What
does God say a woman, a mother is to be? Actually it says in verse 10, "An excellent wife." When it
comes down to what a woman ought to be, this is it. Now this is an ideal, this
is a model. This doesn't describe some particular woman. This describes the
ideal woman.
There
is a lot to be said about women in the book of Proverbs. There is not only the
adulteress but there is the noisy woman, the loud boisterous woman with whom no
one wants to live and the normal man would prefer, the Proverb says, to live in
the corner of the roof, in a tiny little place, then in a big house with a
boisterous woman. There is the foolish woman. There is the rebellious woman.
There is the quarrelsome woman. And they are all really set in contrast to this
excellent wife here in chapter 31.
There
is in chapter 12 verse 4 of Proverbs this statement, "An excellent wife is
the crown of her husband. But she who shames him is as rottenness in his
bones." Nothing better than an excellent wife. Nothing worse than the
opposite. In fact, a wife has a
tremendous ability to influence a husband and a family.
We
talk about the fact that God has designed men to be the head of the family, and
that means provision and that means protection, that means leadership. Men have
that responsibility. But men do not have more than and perhaps not as much as
women when it comes to influence. Ahab was the man of his house, he was even
the king. He was a leader. He was strong. But his life was shaped by the
influence of his wife. A wife plays that role in the life of her husband and
the life of her children….pattern for that ideal woman.
I
was told a couple of weeks ago that Lemuel is a nickname of Solomon and his
mother said to him in verse 3, "Do not give your strength to women."
Don't engage yourself in sexual liaisons with other women. In other words,
don't commit fornication as a single man. Keep your life pure. Do not give away
your strength to women. Those are the way that destroy kings.
Further
good advice. Verse 4, don't drink. Don't drink wine, don't drink strong drink
because it clouds your judgment. In verse
8, "Open your mouth for the dumb." In other words, speak for those
people who can't speak for themselves. Those people who are oppressed. Those
people who can't defend themselves. Those people who are too small and
insignificant to have a platform of self-defense. You take up their cause. You
take up the rights of the unfortunate.
In
verse 9, "Open your mouth and judge righteously and defend the rights of
the afflicted and the needy." "Stay away from alcohol. Stay away from
sexual immorality. Take care of hurting people. Defend those who can't defend
themselves. Stand for the oppressed. Support the needy and deal justly with
everybody." This is how to be a good king. This is how to be a great man.
And most of all, and this is what occupied the length of her speech from verse
10 to 31, "Find a good wife." Understanding the implications of a bad
one, boisterous, quarrelsome, self-centered, wicked, such as Jezebel, and
realizing the influence she was bound to have upon his life, his mother
encouraged Lemuel to find an excellent wife.
The
kind of woman she describes is the model, ideal woman. She is priceless.
"An excellent wife...verse 10 says...who can find her worth is far above
jewels." And she goes on to describe this woman both physically, mentally,
morally, spiritually. In every dimension the character of the excellent wife
and mother is unfolded here. She describes this ideal woman, this model woman
by looking at six features...her character as a wife, her devotion as a
homemaker, her generosity as a neighbor, her influence as a teacher, her
effectiveness as a mother and her excellence as a saint.
Now
this is really a very important document in Jewish history. Obviously it is
inspired by God, but inspired by God in a unique way that to you is not
visible, and I'll tell you what that is. There are 22 verses from verse 10 to
31 and there are 22 characters in the Hebrew alphabet. Each of these verses
begins with the next character in sequence in the Hebrew alphabet so that it
starts with aleph, bet, gimel and so forth right on down through the Hebrew
alphabet. The first letter of each of these proverbs, each verse, is the next
letter in sequence. Why? Because it was easy that way to memorize this. It
became an acrostic which created a formula for easy memorization and recall of
these features so that every young Jewish son could be taught by his mother to
memorize Proverbs 31:10 to 31 and thereby have in his mind the criteria at all
times by which he was to measure the excellence of a woman. Unfortunately we
don't have that benefit in English. It was a great benefit to them in Hebrew.
