The end of this phrase should be in their own eyes. Our intelligence is finite and our ability to act out wisdom is limited. When Solomon asked God for wisdom, he was rewarded for it because wisdom is what we should be attempting to achieve in this life. But even Solomon failed to fully achieve it, bringing Israel down with his foreign wives and their imported idolatrous religions. Religious freedom has a dark element to it; it is not an ideal God encouraged in Israel. In fact, he forbade it. Sometimes, I wonder what our founding fathers were thinking when they determined religious freedom to be a high ideal. Actually, I don’t have to ask because I know. They thought, unwisely, that religious freedom would mean they could practice any form of Christianity they wanted and had little foresight that spiritual battles are indeed real, and if the dark spirits could destroy Christianity in America through our foreign “wives,” as it were, then that is exactly what will happen. They also had little forethought that freedom of speech and assembly would result in pornography, gay pride parades, and drag queen story hours.
Of course, all of this is hindsight 20-20 on our parts today. We know what’s happened in America because we are living in the aftermath of our beloved cafeteria of ideas. We also know what happened in Israel due to Solomon’s lack of wisdom because it’s recorded in the historical accounts of the Israelites. What we are less able to see clearly is our own inability to have perfect understanding and wisdom. Oh, sure, we can see it in other people, generally those who disagree with us. I can go right now to YouTube and find numerous videos of people spouting off who have no humility in their declarations at all. A lack of humility does not, obviously, mean someone isn’t speaking the truth, but it will most decidedly mean that person isn’t open to correction when he or she (hardheadedness and/or hardheartedness are not gendered concepts) is wrong. Everyone is wrong at some point, but not everyone has acknowledged their receipt of that memo. Thankfully, most people arrive at a place where they can admit to being wrong or at least to not fully understanding an issue. When a person doubles down under challenge and refuses to listen to counter arguments, I generally just walk away. Generally. Not always.
In the “cafeteria of ideas,” there are many I won’t entertain at all, even if I’m considered hardhearted. The fact is that, in every field of knowledge, there are foundational concepts that can’t be removed without toppling the entire field. Within Christianity, for example, if you argue that there was no resurrection, you have just toppled Christianity. It doesn’t exist anymore — so what is the point of this argument? This is why the early church fathers condensed core beliefs into creeds while also holding to the ten commandments and their New Testament counterpart, loving God first and then your neighbor. Even if it is impossible to understand God or his Scriptures perfectly, it is possible to know the gospel and how we should live as Christians.
When it comes to God confounding the wisdom of the world, you can see it all over the Bible, e.g., in God choosing the youngest sibling instead of the eldest for kingship or a birthright; or in God granting wisdom to a woman instead of to a man regarding family decisions. That’s one that will irk our modern patriarchals, but the examples are recorded for a reason: e.g., Rebecca chose the son whom God had chosen; Isaac did not, and Abigail had an understanding of who God’s chosen king was, even though her husband either did not or did not care. There are more examples of this phenomenon, in which God reveals that we don’t understand as much about the world as we think we do.
The above thoughts came about because I always ponder Solomon at the start of a New Year. I ponder him because he’s a classic old world version of a nihilist, and nihilism creeps into my soul in January. Years ago, it was so difficult for me to cope with this nihilism that I avoided reading Ecclesiastes. It’s not easy reading, and Solomon’s answer to it is easier said than done. I don’t avoid the book any longer; after all, God wanted it in the Bible for a reason. Still, I don’t go out my way to join Ecclesiastes Bible studies, even if I read it as part of liturgical or yearly Bible reading.
But what ultimately got me thinking along the lines of God confounding the wise was listening to a Christian YouTuber who mocks almost every Christian leader, pastor, or musician who exists in the world today. I listened to him because I clicked on a link where he reviews The Chosen. Solomon this man isn’t. Most of us aren’t even capable of the wisdom, power, or, conversely, the sinfulness of Solomon. I mean, how many of you men have 700 wives who are building temples to their false gods? Aside from that, though, it’s not that men like this YouTuber have first principles they stand for. Everything is a first principle to men like him. It gave me a chill up my spine because I’ve been dealing with a narcissist in my life, and my husband and I have both been gathering information regarding this personality disorder. One of the telltale signs of narcissism is never admitting to being wrong unless it’s for the purpose of manipulation. So, although God confounds those who are wise in their own eyes, the entire world will be able to see it, except the narcissist. They will instead view it as persecution and be protected from the fallout…to an extent, as they will eventually burn all their bridges and be left with no one but God for help.
If you want to know who the YouTuber is, his name is Spencer Smith. I haven’t listened to enough of his videos to claim he’s a narcissist; nor am I a psychiatrist. All I know is he gives off the whiff of it from a distance. Of course, YouTube is no doubt rife with narcissists because it’s an open platform for engaging with people. Narcissists will burn their bridges and retreat as victims to lick their wounds from time to time, but their mental illness requires an audience. Assuredly, they will be back for more. If you are wise, you will avoid them, and I don’t think God will confound such a decision unless he (cringe) wants to use you to penetrate the armor a narcissist wears for protection.
