The Wise Guy in the Backseat
Mar. 10,2012
“Oh, how I love your law! I meditate on it all day long." “Oh, how I love your law! I meditate on it all day long." Psalm 119:97
Driving
with two young children in the backseat often requires a special kind
of grace. Especially when, like on this trip, I was the parent. We were
driving to Grand Rapids to hear one of my favorite pastors speak, and
we were seriously stuck in traffic. I desperately studied the map for
an alternate route while my 3-year-old son amused himself by teasing
his 18-month-old sister. Her piercing screams got louder until my
already frayed nerves finally snapped. I reached behind my seat with
the folded map and bonked my son on the head, yelling, “Stop doing that
to your sister!”
My son, wide-eyed, looked at me from the backseat and admonished, “Daddy, it’s not be ye kind to hit people!”
Ouch.
I
have an advanced degree in theology and make a living teaching others
the Word of God. And yet, in that moment, it took a 3-year-old’s loose
paraphrase of Ephesians 4:32, to help me catch a biblical clue. Out of
the mouths of babes!
That’s exactly what the psalmist is talking
about in this tiny nugget of truth from Psalm 119:97-112. Advanced
degrees and knowledge-laden education or even an ordination to preach,
do not, in and of themselves, make one wise. In fact, some of the
smartest and most talented people in this world live and act in
extremely unwise ways. Paul references people like that in Romans
1:21-22 when he says, “For although they knew God, they neither
glorified him as God nor gave thanks to him, but their thinking became
futile and their foolish hearts were darkened. Although they claimed to
be wise, they became fools.”
It’s God’s Word that makes us wise. In fact, let me be more specific—it’s knowing and applying
God’s Word that makes us wise. I knew the biblical truths in my head.
But in a frustrated moment, I got a solid “F” in translating God’s Word
into wisdom in my life.
The beauty of God’s Word is that it is so
accessible. From young children, not even yet able to read, to stellar
biblical scholars, His truths offer fresh insight and perspective. In
the trustworthy pages of the Bible, God actually—get this—teaches
us. Instruction directly from the Author and Creator of Life! No wonder
His Word “gives understanding to the simple” (Psalm 119:130).
That’s
why the writer of this psalm, the longest chapter in the Bible,
committed to meditating on God’s law all day long. He knew that
questions would surface every day for which he had no answer. He knew
that the daily struggle to live with integrity and purpose would
require countless moment-by-moment decisions for which he would need
wise counsel. And so he steeped his mind and his heart in the truth of
God’s Word, heartily trusting that it would be sufficient for every
situation. His confidence was that immersion in the truth of the Law
granted him wisdom—the real, rubber-meets-the-road kind of
wisdom—beyond what could be learned in school.
And so, armed with
sound biblical wisdom, a 3-year-old wise guy in the backseat of my car
brought a much-needed rebuke to his “biblically educated” Dad. And, by
the way, for the rest of the car trip, I was a little bit more “be ye
kind.”
YOUR JOURNEY…
- How
have you seen God’s truth affecting daily decisions and actions in your
life? In what areas do you need more of His wisdom and less of your
own? On a scale of 1 to 5, how deeply are you immersing yourself in the
truth of God’s Word?
(1 = Wading in the kiddy pool, 5 = Scuba-diving deep in His truth) - What action steps could you intentionally take to help you go deeper in your study and application of God’s Word?
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