This
kind of woman, according to chapter 19 verse 14, is a gift from God. So it
presupposes prayer, that one should find such a woman. In fact, it says in
verse 10, "An excellent wife, who can find?...who can find?" Now I
just do want to be fair about this because I don't want you to think this is
just a problem for men to find such a woman. It is also a problem to find a
good man. This is a just a moment of equal time here. Chapter 20 verse 6,
"Who can find a trustworthy man?"
Too
often when a selection is made of a woman or a wife, it is made for the wrong
reasons...looks, education, personality, likes and dislikes, accomplishments,
style, rather than virtue, character, those things that matter. But this woman
has a value that is far above jewels. The word actually describes precious
stones of any kind. Some versions translate it rubies, some translate it
pearls. Jewels is the best, it's just the generic word for precious stones. The
point being, this is a very, very valuable woman, not easy to find. Then in
verse 11 he begins to describe...she begins to describe this woman
First
of all, her character as a wife. Verse
11, "The heart of her husband trusts in her and he will have no lack of
gain for doing so." Now, in the ancient world, you need to understand
this, in the ancient world things were a bit different, even in Judaism. Women
were not looked upon as God had designed them to be looked upon but grew to be
seen as sort of second class. Men often built strong friendships with other men
and maintained their wives only as servants. And in some cases not even
maintaining a particular devotion to intimacy with them, they had concubines
for their intimate acts. Wives could be kept at a distance and treated very as
servants. Consequently there wasn't always the devotion between the two that
created trust. And so we read in some ancient documents that it was somewhat
common for husbands to lock up all their valuables when they went away so their
wives didn't take them.
The
trust is well founded because she's not going to do anything to harm his
personal gain. I suppose the equivalent today would be, "Are you willing
when you have to go out of town for the two-week business trip to leave your
checkbook with your wife?" Or frankly, do you even have a choice? Or leave
all the credit cards and know that perfectly...know that perfect calm that
comes when you say she will never violate anything, she will never do anything
that brings harm. I completely trust in her, she will never threaten what I
have gained for the support of this family. That's what it's talking about.
It's talking about the fact that there is an intimate relationship built on
complete trust. The husband can go to work, he can go away, he can do whatever
he needs to do with absolute confidence of her integrity, her wisdom and her
discretion in the use of his assets and in the care of his interests. His
comfort is her concern. His burdens are hers to relieve. He is at ease in
absence because he knows that all he has is safe with her because she cares for
him and he knows that. And love means she would never do anything that would
cause him sorrow or suffering or pain or distress. He's not suspicious, he's
not worried, he's not jealous because she is absolutely trustworthy. That is a
great foundation for a marriage.
He
will have no lack of gain. He's never going to have to become some soldier of
fortune to make back what she loses. He's never going to have to cheat to gain
a little more to cover the losses that she's causing. He doesn't have to be
tempted to steal or to falsify some account somewhere so he can get back what
she wasted carelessly.
By
the way, this indicates, and I think it's an important thing to mention, that
she is in charge of the domestic matters. She is in charge of using and
accounting for the resources in the home. He is free to give himself to his
work knowing that she will be a steward of all of that. 1 Timothy
5:14
…the ruler is to be the ruler of the house, or in Titus chapter 2 that she is
to be the ruler of the house. Part of that is the management of those resources
that the husband goes out to earn and to provide. She helps him to profit, not
lose. He has enough because she is devoted to the care of his earnings because
she loves him, because she cares about him, because she seeks his good. And
that's what comes in verse 12, look at the next verse. "She does him good
and not evil all the days of her life."
