Key Verse: “Know the state of your flocks, and put
your heart into caring for your herds.” (v.23)
Big Idea: Wisdom grows wherever we consistently pay
attention, protect what matters, and steward what we’ve been given.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met back at the café this morning. It felt like a warm pocket of order in a chaotic world—espresso machines hissing, the smell of toasted bread drifting through the air, sunlight catching the steam rising from mugs.
I walked in feeling the opposite of ordered. My bills were stacked on my desk like a silent accusation. My budget app hadn’t been opened in weeks. I’d been avoiding anything that required adult-level attention.
Solomon noticed the tension before I even sat down. He tapped the table once—his gentle “I see you.”
Azariah and Amos were already there. Azariah looked unusually serious, hands clasped, eyes distant.
Solomon leaned back, silver-streaked hair tied neatly, linen shirt soft and worn. “Today,” he said, “we’re still in the sayings preserved by Hezekiah’s men. They kept these because they knew people forget what matters.”
He opened his weathered leather notebook. Inside were sketches of sheep, barns, cattle, vineyards, fences—but also modern things: a bank ledger, a calendar, a debit card, a stack of envelopes.
“In this passage,” he said, “I talk about paying attention to your flocks. And then I say—”
He paused, and the café seemed to slow around his voice.
“Know the state of your flocks, and put your heart into caring for your herds.”
I sighed. “I know you’re talking about responsibility. But I don’t have flocks. I have bills. And a budget that feels like a haunted house.”
Amos chuckled. “Those are your flocks. They wander off if you don’t watch them.”
Solomon nodded. “In my day, flocks were your livelihood. Today? Your flocks are your finances, your obligations, your commitments, your tools, your time. Anything that grows stronger—or weaker—based on your attention.”
Azariah cleared his throat. “And verse 24 matters too. ‘Riches can disappear…’ Nothing stays stable without care.”
Solomon pointed at the sketch of the barn. “People assume money manages itself. It doesn’t. Neither do relationships. Neither does your health. Neglect is a slow leak—quiet, invisible, and devastating.”
I rubbed my face. “So what does ‘caring for my flocks’ look like today? Like… practically?”
Solomon smiled, warm and knowing. “It looks like checking your bank accounts regularly. Paying bills on time. Tracking where your money actually goes. Saving and investing for your future. Planning instead of reacting. Reviewing your subscriptions. Setting reminders. Making a simple budget you’ll actually follow.”
Amos added, “It’s also calling the doctor before something becomes urgent. Or checking in on a friend before the friendship fades.”
Azariah shifted, then spoke quietly. “I need to tell you something… I won’t be here tomorrow.” He swallowed. “There are things in my life I need to tend to, financial stuff, family stuff. Today's verse reminded me to go home and deal with it.”
A knot formed in my chest. I didn’t want him to go, but I understood.
Solomon placed a hand on Azariah’s shoulder. “This is wisdom. Not dramatic gestures—just faithful attention to what’s yours to care for.”
Azariah stood, nodded to each of us, and walked out. The empty chair felt like a reminder.
Solomon turned back to me. “Ethan, listen. Your life isn’t asking for perfection. It’s asking for stewardship. The Creator designed the world so that what we tend grows, and what we ignore withers. Caring for your flocks is not glamorous. It’s steady. Quiet. But it builds a life that can withstand storms.”
He closed the notebook. “Start small. But start.”
I sat there staring at the empty chair Azariah left behind, feeling the weight of my own neglected “flocks.”
And for the first time in a long time, the idea of starting small didn’t feel like failure—it felt like wisdom.
What? This passage teaches that wisdom means actively managing the responsibilities, resources, and relationships entrusted to us—because nothing stays healthy without intentional care.
So What? Ignoring finances, obligations, or personal well‑being doesn’t make them disappear; it makes them more expensive, more stressful, and more damaging later.
Now What? Pick one practical task—check your bank balance, pay a bill, review your budget, cancel an unused subscription—and do it today. Small stewardship builds long-term stability.
Key Verse: “An open rebuke is better than hidden
love! Wounds from a sincere friend are better than many kisses from an enemy.”
