-
The Clever Couple Series
Contributed by Glenn Pease on Apr 4, 2021 (message contributor)
Summary: Cleverness is the ability to skillfully work your way through complex circumstances to a goal that is your aim to reach. Godly cleverness is aiming for a goal that is pleasing to God. Boaz was blessed with godly cleverness. This is a virtue that has changed the entire world in which we live.
- 1
- 2
- 3
- …
- 5
- 6
- Next
A young couple who had just gotten married, and who
had received many valuable wedding gifts, established their
home in the suburb. One morning they received in the mail
two tickets for a popular show in the city. A note said,
"Guess who?" The couple were amused as they tried to
find the identity of the donor, but they could not find out
who sent them. They used the tickets, and they had a
delightful evening. On their return home, late at night, still
trying to figure out the mystery, they found their house
stripped of every article of value.
On the bare table in the dinning room was a piece of paper
on which was written- "Now you know!"
Crooks have so many clever ways of robbing people that
it has given the word clever a bad name. Vincent Teresa in
his book My Life In The Mafia tells of numerous clever
schemes he used to steal hundreds of thousands of dollars
from innocent people, and sometimes not so innocent
people. One that shows the thought and planning of these
people is one I want to share. There was a big horse race
called the Constitution Handicap. They put a fortune on
Flauntless Light to win. Non-clever people would give their
horse drugs to help him win, but the Mafia knows the
winner will be tested for drugs, and so they bribed the
stable boys of the other five horses in the race. They juiced
those five with a depressant. Their horse won by 7 links,
and they made a hundred and sixty three grand. There was
a big stink over the race, but the only horse that was
checked was their horse, and he was clean. Clever schemes
like this enabled them to rip off billions of dollars a year.
Because history is full of the clever schemes of con men,
and because the fall of man began with the clever, cunning,
and crafty scheme of that old serpent the devil, we have a
tendency to put cleverness in the category of vice rather
than virtue. The Jews did not do so, however, but
recognized cleverness as a great virtue, and one of the most
powerful weapons in the cause of righteousness. Yes,
they said, evil is clever but it is the task of the righteous to
outwit the evil. The book of Esther is about a very clever
man named Haman, who out of personal pride almost
succeeded in getting the Jewish people exterminated. He
was only foiled in his plot because Mordecai and Esther
were even more clever, and they were able to turn the tables
on him, and he was hung on his own gallows.
The whole theme of wisdom in the Old Testament deals
with the virtue of being clever enough to outwit the clever
appeals of evil. The fool falls for the wiles of the devil, but
the clever stay one jump ahead of him. After all, what is the
battle of life all about? It is about outwitting all the clever
ways of the evil one to keep us from fulfilling the will of
God. Cleverness is part of the image of God in us. He is the
most clever of all Persons in the universe. His wisdom is a
marvel as we study His creation. His cleverness in figuring
out how to outwit Satan, and save a lost world, when Satan
seems to have all the advantages of a fallen free willed
creature who tends toward evil.
Jesus faced the clever tempter, but He was more clever
than the first Adam, and He outwitted the old serpent and
all his agents. No trap set for Him by the Pharisees could
ensnare Him. Jesus said that we are to be wise as serpents
and harmless as doves, and He practiced what He preached.
He lived His whole life outwitting the devil, and He died a
spotless Lamb of God for the sin of the world.
He was, without question, the most clever man whoever
lived. He was a perfect man, and a perfect man by
definition is clever. There are few, if any, who become key
links in the plan of God who are not in some way clever,
and this goes for both Ruth and Boaz. They were just
ordinary people, but they were clever people, and from
their story we can learn why it is important for us to strive
at being clever. By their cleverness they got themselves into
the blood line of the Messiah. The first thing we want to see
is that-
I. COMPLEXITY DEMANDS CLEVERNESS.
Boaz and Ruth had something of a romance going, but it
was not what you would call a whirlwind romance. He
watched her labor in the fields, and they ate lunch together.