This
Jewish mother tells her son, you want a woman who always has your best interest
in her heart, who always seeks to build you up, whose desire is to make you
every bit of the man that you can be in every area. All the days of her life
she is devoted to the well-being of her husband, good times, bad times, times
of plenty, times of little, times of sadness, times of happiness, sick times,
well times...her love is ever and always devoted to the successes of her
husband. She is concerned about the highest spiritual principles and she never
fluctuates, she seeks the best and the noblest for the man who is her husband.
She serves him as Sarah served Abraham, according to 1 Peter
3:6,
and called him “ lord”. She was committed to him. She reveals her virtue by her
consistent service on his behalf. Her love is so deep it has a purity and a
power and devotion that never changes. All her life long his successes, his
comfort, his reputation, his joy are her delight. To live for him is her
constant happiness.
And
a footnote at this point. Aman I read said “That means that when necessary
because his highest good is her greatest desire, she will confront his sin and
his weakness. And lovingly she will be a conscience, she will be necessarily
the voice of God, never unkind, always submissive, but eager to be sure that he
walks with God. She is concerned to confront his sin and his failure. That's
part of desiring him to be everything he should be. That, by the way, is the
essence of what it says in Titus 2:4 when it tells the
young women to love their husbands, that's what it means. It doesn't mean walk
around ga-ga over the guy. It doesn't mean some kind of emotion. It means when
you love somebody you seek his best interests. You seek that he would be every
bit the man that God would want him to be, that he would be as much as he could
be spiritually, as much as he could be professionally in every way...to seek
that he would be the best father, the best friend, the best worker.
The
woman advances her husband's respect. Go down to verse 23, "Her husband is
known in the gates when he sits among the elders of the land." The point
is, he is known as her husband and his reputation is known far and wide. He is
known by everybody. What happened was, inside the gates of ancient cities there
would be sort of a platform area, or a patio area, where the elders of the city
would gather every day and they would adjudicate the matters that came up in
the city, disputes...it was like sort of an open court where hearings were made
with regard to the issues of the time in where business was carried out. And
the elders of the city, the mature men of the city, sat in that place and
rendered judgment.
The
point being that this man has a great reputation among the leaders of the city.
It is a reputation basically built by his wife. She is so faithful to the
duties of her love to him, he is free to be every bit the man he can be and so
he develops a tremendous reputation. That reputation is undergirded by her
because she's doing everything to make him everything he ought to be. She's contributing
to his spiritual development. She's contributing to the clarity with which he
sees the issues of life. She's granting him the wisdom that she gains from the
knowledge of God and the knowledge of God's Word. She serves him. She cares for
the things behind the scenes so he's free to be everything that God would want
him to be and everything that the community would benefit from. And so he is
known as a man of great nobility and great respect because of the contributions
that she has made selflessly to him. And also, you can be sure that she has
done everything she can as well verbally to build his reputation and never do
anything to tear it down. She gains nothing by tearing down her husband's
reputation, absolutely nothing. If people have diminished respect for him, then
they have diminished respect for her, first of all because she speaks evil of
her husband and secondly because he chose someone inadequate to help him to
become all he could be.
This woman has
character as a wife.
So much character that her husband totally trusts her in the careful management
of everything that is precious and important to the family, so much so that she
does him good and not evil all her life long, making him all that he can be so
that his reputation is impeccable in the community. Her character as a wife.
Secondly, her
devotion as a homemaker. And this takes up really the bulk of the passage, her
devotion as a homemaker. This is quite remarkable. Immediately in verse 13,
it's kind of an interesting transition, "She looks for wool and flax and
works with her hands in delight." Vivian Gornek(?), you wouldn't know who
she is, but she teaches feminism at the University of Illinois, says, quote:
"Being a housewife is an illegitimate profession." I always thought
being a prostitute was an illegitimate profession, but in our day being a
housewife is an illegitimate profession. Frankly, the most cruel and certainly
the most damaging sexual harassment, taking place today is the sexual
harassment by feminists and their governmental allies against the role of
motherhood and the role of the dependent wife. That's real sexual harassment
with devastating results.
