At ChristChurch, Clarendon Park, for the sixth session in the course, "Mindfulness". This eight-week course is an interfaith opportunity presented by Christians Aware (as part of its Faith Awareness programme) in association with Leicester Serene Reflection Meditation Group.
Our topic this evening is "The Place of 
Wisdom in the Judeo-Christian Tradition", presented by Revd Marcus Braybrooke. 
Marcus is President 
of the World Congress of Faiths and is the author of many books on religion 
and spirituality in its many forms. His specialist interest is in relations 
between Christians and Jews. The copy below is 
almost entirely adapted from the handout we’re given this evening.
Wisdom 
literature was commonplace in the Ancient world. Here are a few examples of 
Ptahotep's advice:
- "Do not gossip in your neighbourhood, because people love the silent."
- "Only speak when you have something worth saying."
- "Love your wife with passion."
- "Do not blame those who are childless, do not criticise them for not having any, and do not boast about having them yourself."
Wisdom 
literature in the Bible
The Wisdom 
literature includes books such as Job, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and the Song of 
Solomon and perhaps the Psalms and (in the Apocrypha) The Wisdom of Solomon and 
Ecclesiasticus, which is the Greek translation of Ben Sirah who wrote the book 
in Hebrew c. 190/180 BCE and it was then translated into Greek for his grandson 
in 132 BCE. Wisdom literature in the Bible is of two types: instruction and 
reflection.
Instruction
Are you 
good at getting up in the morning? If not, here's one for you: "As the door 
turns upon its hinges, so doth the slothful turn upon his bed." (Prov 26:13). 
Again, "The bickerings of a wife are like the ever-dripping gutter." (Prov 
19:13). But lest we be accused of sexism, Proverbs also says of a virtuous 
woman, "her price is above rubies." (Prov 31:10). Sometimes there are parallels 
with New Testament passages: "The tongue that soothes is a tree of live; the 
perverse tongue a breaker of hearts." (Prov 15:4) and "With the tongue we praise 
Our Lord and Father with the tongue we curse man, who hath been made in God's 
likeness." (James 3:9). There is 
quite often a suggestion that God will reward the righteous: 
"Treasures of wickedness profit nothing, but righteousness 
delivers from death. The Lord will not let the upright go hungry. He thwarts the 
greed of the wicked." (Prov 10:23). Also, "The righteous man 
'shall be like a tree planted by the waterside, but the ungodly are like chaff, 
which the wind scattereth away from the face of the earth." (Psalm 
1)
Reflective literature
Wisdom 
literature ponders the injustice of life: "God has delivered me 
to the ungodly, and turned me over into the hands of the wicked. Know now that 
God hath overthrown me, and has caught me in a net. Behold I cry out of wrong, 
but I am not heard: I cry aloud but there is no judgement." (Job 
19:6-7) The Preacher in Ecclesiastes says: "Vanity of vanities, 
all is vanity".
The 
personification of Wisdom (who is female)
Wisdom 
says in "The Lord brought me forth or created me as the first of his works ... I 
was appointed from eternity, before the world began." (Prov 8:22)
"wisdom 
pervades and permeates all things. She is the breath of the power of God, pure 
emanation of the glory of the Almighty ... She is the reflection of the eternal 
Light, untarnished mirror of God's active power, and image of his goodness." 
(Book of Wisdom 7:25-26)
Wisdom gives understanding and teaches the secret of a good lire, which is obey the Torah. Solomon says: "I called upon God, and the spirit of wisdom came to me ... I loved her above health and beauty ... She is a treasure unto men that never fails." (Wis 7:7)
Wisdom gives understanding and teaches the secret of a good lire, which is obey the Torah. Solomon says: "I called upon God, and the spirit of wisdom came to me ... I loved her above health and beauty ... She is a treasure unto men that never fails." (Wis 7:7)
"Thy word is a lantern unto my feet: and a light unto my paths." (Psalm 119:105)
"Thy testimonies are wonderful: there fore doth my soul keep them." (Psalm 119:129)
Wisdom says: "Put your neck under the yoke and let your soul receive instruction: she is hard to find." (Ecclesiasticus 51:26) Jesus says: "Take my yoke upon you and learn of me." (Matthew 11:25) Testing, and the mocking of a servant of God's claim to be protected by God: Let us see if his words are true, and let us test what will happen at the end of his life: for if the righteous man is God's son, he will help him, and will deliver him from the hand of his adversaries." (Wis 2:17-18). "He trusts in God; let God deliver him now, if he desires him; for he said, 'I am the Son of God.'" (??)
The 
wisdom of God is foolishness to men (1 Cor 1:17ff)
Wisdom is 
a challenge to human conceit and to a knowledge-based pattern of 
education.
Jesus 
as the Wisdom or Word of God
Several 
New Testament writers identify Jesus with the figure of Wisdom who was with God 
from the beginning but how close is the parallel?
Paul 
actually speaks about Christ as "the power of god and the wisdom of God." (1 Cor 
1:24) and says that his message was "of the mystery of the wisdom of God - even 
the hidden wisdom, which God orddainedCor 2:7) "Wisdom is 
a reflection of eternal light, a spotless mirror of the working of God, and an 
image of his goodness." (Wis 7:26) The author of Hebrews says of Christ: "He 
reflects the glory of God and hears the very stamp of his nature, upholding the 
universe by his word of power." (Prologue to John's 
Gospel)
Later 
Judaism
Rabbinic 
Judaism said little about Wisdom, but she reappears in Kabbala or mystical 
Judaism.
"How 
should we speak of Jesus?"
Some translations of 
the New Testament avoid "Father" and "Son".
"Stories 
of the Prophets", and Arabic Bible that uses "Lord" instead of "Father" and 
"Messiah" instead of "Son".
"True 
Meaning of the Gospel of Christ", an Arabic translation which removes "Father" 
in reference to God and removes or redefines "Son".
A Turkish 
translation of Matthew that uses "guardian" for "Father" and "representative" or 
"proxy" for "Son".
The 
Bengali Infil Sharif, which 
translated "Son" as "Messiah" and "Son of God" as "God's Uniquely Intimate 
Beloved Chosen One"
We're 
given an exercise for our small group work that seems a little odd, given that 
not everyone in the room is Christian (we have at least two Secular Humanists, 
two Buddhists and a Bahá'í) but everyone does their best to enter into the spirit of things. We're asked to discuss the most helpful way to 
speak of God's presence in Jesus:- Jesus is God
- Jesus is the Image of God
- God was in Jesus Christ
- Very God of Very God
- The Wisdom or Word of God was present in Jesus and also in Buddha and Zoroaster and Krishna
- Jesus as a window into God (which is how he is described in Honest to God)

 
No comments:
Post a Comment