The
Limits Of Wisdom
For as long
as I've known the record of King Solomon, I've been baffled by the trajectory of his life. At the
beginning of his reign as king, he admirably illustrated the truth of James 1.5 by asking God
for the wisdom to govern his people. God generously gave him "wisdom and understanding beyond
measure, and breadth
of mind like the sand on the seashore" (I Kings 4.29). "He was wiser than all other men" (1 Kings
4.31) and intimately understood the workings of life, animals, and vegetation (I Kings 4.32-33).
How could such an amazing mind forsake the Lord so completely later in his life and worship false
gods like Chemosh
and Molech, which required child sacrifices? What can we learn about the limits of wisdom from looking
at Solomon?
I ) The presence of wisdom, no matter how great, will never override our
desires. In
Deuteronomy 17, God recorded explicit instructions for future Israelite kings. They were forbidden from
collecting horses (or going to Egypt to get them), acquiring many wives, or
accumulating excessive silver and gold (vss. 16-17). Despite his great wisdom,
Solomon chose to disobey every one of these instructions (1 Kings 4.26,
10.14-I5, 11.3). Because his desire for wealth, women, and horses was greater
than his desire for God, he fell into sin. From Solomon, we learn that wisdom is not intended to
be our chief pursuit -
it is merely a tool designed to lead our
hearts to desire and imitate our Creator above all else.
2) The presence of wisdom, no matter how great, does not
make us immune to unwise influencers. No doubt, the reasons why Solomon fell
away from God are numerous.
The primary reason, however, seems clear from I Kings 11. We're explicitly told in 11.3 that the
many foreign wives he married eventually killed his service to God. "When Solomon was old his
wives turned away his heart after other gods, and his heart was not wholly true
to the Lord his God." Solomon did not turn bad the moment he married his first foreign wife.
Indeed, we're told
in I Kings 3 that he married Pharaoh's daughter before construction on the temple in Jerusalem even
began. It took a very long time for Solomon to break down - years of conversations, pleadings,
meditations. But because they were his long-term close companions, over time
their influence outweighed his great wisdom.
If God is not our central joy, no
amount of godly skill, shrewdness, or experience can prevent us from becoming fools. May we humbly
seek after the wisdom God can provide, understanding that its' purpose is to help us seek God
himself. Let's be
careful to keep the divinely inspired words of Solomon that he himself did not follow - "Keep your heart with all
vigilance, for from it flow the springs of life" (Proverbs 4.23). Nathan