In the past and more than once I've shared that the NAC volume on Proverbs (plus Solomon's other books) by Duane Garrett is...er... not my favorite. In fact, what I've said is that mostly it disappoints. Four out of five times when I've gone for help on a verse, Garrett may not even talk about the verse, or doesn't offer much.
All that to say this: Garrett has helped me a lot in approaching the last section of Proverbs 10. As you know, I'm coming to the end of preaching Proverbs 1—10. Despite (or because of) decades of studying Proverbs, the prospect of preaching through this section verse by verse was daunting, brimming with challenges and terrors. As I have drawn near each section, I've wondered how in the world I was going to preach it — but then, when I got under the hood, it's all falling together.
Or it had until I'd done verses 15-17, a triplet of verses on wealth, wisdom and life, tied together by concept and by tag-word. After that I found myself looking down the barrel of verses 18-32. What was facing me now? Fifteen separate sermons? Clusters? Any structure? Anything at all?
Bueller?
Various commenters said this, that, or nothing. But it was actually Duane Garrett whose approach fit the text best to me. He saw it as a chiasm:
3 comments:
Well, Dan..if anyone is gifted to preach on Proverbs, you are. The book (and I'm repeating myself) is outstanding. I do wish more churches would pick it up for study, and I in general don't recommend books other than the Bible itself for Sunday school etc. But since the book is a study on a book of the Bible verse by verse...it's super.
Also interesting to me i.e. the post at hand, it begins and ends with "the tongue" or "speech." I've been reflecting a lot lately on that subject, and related verses such as "out of the abundance of the heart, the mouth speaks," etc. It gets preached on from time to time, but I wonder how seriously we really take what we say on a day to day basis, and ponder the impact of what we say on those who hear us say it?
It really is a sobering reflection.
I notice you changed his chiastic outline to use words of the same letter in yours. How alliterate!
Preacher!
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