A Word Fitly Spoken

“A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in a setting of silver. Like a gold ring or an ornament of gold is a wise reprover to a listening ear.” (Proverbs 25:11, ESV)

Christians need one another. Whether we go through times of triumph or defeat, we need a brother or a sister to come alongside us and encourage us to walk the path of faithfulness.

Imagine a scenario where someone slighted you or put you down. This person made a point of saying how awful you are at your job or how lousy you are as a parent. They made cruel remarks not only about you but about your family. The targeted attack spewing from this person’s mouth seems intended to make you feel small and worthless. Perhaps it’s not so difficult to imagine this scenario. Maybe you’ve lived it!

In such a situation, how do you respond? Better said, how would God have us respond when we are shamefully mistreated and insulted?

The Future King

We find an example of this in 1 Samuel 25. This story occurs when David is not yet the king of Israel, but is instead a fugitive on the run. King Saul, jealous of David for being a better man than him in every way, has been hunting David down. Knowing many in his kingdom long for David to be on the throne – including his own son Jonathan – Saul is determined to kill David.

Twice during this season of exile, David has an opportunity to assassinate Saul. Even when his men encourage David to slay the king, David refuses, saying, “The Lord forbid that I should put out my hand against the Lord’s anointed.” (1 Samuel 26:11; cf. 24:6). David’s Christlike character never shines brighter than in these moments when he chooses to trust God and spare the man who has made his life miserable.

But situated between these two incidents is another time when David’s faithfulness is put to the test. It involves a foolish and ill-tempered man named Nabal, and his wife Abigail, “an intelligent and beautiful woman” (1 Samuel 25:3, NIV). David has something like a business partnership with the wealthy Nabal. Nabal owns many flocks, and David and his 600 soldiers have protected Nabal’s flocks and servants for some time. These were dangerous times when large flocks and their shepherds were vulnerable to raiders and wild animals. The servants even say that David’s men “were a wall around us the whole time we were herding our sheep near them” (v. 16).

It was generally understood that when soldiers provided protective services, it is only right that they be well fed by the owner of the herds. Nabal is about to throw a big feast, so David sends a warm and friendly message to him, asking whether he and his men can join. You could call it a polite request for a fair business transaction.

The Wealthy Fool

But Nabal’s response is crude and thoughtless. He basically says, “David who? Never heard of him. He sounds like one of those runaway slaves who tries to take advantage of respectable individuals like myself.”

This was a pretty low blow. David was well-known everywhere in Israel. He had gained renown for defeating the Philistine giant Goliath. Not only was Nabal not practicing fair exchange, but he was slapping David across the face, telling him to go beg somewhere else. Nabal was living up to his name, which meant “fool.”

Nabal’s reckless words were especially foolish in this ancient honor-shame society. Those who were shamed by others were expected to protect their own name by taking vengeance on the wrongdoer.

David’s response is quick and decisive. He tells 400 of his men: “Strap on your swords!” (v. 13). Nobody insults David and gets away with it. It’s payback time!

The Wise Woman

It’s at this time that Abigail, Nabal’s wife, learns what her idiotic husband has done and that David plans to destroy every man in his household. She wastes no time in putting together a peace offering and running out to meet the enraged David. Abigail humbly falls at David’s feet and pleads with him to reconsider.

Noting that what her husband did is both foolish and hateful, Abigail says, “Please forgive the trespass of your servant” (v. 28). Then, with astonishing wisdom, she reminds David of Yahweh’s tender care for him and that God will one day set him on Israel’s throne, establishing a lasting dynasty.[1] It’s crucial that Abigail does this. When we forget about God’s deep love for us, it can be far easier to be reactionary and impulsive. Abigail then says, “It’s not just for my husband that I’m pleading, David, but for you. I don’t want you to have his blood on your conscience.”

Abigail’s counsel is a word fitly spoken. She appeals to God’s justice and love. And because Abigail speaks with respect and kindness, David is cut to the heart. She is a “wise reprover,” and he has “a listening ear” (Proverbs 25:11).[2]

David recognizes that really it is God who sent her to speak these words to him. He will not take vengeance into his own hands. Because of Abigail’s wise words, David chose to trust the Lord to be his defender instead of responding in a fit of anger. Rather than piling sin upon sin, Abigail guided David to live out what we read in Romans 12:

“Beloved, never avenge yourselves, but leave it to the wrath of God, for it is written, ‘Vengeance is mine, I will repay, says the Lord’… Do not be overcome by evil, but overcome evil with good.” (Romans 12:19, 21, ESV)

David let God be his defender. In fact, we read that only ten days later God struck down Nabal, and David later married the widowed Abigail (1 Samuel 25:38). That doesn’t mean we pray for God to smite all those who mistreat us, but we do show trust in God by letting Him deal with our enemies.

The Essential Church

In our age of rage and social media, people are encouraged to slap back when they are slapped across the face. We think it is up to us to right every wrong and defend ourselves against every offense. In many ways, we are still a shame-honor culture. In a world that urges you to protect your own honor, God’s Word says:

“Good sense makes one slow to anger,
    and it is his glory to overlook an offense.” (Proverbs 19:11, ESV)

How often are you willing to listen to an Abigail when you are hurt or upset? The two biggest reasons Christians make foolish decisions is that they don’t listen to God’s Word and they don’t listen to the wise counsel of other believers. Certainly, we must seek the Lord’s leading through prayer, but we must take care not to use “I’ll pray about that” as a reason to exclude the guidance of others.

The church is an incredible gift we must never take for granted. When we make decisions in isolation or reject the advice of others, we are walking down the path of foolishness – sometimes even running down that path!