But
in God's order, this woman is devoted to the home. She is the ruler of the
house. She manages the household. And her devotion is remarkable. Verse 13 tells us that she's involved in
making thread out of wool and flax, or linen. And I think it's interesting to
note the transition between verse 12 and 13. Verse 12 is a pretty spiritual
verse. She's being her husband's conscience, she's doing him good and never
evil. All the days of her life she's devoted to him being everything he could
be. She seeks his spiritual benefits, spiritual welfare. She wants to comfort
and encourage and strengthen him. And yet her submission and her Godly virtues
don't make her in to some kind of spiritual recluse, some kind of a religious
nut pretending that irresponsibility and laziness is deeply spiritual while she
shirks the duties of the home. She's not quite ready to become the resident theologian
and do nothing but spend time in study. Immediately after the spiritual
leadership of verse 12 we find her using her hands in verse 13. No place in her
life for self-indulgence, no place for laziness, no place for inactivity. She
is full of energy in the duties of the home. Whatever the home required, that's
what she did.
She
looks for flax and wool. Why? Because she wants...she has to purchase the bare
product of flax and wool and then she has to spin it into thread and then she
has to weave it on a loom. And then once it's woven into fabric, she has to cut
it and make the garments with it. Wool? Because of winter time. It was very
cold in the winter. Flax or linen? Because of the hot times. Linen was used in
the summer and wool was used in the winter. The needle and the spindle served
the family and she worked with her hands in delight. There's no complaint about
this. It's not begrudging. She finds joy in this labor. Why? Because she loves
the people for whom she does it. It is her love that drives her. A version of
this says her hands are active after the pleasure of her heart.
It's
not hard for her to do these things. It's not something she begrudges. It's not
an unwilling thing because she loves the people she serves. She loves her work
because she loves her family, she loves her husband. Its value is connected to
whom she works. Because of such deep devotion to her husband and her children,
she willingly denies herself and takes on the most menial of tasks with the
greatest amount of pleasure because she understands that they are an outgrowth
of her deep love for those people in her family.
Verse
14, "She is like merchant ships, she brings her food from afar." Some
of you are saying, "Well that's my wife, she finds these coupons and
drives 30 miles to get a bargain on orange juice and eats up more in gas than
we save." Well, listen, she's trying. Now we understand that benefit of
that being frugal and being careful. But in those days the rub was you had to
walk. She walked long distances to find something that her family would enjoy.
It doesn't even say the price was the issue, although we could assume it was.
She's like a merchant ship. She takes a journey to get some food that's way off
in the distance, and she has to walk a long way to get it. But because of the
delight she has in providing it for her family, she willingly does that. She
finds her complete satisfaction in the joy of serving those great distances to
find the very best, certainly for the best price to bring the benefit to her family.
She's
engaged, you see, in good planning, careful management, but it's not just
simplistic, it's not just bread and water; there are little things that she
adds to make it rich and enjoyable, even if she has to go a long way to get it.
Verse
15 says more about her devotion as a homemaker. "She rises also while it
is still night and gives food to her household and portions to her
maidens." This is before dawn and she's up. "A lamp...a lamp is
always shining." In ancient times in Middle Eastern homes, and it was the
wife's duty to keep it lit, pour a little oil in after midnight, get up before
dawn to make sure it hadn't all been burned up. That was her. After midnight,
trimming the lamp, up before dawn to grind corn for the next day's meals, or
prepare whatever had to be prepare for her husband and her children and the
rest of the household. Her household is above her own comfort, above her own
rest. She's up long before her husband and children so that she can give food
to the household.
And
it says...notice in verse 15..."And portions to her maidens." That's
quite an interesting statement. The word "portions," some would take
it to mean food that she's sort of feeding her maidens, but she had some young
girls who worked for her. This is a picture of kind of a large estate.
