Wednesday, December 30, 2020

Proverbs 31:11 (Proverbs Project)

 

Proverbs 31:11
The heart of her husband doth safely trust in her, so that he shall have no need of spoil.
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A wife’s loyalty is a very precious thing to a man. Her dedication to domestic needs is part of her loyalty, so he will not have to worry or scrounge for anything for his family. Proverbs 31 has the best picture of a perfect woman, and here faithfulpness is described.


How is a virtuous woman rare and her value far above rubies (Proverbs 31:10)?
King Lemuel’s mother described in detail the perfect woman that would be a great wife for her son (Proverbs 31:1-2). Every woman should aspire to this description written by a queen mother, and every man should only marry a woman matching this holy and inspired picture.

She is first and foremost trustworthy, so her husband has no doubts or fears about her. The virtuous woman can be trusted personally, sexually, domestically, economically, socially, and spiritually. Her life is based on the solid ground of fearing God and doing what is right, regardless of circumstances, temptations, or opportunities to compromise. She would not consider taking advantage of him or neglecting any of his needs or desires.

A husband risks his heart with a wife. She can break his heart by giving her body or love to another (Numbers 5:11-31; Matthew 1:18-19). She can defraud him of adoration or sexual fulfillment (Esther 1:12; 1 Cor. 7:1-5; Ephesians 5:33). She can break his heart by being lazy and allowing the family or house to suffer (Proverbs 14:1; Ezekiel 16:49; 1 Timothy 5:14). She can be odious, contentious, and shameful in private or in public (Proverbs 12:4; 27:15-16; 30:21-23).

A man married to a virtuous woman, who fears God and lives righteously, has his heart totally at rest; he is fully confident in all she thinks and does (Proverbs 31:28-31). This is the ultimate in love and marriage for a man in this sinful world. Any other woman will disappoint, defraud, and destroy him in one or more of the sins above. A godly woman fully submits all her desires, loyalty, and service to her husband (1 Cor. 11:9; Ephesians 5:22-24).

Contrast trust in a virtuous woman to the pain felt by a husband on a business trip (Proverbs 7:18-20), Potiphar in Egypt (Genesis 39:7), Jacob (Genesis 31:19), Samson (Judges 16:15-17), and David (2 Samuel 6:20-23). The longest parable in the Bible was written to describe the unfaithfulness of Israel as God’s chosen bride (Ezekiel 16:1-63). A woman that cannot be trusted is like rottenness in the bones, a toothache, and a sprained ankle (Proverbs 12:4; 25:19).

Domestic trust is the emphasis in this proverb, for the following context exclusively describes the virtuous wife’s diligence and industry in managing the home and contributing income to the estate (Proverbs 31:12-27). Hardworking and prudent women, who fulfill the lofty description in these wonderful verses, build great families and estates. But a foolish or lazy woman will destroy a man and his family (Proverbs 7:12; 14:1; 1 Timothy 5:13).

The priority in a woman’s life is serving the family and home. Eve was created to help Adam (Genesis 2:18). When a man is away on business or other matters, she is to make sure all runs as smoothly as if he were there. When he is home, she is to relieve him from any worry about the children or house. She is to pursue any investment or work opportunities by which she can add to the family income. Such is the virtuous woman (Proverbs 31:13-27).

A godly woman is a keeper at home (Titus 2:5). This does not mean she cannot leave the home or even spends most of her time there, for that would contradict the description of the virtuous woman (Proverbs 31:13-27). But it does mean the home is her priority and responsibility, and she is to avoid any foolish distractions away from it (1 Timothy 5:13-14). This noble and diligent woman can build a great family and estate, and it requires more elbow grease and sweat equity than it does intelligence and seminars for super moms.

A virtuous woman keeps her husband’s home beautiful, well-decorated, and well-organized (Proverbs 31:22). He can delight in it every night when he comes home from work and every time he entertains others in it. A Christian woman does not allow her career, children, or other cares to compromise what a Christian home should look like. It should be an attractive, comfortable, neat, orderly, pleasant, and warm place to live or show hospitality. It should impress visitors by the inviting sight, sound, smell, and feeling.

Spoil is goods taken from an enemy in war, or anything taken by force or other injurious means. The husband of a domestically diligent wife will be fully supplied and never think of taking things from others, for he has plenty at home by the faithfulness and wise labors of his wife. A sexually defrauded husband is tempted to fantasy, pornography, or adultery. A domestically defrauded husband is tempted to covetousness, overworking, or theft. Such a man must go beyond his bounds to make up for losses caused by his wife.

Women can be romantically distracted, personally spoiled, sexually selfish, domestically lazy, financially wasteful, or verbally disrespectful. Any one of these sins can build fear and mistrust and eventually break a man’s heart. Women should examine their lives and make every effort to remove any and all doubts and fears from their husbands’ hearts.

Men often choose wives for frivolous reasons like beauty or favor, which generally only add to mistrust (Proverbs 31:30). A wise man will measure the character and proven record of a woman for trustworthy faithfulness and prudent diligence, especially in domestic duties, even if he has to test her. The future of his heart, life, children, and estate depend on it.

