that neither they nor their fathers have known, and I
will pursue them with the sword until I have destroyed them.’”
Jeremiah 11: 14: (God
says to Jeremiah . . .) “Do not pray for this people nor offer any
plea or petition for them, because I will not listen when they call to me in
the time of their distress.”
Jeremiah 21:4-10: “’This is what the Lord, the God of Israel,
says: I am about to turn against you the weapons of war that are in your hands
. . . I myself will fight against you with an outstretched hand and a mighty
arm in anger and fury and great wrath. I
will strike down those who live in this city – both men and animals – and they
will die of a terrible plague. After
that, declares the Lord, I will hand over [those people] who survive the
plague, sword and famine, to Nebuchadnezzar king of Babylon and to the enemies
who seek their lives. He will put them
to the sword; he will show them no mercy or pity or compassion.’ . . . ‘I am
setting before you the way of life and the way of death. Whoever stays in this city will die by sword,
famine or plague. But whoever goes out
and surrenders to the Babylonians who are besieging you will live; he will
escape with his life. I have determined
to do this city harm and not good, declares the Lord.’”
Amazing! Freakin’ terrifying! This should sober us greatly. It should hit us to the very core. Could you imagine not only facing the horrors
of this lifetime – war, disease, famine, violence, natural disasters, etc. – but
also knowing that you have no one to go to for help, that the very God of the
universe has turned His back on you in His justness and is refusing to listen
to your cry for help, that you have fallen into the hands of the living God!?! To whom can you go then, when God Himself has
decreed these punishments?
In America, we are so used to
getting what we want, when we want. We
live with abundant blessings and we take them for granted, believing that we
deserve them and that they will always be there. We believe that it’s all about us. We are self-centered, spoiled
diaper-babies. And we have forgotten
God.
Actually, we haven’t just forgotten
Him. We have asked Him to get out of our
country in many, many ways. We want to
take His name out of the Pledge of Allegiance, out of the national “In God We
Trust” motto, and out of Christmas, changing it to the less offensive “Happy Holidays.” We want to remove Bibles and erase references
to Him from government buildings, schools, and public places. We want to trim back the freedom of speech so
that Christians can’t live and act according to their faith too much. Because it offends people who don’t believe
in God.
We live the way we want, refusing to
acknowledge God as Creator and refusing to follow His ways as laid out in the
Bible. We are much too concerned with
enjoying our little lives to worry about what He has to say. And we don’t want anyone else to challenge
our choices and behaviors. We don’t want
to hear anything defined as “sin” or to hear “not all roads lead to heaven”
because that sounds offensive and judgmental.
We have our own idols of money and
success and pleasure and self. And
that’s all we want. And even as
Christians, we have our own ideas of God and how He is here to serve us and
give us good things and keep bad things from happening to us, and how we can
tuck Him away in a little box and put Him on a shelf until we want Him. (And so we ignore Him during the good times
and we claim credit for the good things, but we blame Him when things go
wrong!)
We overemphasize His soft, mushy
love and His unending patience, yet we fail to live in holy fear of His justness
and holiness. And so if the time should
ever come that we face persecution and trials – famine, war, disease, etc. –
surely God will reach down and rescue us, right? Because we asked Him to? A tender, gentle, loving God would never
allow bad things to happen to us. Right?
But what if the last-minute,
fail-safe, rescue plan doesn’t work?
What if the One you counted on to save you from the consequences of your
rebellion refuses to help? What if the
God of the universe is the very One fighting against you, instead of coming to
your rescue like you thought He would?
What if we pushed Him too far, and now He has decided to respond out of
His justness instead of His patient, unending love and mercy?
Let’s update Judah’s punishment a
little. What if, here in America, God
decided to let Ebola run loose? (I am
not saying God is using that as a punishment in Africa, but what if He decides
to use it as a punishment in America?)
Imagine that Ebola and terrorists have descended on America, wiping out
thousands with disease and violence. And
then throw in some famine, when all of our crops fail and we cannot produce
food for ourselves. And then, after all
this, the survivors are taken by the terrorists, removed from America and
forced to live as slaves.
