Wednesday, November 13, 2024

Sister Tarpley: Are You a Fool?

GeRand Nelson and Terrance Woodson, Jr. in their camp shirts and head bands,
when they showed film of camp activates for the week of camp.

By: Sister Tarpley, NDG Religion Editor

“The fear of the Lord is the beginning of knowledge, but fools despise wisdom and discipline.”  (Proverbs 1:7)

Marvin Wilson, author of Our Father Abraham, has written incisively about the various meanings for our word “fool”:   In Biblical wisdom literature, the pupils of the sages and mentors are the unwise, often termed “fools”  (Proverbs 1:7) or “simple one” (Proverbs 1:22).  In wisdom literature, the different levels of fools, both young and old, are the raw material on which the sages had to work, and they represent the varying degrees of rawness.

Perhaps as much as anything else, the term fool is descriptive of an attitude, bent of mind, or direction in life, which needs correcting.  The various Hebrew words for fool occur more than a hundred times in the book of Proverbs.

The reference to someone being a fool was not necessarily a negative term.  A simple fool was a person who made mistakes, but quickly righted them and was restored to fellowship with God and with others.  King David was a simple fool, one who made mistakes, but kept a repentant heart toward God.  This is why God did not turn away from him for his many sins.

The hardened fool, makes mistakes, but never learns from them and will not listen to others.  Such people can expect God’s reproof to continue and will eat the fruit of their own way (see Proverb 1:31-32).  The hardened fool “returns to his own vomit.”  King Saul was a hardened fool, one who made mistakes and continued in them even after realizing he was wrong.  We’re going to err in our ways.  The question is, once we know we have made a mistake before God, do we make the necessary adjustments that will allow Him to intervene on our behalf?  And, will we avoid the same course of action in the future?  God says that if we do, He will pour out His Spirit on us (see Proverb 1:23).  He will make known His words to us.

The third level of fool mentioned in Proverbs is the mocking fool.  The mocking fool mocks the things of God.  This word means “scoffer” or “scorner.”  When you encounter cynical people who disregard the things of God, you know these people are “mocking fools.”

The fourth level of fool is the God-denying fool. This term relates to the morally wicked person who ignores the disgrace he brings on his family and who despises holiness (see Proverbs 17:21).  This person says, “There is no God.”  By failing to acknowledge God for who He is, the God-denying fool, declares himself to be a “God-denying” fool.

It has been found that it is helpful to try to understand if people are teachable.  Are they simple fools, those who make mistakes but seek to learn from them?  These people can be worked with, but if people sense they are working with a hardened fool, they know they should not spend much time on that person.  Jesus did not spend much time trying to convince the rich young ruler.  He presented truth, and let him make his decision.  Some people must get broken before they can become simple fools.  Sometimes it is simply better to let Satan work on people until the ground is fertile enough to present truth to them.

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