Where can wisdom be found
What is wisdom? First of all, according to the book of Proverbs, wisdom is knowing yourself
1. The importance of true wisdom
2. The inaccessibility of true wisdom
3. The source of true wisdom
In other words, if you have a naïve idea of the complexities and dynamics of poverty, you can do everything right, your motive is right, your ethic is right, your method is right and moral and so on, and yet you destroy the people. Why? You’re incompetent with regard to the complexities of life. That’s what wisdom is: competency with regard to the complexities of life. You have to have wisdom. Its price can’t be weighed in silver. Especially when it comes to suffering you need to have wisdom to know what to do, when to cry, when to start this, when to stop this, and so forth.
2. The inaccessibility of true wisdom
If you actually look at the first stanza, you’ll see it’s not just saying wisdom is more valuable than silver or gold; it’s actually saying also that it’s inaccessible, unlike silver and gold. It tells us man’s hand assaults the flinty rock and lays bare the roots of the mountains. How does that happen? Technology, craftsmanship.
This is an important statement for the case the book of Job is making. Job and his friends think that they know how the cosmos is ordered (the RP with justice as the foundation). God will eventually demonstrate that their model is flawed. God’s perspective on the foundation of the cosmos is based on causes (all instigated by him), not on effects (what humans experience). There is no foundational principle that runs the cosmos. The cosmos runs by God’s continuous and ongoing activity. It is dynamic because he is dynamic; this is why he acts according to circumstance and not by a rigid set of strictures. This is why modern empirical science (which is based on constancy and laws) has to remove God from the equation before it can do anything.
3. The source of true wisdom
4. The secret of true wisdom
3. How you can get wisdom for yourself
Fearing the Lord means to take him seriously as opposed to:
• thinking him detached (therefore to be ignored)
• thinking him incompetent (therefore to be treated with disdain)
• thinking him limited or impotent (therefore to be scorned)
• thinking him corrupt (therefore to be admonished)
• thinking him shortsighted (therefore to be advised)
• thinking him petty (therefore to be resented)
We trust that he is not p 292 detached, incompetent, impotent, corrupt, shortsighted, or petty.
The poem shifts the book from a search for justice to a search for wisdom
God and wisdom. The term used predominantly in Job 28 for wise/wisdom is ḥakam/ḥokmah. A study of the root ḥkm throughout the Old Testament turns up some surprising results. The Old Testament rarely suggests that God is wise.15 The noun (ḥokmah) refers to that which belongs to God p 295 (Job 12:13) and which is given by God (1 Kings 3:28; 10:24; Prov. 2:6; Eccl. 2:26). God operates in wisdom (Ps. 104:24; Prov. 3:19). God is the one who brought wisdom forth (Prov. 8:22
Wisdom should be understood as that which brings order and coherence
Since before there was creation there was only God, there was nothing for God to provide coherence for and no one to seek coherence. Order implies a relationship of things and there was nothing else. God is the author of order and the foundation for coherence, but one would not speak of God himself, alone, as coherent or orderly. Only as creation was put in place could God envision order and inculcate it into the cosmos. One can then say that God was exercising wisdom to do so, but to say that God is wise understates God’s nature. Affirmations such as “God is wise,” “God is good,” or “God is holy” are misleading and ultimately reductionistic, though the Bible makes such statements legitimately. The adjectives themselves find their definition in God, so one may as well say “God is God”—a philosophically meaningless tautology. Humans can only approach wisdom, goodness, or holiness by being like God—not because he is wise, but because any wisdom we might find has its foundations in him.
These observations help us to begin to understand the point being made in Job 28. The cosmos is permeated with wisdom because God made it that way. The poem does not suggest that God is wisdom or that he has wisdom. Certainly God understands and knows wisdom because it finds its source in him. One can only perceive order and coherence if one takes seriously that those qualities of wisdom emanate from God; thus fearing the Lord is wisdom. We are used to the saying, “All truth is God’s truth.” The variation of that saying that emerges from this discussion is “All order is God’s order.”
The introduction indicates that Job fears God (1:8). This is demonstrated by his pious attention to ritual and his turning away from evil. But p 296 there are other areas in which to express fear of the Lord. Does Job consider God to be the author of coherence? Fearing God in that manner would be demonstrated in giving him the benefit of the doubt even in the midst of perceived incoherence. For Job, coherence can only be found in justice. It would seem that if Job is unable to identify a coherence associated with justice, God becomes suspect and should be called to account. In this sense, Job at least tacitly believes that he knows the path to wisdom and the shape that it needs to take. Job’s friends suffer the same overconfidence.
Job 28 therefore serves an important function at this juncture in the book. It serves notice that Job is not in the position of control and that his expectations should not dictate the direction in which the situation proceeds. It also serves notice that the friends’ perception of coherence is flawed and simplistic.
Fearing the Lord means to take him seriously as opposed to:
• thinking him detached (therefore to be ignored)
• thinking him incompetent (therefore to be treated with disdain)
• thinking him limited or impotent (therefore to be scorned)
• thinking him corrupt (therefore to be admonished)
• thinking him shortsighted (therefore to be advised)
• thinking him petty (therefore to be resented)
If God had set up the cosmos so that justice would be the default, a fallen world could not exist. As it stands, however, there is more to the world than justice, and we should be glad of this reality. Otherwise none of us would exist.
Fear of the Lord
This becomes a matter of trust rather than understanding. Adopting such a posture does not require us to affirm that “there is a reason even though I don’t know what it is.” Instead it asks us to move beyond reasons. Our confidence is not that there is an explanation. We trust that God has established the cosmos wisely and that whatever comes our way is reconcilable with his wisdom.
Trusting in his wisdom does not make him the efficient cause of all that we experience.
Seeking coherency. So how should we make sense of God, the world, and our experience? Perhaps there is a prior question: Is coherency to be expected? My reading of Ecclesiastes would suggest that we should not expect coherency. God, despite the fact that he has revealed himself to us, remains mysterious and paradoxical. The world, though under the control of God, is fallen, and as it awaits redemption it is often more chaotic than coherent. Our experiences in this world, given what was just said about God and the world, will evade our vain attempts to be harnessed into some sustained and consistent coherence
Path to Wisdom
JHW: Kelly, as you read Job 28 and the present chapter and reflect on the list above, what makes sense and what doesn’t? Have any of these worked for you as you have tried to struggle through your circumstances?