Christ called the church His body, because we are both united to Him and mutually interdependent on one another, just as the eye needs the ear and the hand needs the foot.[3] The Holy Spirit unites believers to one another so that they can share divine wisdom and encourage one another to follow Christ faithfully. We cannot forsake the fellowship of other believers.

When we respond in fleshly haste, we put ourselves in danger, sometimes both spiritually and physically. We need to seek the wisdom of others in the church, because a word fitly spoken might just spare us from the pangs of conscience later.


[1] The Lord Himself promises David that he will have a son reign on his throne forever (2 Samuel 7:12-16), a promise fulfilled by King Jesus in His present and future kingdom (Isaiah 11:1-10).

[2] It’s ironic that many skeptics claim the Bible is denigrating to women when you have many stories like this one, where the woman is clearly the voice of reason and godly wisdom. For other examples, see: Genesis 38:25-26; Judges 4:4-10; Ruth 2:20-22; 1 Samuel 1:12-17; Esther 7:1-7; Luke 24:9-12; John 12:3-8; Acts 18:26.

[3] See 1 Corinthians 12:12-26.

The Waiting Is the Hardest Part

By Jason Smith

“A person’s days are determined; you have decreed the number of his months and have set limits he cannot exceed.” (Job 14:5, NIV)

What are you waiting for? I frequently find myself wishing things were happening faster. Maybe it’s because I’m naturally an impatient person, or maybe it’s because I love the thrill of seeing things get done. Either way, I often feel that one of the greatest struggles in life is living in the tension of waiting.

So what are you waiting for? A new job? A new house? A new relationship? A call from your doctor? Take inventory of your heart for a moment. Have you ever noticed how the other highway lane or the other grocery line always seems to be moving faster than the one you’re in? What tends to happen to you when you feel like something you’re waiting for is taking too long? Do you grow agitated by your circumstances? Do people start to rub you the wrong way?

It’s very easy to be short with others when life seems to be stuck at a red light. It gets worse when others seem to be finding or achieving the very things for which you are most longing. It’s as if you’ve been stuck in the back of the line for a ride at Disneyland, and you keep watching one person after another jump ahead of you with their fast pass. You begin to wonder, Where’s my fast pass in life?

It can be discouraging to the point of debilitating when you live in a fast-paced world, yet seem to be stuck in slow motion. We think, Boy, wouldn’t it be nice to have a fast-forward button for life? We all know what it’s like to experience the unwelcome tension of waiting. Millennials like myself probably struggle with this even more than former generations. After all, we are enmeshed in the world of fast food, next-day delivery, and real-time news alerts. Every bit of information we need is merely a click away. Our culture has programmed us to view waiting as an unpleasant part of life. When we do have to wait for something, we see it as nothing but an inconvenient obstacle to our life plans.

But what if waiting is part of the plan? What if God intends to do something in us while we wait that could not otherwise happen? This is where a healthy view of God’s sovereignty can be indescribably freeing. “My times are in Your hand” (Psalm 31:15).

Scripture offers this promise to our restless hearts: “And we know that for those who love God all things work together for good, for those who are called according to His purpose” (Romans 8:28). Read that promise again, only slower. The first thing we need to see is that God is working out “all things” for the good of His beloved children. “All things” has to include even the tiniest details in life. How we choose to respond to waiting reflects our confidence in God’s sovereign goodness and wisdom in that moment. I intentionally say we choose how we respond, because while we cannot always change our circumstances, we can always change our attitude (Philippians 2:14).

Over a dozen passages in the Bible talk about waiting on or for the Lord. To wait for the Lord is “to put your hope in the Lord with great anticipation.”

“Wait for the LORD; be strong, and let your heart take courage; wait for the LORD!” (Psalm 27:14)

“For the evildoers shall be cut off, but those who wait for the LORD shall inherit the land.” (Psalm 37:9)

“Do not say, ‘I will repay evil’; wait for the LORD, and He will deliver you.” (Proverbs 20:22)

“…but they who wait for the LORD shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings like eagles; they shall run and not be weary; they shall walk and not faint.” (Isaiah 40:31)

The oft-repeated cliché “Good things come to those who wait” could be amended to “Great things come to those who wait on the Lord.” But let’s be careful not to reduce waiting on the Lord to some version of hyper spiritualized laziness. It is an act of faith, whereby we live in the present in full reliance on the One who holds the future. It’s not an excuse for passivity. Followers of Christ are to be passionately involved in loving service in the midst of the waiting (Romans 12:6-13). “Never be lazy, but work hard and serve the Lord enthusiastically” (Romans 12:11, NLT).

While the late Tom Petty was talking about his romantic relationship, the chorus from his song “The Waiting is the Hardest Part” can well apply to our situation: “You take it on faith, you take it to the heart/ The waiting is the hardest part.”

We see many examples in Scripture of those who had to wait a long time for their prayers to be answered. The woman with a bleeding problem had to wait twelve long years for healing (Luke 8:43-48). Despite their faithfulness and courage, Joshua and Caleb had to wait 40 years to enter the Promised Land (Deuteronomy 2:7; Joshua 5:6). Abraham and Sarah had to wait until they were 100 and 90 to have children (Genesis 21:5-7). The lame man at the Pool of Bethesda waited 38 years before God healed him (John 5:5-9).

In each of these cases, God was doing something in those who were waiting while they waited. Think of it. The man of John 9 who had been blind from birth had the unspeakable privilege of not only being healed by Christ but coming to know Jesus as Messiah and Savior (John 9:35-39). In the words of Jesus, all those years of blindness “happened so the power of God could be seen in him” (John 9:3).

Treasure this truth: God is never idle. He is doing something in and through you today to reveal His power in you tomorrow. He is always at work in the waiting.

Photo courtesy of Metiza