And God Himself turns a deaf ear to
our cries. . . because we have asked Him to get out of our country . . .
because we have turned our backs on Him, pushing Him away with our continued
rebellion and self-worship . . . because He has decided to do us harm and not
good, as discipline and punishment . . . because we have taken His love and
patience for granted for too long, smugly brushing it aside. Because we have no fear of Him anymore. What if?
Can you think of any more terrifying
scenario than to know that God Himself has turned His face from you, that He
would refuse to listen to your cries for mercy, that you have no one to turn to
at a time like that?
Actually, I think there is one thing
that is more horrifying than that. And
that would be for God to let us continue in our rebellion, disobedience, and
hard-heartedness so that we never seek Him or turn toward Him in
repentance. Happily, self-gratifyingly,
and ignorantly skipping our way straight to hell.
This is why God has given us His
Word and the examples we find in Scripture: to learn from, to find Truth, to
guide us, and to call us to Him. And the
wise take this seriously. Let us never
forget that God is a holy God, with a keen sense of justice as well as an
unending, patient, unconditional love.
And you know the most amazing thing
about our God, the One who could destroy rebellious nations in His wrath?
Jeremiah 5:1: “Go up and down the streets of Jerusalem, look
around and consider, search through her squares. If you can find but one person who deals
honestly and seeks the truth, I will forgive this city.”
The same God who pours out wrath is
the One who will forgive a whole ungodly city for one righteous person. This love should never be taken for granted,
ignoring it while we live the way we want.
But it should make us fall on our knees in thankfulness and want to know
Him more. It should make us want to live
a more honoring life for Him. It should
make us pursue godly righteousness. It
should develop in us a healthy respect, awe, and fear. Because that is some amazing love! How could we continue to live in rebellion or
apathy toward a love as great and patient as that? There is no excuse! And at some point, there may be no One to
call on to save us from the consequences of our rebellion.
“Help, Lord, for the godly are no more; the faithful have
vanished from among men.” (Psalm 12:1)
“Seek the Lord while he may be found; call on him while he is
near.” (Isaiah 55:6)
“For the eyes of the Lord range
throughout the earth to strengthen those whose hearts are fully committed to
him.” (2 Chronicles 16:9)
“If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves
and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear from
heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land. Now my eyes will be open and my ears
attentive to the prayers offered in this place.” (2 Chronicles 7:14-15)
Asking for Wisdom
Earlier, I pointed out
how the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. There is another aspect to wisdom that I want
to look at for a moment. A more
practical aspect.
James 1:5 says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask God, who gives
generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to him.”
Proverbs 3:5-6: “Trust in the Lord with all your heart and
lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he
will make your paths straight.”
Isaiah 48: 17: “This is what the Lord
says . . .’I am the Lord your God, who teaches you what is best for you, who
directs you in the way you should go.’“
When I face a hard decision and I am
not sure what the Lord wants me to do, it is all-too-easy to panic, to fear
that I will miss “His Will.” But God’s
Word says that He will give us wisdom if we ask. He said that He will make our paths straight
if we trust Him with all of our heart and acknowledge Him in all our ways. And He said that He will tell us the way to
go. We just have to listen.
He promised to do these things. And I think having a proper fear of Him means
that we believe Him and His promises, that we take Him at His Word when He says
He will make our paths straight as long as we are doing our part. It means that we trust that He is a good,
loving, wise Father who will guide us and care for us and work all things out
for good.
A healthy fear of Him will also lead
us to become more concerned with righteousness, obedience, and glorifying Him
than we are with fulfilling our wants and meeting our “needs” and planning the
future. Because we trust Him.
I think our fear of Him is tied to
our ability to trust Him. The one
affects the other and vice versa. How
can we have a healthy fear of Him if we don’t’ trust Him? How can we trust Him if we don’t see Him for
the powerful and magnificent God that He really is, if we don’t have a healthy
respect and awe for Him?
But if we really know Him and have
learned to trust Him and are walking with Him, we don’t have to be afraid that
He will let us down, that He won’t straighten out our paths or give us the
wisdom we need. We don’t have to be
afraid that we won’t hear Him, because He has promised to lead us. As long as we are doing our part – seeking
righteousness, walking in obedience, praying, abiding in God’s Word - we can
trust that He will faithfully come through loud and clear when the time is
right. (And this will be especially
helpful during those long waits and long trials when we are waiting on Him and
not sure what to do next.)
