YouVersion Logo
Search Icon

Plan Info

Bible IconGet the app

The Proverbs :: A Guidebook for Menनमूना

The Proverbs :: A Guidebook for Men

DAY 29 OF 31

In 1936, engineers completed one of the boldest feats of human ingenuity in history near the Western Coast of the United States. To this day, it is still widely considered to be one of the most impressive, if not the most impressive, U.S. public works projects ever.

The Hoover Dam, located just 30 miles southeast of Las Vegas, is a sight to behold.

The Dam is 726 feet tall, making it more than 100 feet taller than the Washington Monument in D.C. It is 45 feet thick at the top but nearly 660 feet thick at the bottom, making it nearly the length of two football fields.

The amount of concrete used to build the Dam could create a two-lane highway from Seattle, Washington, to Miami, Florida.

The Dam holds back 45,000 lbs of water pressure per square foot at its most vital point. If it ever were to break or rupture, roughly 3.5 trillion gallons of water would be let loose, and total catastrophe would ensue.

The Hoover Dam holding back the Colorado River is undoubtedly impressive. In many ways, it shows us the power that comes through restraint, which is one of the central themes of Proverbs 29.

Like a dam holding back a mighty river, the Scripture says that a wise man holds back his spirit (or, in other references, his wrath, frustration, aggression).

We often associate wrath as a negative emotion, and in many ways, it can be. We read in verse 8 that “scoffers set a city aflame, but the wise turn away wrath.” Then, later in the text, we see again that “A man of wrath stirs up strife, and one given to anger causes much transgression.”

When we read verses like these, we quickly jump to the first and easiest conclusion: don’t be angry. Don’t experience wrath. But that’s not always the best or healthiest answer.

God’s character includes wrath. It has righteous jealousy and holy anger. As such, we who are made in His image are prone to these emotions from time to time. Eradicating anger is like telling a river not to run downhill. It’s fighting the inevitable.

Instead of abolishing our emotions, what if we took a different approach? What if we built a Holy dam on the river of our emotions that, like the Hoover Dam, released what was appropriate at the proper time and in the adequate quantity?

A fool gives full vent to his spirit, but a wise man quietly holds it back.”

What if we bought into this verse and set out to build a Spirit-operated filter in our souls, one that sifted the emotions that pass through and righteously filtered the feelings that are honoring to God from those that are not?

Like the Hoover Dam, we, too, would become weighty and impressive, not just for the mechanics of our engineering but rather for our restraint. Our ability to hold back, temper, and “rule our flesh and spirit” so that what we let through our lives is a holy and pure offering to a most deserving God.

God, the same Spirit that raised Jesus from the dead, now dwells in me. Through His power, help me begin to filter my emotions in such a way that holds back what is not pleasing to You.

धर्मशास्त्र

Day 28Day 30

About this Plan

The Proverbs :: A Guidebook for Men

There is, within every man, a deep desire to do what is right, a longing to navigate all of life's adventures with a clear understanding of what is at stake and the best path forward toward victory. Join the Passion team as we pursue God's promised wisdom through the Proverbs in a holy effort to keep the proper heading.

More