M
Matrix_Refugee
Guest
I always think of “wisdom” as something transcendent, something beyond being smart or intelligent or being heavily educated. Think of those pearls of wisdom that are sometimes uttered by young children or adults with little formal education.
I talked this over with my mom (good person to go to: mothers have to be wise to handle their kids lovingly!), and her take on it as “she was wise because she was loving”. Isn’t there something in the gospel about how the greatest of the three theological virtues is love? Mary likely had to be wise: she was the mom to a kid who was not just a precocious boy, but also God Incarnate. Ordinary run of the mill kids can be the types that you need to think three steps ahead of them so they aren’t getting themself into trouble, now take a Divine Nature and attach it to that innocently rambunctious kid. Your “hey, what are you doing??” moments (parents reading this thread will know what I mean…) have multiplied.
I talked this over with my mom (good person to go to: mothers have to be wise to handle their kids lovingly!), and her take on it as “she was wise because she was loving”. Isn’t there something in the gospel about how the greatest of the three theological virtues is love? Mary likely had to be wise: she was the mom to a kid who was not just a precocious boy, but also God Incarnate. Ordinary run of the mill kids can be the types that you need to think three steps ahead of them so they aren’t getting themself into trouble, now take a Divine Nature and attach it to that innocently rambunctious kid. Your “hey, what are you doing??” moments (parents reading this thread will know what I mean…) have multiplied.