If Christ is risen, nothing else matters. And if Christ is not risen - nothing else matters.
Jaroslav Pelikan
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God exists and is the uncreated
creator of the universe and humans, and He cares about what happens to them. He
loves them.
•
God’s existence is seen in nature, in
human events, and in the human soul created in His image.
•
True joy, without side effects or
adverse consequences, is the result of the practice of virtue. Pain, misery,
suffering are the end result of the practice of sin and evil.
• God plans to bring about a peaceful and just kingdom on the earth, His kingdom, in which those who follow and practice His ways will participate, but those who don’t, won’t.
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Wisdom - blessings flow from having
and heeding wisdom and especially obeying and trusting God
•
Foolishness - fools, foolish actions
and attitudes, have bad consequences.
•
Evil men’s acts have terrible
consequences.
•
Virtues bear fruit; for example,
faithfulness, righteousness, integrity, truthfulness, diligence, humility,
honesty, love.
•
Sinful traits have consequences -
pride, laziness, sexual activity outside marriage, alcoholism, deceit and
dishonesty, greed, anger, envy, gluttony
•
Virtuous wives are blessings to their
husbands
•
Raising children, honoring parents
yields blessings
•
Respect for others - God and His ways,
family, neighbors, rulers, and those we deal with in life - is embedded in all
good things.
These themes are all repeated in the New Testament, in fact taken for granted. The seven deadly sins from church doctrine pretty much repeat proverbs in summary form. The difference is this: in the Old Testament, virtue was a choice that relied on human dedication and human strength to practice. In the New Testament we have the promise of the indwelling Christ and the anointing of the Holy Spirit to empower us once we have made the decision to receive them. Proverbs spells out the consequences of sin and, in Solomon’s day, that was the incentive to virtuous living. Under the new covenant, those washed by the blood of Christ often are spared some of these consequences, but the forgiveness of sins does not automatically guarantee freedom from their natural consequences. The empowerment of the Holy Spirit produces fruit. (James 3:17).
God often uses natural outcomes of sinful choices to disciple us to learn not repeat them. And in my experience, He orchestrates life so that repeated actions result in escalating prices that we or others pay. I do not know whether or not He does the same for those who reject Him. The Old Testament seems to indicate that it was not just Israel who was chastised for their rebellion against Him. At the very least, we know that Noah preached to his neighbors before the flood, and it seems that Lot testified to some extent to the men of Sodom before their destruction, and that God spoke to Pharaoh about taking Abram’s wife. It may be that for unbelievers, God’s primary effort to turn them from sin is human preaching, and that He backstops that with dreams and visions when humans fall short. We have Jesus’ great commission, to carry the gospel to every tribe and nation.
The prescriptions of Proverbs for a virtuous life and its fruit are perhaps the only appeal that will make sense to the unregenerate, if they have rejected the gospel. But their reaction seems to be philosophical nihilism that nothing really matters - not joy, not virtue, not eternal rewards. God’s ultimate plan is for Christ to return and establish His kingdom on the earth through the rule of the redeemed, completing what Adam was first commanded. (Isaiah 65:17-25) This really matters!
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