(v.5–6)
Big Idea: Real friendship doesn’t protect your comfort—it
protects your soul.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The basketball gym smelled like varnished wood and old sweat. Sneakers squeaked across the polished floor while a pickup game raged on under buzzing fluorescent lights. The rhythmic thump-thump of the ball echoed off the high ceiling.
I leaned against the metal bleachers, trying to slow my breathing. I’d just finished a half-hearted run on the treadmill. My heart wasn’t in it.
Solomon sat a few rows up, elbows on his knees, watching the game like a seasoned coach studying plays. He glanced at the scoreboard. “Team games reveal character quickly.”
“Yeah,” I said. “Mostly who blames everyone else.”
Solomon chuckled softly and tapped the bleacher with his knuckles. “Which is a fine doorway into today’s proverb.”
Two familiar figures approached from the gym entrance. Azariah walked with quiet steadiness, hands clasped behind his back. Amos followed a step behind, scanning the court with thoughtful eyes.
“Ah,” Solomon said, smiling. “My friends arrive.”
Azariah nodded to me. Amos gave a warm grin and sat beside us.
Solomon looked out at the players arguing over a foul call.
“In this section,” he continued, “I speak about humility, honesty, friendship, and the quiet dangers of pride.”
He opened his weathered leather notebook and sketched two quick circles.
“In one circle,” he said, tapping it, “people surround themselves with comfort. No correction. No truth. Only approval. Applause.”
He tapped the other.
“In the second circle, people allow trusted voices to challenge them. To sharpen them.”
Amos leaned forward. “Most people prefer the first circle.”
“Of course,” Solomon said gently. “Truth can sting.”
He slid the notebook toward us.
“But comfort and fake applause can slowly ruin a man.”
The basketball game paused as players debated a call. One guy was shouting at his teammate.
Solomon nodded toward them. “There,” he said quietly. “Watch.”
A tall player stormed toward the bench while another teammate tried to talk to him. The angry one shoved his hand away.
“See the difference?” Solomon said. “One offers correction. The other refuses it.”
He turned back to us and quoted slowly: “An open rebuke is better than hidden love! Wounds from a sincere friend are better than many kisses from an enemy.”
The gym noise seemed to soften for a moment. I frowned. “That sounds backwards.”
Solomon raised an eyebrow. “How so?”
“Well… if someone rebukes me, it feels like they’re attacking me. And if someone praises me, that feels like support.”
Amos nodded. “That’s exactly why this proverb is so needed.”
Azariah folded his arms thoughtfully.
“Hidden love,” he said quietly, “is when someone cares about you but stays silent while you walk toward harm.”
Solomon looked at me. “Tell me, Ethan,” he said. “If a doctor hides a dangerous diagnosis so you won’t feel upset—is that kindness?”
“Of course not.”
“Exactly.”
He leaned closer, voice calm but firm. “Truth spoken by someone who loves you may feel like a wound at first. But it’s the wound that cleanses infection.”
Amos added, “Flattery, on the other hand, can feel wonderful… while quietly destroying you.”
Solomon nodded. “The Hebrew idea behind ‘wounds’ here carries the sense of faithful blows. A surgeon’s cut, not an enemy’s stab.”
He gestured toward Azariah and Amos.
“These men have challenged me before. Hard truths. Necessary ones.”
Azariah smiled faintly. “And you did not enjoy them.”
“Not at all,” Solomon said with a laugh. “But I survived because of them.”
A whistle blew and the game resumed.
Solomon’s voice softened. “Today is Day 80 of our conversations together. You have ten days left in this journey with me, Ethan.”
That landed heavier than I expected. “Only ten?”
“Wisdom conversations don’t need to last forever,” he said. “Eventually they must become lived decisions.”
He looked back at the court. “Choose friends who care more about your growth than your comfort.”
Amos added quietly, “And become that kind of friend yourself.”
We sat in silence for a moment, listening to the bounce of the ball.
I thought about people in my life who had tried to correct me… and how quickly I’d brushed them off.
Maybe the problem wasn’t their tone.
Maybe it was my pride.
Solomon stood, brushing dust from his hands.
“Remember this,” he said. “A flattering enemy helps you stay lost.”
He paused. “But a truthful friend helps you become who God meant you to be.”
What? Real friendship includes honest correction. Loving truth—even when it hurts—is better than comforting lies.
