The Way of Wisdom

Jerry and I were reading to our second graders one time and they were excited to tell us about the newest word they had learned: “genre.”

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These are such smart, clever children!

Back when you and I were in the second grade, even if we didn’t know the term “genre,” we still knew there were different categories of the things we were reading.

We knew the difference between comic books and history books and biographies; we learned how fiction, non-fiction and science fiction works.

The ability to discern between different genres still comes in handy for adults. For example, we know how important it is to notice the difference between objective news reporting and commentary or opinions; between science and poetry; between history with documentable facts and the stories that interpret and make meaning of facts.

This is not to say that some genres are better than others; that some categories are necessarily “truer” than others.

But it is to say that finding meaning and discerning what is “true” requires understanding a big picture, not just one small piece of reality.

Look at our music, for example. We wouldn’t say that only classical music is “right;” or country or rock or bluegrass. We see all those different genres of music as rich and interesting and beneficial as we seek to experience life more fully.

All this variety makes us better and bigger as we share life together with all our different tastes and preferences.

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In much the same way, we appreciate the numerous genres of Scripture.

In this complex book we call the Bible, we recognize that it is really more than one book; it is an entire library of books written by a variety of authors with a range of understandings over a number of centuries.

We come to see that the Bible contains numerous genres: Poetry, Prophecy, Parables, Narrative, Apocalyptic (visions) and Wisdom – to name just a few.

Considering these various genres of Scripture is an important way to read and re-read our Bible. It’s helpful to recognize how they work together to create understanding and to reveal meaning.

As we read, it’s also important to see how a variety of perspectives, how various streams of thought come together, intersect and inform one another in the big picture of the Bible.

For example, the narrative of the story of Israel can sometimes be pretty raw and violent and even hopeless. “What goes around comes around,” is how it looks in some of these stories. People seem to be stuck in vicious cycles that keep showing up in generation after generation of broken humanity.

But then the prophetic tradition informs and critiques the narrative tradition.

We hear a different melody, an alternative refrain that infuses Israel with hope. It is the prophets who hold forth a new vision: a hope that things will not always be as they are now. That humanity will not stay stuck. That God will not stay hidden but – in God’s own time – will be faithful to intersect human history and accomplish the divine purposes for goodness and wholeness.

Or another example: remember when we were reading Leviticus and Deuteronomy recently, we also were reading the New Testament book of Hebrews.

In Hebrews we discovered how a theological reflection from the perspective of the Christ event can give us freedom to re-interpret ancient understandings about the priestly system or the sacrificial system or the ethics and morals of a people in another time and place.

When we are reading the Bible and asking: ‘what does this mean?’ it is important to see the big picture of the writings within an overarching balance and counterbalance.

Wisdom is one such tradition that stands in tension with the covenantal narrative of the Law.

When the Law offers “thou shalts” and “thou shalt nots” as the Word of the Lord delivered from the mountain top and set in stone, Wisdom says: Yes-And; the “word is very near you; it is in your mouth and in your heart…” (Deuteronomy 30:14).

When the Law’s deuteronomistic understandings say: “you get what you deserve,” Wisdom argues: “Yes-But … Sometimes bad things happen to good people. Sometimes life doesn’t work the way it’s supposed to work.”

When the Law thunders: “thus saith the Lord…” Wisdom hears the voice of God in the whispers, in the silences, in the still small voice. Wisdom trusts that “when you turn to the right or when you turn to the left, your ears shall hear a word behind you, saying, “This is the way; walk in it.” (Isaiah 30:21).

When the Law reveals the will of God in the offering of the sacrifices and the repetitions of the priests and the practices of the Temple, Wisdom discovers the will of God also in a mother’s love and a father’s devotion and the faithfulness of a friend.

Within the sweep of the biblical story, all the various voices must be heard and respected.

But in these days in particular, I think we modern church folks need to listen more carefully and more attentively to the voice of Wisdom.

We need to pay attention because wisdom traditions are the deep wisdom of lived experience.

This is the knowing that comes from the doing, from actually living our lives with compassion and grace, with love and mercy. Lessons learned and truth discerned – this too is a way of knowing – not just “what does the Bible say.”

