Sessions Included
1. Becoming Wise
2. Wise Wealth
3. Wise Talk
4. Wise Character

Estimated Traditional Cost: $24.99

Your Price: $10.99


Proverbs for Living

Please note: This product is a digital file. You will need to download the file to your computer and print it from your printer.

Age Group
Adult

Materials Included
4 Sessions of Learner’s Materials
4 Sessions of Teaching Materials
4 Handouts

Scriptures
1. Proverbs 1:1-7; 3:1-10
2. Proverbs 10:1-15
3. Proverbs 18:21; 16:23-30
4. Proverbs 31:10-31

Brief Description
Tomorrow, and tomorrow and tomorrow / creeps in this petty pace from day to day, / To the last syllable of recorded time, / And all our yesterdays have lighted fools / The way to dusty death. Out, Out, brief candle / Life's but a walking shadow, a poor player/ That struts and frets his hour upon the stage / and then is heard no more. It is a tale / Told by an idiot. Full of sound and fury/ Signifying nothing.
--Shakespeare, Macbeth, V.v. 17.

Shakespeare's Macbeth speaks these words upon hearing the news of Lady Macbeth's death. Such a profound loss stirred within him an equally profound reflection about life. What does life mean? Does it really matter? Will the world notice I was here? Macbeth's response leaves little mystery as to why this play is known as a tragedy. Possibly the darkest tragedy of all is that Macbeth, alive and speaking, concludes that life is "a tale told by an idiot."

Fortunately, Macbeth's words aren't the final judgment about life. The witness of those who know the Lord is that life is great, important, and fulfilling. Or, at least, it can be. If it were up to the Lord, everyone's life would be everything Macbeth thinks it isn't. If it were up to the Lord, all would enjoy a sense of purpose, a sense of place, and the experience of grace. But, and this isn't a tragedy, it is not up the Lord. It is up to you.

Long ago, a community of wise teachers committed themselves to the ways of the Lord, the God of Abraham and Moses. While they were full of wisdom, they were equally full of concern for the young. These wise teachers were committed to teaching the young a very simple truth: There is a good life to be had—a life lived in faithfulness to the Lord. They spoke of this good life as a pursuit for wisdom. They knew the good life or the life of wisdom isn't a one-time choice, but involves a lifetime of choosing—choosing justice, self-restraint, and compassion.

A collection of teachings from these wise teachers became very important for the church, and today we know it as the book of Proverbs. "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom" is a central theme of the book. How does one parent, conduct business, speak to a neighbor, manage finances, and prepare for retirement in a manner that is full of the Lord's wisdom? Proverbs attempts to provide a practical manual for living for those who love the Lord.

by Mark McElroy


User License
The purchaser of this file has permission to print twenty copies of this Learners Study Guide. Neither the file nor the printed contents may be sold copied or transferred to another person or church. The purchaser may make a backup copy of the file.

The purchaser of this file has permission to print one copy of this Teaching Guide. Neither the file nor the printed contents may be sold, copied or transferred to another person or church. The purchaser may make a backup copy of the file.

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