Lady Wisdom with her three daughters: Faith, Hope, and Love
Proverbs 9 provides a summing up of the first
section of this book before we move into the more typical proverbs of chapters
10 through 22. What fascinated me in today’s reading is the personification of
Wisdom in chapter 9. Lawrence Boadt has this to say about it….
Wisdom reveals that the transcendent mystery of
God actually interacts in the world by its use of personification. Usually pictured as a woman, wisdom invites us to
find her in the world through the life of worship and obedience to the law.
Several major passages actually treat wisdom as an independent being, often
called a hypostasis (in Greek), that
stands by God’s side, comes into the world, and speaks to humanity (Prv
1:20-33; Prv 8:22-31; Sir 24:1-31; Wis 9:9-11; Jb 28:1-28). While it is not
likely that Israel thought of wisdom as a real divine being, its description as
a person signified that God truly communicated
himself and his plan to the world and that he could be heard and understood by
humanity in personal relationship.[1]
David Atkinson has this to say on the same
subject….
Wisdom is no abstract concept; wisdom is
personified: she is described as a woman. In some places she is depicted by
just a line drawing, one or two of her features emphasized for a particular
purpose. In others, we are given a richly coloured, almost three-dimensional
portrait. Taken together, these sketches introduce us to a woman who speaks the
wisdom of God, and who points the way of life.
This personification of Wisdom is not a (mere)
literary device; it reflects the essential nature of biblical wisdom. Wisdom is
embodied. Wisdom is for living. In fact, nothing is truly known until it is lived out in the everyday world.
It is not until Proverbs 8 that Wisdom’s full
beauty is described. But throughout the earlier chapters, details of her
portrait are being filled in, rather like earlier sketches of a great
Renaissance painter. In some art galleries you can see the
‘cartoons’—preliminary sketches—of the great works of art, in which the artist
has concentrated on one detail or another which will eventually contribute to
the finished portrait. Proverbs 1-7 gives us a number of preliminary sketches
of Wisdom, before her full-colour portrait appears in chapter 8.[2]
It is intriguing to me that Wisdom stands, almost
as a divine being, alongside Yahweh, and
that Wisdom is a woman. For a religion, Judaism, that emphasised the masculine
side of God, it is interesting that the ancient Jews saw a need to complement
this picture with a feminine portrait as well.
It is even more interesting to me that the word
“wisdom” appears many places in the New Testament, but not in the Gospel of
John. It is in that Gospel that Jesus is identified with the Logos, the
reasoning power behind the universe. Thus Jesus, in a sense, is the fulfillment
and embodiment of Wisdom. Paul even calls Jesus the wisdom of God (1 Corinthians 1:24). It makes me wonder: in what ways might Jesus embody
the feminine side of God?
Henri Nouwen, in his wonderful book on the
parable of the prodigal son, notes how Rembrandt’s portait of the father
welcoming home the prodigal reveals both a feminine and a masculine side to the
father. Rembrandt depicted these two sides of God in the hands of the father.
The left hand is larger, rougher, more masculine, whereas the right hand is
smaller, delicate, more feminine.
Is the fact that Wisdom, in the book of Proverbs,
is depicted as a woman meaningful to you? In what ways do you see both feminine
and masculine characteristics in God? Is this a hard concept for you to
embrace? If so, why do you suppose that is the case?
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