THE
KNOWLEDGE OF THE HOLY ONES Poteau, Oklahoma
Our primary text is Proverbs 9:10 where it is written:
“The fear of
the LORD is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy is
understanding.” One thing about Hebrew poetry
needs to be remembered.
Ancient Hebrew poetry such as our text probably did not rhyme even when
originally written. It most certainly does not rhyme in sound when translated
into English, but presents instead the beauty of corresponding and sometimes
expanding thoughts. Any rhythm, cadence, or rhyming of sound is lost in the
translation. However, the “rhyming” of thoughts shines through to those who read
their Bibles looking for it. Often a truth is stated first in one way and then
the same or a kindred truth is stated in different words. So the beauty is not
in similar sounds, but in parallel thoughts. The truth is established by
building upon or modifying a previous statement. When next you read the Psalms
or other Old Testament poetry look for this kind of construction.
Our aim is to understand and appreciate the phrase “the knowledge of the
holy” which is found in the second part of this couplet - our text. This exact
phrase is found in our Bibles only here and one other place which we will
examine a little later. But before we examine the second part let us look at the
first of this verse. First, remember that the word “LORD” in all capital letters
is the English word we know as Jehovah. This is the name of God which carries
the idea of the “I AM” - the eternally living One. In the Masoretic text (the
authoritative text for the Hebrew Old Testament) this word appears well over
six-thousand-five-hundred times, but the King James translators only translated
it as JEHOVAH four times. James Strong says our King James Bible has it as
“LORD” 6510 times, as “God” 4 times, as “JEHOVAH” 4 times, and as a “variant” 1
time, thus making the total translations of the Hebrew word 6519 times. I have
used the term “word,” but as you may remember, the Hebrew is actually the
tetragrammaton written as “YHWH” or “JHVH” or “YHVH,” or “JHWH.”
(Tetregrammaton means “four letters”). The King James translators used
the word “Jehovah” for the tetragrammaton. “Jehovah” is the vulgar (common)
pronunciation that was used in England in A.D. 1611. And so it has passed down
to us today. In order to arrive at an English pronunciation vowels must be
supplied among the four letters and so the word “Jehovah” came into being.
Exactly how the ancient Hebrews pronounced this word is unknown as far as this
preacher has been able to learn. We cannot see that this matters inasmuch as the
spellings of names of persons, and places and their pronunciations have often
changed down through the centuries.
The thing to remember is that Jehovah is the proper name of God. The
Hebrew Elohim or Eloheim when used with singular adjectives is translated as
“God” and when used with plural adjectives is translated as “gods” in our King
James Bibles. (Jehovah is not a title such as the word “Lord” when printed in
our Bibles in mixed upper and lower case letters). Jehovah is the name by which
God revealed Himself as the self-existing one: the Redeemer, the source of life:
the “I AM.”
God revealed Himself
thus to Moses, saying, “And God said unto Moses, I AM THAT I AM: and he said,
Thus shalt thou say unto the children of Israel, I AM hath sent me unto you,”
(Exodus 3:14). So it is in our text (Proverbs 9:10) which we quoted at the first
of this article, we need to understand that the first part of this poetic
statement can be translated thus: “The fear of JEHOVAH is the beginning of
wisdom.”
And so we are brought
“face to face” as it were, with Jehovah: not just God, but the fear of
the “I AM THAT I AM.”
Such a respect, awe, and trembling at His Word can only be the work of
God within an individual. Such a
“fear of JEHOVAH” prompts “godly
sorrow” which initiates and perpetuates not only a first time experience of
repentance, but a lifetime of repentance, (see 2 Corinthians 7:10).
Now the second part of this couplet appears in our Bibles as,
“and
the knowledge of the holy is understanding.” However, as several
commentators note, the word “holy” is plural in the original. It means “the
holies” or “the Holy Ones.” John Gill notes that the same plural Hebrew word
appears in Joshua 24:19; Proverbs 30:3; and Hosea 11:9. Thus far in my research
I have not learned why the King James translators chose to render this plural
Hebrew word as a singular English one. Perhaps this term “the holy” is another
of those old Catholic church words that King James instructed them to keep.
Perhaps there was another reason, but we cannot think of a good one that would
excuse such a misstep. So let us understand that the second part of our couplet
says, “and the knowledge of the Holy Ones is understanding.”
