Geoff's Miscellany

Wisdom Literature

Is the author of Job an unreliable narrator?

January 31, 2019

The literary device of an unreliable narrator may make an appearance in Job. The literary device is essentially when a narrator presents reality in a way that contradicts the logic of the narrative. Some unreliable narrators could be crazy people like the narrator of Fight Club, deceitful gods as in Aristophanes' Frogs, in the Dark Knight, Heath Ledger's Joker unreliably narrates his life story two or three times in the film. The narrator of Job present two versions of Job's status before God. He presents a contradiction as though it was a straight presentation of things. But the stories logic perhaps only allows for one of the claims to be true. The author unreliably narrates, perhaps, to bring the reader further into the story. I'll show you where below.

From the outside in?

August 14, 2017

The pattern we typically set for people who wish to be more like Christ is this:

Start from the inside out.
It's not unreasonable. Jesus says roughly that to the Pharisees:
Matthew 23:25-26 ESV “Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you clean the outside of the cup and the plate, but inside they are full of greed and self-indulgence. (26) You blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and the plate, that the outside also may be clean.
And I think the advice in generally sound. But, sometimes people's desire to be like Jesus is evidence that the Holy Spirit is already working on the inside and they need something to do to actualize the potential God is putting there.

First, a passage from Proverbs:

Wisdom Wedneday: Wisdom for Leadership from the Wisdom of Solomon

October 19, 2016

A lot of people want to be in leadership roles just like a lot of people want to be a body builder.

But the problem is that very few people want to put in the work necessary to be a good leader, nor the work necessary to be a big bodybuilder.

To be a good leader one needs to:

Proverbs 24:27

August 24, 2016

Pro 24:27 Prepare your work outside; get everything ready for yourself in the field, and after that build your house.

I suppose you could shorten this Proverb to “put first things first.”

Of course, to do that we’ve got to think things through.

In the case of buying property in the ancient world, you’d want to make sure it could produce wealth before building a house on it.

Similarly, one might want to find a good source or several sources of income before buying a house.

Wisdom Wednesday: Proverbs 22:13

June 22, 2016

The slothful man saith, There is a lion without, I shall be slain in the streets. (Proverbs 22:13)
Passages of scripture like this pose one of the greatest challenges for risk averse people. Many of us think we are wise for avoiding risk. And indeed, Proverbs itself says that the wise hides himself when there is obvious danger (22:3)*. This piece of good advice, as with all wise practices, can become a shield from personal responsibility (see Matthew 6 for Jesus' discussion of this fact with regards to prayer, fasting, and even alms).

Often in life, we who are risk averse take the slothful route and claim that the time isn’t right for action because things aren’t perfect. My karate instructor said that the most common excuse he received from people skipping karate after a vacation was “I need to get back into shape first.” Some people won’t go to church because “I need to get right with the Lord first.” If you’re super risk averse then you’re probably waiting for circumstances to be exactly right, but you’ll actually be in the process of waiting when good circumstance pass you by. Check this actual sloth out:

Wisdom Wednesday: The Master of Destruction and Deep Work

May 19, 2016

Proverbs 18:9 Even he who is slack in his employment is a brother of a master of destruction. (Author's Translation)
I can't tell if I translated the passage above based solely on a desire to be literal or because "master of destruction" simply sounds better than the less literal, "him who destroys (ESV)."

Anyhow, the book of Proverbs, at its heart is about the good life. And central to the good life in the Bible is work. Many people see work as a punishment, but this is not so. Work is the task of humanity from the beginning (take dominion…tend the garden, etc).

Thoughts on being a nerd and being well liked

July 25, 2015

When I was younger, I was a nerd. I played too many video games, my favorite class was computer programming, I couldn’t figure out social interactions, and felt resentful of people who could make friends well. Now, I’m happy to say that I figured it out from reading the Bible after my conversion. I have friends from a wide variety of walks of life.

I had bought into the Disney myth: just be yourself and the right people will like you for who you are.