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1. Pro 8:2 – “She standeth in the top of high places, by the way in the places of the paths.”
- She standeth in the top of high places,
- Wisdom stands as she cries.
- Wisdom stands while she calls out to the sons of men.
- Standing is a far more advantageous position for a speaker to get the attention of his audience (Act 2:14; Act 24:21; Rev 19:17).
- Wisdom stands while calling men to repentance while the foolish woman sits on a seat while calling sinners to sin (Pro 9:13-17).
- Wisdom wants to be heard, so she goes to high places to cry (Pro 8:1).
- High adj. – 21. high place, in Scripture, a place of worship or sacrifice (usually idolatrous) on a hill or high ground; the altar and other appointments for such worship; also, in pl., the upper echelon of any organization
- As the definition shows, high places are often places of worship and can also refer to the upper echelons of organizations.
- Every time that the word of God is preached in churches wisdom is crying from the high places.
- Any time common sense is uttered in a corporate boardroom wisdom is crying from the high places.
- Not only does wisdom go to high places, she goes to the highest places of the city to cry (Pro 9:3).
- She goes to the top of high places to get to the highest places.
- Top n. – II. The highest or uppermost part. 3. a. The highest point or part of anything; perh. originally a pointed or peaked summit, an apex or peak; but now applied to the uppermost part, whatever its nature or shape; the highest place or limit of Also pl., mountain tops, high moorland, etc.
- Crying atop of high places gives one’s voice maximum projection in order to be able to be heard from far away.
- The fact that wisdom stands in the top of high places demonstrates how much effort God has exerted throughout time to call men to repentance and wisdom.
- by the way in the places of the paths.
- Wisdom not only cries from the high places where her voice will carry the farthest, she also goes where men are in order to reach them where they are.
- She preaches in both the crowded streets and the less traveled paths.
- Way n. – Road, path. 1. a. gen. A track prepared or available for travelling along; a road, street, lane, or path. b. In figurative context, with reference to a metaphorical walking or travelling. c. A main road connecting different parts of a country.
- Path n. – a. A way beaten or trodden by the feet of men or beasts; a track formed incidentally by passage between places, rather than expressly planned and constructed to accomodate traffic; a narrow unmade and (usually) unenclosed way across the open country, through woods or fields, over a mountain, etc.; a footway or footpath, as opposed to a road for vehicles; hence applied also to a walk made for foot-passengers, in a garden, park, wood, or the like. Sometimes said more vaguely of any way or road: cf. sense 3.
- The fact that wisdom stands by the way in the places of the paths demonstrates that God takes great pains to ensure that His word is preached wherever men are.
- This is why preachers preach both publicly in church and from house to house (Act 20:20).