|
We have all heard
it said that we learn by doing and this is true. Experience
is a very good teacher. The wise man, however, does not try
to learn everything by personal experience. Life is too short
to learn everything this way.
A wise man reads and observes the mistakes and triumphs of
others in an effort to benefit from their experience. An excellent
example of this is the first Kaiser automobile which was built
just after World War II. Now had the manufacturer started
at the beginning as the makers of the first automobiles did,
his car would have looked very much like the first horseless
carriages. Instead, he studied the features and designs of
all the leading makes and as a consequence he benefitted from
their experience and produced a car comparable to theirs although
he did not have the many years of experience behind him that
they did. This wisdom is not found in all of us, for it seems
that each generation insists on learning many things for themselves
the hard way. The experience of their parents is disregarded
and they insist upon burning their own fingers upon the stove
that scarred the hands of their forefathers.
There are many
things to learn where personal experience is too high a price
to pay. To learn not to play in the street by being run over
may teach us a never-to-be-forgotten lesson, but we may not
live long enough to benefit from our experience.
As parents we know how much we could save our children if
they would only listen and learn. For this reason we often
repeat a principle over and over again in hopes that by the
process of repetition the lesson may become engraved in their
minds.
Paul tells us, ”For whatsoever things were written aforetime
were written for our learning, that we, through patience and
comfort of the scriptures, might have hope.”
We see then the
love and wisdom of God in providing us with our Bibles to
teach, warn, rebuke and instruct us in His holy precepts.
The wise man recognizes the importance of God’s words and
the need for repetition. We should then remember Peter’s words,
”I now write unto you; in both which I stir up your pure minds
by way of remembrance.”
The disciples at Berea were commended because they were more
noble than those in Thessalonica in that they received the
word with all readiness of mind and searched the scriptures
daily.
Realizing the
need for daily Bible reading, let us make use of the wonderful
tool we have to aid us in our reading of the scriptures each
day. It is called ”The Bible Companion” and it will lead us
through the Old Testament once and the New Testament twice
each year.
The good habit of daily Bible reading will help us to benefit
from the trials and experiences of God’s chosen people and
avoid the pitfalls which exact their toll upon the less wise.
As God’s children we shall know the holy scriptures which
are able to make us wise unto salvation through faith which
is in Christ Jesus.
|