In Luxor, an Egyptian city more than 400 miles south of Cairo, medical professionals pronounced Hamdi Hafez al-Nubi dead. He was only 28 years old, far too young to die of a heart attack. His family took his body home and (following Islamic burial rites) bathed Hamdi in order to prepare him for his funeral. The hospital sent a doctor to his family’s home to endorse the death certificate; but when the doctor arrived, she found the body warm. Hamdi was alive. His mother fainted, but the Associated Press reporter happily concluded that with “the doctor’s assistance, both al-Nubi and his mother were awakened and soon were celebrating with guests.”
It’s a happy story whenever death is robbed of power. It’s a happy story any time life wins. Proverbs speaks of one repeated way death loses power: Whenever wisdom speaks, death retreats. In Proverbs, wisdom is truth that comes from the ultimate source of truth—God. And God, Scripture tells us, is also the ultimate Source of life. So, as we hear and obey God’s truth (which is what Proverbs means by wise living), we move toward life. We move toward the “life-giving fountain” (Proverbs 13:14).
As we move toward life, we’re moving away from death. We discover that we’re automatically shunning those things that distract us from God’s provision and His care—from all of His good intentions for us. When we follow God’s wisdom, we’re pulled from “the snares of death” (Proverbs 13:14).
Proverbs repeats these ideas often, as does the rest of the Bible. “Evil people find death” (Proverbs 11:19), one proverb declares. Conversely, “the one who gets wisdom loves life” (Proverbs19:8 NIV). To follow God is to pursue wisdom. To follow God is to run from death.
NLT 365-day reading plan passage for today: Joshua 24:1-31
More:
Read Proverbs 14:27. What’s similar between this proverb and 13:14? What’s different? What does this distinction tell us?
Next:
Where in life do you need to say yes to God’s wisdom? Where do you need to say no to death?
mike wittmer on March 8, 2013 at 9:24 am
This is very timely for me, for it’s exactly what I discovered when I skimmed through Proverbs yesterday. There seem to be two ways–the way of wisdom, love, and righteousness that leads to life and the way of folly, sin, and selfishness that ends in death. Thank you for reinforcing this truth in my own heart, Winn.