I did a little googling and I am pretty sure lighthouse church is a cultish church and Smith is basically a wolf in sheep’s clothing. He’s just using YouTube as a business. Definitely narcissistic. I hate how these guys make Christianity and GOD look bad. But I think it’s part of a larger problem of 1)people not thinking for themselves and 2)tax exemptions for churches.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I went back and watched a few shorts and scanned his video titles. What bothers me is that he is not talking about God or Jesus at all or giving them glory . Some of the stuff he says is correct , but the spirit of it seems very prideful. I admit I used to follow people like this because I was so afraid of being astray . I wasn’t trusting the Holy Spirit, I was trusting these critics . Some of them do a good and honest job of laying out why certain teachers are wrong , but it’s easy to see how many of them are just feeding hate instead of directing people to Christ.
LikeLiked by 1 person
I have to admit that part of what irks me about this guy is he calls Catholics Mary and Pope worshippers. That is considered absolute heresy according to the catechism. But it also gets me because modern Christians do engage in idolatry. It just isn’t usually as obvious as a physical idol like pagans had. Sometimes, it’s our own understanding…which also irks me about this guy. It seems from the outside, at least, that he does engage in that kind of idolatry.
LikeLiked by 1 person
When I was just getting into doctrine, as in starting to think and study the Bible, I met some new people on Facebook. I became a Calvinist. I also discovered the world of “picking apart every other denomination”. During this time I heard that Catholics were not really Christians, worshipped Mary and saints, and are legalists who don’t believe that Jesus’ death fully satisfied God’s wrath. I’ve since learned by meeting and talking to actual Catholics that, as in every denomination , some Catholics are real Christians and some aren’t, and that many are more devoted to God and loving people than other denominations. Gradually I came to realize that everyone, including me, has to go through a faith journey and we learn the truth as we go. Have you heard of J. Vernon McGee? He’s one of my favorite preachers , along with Adrian Rogers and my Calvinist friends don’t consider either one to be doctrinally correct . I no longer worry about it. The point is that you and God know where you’re putting your faith for salvation. This Smith guy has no love. He’s a legalist. He will probably have to learn the hard way.
LikeLiked by 1 person
‘Their mental illness requires an audience.’ Most excellent, not sure though that character trait would be perceived as such by others.
You do raise many grand observations, especially about things that are clearly concrete, ie, the resurrection of Christ.
Impossible to be a believer of any stripe without that.
As to other things, such as lying science, we found out the past two yrs that disagreements divided families- such sad results wouldn’t happen if the science was good. Tree and fruit and all that.
Also, the death of JFK was long thought to be an inside job- and people who presented this were called insane. Who’s crazy now.
What’s next- the moon landing archives? So it’s worth debating some things I suppose.
LikeLiked by 1 person
It’s worth debating some things, yes. Not everything is worth it, but there are also ideas in this world I have no investment in, or I have no arguments because I have no good answers.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Not EVERYTHING. Of course.
The exercise of having to prove/ disprove something worthwhile, is rather valuable in that it helps to unwrap strengths and weaknesses.
Takes a bit of humility to say I may have been wrong about this or that. We tend to have idols of straw far too often.
And it goes to your text up top: God confounds the wise. Who would ever have thought that a virgin would conceive.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Interesting, Jill! One of my favorite things is how God confounds the wise, even me! I too am a nihilist sometimes, so I take great comfort in the fact that not everything is as gloomy or as meaningless as it appears to me sometimes. Wisdom can carry with it grief and great sadness as we know from Ecclesiastes.
As to narcissists, they can be quite a mixed bag. There are the covert, often pleasant people who simply don’t realize the whole world is not a reflection of them. My mother is a covert narcissist. Then there are the more arrogant, bombastic, and outright sociopathic. To complicate matters even more, “narcissist” has become a catch all name simply meaning an abuser, manipulator, or bully. In the modern world one can no longer just be an old fashioned jerk, one must be suffering from an identifiable mental illness.
When it comes to Christian you tubers, Big Eva, churchians, whatever you wish to call them, ai yi yi. That’s a special kind of irritation.
LikeLiked by 1 person
Yeah, I don’t really go in for diagnosing people on the internet. Suffice it to say I’m a little sensitive to narcissistic behavior at this point, so I might be seeing it even where it doesn’t exist. I do begin to wonder, though, about people who can never be wrong on the internet. Is it a schtick, or is it real? That is a classic narcissistic trait, and it’s very frustrating to be around people like that. I’m losing my patience for it.
LikeLike
Nah, I think you’re probably on the right track, no matter what we are going to call it.
LikeLiked by 1 person