Here is inspired wisdom from heaven for godly and prosperous marriages. Let every woman take heed that her life closely matches that of the virtuous woman described in this chapter. You can do it with God’s help. And let every man desire and pursue only those women like her. If you already have such a woman, bless and thank God for such a precious gift (Proverbs 18:22; 19:14), and then praise and reward her liberally (Proverbs 31:28,31).

The Ekklesia is the bride of Jesus Christ. Each believer is also in a sense the wife of God’s Son. Does His heart fully trust in you that you care only about Him and the things of His kingdom, or does He know you are often distracted pursuing worldly interests? Must He find others to provide the needs of His Ekklesia and kingdom because you are lazy or selfish, or does He know you will do all expected and more (Luke 17:10; 1 Cor. 15:10)?

May God bless each believing man and woman to be virtuous pertaining to this Husband!

Tuesday, December 29, 2020

Proverbs 30:5 (Proverbs Project)

 Proverbs 30:5

Every word of God is pure: he is a shield unto them that put their trust in him.
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A word is the smallest component of language that carries meaning. In God’s inspired Scriptures, every word is specially chosen for value. He has purified His inspired words very carefully – as silver purified seven times in a refining fire – until they are perfectly pure (Psalm 12:6). And He will bless and protect any person that trusts Him and His words.

David expressed the sense of this proverb with these words: “As for God, his way is perfect: the word of the LORD is tried: he is a buckler to all those that trust in him” (Psalm 18:30). God’s way is perfect; He has examined and perfected His word; and He will protect those that trust Him. How do you trust God? You believe what He has written.

Do not question God’s words! He has magnified His word above all His name, and He will not forgive any tampering with it (Psalm 138:2; Rev. 22:18-19). Satan’s questioning of God’s words ruined your race (Genesis 3:1), for which he is the father of lies (John 8:44). God mocks and ridicules textual critics and Bible skeptics (1 Cor. 1:19-20; 1 Timothy 6:20-21).

Do you have a word-perfect Bible? Do you trust each word? Do you value the statements of Scripture as pure and right, so that you hate every contrary opinion (Psalm 119:128; Is 8:20)? Can you say with David, “Thy word is very pure: therefore thy servant loveth it” (Psalm 119:140)? And, “I hate vain thoughts: but thy law do I love” (Psalm 119:113)?

Jesus and Paul had word-perfect Bibles, and they never saw or heard about the originals! Any person referring to originals is either confused or lying. The originals were never in a book for anyone to use. They were never appealed to by anyone for any matter. And the Bible itself never recommended their use. Copies, translations, copies of translations, and translations of copies have always been used. You just need to find God’s Bible.

Consider how Jesus used copies and translations. He defended the resurrection by “am” (Matthew 22:31-33), and He declared His deity by the same word (John 8:58). He argued for His divinity from the noun “lord” (Matthew 22:41-46). And He rebuked the Jews by the noun “gods,” when He declared that the Bible’s words cannot be broken (John 10:33-36).

What about Paul? He defended salvation by grace and the spiritual promises to Abraham by the difference between the singular and plural of “seed” (Galatians 3:16). Paul knew God’s Scriptures used the singular “seed” in all promises to Abraham, as Genesis 12:7; 13:15-16; 15:5,13,18; 17:8-10,19; 21:12; 22:17-18; 24:7. To their shame and condemnation, and for the most part, modern versions corrupt God’s “seed,” flagrantly and profanely destroying Paul’s lesson.

Did Paul truly trust every word of God? He sure did. He based his argument for the end of the old covenant on the integrity and meaning of the word “new” (Hebrews 8:13) and the three words “yet once more” (Hebrews 12:26-27). And He exalted God’s role in your salvation by changing from the active to passive voice of the verb “know” (Galatians 4:9). There are at least twelve more such one-word arguments in the New Testament!

Do you trust your Bible like Jesus and Paul trusted their Scriptures? Do you have the Bible you can trust? Since the English Revised Version (1881), new Bibles appear at the rate of one per year. They add words, delete words, and change words to defy God’s inspiration and preservation of pure words. The textual critics and profane skeptics behind these versions do not trust God or His words; they trust themselves and their natural profession instead.

Do you trust what the Bible’s words teach? Do you train your children like God says (Proverbs 29:15)? Give sexual due benevolence often (1 Cor. 7:1-5)? Practice first-fruits giving (Proverbs 3:9-10)? Reject the company of fools (Proverbs 14:7)? Submit to your husband (Ephesians 5:22-24)? Obey all ordinances of civil government (1 Peter 2:13-17)? Give thanks in everything (1 Thes. 5:18)? Reject all bitterness (Ephesians 4:31-32)? Always speak with grace (Col. 4:6)?

The purest trust in God is your trust of His words that affect your life (John 14:23-24; 1 John 2:3-5). It is easy to speak of trusting God as a fair Being, but the true test of your faith is your willingness to alter your life now and trust Him for eternal life to come. If you trust His words about this life and the next, He will be a protecting shield to you.

Are you associating with His called out ones, His Ekklesia? And in so doing, are you listening to the pure word of God as it is preached by a true pastor (2 Timothy 4:1-4)? Or are you going to church businesses filled with entertainment and the sermons with fables and illustrations? It is your duty to asssociate with His called out ones, His Ekklesia, whereby every word of God is preached with confidence and conviction. For man shall not live by bread alone, but by every word of God (Luke 4:4).