Remember, this mother is talking to her son who will be a king. And so there
are servants there. But this woman, even though she would be a queen is not
indolent or lazy, she works. And the work portions in the Septuagint, they use
the Greek word erga which means work or labor. What it means is she's up early
passing out the tasks to all the maidens to do their assignments through the
day. So she literally gets up in the morning to plan the day's activities,
prepare the day's food, delegate the tasks to all the maidens who are going to
assist. She really does manage the house.
She's
entrepreneurial, too. Look at verse 16. "She considers a field and buys
it." Now...notice this, she knows the field is for sale and she thinks it
through. She assesses the price and the value of the field and the benefit it
could bring to her family. And she decides it's an appropriate thing to do.
Notice the independence of this. She considers it, she thinks it through and
she makes the purchase.
You
say, "Well...well where does she get this money? Did she just take it out
of her husband's account?" No. This is a very enterprising lady. It tells
you that she purchases the field in verse 16 from her earnings. And then she
has enough to plant a vineyard in it. She decides that this would be a great
field to plant grapes and that that would benefit the household well. And so
she takes her earnings.
Where
did she get this little bit of money? Well, she had a little enterprise going.
Go down to verse 24. This is an entrepreneurial lady. And what she's doing,
according to verse 24, is making linen garments and selling them and supplying
belts or sashes to the tradesmen. So she's got a little cottage industry going,
I like this. People say, "Well, shouldn't a woman be creative? And what
about their talents? And shouldn't they work?" Yes, and she's found the
right place. The Word of God pictures her right in the home being enterprising
enough to be making these garments, certainly probably assisted by the maidens
that come alongside of her, selling them to the tradesmen who tend...who take
them and export them all over the world. So she's got her own little export
business going, she's working with tradesmen. And from the money that she
garnered out of that enterprise she started to save it, and save it and save
it, never indulging it on herself but always with a view to securing it so that
in the future she could do something that would benefit everybody. She finally
comes to the conclusion, she has enough, the field is for sale, that's the best
investment. She buys the field, she plants the vineyard and everybody benefits.
She makes wise investments.
Wonderful
when a woman is enterprising and if she has the time and the inclination and
the talents and abilities to do things in the home that can benefit the family,
that is a marvelous thing. The sad thing is when a woman decides that she's
going to go have a career at the expense of the family, at the expense of the
children, at the expense of the husband and the home.
V.
16 is a great Time Management tool:
consider a new opportunity and do not get involved (say NO) if you know
that you cannot keep your present responsibilities in order!
Verse
17 tells us a little more about this woman. It says, "She girds herself
with strength and makes her arms strong." This does not mean she went to
the gym. Just want to make that clear. She girds herself with strength and
makes her arms strong. She's not soft, she's strong. And what has made her
strong, and it's not just talking about her muscles, she's become strong as the
result of her effort, as a result of her strength exerted in the daily tasks
she becomes strong. And that's why she can do so much. Her physical
constitution is strong and her arms are strong and she can work that spindle,
look at verse 19. "She can stretch her hands out to the distaff and her
hands can grasp the spindle." She can do that handwork. She can work with
her hands, verse 13, in delight. Verse 24, she can make those linen garments.
She in verse 22 even makes coverings for herself. This is a woman who is a
strong woman.
Then
in verse 18, "She senses that her gain is good, her lamp does not go out
at night." What does it mean "she senses that her gain is good?"
That all of this effort is producing goodness ot the family. She sees that what
she does is beneficial for everybody and she lives for them. She is motivated
by the goodness of that effort, the goodness to everybody around her. She is
spurred on not by self-fulfillment, not by self-indulgence, she is spurred on
by the inherent goodness of what she is doing in the lives of everyone she
loves. The family is not organized in such a way that everybody has to attend
to her, but rather that she is committed to give herself away for the goodness
of everyone else. And in order to accomplish all that's in her heart, her lamp
goes not out at night.