So What? Most people prefer affirmation over correction, but unchecked pride and blind spots quietly damage our lives, relationships, and character.
Now What? Think of one trusted person who has permission to speak honestly into your life—and ask them this week: “Is there something I’m not seeing about myself?”
Key Verse: “Just as damaging as a madman shooting a
deadly weapon is someone who lies to a friend and then says, ‘I was only
joking.’” (v.18–19)
Big Idea: Words disguised as humor can wound just as
deeply as intentional attacks.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rooftop garden sat high above the city, where wind softened the hum of traffic below. Rows of rosemary and lavender released their scent whenever the breeze stirred the leaves.
Solomon leaned against the railing when I arrived. His weathered leather notebook rested on a small iron table.
Two men stood beside him today.
Azariah smiled when he saw me.
The other man stepped forward and offered his hand. “Hello, I’m Amos.”
Solomon gestured toward them. “Both Azariah and Amos served under King Hezekiah. They helped gather my sayings into the collection you’re reading now.”
Azariah nodded. “When Hezekiah ordered us to preserve Solomon’s wisdom, we found scrolls scattered everywhere.”
Amos added, “What struck us most was how clearly he understood life and human behavior.”
Solomon chuckled softly. “Years of watching people will do that.”
He opened the notebook and slid it toward me.
A sketch showed a wild-eyed stick figure firing arrows in every direction.
Underneath it he had written: MADMAN
“In this passage,” Solomon said, tapping the page, “I warned about a kind of person who causes damage but pretends innocence.”
He looked directly at me and quoted the key line.
“Just as damaging as a madman shooting a deadly weapon is someone who lies to a friend and then says, ‘I was only joking.’”
The wind rustled the rosemary beside us.
“That’s sarcasm, basically,” I said.
“Sometimes,” Solomon replied gently.
Azariah stepped closer. “But more often it’s cruelty hiding behind laughter.”
Solomon nodded toward a group of office workers sitting at another table nearby. One of them slapped a coworker on the shoulder.
“Man, if laziness were a job, you’d be CEO.”
Everyone laughed.
The guy being teased laughed too—but it sounded forced.
Solomon leaned closer.
“Humor can build friendship,” he said quietly. “But humor can also be a weapon.”
Amos folded his arms. “In the royal court we saw this constantly. A man would insult someone publicly, then say, ‘Relax, I’m joking.’”
Azariah added, “It gave him cover.”
Solomon flipped the notebook to another page. This time the sketch showed a small spark landing in dry brush.
“In this same passage,” he said, “I compare gossip and stirring conflict to starting fires. One careless spark can burn an entire forest.”
I watched the coworker group begin to leave. The guy who had been mocked walked away last, hands stuffed in his pockets.
Something about the empty chair he left behind felt heavier than the laughter.
Solomon noticed my expression.
“Words travel deeper than people realize,” he said.
Then he quoted something else.
“Jesus would later say, ‘The words you say will either acquit you or condemn you.’” —Matthew 12:37
“That’s intense,” I said.
“Because words reveal the heart,” Solomon replied.
Amos nodded. “Jokes often expose what someone really thinks but is afraid to say plainly.”
Solomon closed his notebook. “Let me leave you with three things,” he said.
“First: words can wound like weapons.”
“Second: calling cruelty a joke does not remove the harm.”
“Third: wise people take responsibility for the effect their words have on others.”
He gave a small smile. “Good humor brightens a room. False humor leaves quiet scars.”
As we headed toward the stairwell, I kept replaying conversations in my mind—things I’d said that got laughs.
And for the first time, I wondered how many of my “jokes” had actually been arrows.
What? Proverbs 26 warns that hurtful words disguised as humor can cause real damage to relationships.
So What? Calling something “just a joke” doesn’t erase the impact. Our words reveal what’s really in our hearts.
Now What? Before making a joke this week, pause and ask: Will this bring someone joy—or quietly cut them down?
Key Verse: “Don’t answer the foolish arguments of
fools, or you will become as foolish as they are.” (v.4)
Big Idea: Wisdom isn’t just what you say—it’s when
you choose silence over engagement.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
I met Solomon this morning at the riverwalk, where the sun was just tipping over the city skyline, gilding the ripples with gold. The smell of wet earth and the faint tang of the river made me feel awake in a way that coffee alone never does.
