-
Old Dogs And New Tricks Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 2, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Shallowness always leads to folly, but depth, when it is directed by wisdom, will lead to a life pleasing to God and appealing to man. Very seldom is a truly wise man proud. He is humbled because he knows so well how little he really knows.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- Next
Proverbs by their very nature are often paradoxical, and they often
seem to contradict one another. They only do so, however, if we take them
as absolutes which are true in every case. If we take them as stating a
truth of a segment of reality, and not all of reality, we will see there are no
contradictions. This will come up in our study of inspired proverbs as
well, but for now let me give you an example from manmade proverbs.
Aeschylus, the ancient Greek, said, "It is always in season for an old man
to learn." A more modern saying is, "You cant' teach an old dog new
tricks." They appear to be contradictory, but they can both be true if we
apply them to what we know of human life.
We know that once a pattern of life has been established an older
person often resists any change. He is content with his pattern of life and
has no desire to adjust to new way of thought or action. It is when one
meets such persons and finds it impossible to alter their pattern one iota
that he goes away quoting the proverb, "You can't teach an old dog new
tricks." It fits the facts of life, and so it is true, but a thing can be true and
not be the truth. If you make it an absolute truth and apply it to all people
you ignore other facts of life. History is filled with examples of old people
who have broken out of the ruts of the past and become pioneers of new
ideas. The facts of life prove the proverb true that you are never to old to
learn.
John Stuart Blackie says that the Scottish people have a reputation of
being prudent and of having foresight because of their custom of printing
the book of Proverbs in a separate volume so that farmers and
workingmen can carry them in their pocket and read while they rest.
They believed that old dogs could learn new tricks, and they took
deliberate steps to teach them. This is the attitude of Solomon as well, and
we see this brought out in the sixth purpose for the writing of the
Proverbs.
In verse 5 he says, "A wise man will hear and increase learning." He
had just referred to the young men, and now he goes on to say that the
older men can and will go on in their learning by the reading of these
proverbs. They are not only for youth, but for people of all ages because
God knows that old dogs can still learn new tricks. A wise man is one who
has learned to use his knowledge for the glory of God, but he is well aware
of his lack of knowledge. He wants to know more because the more he
knows the more he has to use in serving God.
It is only the ignorant and the superficially educated who think they
know all they need to know, the wise man is well aware of how little he
knows. Someone said, "Knowing is largely a means of discovering the
vastness of one's ignorance." The truly educated man is one who is never
embarrassed by a new idea. He knows that there are thousands of ideas he
has never heard. Many times I have heard Christians say, "I never heard
of that before." They imply that it cannot be valid if they have never
heard of it. This verse tells us that it is God's will that we go on and
increase in learning, and never be content with our present status. Depth
is to be our goal. There is a well-known proverb that is the first line to a
longer poem written by Pope that expresses this point well, that
shallowness leads to folly, but depth will lead to a life pleasing to God and
appealing to man.
A little learning is a dangerous thing;
Drink deep, or taste not the Pierian spring,
There shallow draughts intoxicate the brain,
And drinking largely sobers us again.
Shallowness always leads to folly, but depth, when it is directed by
wisdom, will lead to a life pleasing to God and appealing to man. Very
seldom is a truly wise man proud. He is humbled because he knows so well
how little he really knows. Paul is a good example, for his pattern of life
and philosophy had already been established, and yet, by the grace of God,
he learned some new tricks. His life was changed, and he became the
greatest theologian in Christianity. Right to the end he kept studying and
learning, and God could use him to impart His Word to the world. Who
else but a man of Paul's depth could write letters that would be used of