It is one of the saddest stories n the bible.
Didn't say in a round about way that it was hidden ... covered up ... we mist up again ... that brain fog from the heating waters in the kettle ... caldron of mind? Tis often steamy ...
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It is one of the saddest stories n the bible.
More Psalms.
I've reached the end of 2nd Samuel, and returned to 1 Chonicles, picking up at chapter 21. David is reaching the end of his long and eventful life. He has chosen Solomon from among his sons to be his heir, and he gathers materials and workers for Solomon to build the temple. (The Lord didn't want David to build the temple because of all the blood he had shed in the battles during his lifetime. Solomon's reign will be a reign of peace and Solomon will build the temple.)
I've read Proverbs 1 - 24 to date.
Proverbs are conventional wisdom - the type of advice older people give to youth. Not laws or commandments, but generallly good advice. They remind me of advice given in Shakespears 'Hamlet' - 'Never a lender or a borrower be.' 'Dress as costly as your purse will allow.; wise sayings from my elders when I was young 'birds of a feather flock together'. 'a stitch in time saves nine'.
Supposedly written by Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived, they are often common sense, and make statements about things that are easily observable. They predict consequences: work hard and be successful; be lazy and a failure. Rewards for the good; misfortune for the bad.
Mostly conventional advice - but sometimes open to misinterpretation. 'Spare the rod ...' has been discussed in another thread. Proverbs has been quoted by proponents of the prosperity gospel. Women often shown in a poor light - gossiping, shrill, talking too much - and leading young men into adultery.
Use a bit of discernment when applying Proverbs to your life.
Only some of the proverbs are attributed to Solomon - not all. My favorite proverb - 'Go to the ant you sluggard!'![]()
Only some of the proverbs are attributed to Solomon - not all. My favorite proverb - 'Go to the ant you sluggard!'![]()
I did notice that sometimes the style and/or tone changed (the passage on wisdom for example is not written in the short two-line style of the sayings) and I suspected that there might be several different writers involved.
Reviewing my 'reflection', I realize that there is one point for which I didn't give due importance; that is in their developing understanding of monotheism they kept falling back on ideas of dualism, and what about the gods of other tribes.
Hear oh Israel, the Lord your God is One. Thou shalt worship the Lord your God. Do not make any graven image or any likeness of anything ... Do not bow down to them or worship them. - No golden calves.
Thou shalt not worship any other gods. - Does this imply that there are other gods - gods forbidden to the Israelites?
The temptation was always there. Joshua warned about it before he led the people into the promised land - choose this day which way you will go. Will you be attracted to the foreign gods of the people living in the land, or will you worship only God.
Since God had chosen the Israelites as his people, he was their God.
Other people worshiped other gods - baals. They were evil - or false.
But some of them were attractive.
There was no understanding that gods of agriculture that caused the rain to fall and the sun to shine, and/.or the goddess of furtility that helped the crops to grow andd the herds to increase, and a once barren woman to bear sons, might be aspects of the One True God. Or that worship in the high places of the countryside might be as proper as worship in the temple in Jerusalem.
King David was revered because he never swayed from his trust in God. King Solomon was influenced by his foreign wives and gradually their gods were introduced into the nation of Israel. (Foreign wives, and women in general, often take the rap for anything that goes wrong.)