He was already there, leaning on the railing. A faint cedar scent lingered around him, like wisdom walking by.
“Ethan,” he greeted, sliding his weathered leather notebook toward me. “Today, we continue this section I never published myself—Hezekiah’s men helped bring these to light.” He tapped the notebook, eyes gleaming.
I noticed a second figure nearby, leaning quietly against a post. Azariah. The scribe. His presence was quieter, but there: calm, deliberate, the kind of man who notices details most people miss.
“Good morning, Ethan,” Azariah said softly, voice like paper rustling over old scrolls. “Today, in verse four—Solomon cautioned kings not to argue with fools. Then, in verse five—he said there are times you must answer, lest the fool grow proud in his own eyes. It’s a tension I’ve always remembered: wisdom knows both silence and engagement.”
Solomon leaned closer to me, tapping his notebook. “Exactly. Some fools will drag you down if you engage. Others—if left unchecked—will grow proud in their ignorance. Think of it like holding cards in a game. You know when to hold ‘em, and when to fold ‘em.”
I frowned. “Wait… that still sounds contradictory. Which is it? Answer them or don’t answer them?”
Azariah spoke again, stepping just a bit closer. “It’s paradoxical, yes. Wisdom isn’t about rules, Ethan. It’s about discernment. The right move depends on the heart of the fool, the moment, and your own state. Engage blindly, and you risk matching their folly. Step back, and you may preserve influence instead of squandering it.”
As we walked along the river, a man ahead was arguing with a woman on a bench, their voices rising, words sharp. Solomon slowed, letting me notice. “See them?” he said softly. “Fury and pride, neither listening. If they were your ‘fool,’ which verse would guide you?”
I wanted to jump in, to tell them to stop, to fix it. Both Solomon’s and Azariah’s gaze held me back.
“Sometimes, the wiser move is to step back, not because you lack courage, but because engagement will only pull you into their storm,” Solomon said.
The river slowed in my vision for a moment, the city noises muffled. When I looked back, the arguing pair had gone, leaving only the soft lap of water and the echo of Solomon’s laughter. Azariah nodded toward me. “Remember, Ethan: knowing when to hold your words—and when to release them—is the measure of real strength.”
What? Proverbs 26 teaches that not all arguments are worth engaging in. A fool thrives on debate; wisdom often chooses silence.
So What? Life throws relentless noise at us—provocations, opinions, social media battles. Engaging every foolishness can erode our clarity, patience, and peace. Recognizing the difference matters.
Now What? Before replying to the next person or post that pushes your buttons, pause. Ask yourself: Will this conversation build truth or drain wisdom? If it will drain wisdom, hold your cards.
Key Verse: “If your enemies are hungry, give them
food to eat. If they are thirsty, give them water to drink.” (v.21)
Big Idea: The most powerful way to defeat an enemy is
not revenge—but unexpected kindness.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The gym smelled like rubber mats and metal.
Someone dropped a barbell across the room and the clang echoed through the weight area. A couple of guys argued near the squat rack while the TVs overhead played muted sports highlights.
I wiped sweat from my forehead and spotted Solomon sitting on a bench near the stretching area, calm as a lake in the eye of a storm. Linen shirt sleeves rolled, silver-streaked hair tied back. His leather notebook rested beside him.
And next to him stood Azariah.
Azariah looked older than I remembered from a few days ago—deep lines around the eyes, the quiet presence of someone used to standing near kings without needing attention.
Solomon tapped the bench.
“Sit, Ethan.”
I dropped down, still breathing hard.
Solomon nodded toward the room. “Conflict everywhere. Competition. Pride. Wounded egos.” He smiled faintly. “Which makes today’s proverb especially useful.”
Azariah folded his hands.
“These,” he said gently, “are among the writings we recovered when King Hezekiah asked us to gather Solomon’s remaining proverbs.”
Solomon opened his notebook and slid it toward me. A simple diagram filled the page: two arrows.
One arrow pointed back. The other pointed forward.
“Most people,” Solomon said, “believe conflict moves in only one direction.”
He tapped the backward arrow. “Strike for strike. Insult for insult.”