I tend to panic a lot when I need
guidance from God and He doesn’t seem to be answering. I worry that I will miss His guidance, that I
will fail to hear His leading.
But over time, I have learned that if
I do not yet have a sense of the next step God wants me to take - if it is
still unclear - then He hasn’t yet revealed it.
Because when He does, it will be clear.
I won’t have to wonder. So if I
am still wondering and unsure, then I know I need to wait some more, until it
is clear. I am learning that when He
says He will give me wisdom, He means it.
I just need to relax and trust Him more.
Wisdom is tied to our fear of
God. Which is tied to our trust of
God. Which is tied to how well we know
God as He really is, instead of just our own ideas of Him. Which is tied to whether we abide in the Word
or not.
“My son, if you accept my words and
store up my commands within you, turning your ear to wisdom and applying your
heart to understanding, and if you call out for insight and cry aloud for
understanding, and if you look for it as for silver and search for it as for
hidden treasure, then you will understand the fear of the Lord and find the
knowledge of God.” (Proverbs 2:1-5)
Psalm 147: 11: “the Lord delights in those who fear him, who
put their hope in His unfailing love.”
So how many of us would like to be
wise? Are we willing to put in the
necessary effort and time to find wisdom, to understand the fear of the
Lord? Are we willing to open our eyes to
who God really is, to really find Him in the pages of the Bible, and to fall
down on our faces before Him in humility?
Or would we rather substitute
knowledge for wisdom? After all,
knowledge is much easier to gain.
Would we rather substitute our own
wisdom for godly wisdom? Because we are
pretty great Christians who know the Bible and know what we’re doing.
Would we rather think of God as soft
and mushy instead of holy and just?
Because a holy and just God is a scary God and we don’t want to have to
change the way we live.
Would we rather substitute serving
the Lord for the fear of the Lord?
Because serving is easier and more obvious.
“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom.”
Do we really understand what this
means?
Questions:
1.
Does this topic trigger any thoughts or questions you want to
share? Any other Bible verses?
2.
What does “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” mean?
3.
Discuss this verse. Look at each
part and discuss what it means and how we can do it? How do you think wisdom is tied to fearing
God?
“My son, if you accept my words and store up
my commands within you, turning your ear to wisdom and applying your heart to
understanding, and if you call out for insight and cry aloud for understanding,
and if you look for it as for silver and search for it as for hidden treasure,
then you will understand the fear of the Lord and find the knowledge of
God.” (Proverbs 2:1-5)
4.
How do people and a country act when they have no fear of the Lord? Why might someone have no fear of the
Lord?
5.
What does an unhealthy fear of the Lord look like? What causes it? And how does it affect our lives and our
faith?
6.
What does a healthy fear of the Lord look like? How do we get it? And how does it affect our lives and our
faith?
7. Do you think God’s Word is critical to a
proper fear of Him? What makes you say
this? For those who do not have access
to God’s Word, how would it be different for them?
8.
What do “lazy spiritual disciplines” say about our view of God and our
relationship with Him? On the flip side,
could there be anything wrong about super-strong disciplines? What are the pitfalls of each? And what should be the reasons for our
praying and Bible reading?
9.
Do you think most Christians today have a proper fear of the Lord? What makes you think this?
10.
What kinds of things get in the way of a healthy fear of the Lord?
11.
“In our country, I fear
that we are failing at seeing God as He really is. We are downplaying His justness and
over-highlighting His love, turning Him into a mushy, weak God who winks at sin
and just wants us to be happy. And who
would have any fear of or respect for a God like that?”
What do you think the general view of God is in our society: soft and
mushy, or harsh and punishing, or holy and just yet merciful and loving? Where might we be going wrong in our
thinking? And what effect is it having
on us and our churches and our country?
(How about for you personally?)
12. Discuss these verses and the effects they
should have on us:
“Do not be afraid of those who kill the body but cannot kill the
soul. Rather, be afraid of the One who
can destroy both soul and body in hell.”
