I need wisdom. I need knowledge also. But I have a reasonable measure of knowledge
and I know how to learn. Acquiring knowledge can be difficult but it can be
gained by our personal grit and study and with the help of others who know how
to point us in the right direction. But gaining wisdom is more difficult. Wisdom
is gained through a lifetime of failures and successes and the painful
experiences along the way. Even then wisdom will not be fully gained unless we
have a desire to learn from our experiences. Wisdom is ultimately acquired when
we seek God’s advice and allow His mind to interact with our minds as we
journey through life. Proverbs 9:10 says “The fear of the Lord is the beginning
of wisdom”. In James 1:5 we read “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God
who gives generously to all without reproach, and it will be given to him”.
If we are honest, we will all agree that we lack wisdom and
thus all of us are in need of wisdom. We understand however that wisdom comes
from God and that God is delighted to dispense wisdom to us. Wisdom is available
to us when we pray and ask God for insight and understanding and application. We
need knowledge but wisdom is far greater because wisdom enables us to
practically and properly use the knowledge that we have. Wisdom makes knowledge
productive. God desires to be generous in dispensing wisdom to us. God is not
harsh but gives generously to all without reproach. This means that God is not looking
for flaws within us that would disqualify us from receiving wisdom. God is not
looking at our faults to find reasons to not grant us wisdom. If He did none of
us would be worthy of God’s gift of wisdom. God desires to lavish us with all
the wisdom we need. But we do need to ask God for wisdom and we need to ask God
for wisdom believing that God will indeed give us wisdom.
Receiving wisdom from God requires faith. James wrote “But
let him ask in faith, with no doubting, for the one who doubts is like a wave
of the sea that is driven and tossed by the wind. For that person must not
suppose that he will receive anything from the Lord; he is a double-minded man,
unstable in all his ways” (James 1:6-8). Getting wisdom from God requires a
focus that is grounded by faith in God. This does not mean that we do not
struggle in our faith. God is not asking us to have blind faith. Faith in God
is not ignorant of the realities of the world. God is not saying that we must
have a faith that does not struggle with doubt. Indeed, that level of faith
does not exist in frail humanity. We all struggle in our faith. Faith and doubt
are often, maybe usually, mingled together. But faith needs to be dominate in
our lives. The world around us is a doubting world tossed about by the wind and
the movement of the earth. People who succumb to this kind of doubt are filled
with so much duplicity that they are unable to find stability. In that
predicament they will never discover God’s gift of wisdom. To have faith means
that when the waves of doubt come, we stand firm holding onto to whatever amount
of faith we have. It might not be much faith. It may be faith no bigger than a
grain of mustard seed. It may be a weak faith that finds us crying out “Lord, I
believe, help my unbelief”. But yet it is a faith that is certain of God’s love
for us and is committed to fulfill our life’s purpose of serving God. It is a
faith to which God will reward an abundance of wisdom.
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