The practical theology of our living helps us to discover something about the God who is; the God who creates and redeems and sustains.

The Wisdom Tradition of Israel is grounded in creation and the Wisdom of the creation teaches that all things are made for God’s purposes and God’s glory.

  • All things are made to be good and to work together for good.
  • All things are connected and inter-connected, intimately woven together into an harmonic wholeness.

Wisdom teaches us that even though we humans are an important and esteemed part of God’s ultimate plan and purposes, we are not the center of this universe.

Wisdom teaches that we are part of a whole.
  • That we are created in God’s image.
  • That we need not be fragmented within our communities nor within ourselves.
  • That we are always in the process of being re-shaped and re-created into the image of the one true God and the Creating Christ.

The Wisdom Tradition of Israel teaches that there are two fundamental ways:

  • a way that is the Way of the Creator, the way of life, the way of the wise.
  • And a way that is the way of death, the way of the fool.

Wisdom says (as Walter Brueggemann says):

God will be God! It is profound stupidity to think or to live otherwise.

Sophia

As you have read Proverbs 8 again this week, maybe you will recall the lovely image of Woman Wisdom calling out to humanity, enticing us to come, to learn, to walk in her way: the way of the Creator, the way of life.

Does not wisdom call; does not understanding raise her voice?   …

The LORD created me at the beginning of his work, the first of God’s acts long ago…

When the Lord established the heavens, I was there; when God drew a circle on the face of the deep and made firm the skies above; when God established the fountains of the deep and assigned to the sea its limit; when God marked out the foundations of the earth … I was there, like a master worker daily God’s delight.


I rejoiced always, rejoicing in this inhabited world and delighting in humanity.

Wisdom in the Old Testament is always “Sophia” – a divine female figure.
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And so it is fascinating to see in the first chapter of the Gospel of John, John’s brilliant re-working of the Sophia/Wisdom Tradition as he interpreted the Christ event.

John re-read his own Scripture, recognizing the Creating Wisdom of Sophia and then re-writing the creation story to include the Creating Christ, the Logos.

This Logos was – like Sophia – “in the beginning with God; the One through whom all things were created.”

“If the Christian movement is anything,” Brueggemann says, “it is an ongoing interpretive reflection on the tradition…”

Walter Brueggemann, Theology of the Old Testament (Fortress Press, 1997).

And so the Gospel of John, steeped in the Wisdom Tradition, is an “interpretive reflection” that ponders and celebrates unknowable mysteries that are being made known by God through this One: Jesus the Christ.

Jesus the Christ: the Wisdom of God embodied, incarnate.

Jesus the Christ: truly God – who has come to make God known; who has come to show us what love and grace and compassion and fidelity actually look like and sound like and feel like.

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Jesus the Christ: truly human – who has come to show us humans what it means to be fully human, authentically human – and to reveal to us what wise living looks like.

The Spirit of the Risen Christ – for us here and now – is constantly teaching and guiding and leading and surrounding and nudging and correcting and comforting and encouraging and helping us to become truly human.

The Spirit of Wisdom enables us to become who we are created and called to be.

Living in The Story readings for Week 31 (This looks like a lot of reading but if you are able to take the time to consider all these works during one week, you will find wide and rich connections. Consider setting up some of these long readings in an audio Bible app so you can listen instead of read.)

Proverbs 1-9

Proverbs 10-26

Ecclesiastes

Song of Solomon

Psalm 63

Psalm 72

Psalm 132

John 11

James

Image Credits:

“Wisdom Sophia” by Mirta Toledo

The Christ/Sophia painting probably represents Jesus and Mary Magdalene (“Yeshua and Miriam”) I use it to represent the partnership of Logos and Sophia.)

Icon: “Creation of the Cosmos” (In the Beginning)

Author: Charlotte Vaughan Coyle

Charlotte lives and blogs in Paris TX. She is ordained within the Christian Church (Disciples of Christ) and developed Living in The Story while doing doctoral work at Brite Divinity School in Ft. Worth. Charlotte also blogs about intersections of faith, politics, and culture at CharlotteVaughanCoyle.com.