
Click here for the Entire Series and the Outline.
Click here for previous sermon.
Click here for next sermon.
1. Pro 10:21 – “The lips of the righteous feed many: but fools die for want of wisdom.”
- The lips of the righteous feed many:
- The lips are used to consume physical food and to produce spiritual food.
- Any fool can use his lips to consume food, but only the righteous feeds many with his lips.
- Righteous adj. – 1. a. Of persons: Just, upright, virtuous; guiltless, sinless; conforming to the standard of the divine or the moral law; acting rightly or justly.
- Feed – 1. a. trans. To give food to; to supply with food; to provide food for. 2. fig. of I. Const. as above. a. simply; esp. in spiritual sense.
- The food that the righteous feed to the hungry is the food of knowledge (Jer 3:15).
- Only those who are hungering and thirsting after the knowledge of God will be fed (Mat 5:6; Psa 107:9).
- The words of a righteous and wise man’s mouth are like deep waters (Pro 18:4) which must be drawn out of him by the thirsty (Pro 20:5).
- One of the “many” whom the righteous feeds with his lips is himself (Pro 12:14; Pro 13:2; Pro 18:20).
- A good (righteous) man shall be satisfied from himself (Pro 14:14).
- A wise man is profitable to himself (Job 22:2).
- Wisdom is its own reward.
- Preachers feed many with their lips (Act 20:28; 1Pe 5:2; Joh 21:15-17).
- But you don’t have to be a preacher to feed many with your lips.
- Every Christian should have the lips of knowledge to feed those around him.
- Christians can feed others by:
- Speaking a word of comfort to them when they are weary (Isa 50:4).
- Teaching others the truth (Heb 5:12).
- Edifying them (1Th 5:11).
- Giving them a good word which will bring them joy (Pro 12:25).
- Exhorting (Heb 3:13) and admonishing them (Rom 15:14).
- Rebuking them (Lev 19:17).
- Fathers and mothers should be feeding their children the knowledge of God (Eph 6:4), and so should grandparents be doing so to their grandchildren (Deut 4:9).
- but fools die for want of wisdom.
- Definitions
- Fool n. – 1. a. One deficient in judgement or sense, one who acts or behaves stupidly, a silly person, a simpleton. (In Biblical use applied to vicious or impious persons.) The word has in mod.Eng. a much stronger sense than it had at an earlier period; it has now an implication of insulting contempt which does not in the same degree belong to any of its synonyms, or to the derivative foolish.
- Want n. – – 1. predicatively, or quasi-adj. (Something that is) wanting, missing. In Ormin const. with dative. rare. (last usage in 1400) 2. a. Deficiency, shortage, lack (of something desirable or necessary, esp. a quality or attribute). 3. a. The state of lacking the necessaries of life; penury; destitution. Also, the condition of lacking food; famine; starvation. to come to want: to be reduced to penury.
- Wisdom n. – 1. a. Capacity of judging rightly in matters relating to life and conduct; soundness of judgement in the choice of means and ends; sometimes, less strictly, sound sense, esp. in practical affairs: opp. to folly.
- Wisdom is food for the soul.
- Just as people die if they lack food, fools will die because they lack wisdom.
- Death may result from a lack of wisdom for the following reasons:
- Fools mouth off and get themselves killed for it (Pro 18:7, 21).
- Fools commit fornication and adultery and die for it (Pro 5:20, 23; Pro 7:22, 26-27).
- Fools do sinful and stupid things such as excessive drinking and eating, drunk driving, drugs, and doing dangerous things which all lead to death.
- Fools die as a result of the judgment of God for their wickedness (Pro 19:16; Ecc 7:17).
- You can’t feed a fool knowledge because he is not hungry for it (Pro 1:7; Pro 23:9).
- Wisdom is available from wise men, but fools don’t want it.
- How can you know if a man desires wisdom? He asks for advice from others.
- How can you know if a man does NOT desire wisdom? He does NOT ask for advice from others.
- How can you know if a man is a wise man? He asks for advice from others (Pro 1:5).
- How can you know if a man is a fool? He does NOT ask for advice from others.
- Are you a wise man or a fool?
- Ask yourself this question: “How often do I ask for advice from others?”
- Your honest answer will tell you how wise or how foolish you are.
- If you think you ask for advice from others often, ask yourself when was the last time you did so?
- If you can’t remember, you likely lack wisdom.