Then he tapped the forward arrow. “But wisdom introduces a different move.”
He leaned forward slightly and quoted:
“If your enemies are hungry, give them food to eat. If they are thirsty, give them water to drink.”
I blinked.
“Wait! What ?! You’re telling me to help someone who hates me?”
“Precisely,” Solomon said.
I laughed under my breath. “That sounds like a great way to get taken advantage of.”
A guy across the gym slammed weights down again, muttering something angry.
Solomon nodded toward him.
“Watch.” The man’s workout partner walked away after a heated exchange. The angry guy sat there alone, staring at the floor.
Solomon lowered his voice.
“Hatred thrives on fuel. Anger expects retaliation.”
Azariah stepped in gently.
“When Solomon wrote these words,” he said, “he was confronting the ancient instinct for revenge. Every tribe, every nation believed honor required it.”
He paused.
“But Solomon saw something deeper.” Azariah added softly, “Sometimes the strongest move is refusing to return what was given to you.”
Solomon tapped the notebook again and quoted the next line. “You will heap burning coals of shame on their heads, and the Lord will reward you.” (v.22)
I frowned. “That part sounds so… violent.”
Azariah smiled slightly.
“A common misunderstanding.”
He crouched and drew a small circle on the notebook page.
“In our culture, fire was life—warmth, cooking, survival. If someone’s fire went out, they sometimes carried hot coals home in a clay pot balanced on their head.”
I stared at the drawing.
“So ‘heaping coals on their head’…”
“…means blessing them by restoring their fire,” Solomon finished.
“Exactly,” Azariah said. “Your kindness gives them the heat they lost.”
The gym suddenly felt quieter. Solomon leaned back. “Unexpected kindness does something strange to the human heart,” he said. “It confronts evil without becoming evil.”
I crossed my arms. “But what if they stay an enemy?”
Solomon shrugged lightly. “Sometimes they will, but you can’t control that.” Then he added, more serious now: “But you will not become one.”
“Centuries later, Jesus would take this same idea even further—telling His followers not only to feed their enemies, but to actually love them and pray for them.”
The words sat heavy.
I exhaled slowly. Images flashed through my mind—arguments, grudges, people I still quietly resented.
Across the gym, the angry guy stood up. His former partner walked back over and handed him a bottle of water. They didn’t speak. But the tension broke.
Solomon noticed. “See?” he said softly. The moment seemed to slow, like the world paused long enough to underline the point.
He closed the notebook. “Revenge spreads fire,” he said, “Kindness redirects it.”
Then he leaned back, letting the clatter of the gym fade around us. “Ethan,” he said, “people often assume personality is permanent… They say, ‘That’s just how I am.’”
I shifted uncomfortably.
“But Scripture consistently shows something different,” he continued, voice steady. “Even someone with a long habit of anger can grow into a person known for calm strength.”
He tapped the bench once. “It’s not instant. It’s practiced wisdom… and, most importantly, it’s God’s work inside a person over time.”
Azariah nodded quietly beside him.
“Brick by brick,” he added.
I sat there staring at the rubber floor.
Trying to imagine what my life would look like if I actually lived that way.
What? Proverbs 25:21–28 teaches that responding to enemies with kindness, not revenge, reflects wisdom and requires strong self-control.
So What? Kindness disrupts cycles of anger and protects your own heart from becoming hardened by resentment.
Now What? Think of one person who has wronged you—and take one small step of unexpected kindness toward them this week.
Key Verse: “Singing cheerful songs to a person with a
heavy heart is like taking someone’s coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar in
a wound.” (v.20)
Big Idea: Wisdom knows that comfort must match the
season of a person’s heart.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
The rain had just stopped when I reached the hospital courtyard.
Everything smelled like wet concrete and antiseptic drifting through the open doors. A few families sat scattered on metal benches, speaking quietly or staring into nothing. The fountain in the middle splashed steadily, the only sound that seemed confident about what it was doing.
Solomon stood near the edge of the fountain, silver-streaked hair tied back, linen shirt sleeves rolled. His handmade boots were damp from the pavement.
Beside him stood Azariah—the same careful-eyed scribe I’d met a day earlier. He held a slim scroll and nodded when he saw me.
“Ah, Ethan,” Solomon said warmly. “You chose a fitting place for today.”