The teaching of this verse stated negatively is this: no one has wisdom
or understanding apart from the “fear” and “knowledge” of JEHOVAH, the Triune
God. Those who do not “tremble at his word” (Isaiah 66:5) and who do not
“know him that is true,” (1 John 5:20), do not have true wisdom or
understanding. Let us hasten to add that it is not wisdom or understanding that
enables people to know God. God cannot be put under a microscope or any modern
scientific device and examined in that way. He must reveal Himself. In creation,
by means of human consciences, and in the Word of
God He has revealed Himself. In the first two of these ways, creation and
conscience, the revelation is a general one so that all men are without excuse.
The Bible is a special revelation and in a different class than the first two.
By it salvation is made known to God's elect people. Those not spiritually
enabled to understand the Bible only see religion in that Book. That is the
limit of their experience. But there is a further revelation (if we may use that
term) or perhaps a better word is enlightenment. John Gill called it “spiritual
and evangelical wisdom.” For when God calls a person to Himself, the Spirit of
God enables the spiritually dead sinner to live and understand. He does not just
improve on human wisdom, but is Light within the regenerate. God does not call
wise men to salvation for the most part, and if He did, their natural wisdom
would not help them to understand the things of God. In 1 Corinthians 1:26-29
God's Word specifies the kind of people God calls to salvation:
“For ye see
your calling, brethren, how that not many wise men after the flesh, not many
mighty, not many noble, are called: But God hath chosen the foolish things of
the world to confound the wise; and God hath chosen the weak things of the world
to confound the things which are mighty; And base things of the world, and
things which are despised, hath God chosen, yea, and things which are not, to
bring to nought things that are: That no flesh should glory in his presence.”
The world's nobodies are called to be God's somebodies. Better stated, the
world's nobodies are called with a call that makes them God's somebodies. A few
“wise men after the flesh” are called, but “not many.” This enlightenment or
“spiritual and evangelical wisdom” is seen when Paul exhorted the congregation
in Ephesus to live holy lives saying, “For ye were sometimes darkness, but
now are ye light in the Lord: walk as children of light,” (Ephesians 5:8).
In Ephesians 1:17-19 Paul wrote to that same ekklesia concerning his prayer for
them saying: “That the God of our Lord Jesus Christ, the Father of glory, may
give unto you the spirit of wisdom and revelation in the knowledge of him: The
eyes of your understanding being enlightened; that ye may know what is the hope
of his calling, and what the riches of the glory of his inheritance in the
saints, And what is the exceeding greatness of his power to us-ward who believe,
according to the working of his mighty power.” So it is that those whom God
regenerates are “light in the Lord.”
They may be uneducated men and
women, but they are enabled to have understanding and wisdom. And those so
enlightened are told to “walk as children of light.”
Another place where this same plural Hebrew word is translated as a
singular word is Proverbs 30:3 where the writer penned the words,
“I neither
learned wisdom, nor have the knowledge of the holy.”
At first glance the
penman may seem to be writing words of disapproval or criticism of himself and
his lack of knowledge. Since we have a couplet again here, as in our first text,
let us examine it piece by piece. The first phrase is:
“I neither learned
wisdom.” He does not say that he does not have wisdom, but that he did not
learn it nor discover it for or by himself.
John Gill in commenting upon the phrase “I neither learned wisdom” says
the word “wisdom” means, “... spiritual and evangelical wisdom; that is, not
of himself through the mere strength and force of his genius and natural
capacity, or of others; he was not the son of a prophet, nor brought up in the
schools of the prophets; he did not learn it, nor was he taught it by men; for
this is not acquired by human teaching; it is what comes from above, from
heaven, and by the revelation of God.” We think Gill is correct. The writer
is saying that this “spiritual and evangelical wisdom” is not of a man himself
as a source. So it is with all of God's true children. The religious world may
promote its
pride-filled little
ditty at Christmas time, saying, “Wise men still seek Him,” but the true
children of God should know better – or surely will learn better. We seek Him
each and every day, and have since the day of our regeneration, but it is not
our wisdom that causes us to desire Him and regard Him far above the price of
rubies and diamonds.
The second part of this couplet says,
“nor have the knowledge of the
holy.”
