2016 picture of Ray Sparre

Insightful Musings on the Scriptures

by

Raymond P. Sparre
Northwest University class of '67



Sat Feb 5, 2022

Hi, Zane.

What are you up to today? Do you work on Saturdays?

I dropped about a dozen or so alder trees last evening. We were able to buck, load, and haul to our place about half of them. Thano will be the main benefactor of this resource when he turns the wood into marketable firewood.

Today I’m facing an objective to install a couple of 5’x8’ sign panels into a large steel frame. Rather than resorting to setting up ladders and plank as scaffolding, I’m thinking to work from the basket of my old boom truck. Hope it goes well.

And I hope your day goes well. Love and prayers—Tua/Ray.


05 February
Matthew 25:1-30
Focus: “Five of them were foolish and five were wise.” (Matthew 25:2)

We tend to have all manner of categories for classifying people—young and old, black and white, rich and poor, male and female, tall and short, educated and uneducated, heathen and Christian, and even saved and lost. But as I read and meditate again on these teachings of Jesus, I see more clearly than ever before that the categories of WISE and FOOLISH are more basic and fundamental to the Kingdom of God than any other. Jesus seems to say over and over from many different angles that the outcome of a person’s life is contingent on whether he is one or the other, either WISE or FOOLISH, in relation to God and His Word in preparation (or the lack thereof) for judgment and eternity. This is the critical standard of ultimate determination, not mathematics (numbers) or history (traditions, achievements) or theology (doctrinal systems). David affirms, “the fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom” (Ps. 111:10). To be saved, you see, IS WISDOM. It is the result of a person taking seriously his personal responsibility to a sovereign God. To be lost, then, IS absolute FOOLISHNESS as it is the result of a person failing to take seriously his personal responsibility to a sovereign God.

These two polarities of orientation are featured here in the story of the ten virgins. Even the following story of the Talents could be viewed as contrasting these two categorical positions. The first two servants were essentially commended for their being WISE. The Master rebuked the third servant, however, as being “wicked and lazy.” Don’t you agree that it is extremely FOOLISH to be “wicked and lazy” when one knows different—when one knows that he will one day stand in judgment before his Master. Consider also the previous chapter (25:45) when Jesus says, “Who then is a faithful and WISE servant…?” The emphasis there also relates to personal responsibility to the sovereign Master before Whom everyone with normal faculties is accountable. Period! No exceptions! And one of the clearest examples of this is Jesus’ story of the WISE and FOOLISH builders in Matthew 7. “Therefore everyone who hears these words of mine and puts them into practice is like a WISE man who built his house on the rock” (Matt. 7:24).

The recipe for inclusion in the Kingdom of God is really not all that complicated or technical. It all boils down to this: Take God serious and be WISE—the equivalent of a HEART AFTER GOD.

“True wisdom is the accurate perception of what is really important.”