In the book of Proverbs, there is no shortage of comparisons between the foolish and the wise. The foolish work in futility for the things that fade, and their end is destruction, while the wise live a full life that ends in growth and vitality.
For many readers, this comparison can be troubling. When we look around, we see the wicked not only backbiting and slandering, but gaining reward for it. It is enough to make a believer wonder: I thought I was one of the wise. Why doesn’t God reward me? But Scripture has an answer to this exceptionalism: whatever we are in the eyes of the world, not one of us can make his heart pure before the LORD.
In John’s Gospel, as the shadow of Jesus’ suffering looms, he continues to teach us who he is – and what he makes of us foolish sinners. He uses many metaphors, but perhaps most strikingly, Jesus tells his disciples that they will no longer be servants, but friends. The fools of this world may seem to be friends of all the right people, but in the end, when they stand before the Father, the deeds, the money, the reputations they have earned for themselves are all melted by the heat of his wrath.
Not so for the wise. Those in Christ Jesus are now friends of the Almighty, a title earned by Jesus’ innocent death on the cross, the supreme demonstration of love for others. This unmatched sacrifice hasn’t simply deflected God’s anger for a time, but has satisifed it. Therefore, the Father doesn’t simply withhold his anger; he himself loves us.
Still, the spiritual fools of this world continue to mock the wise. They don’t see a Savior. But they look in the wrong places. His Spirit carries the truth into calloused hearts and destroys the wisdom of this world. He remakes the wise with Jesus’ words and his body, spoken from the pulpit and shared among friends. The Father longs to make friends of them, too. His Son has atoned for them. May his Spirit work among us to fearlessly confess what he has done for us, so that we can all be friends in the life to come.