“I didn’t choose it,” I said. “You texted me the location.”
Solomon smiled faintly. “Even better.”
We sat on a bench facing the fountain.
Azariah unrolled the scroll slightly. “These are among the sayings we preserved during King Hezekiah’s reign,” he said. “Teachings Solomon wrote but never released.”
Solomon leaned forward, elbows on his knees.
“Today’s passage,” he said, “Speaks about how words land on people. A wise rebuke to a listening ear is like gold jewelry—precious, fitting. A faithful messenger refreshes like snow during harvest.”
He gestured around the courtyard.
“But then I address something more delicate.”
A nurse pushed through the hospital doors. Behind her walked a young man and woman. The woman’s face was blotchy from crying. The man tried to lighten the mood.
“Hey,” he said, forcing a laugh. “Could be worse, right? At least the cafeteria food isn’t lethal.”
She didn’t laugh. She just stared at the ground. The man kept talking. “You’ve always been strong. You’ll bounce back. Everything happens for a reason.”
Solomon watched quietly.
Then he turned to me and said gently, “Singing cheerful songs to a person with a heavy heart is like taking someone’s coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar in a wound.”
The courtyard seemed to quiet for a moment.
“That guy isn’t trying to hurt her,” I said.
“No,” Solomon said softly. “He’s trying to fix the pain with noise.”
Azariah folded his hands. “When we compiled these sayings,” he added, “this one stood out to me. It speaks not of cruelty—but of blindness.”
Solomon nodded.
“That man seems tone-deaf to the season of her soul.”
I watched the couple sit across the courtyard. The woman leaned forward, elbows on her knees. The man kept talking, filling the air with encouragement that seemed to float right past her.
“I’ve done that,” I admitted.
Solomon glanced at me knowingly.
“You want the pain to end,” he said. “So you rush to joy. But wisdom waits.”
He picked up a small leaf from the wet pavement and rolled it between his fingers.
“Comfort is like medicine. The wrong dose—even if it’s good medicine—can sting.”
“So what should he do instead?” I asked.
Solomon leaned back against the bench.
“First,” he said, “see the wound.”
“Second, sit in the cold with them.”
Azariah added quietly, “Our Scriptures say something similar elsewhere: ‘Weep with those who weep.’”
Solomon nodded. “Yes. That line was written many centuries after mine, but it carries the same wisdom.”
I watched the couple again.
The man had finally stopped talking. He simply put his hand on her back.
For the first time, she leaned into him.
“There,” Solomon said quietly. “Now comfort has the right shape.”
I let that sit for a moment.
“I guess I always thought positivity helped people,” I said.
“It sometimes does,” Solomon said. “But timing matters. Even joy must arrive in season.”
He tapped the bench lightly with two fingers.
“God Himself understands this. The Creator does not rush grief. He sits with it. That is why His comfort heals rather than stings.”
The courtyard breeze picked up, carrying the smell of rain again.
Solomon stood and looked back toward the hospital doors.
“Remember this, Ethan,” he said.
“Some hearts need laughter. Others need quiet. And wisdom,” he added softly, “knows the difference.”
As I walked away, I kept thinking about all the times I’d tried to fix someone’s pain with optimism instead of presence.
Maybe the wiser thing… is sometimes just to sit in the cold with them.
What? Words meant to encourage can wound when they ignore the emotional season someone is in. Wisdom matches comfort to the moment.
So What? Many people try to fix grief with quick positivity, but real compassion begins with understanding and presence.
Now What? The next time someone shares pain, resist the urge to fix it—listen first, sit with them, and let empathy lead your response.
Key Verse: “It is God’s privilege to conceal things
and the king’s privilege to discover them.” (v.2)
Big Idea: God hides depth within His world, and wise
leaders humbly search it out.
🎧 Listen to Today’s Audio Here
We met in the city archive building downtown — marble floors, tall windows, dust motes floating like slow-falling snow in late-afternoon light. The air smelled like paper and polish. It felt like a place where forgotten things waited to be remembered.
Solomon stood near a long oak table, linen shirt crisp, silver-streaked hair tied back. His leather notebook rested under his palm. But he wasn’t alone.