Again we point out the
meaning of the plural phrase, “of the holies,” and think the meaning is actually
“of the Holy Ones.” Again we quote the long departed and highly educated John
Gill who wrote, “...or rather of the holy Persons in the Trinity, Father, Son
and Spirit; their nature modes of subsisting, perfections, purposes, and the
like; at least not a full and comprehensive one: or of holy things, of the holy
Scriptures, and the holy doctrines of them; however, not what is perfect and
complete.” It was true of the penman
of Proverbs as it is true of all of God's regenerated ones: our wisdom is not
something that we obtained from any source other than God. And we did nothing to
qualify for it nor to instigate our receiving it. It is all of grace. The kind
of wisdom spoken of here cannot be imparted by parents however hard they try,
nor from schools or even seminaries. Nor can the “school of hard knocks” as we
say, impart this kind of wisdom. We, like the first of this couplet must say, “I
neither learned wisdom.” That is, I claim a supernatural enlightenment: I do not
claim any effort on my part enabled me to have this knowledge nor did my own
natural ability cause me to know Him - as
if such things could aid me in knowing God. In fact, the writer means
what we all who know God must say: had God not supernaturally intervened in me
and my life, the Word of God – the “things of the Spirit of God” would
still be “foolishness” to me. Had He not given me the ability to know the
things that are “spiritually discerned” I would have no real wisdom at
all, (1 Corinthians 2:14). Today we may say with Paul, that to us what he
called, “Christ crucified” would still be
“foolishness”
as it is
to all Gentiles left to themselves. Had God not supernaturally intervened
and done His regenerating work in our innermost being, we would be unenlightened
and Christ-less, (1 Corinthians 1:23).
As to the second part of this last couplet, “nor have the knowledge of the holy,” we say this: while we claim to know the Holy Ones, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, we do not have complete knowledge of Him. We think we shall continue to be enthralled with learning of Him throughout the infinity of eternity. Even when in glorified bodies, how can we finite beings ever comprehend the Three-In-One who is infinite and “his ways past finding out?” (Romans 11:33). Nevertheless, as our first couplet says, “The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom: and the knowledge of the holy [Holy Ones] is understanding.” And as our second couplet teaches, such knowledge is “too wonderful” for us. God-given “wisdom” is jarring to that which the world calls wisdom, but harmonizes with the Psalmist who wrote: “O LORD, thou hast searched me, and known me. Thou knowest my downsitting and mine uprising, thou understandest my thought afar off. Thou compassest my path and my lying down, and art acquainted with all my ways. For there is not a word in my tongue, but, lo, O LORD, thou knowest it altogether. Thou hast beset me behind and before, and laid thine hand upon me. Such knowledge is too wonderful for me; it is high, I cannot attain unto it. Whither shall I go from thy spirit? or whither shall I flee from thy presence? If I ascend up into heaven, thou art there: if I make my bed in hell, behold, thou art there. If I take the wings of the morning, and dwell in the uttermost parts of the sea; Even there shall thy hand lead me, and thy right hand shall hold me. If I say, Surely the darkness shall cover me; even the night shall be light about me. Yea, the darkness hideth not from thee; but the night shineth as the day: the darkness and the light are both alike to thee. For thou hast possessed my reins: thou hast covered me in my mother’s womb. I will praise thee; for I am fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works; and that my soul knoweth right well,” (Psalm 139:1-14). And so we, like Spurgeon, ascribe all our change to God! It is God who has given us life and immortality and brought those things to light to us through the gospel (see 2 Timothy 1:10). The blessing of knowledge, wisdom and understanding of God within us are all attributable to God. Be of good cheer, Brethren, look up! God has begun a good work in us. Part of that good work is causing us to have a bit of His wisdom and understanding and knowledge. And He shall perform that good work in us until the return of Christ, (see Philippians 1:6). For now is our final salvation – the redemption of our bodies – “nearer than when we [first] believed,” (Romans 13:11). Rejoice that you know what the most intelligent of natural men cannot know. Let them call us fools, bigots, fanatics, narrow minded and whatever other epithets they can invent. We care not for the epithets of men: we are concerned with what epitaphs God might compose about us. We stand in a long line: a remnant of people down through the ages to whom God has made Himself known. And this in itself makes us different. Let us not rejoice in being different, but let us rejoice in Christ and be willing to be different in and because of our knowledge and understanding. Old John wrote, “And we know that we are of God, and the whole world lieth in wickedness. And we know that the Son of God is come, and hath given us an understanding, that we may know him that is true, and we are in him that is true, even in his Son Jesus Christ. This is the true God, and eternal life,” (1 John 5:19-20). Selah. |