Proverbs 17:24
“Wisdom is before him that hath understanding; but the eyes of a fool are in the ends of the earth.”
If It Had Been a Snake
I have heard this saying all my life: “If it had been a snake, it would have bit you.” What exactly does that mean?
One time I heard it after I had been searching for a water hose in some tall grass I should have mowed earlier. My dad and I had to look for the missing hose, so when my foot slipped on the round rubber tube, my dad said, “If it’a been a snake, it would’a bit ya’.”
The meaning is that sometimes we miss the most obvious things, even though they may be right in front of our face.
It Was a Snake
Because we lived next to the woods and near the Tennessee River when I was younger, rattle snakes and copperheads (venomous snakes) were common. One day, when a friend of mine came to visit for the evening, he walked in front of me to the front door of our house. What he failed to see stretched out on the ground in front of him, right below the door, was a 3-foot copperhead. He didn’t see it, but I did – just in time – so I threw him (my friend) off the porch and into the yard (I guess it was the adrenalin).
The reason my friend did not see the snake was because he was looking other places.
Not a Snake
Wisdom is not a snake, but you probably knew that. Yet, why is wisdom so hard for some to recognize? Solomon previously described Wisdom as even crying out in the streets (Prov. 1:20). It’s not like we can call wisdom elusive, can we?
I am reminded of what God said through Moses,
11 “This command that I give you today is certainly not too difficult or beyond your reach. 12 It is not in heaven so that you have to ask, ‘Who will go up to heaven, get it for us, and proclaim it to us so that we may follow it?’ 13 And it is not across the sea so that you have to ask, ‘Who will cross the sea, get it for us, and proclaim it to us so that we may follow it?’ 14 But the message is very near you, in your mouth and in your heart, so that you may follow it.[1]
Wisdom is as close as our face, if we would just pay attention. All it would really take is for one to want to see it.
The Fool Will Get Bitten
Unlike the man with understanding, the fool has his eyes looking around for anything and everything that doesn’t matter. Instead of recognizing what is in front of his face, he looks up to the stars and across the seas.
In the end, it won’t be wisdom that bites, but another kind of Serpent.
[1] The Holy Bible: Holman Christian Standard Version. (Nashville: Holman Bible Publishers, 2009), Dt 30:11–14.
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