Beside him stood a man I hadn’t seen before. Slightly younger than Solomon, posture straight, beard trimmed close. His robe was simple but dignified, and he carried a bundle of rolled parchments tied with cord.
“Ethan,” Solomon said, tapping the table lightly, “meet Azariah. He served several centuries ago under King Hezekiah.”
Azariah inclined his head. “One of many royal advisers,” he said. His voice was calm, deliberate. “We were tasked with searching the royal archives for additional proverbs spoken by King Solomon.”
I blinked. “So… this section wasn’t in the original?”
Solomon smiled faintly. “I spoke thousands of proverbs. Not all were gathered at once. Some lived in court records. Some in instruction manuals for princes. Generations later, nearly 200 years, they were needed again.”
Today we enter a new section of Proverbs that begins with, “These are more proverbs of Solomon, collected by the advisers of King Hezekiah of Judah.”
Azariah untied the parchments carefully. “Judah was under threat. Assyria, a very strong enemy, pressed in. Reform was underway. Our king wanted ancient wisdom to steady present leadership.”
He looked at me directly. “We weren’t preserving poetry. We were fighting drift.”
The room felt quieter somehow. Solomon opened his notebook and slid it toward me. No diagrams this time — just a single line written boldly across the page.
He spoke it slowly, “It is God’s privilege to conceal things and the king’s privilege to discover them.”
“In these opening verses,” Solomon said, “I address kings — leaders — anyone entrusted with influence. I began with mystery.”
Azariah nodded. “The Hebrew word for ‘conceal’ doesn’t imply trickery. It implies depth. Weight. Glory.”
Solomon leaned in slightly. “God hides things the way a mountain hides gold. Not to frustrate you — but to invite you.”
I crossed my arms. “Why not just make everything obvious?”
Azariah’s lips curved almost imperceptibly. “If everything were obvious, nothing would require wisdom. Nor determination.”
Solomon continued. “The Creator builds layers into reality. He weaves consequences into choices. He buries insight beneath humility. A leader’s job — whether over a nation or a household — is to search it out carefully.”
He tapped the notebook again.
“This section,” he said, “speaks of removing dross from silver so a vessel can emerge. I speak of removing wicked advisors so a throne stands firm. I speak of not exalting yourself before a king, of waiting to be invited higher.”
Azariah added, “Reform requires refinement.”
The word hung there.
Outside the window, a siren wailed faintly in the distance. The city pulsed. Noise, pressure, ambition.
“Discovery,” Solomon said quietly, “requires restraint. You cannot discover what God conceals if you are loud, hurried, or self-promoting.”
I thought about how often I rush to conclusions. How quickly I defend myself. How rarely I pause long enough to search beneath the surface — of a conflict, a failure, even my own motives.
“So this isn’t just about kings?” I asked.
Azariah shook his head. “Anyone with responsibility must search out what’s really happening — beneath appearances, in between the lines.”
Solomon’s voice softened. “Jesus would later say, ‘Ask, and you will receive; seek, and you will find.’ And remember the words of the prophet, Jeremiah, ‘you will seek Me and find Me, when you search for Me with all your heart.’” (Matthew 7:7, Jeremiah 29:13)
His eyes glistened for a moment, then he summed up, ‘The Father delights when His children pursue understanding.”
The room seemed to slow — dust floating, light stretching golden.
“God hides depth in people,” Azariah said. “In circumstances. In Scripture. But He also reveals His truths to the humble.”
Azariah carefully re-rolled the parchments. “Our generation needed these words again. Yours does too.”
For a moment, I imagined wisdom like buried treasure — not flashy, not trending, but waiting beneath noise and pride.
As we stepped out of the archive into the evening air, the city felt less chaotic and more layered. Like there were meanings beneath moments if I’d slow down enough to look.
Solomon walked beside me. “This section,” he said, “is about influence. About refinement. About learning to search before you speak.”
I nodded.
Maybe I’ve been reacting to life instead of discovering it.
What? God intentionally builds depth and mystery into the world, and wise leaders humbly search out truth rather than reacting impulsively.
So What? If you don’t slow down to seek understanding, you’ll lead — and live — on the surface, missing what truly matters.
Now What? In your next conflict or decision, pause and ask: What might God be revealing beneath the surface that I need to search out before I respond?