This
is remarkable. She finds work for the hours of darkness. And you have to do a
special kind of work, it's hard to do sewing work in ancient times without
light bulbs, to the light of an oil lamp. It would be hard to stay warm at
night during the winter because the only way you could warm the interior of a
room would be to have a pat...a pan of hot coals sitting in the middle of the
room, which is what they did. But she is so devoted to the needs of her family
that she's up at night in the dark doing what could be done in the
dark...sleeping and then up again before the light in the morning preparing for
the day. Motivated by the goodness of what she does, motivated because it is so
good for all the family to enjoy. She does it, to borrow the words of the New
Testament, "Heartily as unto the Lord."
In
verse 19, speaks of the distaff and the spindle which are implements that are
part of making thread which, of course, lead to the loom where there's a
weaving. And finally the fabric is made from which clothes and other things can
be produced.
Verse
21, "She is not afraid of the snow for her household, for all her
household are clothed with scarlet." She's not afraid of the snow. You
say, "Well does it snow in Jerusalem? Does it snow in Israel?" Sure.
If you were a king and you ended up on the throne in Jerusalem, it snows there
about every other winter. But even when it doesn't snow, it's very cold in
Jerusalem. In fact, just as a footnote so you know I'm giving you the straight
story here, 2 Samuel 23:20, "Benaiah, the son of Jehoiada, the son of a valiant
man of Kabzeel, who had done mighty deeds, killed the two sons of Ariel of
Moab. He also went down and killed a lion in the middle of a pit on a snowy
day." Just so you know. There are snowy days.
Now,
she would provide wool garments for the snowy day, but not just wool garments.
It's interesting that they're scarlet...she dyes them deep red...deep red. Why?
Well, wool garments deep red in color would retain more heat. We all understand
that, that dark garments retain heat and white garments reflect heat. Now just
dark black garments, but she makes them beautiful with a deep scarlet burgundy
kind of a red. And those would be very important in the winter. As I said, all
you have is a portable pan with coals to heat a room and you may have worn that
wool garment not only out in the day but certainly in the night sitting in the
home and maybe even to cover you when you slept. Such garments were dignified.
They were beautiful. They were well made. They were functional but they were
red so that they could have some beauty. She cared not just about the basic
things, she cared about the enjoyment of her family.
In
verse 22 she makes coverings for herself. "Her clothing is fine linen and
purple." What does it mean she makes coverings for herself? It could refer
to a coat, a cloak, a shawl, some kind of a wrap. It also can refer to pillows,
blankets, bed covering. She made coverings for herself. She...the implication
here is she made her bed beautiful. I mean, earlier in the Proverbs the
prostitute did that to seduce the man. Here is the godly woman making the bed a
place of loveliness and comfort. She adorns the beds of her house for herself,
for her family, for comfort and for beauty. And then her clothing is fine linen
and purple.
When
it came...you know, you could say if you looked at this woman, by the time you
get to this verse you could say, "You know, this woman has got to really
look bad. I mean, she's got to be haggard. This woman gets no sleep. She
goes...she doesn't go to bed till after dark. She gets up before light. She's
tramping all over town buying stuff at a bargain. When she does get home she's
working with the spindle. She's got to have dirty arms, dirty hands and her
hair must be a fright. When does she ever pay any attention to herself? And the
husband is probably going to come home and say, "You know, all this is
great, but, dear, could you please do something about the way you look." Not so. This woman appreciates the beauty
that God has given her. This lady understood how important that charm and that
beauty was.
Verse
24 says more about this amazing enterprise that she's engaged in as a
homemaker. She makes these linen garments and sells them and supplies belts to
the tradesmen. The Hebrew word "tradesmen" here is quite interesting.
It's the word kenaanites and that refers to the Phoenicians who were the
sailors of the ancient Middle East. And what she's doing is making garments,
selling them to the sailors who are the traders who take their ships off the
coast of Palestine and distribute their goods all over the Mediterranean. So she's
got an export business going. Belts is cloth girdles, like cummerbunds, sashes.