(Matthew
10:28)
“It is a dreadful thing to fall into
the hands of the living God.” (Hebrews 10:31)
13. Is God still active in the world, sending
punishments and consequences to wake people up, to draw them back to Him? What kinds of things might He do to get our
attention, in our country and in our individual lives? Can you think of examples?
14. Are all bad things directly from Him? What else might cause bad things to
happen?
15. After some disasters, you might hear a
preacher telling a city that was destroyed, “God sent that disaster as a punishment
for your sins”? Can we make
proclamations like that? What is a good,
balanced way to view God’s activity in the world and the bad things that
happen?
16. What might happen if God is trying to get our
attention and we ignore Him for too long, as individuals or as a country? Examples?
17. Not only is God a just and holy God (which is
a major reason to have a proper fear of Him), but He is also a merciful
God. What does this mean? How does knowing He is just and yet still merciful factor into a
healthy fear of Him? How might we have a
hard time assimilating the two?
18. Imagine if Hitler became saved just before
his death and yet one of our closest, nicest, moral, atheist friends (or family
members) never accepted Jesus before they died?
How might most non-Christians feel about this? How do you yourself feel about something like
this? How would the Bible address
something like this in relation to God’s justice and mercy and grace?
19. Speaking of being moral, is it possible to
truly be moral yet have no belief in God?
Or is morality intrinsically tied to God and His standards? And how does mankind’s idea of morality
differ from God’s? How is it similar?
20.
Why is “subjective morality” appealing (the idea that we get to define
morality based on what we believe and how we feel)? What are some of the problems related to it? How does the world feel about “objective
morality” (the idea that morality is based on God and His standards and they
cannot be changed)? What are some
problems related to that? And when do we
run into conflicts between these two mindsets?
How can we handle it? Examples?
21.
Most people want to believe that as long as someone was a good person,
they will go to heaven when they die.
What is wrong with this way of thinking?
And after someone has
died, we usually comfort their loved ones by saying things like, “They have
gone to a better place” or “They are in heaven now,” even if they were not a Christian. Is this something we should be saying? If not, why not? And what could we say instead, especially if
we are asked if we think they are in heaven?
22. “In America, we are so used to getting what
we want, when we want. We live with
abundant blessings and we take them for granted, believing that we deserve them
and that they will always be there. We
believe that it’s all about us. We are
self-centered, spoiled diaper-babies.
And we have forgotten God.
Actually, we haven’t just forgotten Him.
We have asked Him to get out of our country in many, many ways.”
What other things show that our
country (or your country) is ignoring God or taking Him for granted? In what other ways have we as Christians or a
country shunned God, turned our backs on Him, or mocked Him? What have been some consequences of this and
what are possible future consequences?
What can Christians do about it?
What can you?
23. “If my people, who are called by my name, will humble themselves
and pray and seek my face and turn from their wicked ways, then will I hear
from heaven and will forgive their sin and will heal their land. Now my eyes will be open and my ears
attentive to the prayers offered in this place.” (2 Chronicles 7:14-15)
This is fast becoming
one of my favorite, most convicting verses.
What do you think about it and how does it affect you?
24.
Do most of us substitute knowledge for wisdom? If so, how and why?
25.
Do we often substitute our own wisdom for godly wisdom? If so, why do we do this and how does it
affect our lives and our relationship with God?
Any examples from your own life?
26.
Would most of us rather serve the Lord than fear the Lord (doing all
that is required in the Proverbs 2 passage)?
What else might we do instead of “fearing Him”?
27.
James 1:5 says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, he should ask
God, who gives generously to all without finding fault, and it will be given to
him.”
What do you think this
verse means and how should it affect our lives, our faith, and our trust in God?
28.
What kinds of things should we be seeking God’s wisdom about? How can we do this? Do you have examples from your own life when
you did seek His wisdom or when you failed to seek His wisdom?
29. “Wisdom is tied to our fear of God. Which is tied to our trust of God. Which is tied to how well we know God as He
really is, instead of just our own ideas of Him. Which is tied to whether we abide in the Word
or not.”
Do you think this is accurate? If so, how do all these things interact with
each other? If not, what would you
change or add to it?
30. Can
you see any of what we talked about in your own life?
31.
How might God be challenging you about this topic?