Wisdom – Proverbs 3:1–6

Proverbs 3:5 (NIV)
“Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding.”

There is a kind of wisdom that looks impressive but is ultimately self-referential. It is built on confidence in one’s own judgment, experience, and instincts. Proverbs quietly but firmly exposes that kind of wisdom as insufficient. The wisdom God calls His people to is not primarily about intelligence or strategy; it is about orientation—who or what we are relying on.

For the original audience, this passage tied wisdom to character. Loyalty and faithfulness were not abstract virtues; they shaped how a person was viewed both by God and by the community. Trusting the Lord meant rejecting the assumption that human insight was the highest authority. True wisdom began with acknowledging that God sees what we cannot and understands what we never will.

That tension still exists today. It is easy to believe that God has given us wisdom and then subtly shift into trusting our own abilities instead of Him. Even our reactions can betray that shift—responding with what seems reasonable, efficient, or self-protective rather than what reflects God’s counsel. In that sense, relying on “worldly wisdom” is not always loud or arrogant; sometimes it simply feels practical.

This passage calls for something harder: active dependence. Trusting the Lord means submitting decisions, instincts, and even our sense of competence to Him. It means admitting that wisdom is not something we possess, but something we receive. Learning to rely on God’s counsel is not automatic—it must be taught, practiced, and prayed into existence.