The book of Proverbs in the Old Testament is a collection of short, memorable sayings, meant to be carried into everyday life. Rather than long letters or detailed stories, it offers sharp observations about how the world tends to work and how a faithful life is shaped.
It speaks in contrasts: wisdom and foolishness, patience and impulse, integrity and corruption. And it draws us to ask a simple but uncomfortable question: which path have we chosen?
In Proverbs 24, the writer begins with a timeless warning: “Do not envy evil people, because their minds plot violence, and their lips talk trouble.” Even when their lives appear successful, even when they seem to get ahead through force or manipulation, we are told not to wish we were in their place. Because what they are building is not what it appears to be.
Instead, Proverbs offers a different image: “With wisdom a house is built, and through understanding it is established.” A life that lasts is not constructed quickly or carelessly. It is built over time, with attention, patience, and care. And it is filled, not merely with possessions, but with what the proverb calls “precious and pleasant riches,” the deeper qualities that give life stability and meaning: trust, clarity, and purpose.
That is set against lives shaped by harmful intent, troubled speech, and schemes that damage rather than build.
The proverb also reframes what we think of as strength. Real strength is not just power, it is judgment, restraint, and timing.
After all, we live in a time when words travel quickly and actions have immediate effect, while wisdom often travels slowly and takes time to show itself. That means not every response, in words or in actions, needs to be immediate, because what we say or do in one moment cannot simply be undone in the next.
And wisdom is rarely a solo achievement. “With many advisers there is victory,” the proverb says. Those who listen, learn, and receive guidance tend to walk more securely than those who insist on going alone. Stubbornness isolates a person, while wisdom opens the door to insight.
So how does a person actually live wisely in a time like ours? Proverbs suggests it is not complicated, but it is intentional. Wisdom is a way of life shaped by patience in our reactions, humility in our listening, care in our words, and clarity in what we choose to value.
Because a life built on wisdom, lived patiently and with integrity, does more than succeed for a moment. It stands for a lifetime.


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