And you see pictures of people in biblical times, you know, representations of
them and they have these long robes. You'll always see them with a sash because
that was the way you sort of gathered all that material in.
Thirdly, her
generosity as a neighbor. Verse 20, "She extends her hand to the poor and she
stretches out her hands to the needy." It isn't that they come to her,
it's that she goes to them. Isn't that good? She demonstrates not only a
special devotion to her home but compassion toward those not fortunate enough
to be in her home. She demonstrates compassion to the poor and the unfortunate
who have needs. When it says she extends her hand to the poor, it means she
gets involved in their life, she provides what they need...maybe it was food,
maybe it was money, maybe it was a cloak. She stretches out her hands to the
needy, she doesn't just touch those who come close to her, she goes to those
who have needs. Her generosity as a neighbor. She is an utterly selfless woman.
Number four is her
influence as a teacher. Verse 25, "Strength and dignity are her clothing and
she smiles at the future." And I start there even though it doesn't talk
about teaching because verse 25 is the platform for her teaching. She is
clothed in verse 25 with spiritual character. She has spiritual strength and
dignity.
What
does that word "dignity" mean? It refers to the fact that she is
elevated above common things. She is elevated about trivial things. Her life is
not all about what doesn't matter. She has true class, true virtue. She has
godly character. She is spiritually strong and she has elevated herself to the
nobler issues. And she has the power of true character and it’s expressed in
the fact that she smiles at the future. She has no fear. Why? Because she knows
her life is right with God and that secures His blessing in the future.
You
shouldn't fear the future. You shouldn't worry about the future. If your life
is right with God the promise of God is unfolding blessing, isn't it? She knows
in whom she trusts. She knows her life is right. She is faithful. She is pure.
And therefore she can delight in what is ahead. Those who fear the future are
those who experience guilt in the present. If you're overburdened by the weight
of your own sin and unfaithfulness, you have every reason to fear the future
because the Bible promises chastening. This woman, because of the virtue of her
life, can smile at the future and know the promise of God for blessing.
So,
based on spiritual strength, based on virtue and having elevated her thoughts
above common things, mundane things, trivial things, worldly things...verse 26,
"She opens her mouth in wisdom." And she has credibility because of
her life. "She opens her mouth in wisdom...and I love this...and literally
the law of kindness is on her tongue." She opens her mouth, she speaks
wisdom. But that wisdom comes with kindness. She guides her family daily,
including her husband, with words of wisdom from the law of God. Proverbs
1:8
tells a young man to follow the law of his mother. Hers is not a formal class,
there's a place for women to teach women, women to teach children and we understand
that. And women are limited in not being able to teach the church, as we read
in 1 Timothy chapter 2. But women have a class that is not formal and
informal...not formal but informal, it's the home. And it's all the time her
classroom. It's the instruction in the flow of her life day in, day out, day
in, day out she is the teacher. And out of her mouth comes, it says in verse
26, the teaching of kindness, literally the Torah of kindness, the Law of God...the
law of kindness. Kindness, what's that? That's that magnificent Old Testament
word chesed, it is translated kindness, loving kindness, mercy. Its perhaps
truest translation is grace. So she teaches law, God's law to her family with
grace. With pleasing, kind, gracious speech her tongue is regulated. Behind the
teaching of the law is the tempering of mercy, compassion. This is the noble,
excellent woman.
Fifthly, we have seen
her as a wife, a homemaker, a neighbor and a teacher. Verse 27, "She looks well to the
ways of her household and doesn't eat the bread of idleness." And because
of that devotion to her household and because she's not lazy but she gives her
life for them, verse 28, "Her children rise up and bless her, her husband
also and he praises her saying, 'Many daughters have done nobly, but you excel
them all.'" There's the reward...there's the reward.
