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Proverbs 1

The Beginning of Wisdom: Instruction, Fear of the Lord, and the Refusal of Folly

True wisdom begins with the fear of the Lord, receives correction, rejects the seductive fellowship of sinners, and listens before folly becomes judgment.

Chapter Summary

True wisdom begins with the fear of the Lord, receives correction, rejects the seductive fellowship of sinners, and listens before folly becomes judgment.

Overview

Proverbs 1 argues that wisdom is covenantal, moral, relational, and urgent. Knowledge does not begin with autonomous human reasoning, but with rightly ordered reverence before the Lord. The chapter presents three tests of wisdom: whether one receives instruction, whether one resists sinful companionship, and whether one responds to Wisdom's public reproof. Folly is not merely ignorance; it is moral refusal.

The fool despises instruction, the sinner entices others into destructive gain, and the mocker refuses correction until calamity arrives. The theological logic is severe and gracious: wisdom calls before judgment falls, but persistent refusal hardens into ruin.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from purpose, to parental instruction, to public wisdom appeal, showing that wisdom confronts the learner privately, socially, and publicly.

Covenant Significance

Proverbs 1 frames wisdom as covenant formation. The people of God are not merely to know commandments, but to become the kind of people whose minds, desires, speech, and decisions are governed by the fear of the Lord. The father and mother represent covenantal instruction in the home, while Wisdom's public call represents God's moral claim over the whole community. To reject wisdom is to reject the Lord's ordered way of life.

Gospel Clarity

Proverbs 1 does not announce the gospel in its full New Testament form, but it prepares for the gospel by exposing the sinner's refusal of God's wisdom and the deadly outcome of despising correction. The chapter shows why sinners need more than advice: they need redemption, a new heart, and the Spirit's transforming work. Christ, the wisdom of God, comes to those who have rejected wisdom.

At the cross, He bears judgment for fools and sinners. In His resurrection, He gives life and security to those who turn to Him. The gospel does not cancel the call to wisdom; it creates a people who can begin to listen, repent, and walk in the fear of the Lord.

Formation Aim

Teachable reverence, moral discernment, resistance to sinful fellowship, and quick repentance under reproof.

Focus Points

  • The Fear of the Lord
  • Instruction and Reproof
  • Folly as Moral Refusal
  • The Seduction of Sinful Community
  • Wisdom's Public Witness
  • Fear of the Lord
  • Revelation and Wisdom
  • Sin and Folly
  • Judgment
  • Sanctification

Passages

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