A Case for Reading the Proverbs
This is the introduction to the Book of Proverbs written by Eugene Peterson in the Message Bible. It such a great reading Bible, written for the purpose of getting you to read the Bible! It is so descriptive and compelling. I hope that it will motivate you to start or to keep on reading the Proverbs. Remember that there are 31 Proverbs and most months have 31 days! An awesome coincidence!
“Many people think that what’s written in the Bible has mostly to do with getting people into heaven—getting right with God, saving their eternal souls. It does have to do with that, of course, but not mostly. It is equally concerned with living on this earth—living well, living in robust sanity. In our Scriptures, heaven is not the primary concern, to which earth is a tagalong afterthought. “On earth as it is in heaven” is Jesus’ prayer.
“Wisdom” is the biblical term for this on-earth-as-it-is-in-heaven everyday living. Wisdom is the art of living skillfully in whatever actual conditions we find ourselves. It has virtually nothing to do with information as such, with knowledge as such. A college degree is no certification of wisdom—nor is it primarily concerned with keeping us out of moral mud puddles, although it does have a profound moral effect upon us.
Wisdom has to do with becoming skillful in honoring our parents and raising our children, handling our money and conducting our sexual lives, going to work and exercising leadership, using words well and treating friends kindly, eating and drinking healthily, cultivating emotions within ourselves and attitudes toward others that make for peace. Threaded through all these items is the insistence that the way we think of and respond to God is the most practical thing we do. In matters of everyday practicality, nothing, absolutely nothing, takes precedence over God.
Proverbs concentrates on these concerns more than any other book in the Bible. Attention to the here and now is everywhere present in the stories and legislation, the prayers and the sermons, that are spread over the thousands of pages of the Bible. Proverbs distills it all into riveting images and aphorisms that keep us connected in holy obedience to the ordinary.”
Grace & peace!

October 16th, 2009 at 7:00 pm
I have trouble reading proverbs because the subject skips every other verse. I like psalms a lot though.
But my husband, he LOVES proverbs. I think it’s one of his fave books.
October 17th, 2009 at 6:36 am
Your first and finale 15 have been a blessing to me and my family. Thank you for teaching us the importance of proverbs and Psalms. We are blessed to call you our Pastor!
November 16th, 2009 at 12:19 pm
Thank you gilligan family,my our father guild and watch over you and all the church body amen
December 6th, 2009 at 7:44 am
Proverbs for me was the tool God used to untwist my mind. I had gotten myself in a emotional relationship that was confusing the truth. Proverbs helped me understand right from wrong, good from bad, up from down, light from dark. This writing lead me step by step back to the sanity of my Lord and Savior. When I minister to those who have lost sight of right and wrong, it is easy to follow the road in proverbs with them.