She
exercises, according to verse 27, careful surveillance over everything. She
manages the children. She manages the household. She is not lazy. She is not
eating the product of laziness but the bread of loving hard work. And then the
real satisfaction comes for her, it comes from the people she loves the most.
She's given everything to them and what does she get back? They rise up and
bless her and they praise her. They reverence her, literally. They honor her,
they hold her in high esteem. And even her husband because she has set aside
her own comfort for his, she receives from him the supreme blessing after all
the years of life, he loves her more than he's ever loved her because he now understands
her character better than he ever understood it.
It's
so obvious that when you marry somebody in the beginning, there are lots of
sort of chemical attractions and some social attractions and some other things
that bring you together. But you don't have a lifetime of character in which to
assess someone. It shouldn't be that somewhere down the life of that marriage
you start saying, "Well, I don't love you anymore, this isn't going to
work, I want out of this deal." It ought to be that the further you go
down that marriage the more noble, the more wonderful, the more excellent that
woman becomes so that the further along you are in that marriage, the more
likely you are to say, "I wouldn't trade you for anybody in the
world." That's how it ought to be. As she becomes older, as her children
grow, they will appreciate her more and more and so will her husband because of
her sacrifice and they will rise up and call her blessed. They will praise her
and he should say of her, "Many daughters have done nobly, I've met a lot
of women and some pretty wonderful ones at that, I wouldn't trade you for any
of them."
As
she becomes older, her children grow. They have their own children and they
endeavor then to raise them as they were raised by her. She is constantly
before their eyes. Her tender guidance, her wise counsel, her loving
discipline, her holy example, her hard work, her unselfish giving, all of these
things never cease to fill the memories of her children and so they begin to
fill the lives of their children. And that's how righteousness is passed from
generation to generation. And let me tell you, no woman in the work place can
have that kind of influence.
She's
excellent as a wife and homemaker and a neighbor and a teacher and mother and
lastly, her excellence as a saint, verses 30 and 31. "Charm is deceitful
and beauty is vain, but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be praised."
Simple point. Look pass the superficial. Charm in the Hebrew means gracefulness
of form, it talks about her shape. Beauty has to do with the face. That is
deceitful, that can all look good and really cover up a wicked heart. But a
woman who fears the Lord, she shall be praised.
KEY VERSE TO BEING THAT PROVERBIAL WOMAN!!!! A woman that fears the LORD!
So
Lemuel's mother says, "Find a woman who fears the Lord. Therein is the
beginning of wisdom. She will be praised. Give her the product of her hands and
let her works praise her in the gates." What are the products of her
hands? All the good she's done to others, it will now come back to her. All the
sacrifice will be hers the rest of her life. Everything she did in private will
come back in public as they praise her in the gates in the middle of town.
She'll be famous for her Godly womanhood, that's her reward.
Father,
thank You for this tremendous passage of Scripture. We've just touched the
surface of it. Lord, we pray for the women of this church, knowing their love
for Christ, knowing their desire to fear You and honor You, knowing their
submissiveness to the Word of God, we trust, Lord, that You would lead them to
be the women that this great chapter describes, that they might raise a
generation of children who will pass on their virtue, that they might know the
rich, rich reward that comes when the children and the husband praise them. We
pray for the families of our church. We know that much lies in the
responsibility of the husband, but much as well in the responsibility of the
wife. We pray, Lord, that You and Your grace will forgive us for our
short-comings, for all of us have fallen short of the standard both for men and
women, husbands and wives, fathers and mothers, and, Lord, to help us pick up
from the failure and to move ahead and to be obedient to be what You want us to
be. We pray especially on this day that You would cause all the goodness that
so many have given to their families to come back in the joy and the
thankfulness and the blessing of a generation of children and of husbands who
will praise them. And, Lord, thank You for the grace and the strength through
Your Spirit to be what You want us to be, in Christ's name. Amen.
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