When the Wise Look Foolish (and the Foolish Look Hairless)

Day 142

2 Samuel 9–10 | 1 Corinthians 1:18–31 | Psalm 60

The Apostle Paul once wrote that “the word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing” (1 Corinthians 1:18).

But sometimes… the folly shows up in a cardiology exam.

Let me explain.

Yesterday morning, I had an appointment with my cardiologist. Routine stuff—an EKG, a chest ultrasound, all the pokes and prods that remind me I’m middle-aged.

The nurse led me into the exam room, asked me to remove my shirt, smiled politely, and then said it:

“Oh boy. No one told you to shave your chest, did they?”

I knew right then I was in trouble.

She handed me a flimsy disposable razor and a giant bottle of ultrasound jelly as make-shift shaving cream. Then she just… pointed.

No words. Just a silent, universal gesture that said, “Good luck, champ.”

So I walked.

Down the hallway.

Across the waiting room.

Clutching a razor in one hand and a bottle of blue goop in the other.

And every person I passed gave me the same look: “Oof. Rough morning, buddy.”

I stepped into the bathroom. No mirror. No dignity. Just me, my soon-to-be-patchy-haired chest, and the scrape of disposable regret.

I finished the job as best I could, returned to the exam room, and laid back on the table—half-shaved but fully humbled—while they ran the tests.

A few minutes later, the doctor returned.

“Good news,” he said. “Your heart is strong.”

I smiled. Brief relief.

“The bad news?” he continued. “Your blood pressure is catastrophically high. 143 over 104. That’s the kind of high where you could drop at any moment. Stroke out. Fall over. Wake up at the pearly gates.”

It’s not the bedside manner I was hoping for. But maybe it was the wake-up call I needed.

Because you don’t get a do-over on a heart attack.

And you don’t get a mulligan on wasting your life.

That diagnosis was a bit jarring. Not just physically, but spiritually. It made me think about what really matters—and how easily we lose sight of it. Which brings me to last bight…

Her Favorite Italian Restaurant

Last night, Talacey and I took Sophia out to her favorite Italian place with both sets of her grandparents. Because today she turns 13.

She’s graduating sixth grade, blossoming into a young, beautiful woman full of grace, joy, intelligence, and growing faith. And I can’t help but think back to the moment Talacey and I decided to homeschool her.

People thought we were crazy. We left the comfort of an educational system we no longer trusted, walking away from the routines and approval and predictability that the world says is normal.

But we didn’t leave because we were afraid. We left because we believed it’s imperative that Christ be at the center of our home—and of our daughter’s formation.

And—thanks to the grace of God and the diligence of my wife—we can already see the fruit.

Not perfection.

But light. Radiance. The earliest signs of a faith that’s hers—not just ours.

Many questioned that decision when we made it. Others dismissed it.

To some, it looked like fear. Or arrogance. Or a retreat from reality. But to us—it was obedience. The cross-shaped kind.

And sometimes that cross-shaped way—the low, quiet, countercultural way that takes intentionality and discipline and thankless work—ends up being the wisest thing you could’ve done.

The Kindness That Changes Everything

2 Samuel 9 tells the story of Mephibosheth.

He’s the disabled grandson of Saul—the former king. He has nothing. No inheritance. No status. No ability to earn favor.

And David seeks him out.

Not to punish. But to bless.

“Do not fear,” David says, “for I will show you kindness for the sake of your father Jonathan… and you shall eat at my table always.” (2 Samuel 9:7)

It’s pure, undeserved grace.

A king showing kindness to a cripple.

An enemy made family.

A forgotten man given a permanent seat at the table.

Sound familiar?

It’s our story, too.

The Kindness That Gets Mocked

In 2 Samuel 10, David tries to show kindness again. This time to Hanun, the Ammonite king. David sends servants to console him after his father’s death.

But Hanun mocks them. Shaves off half their beards. Cuts their clothes. Humiliates them.

And that act of rejection sparks a war.

Because not everyone receives kindness.

Not everyone sees grace for what it is.

The Cross Is Still Offensive

Both Mephibosheth and Hanun were offered kindness. One received it with humility. The other rejected it in pride. And that’s the dividing line Paul describes, too—between those who see the cross as power and those who see it as folly.

“The word of the cross is folly to those who are perishing… but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” (1 Cor. 1:18)

The Greeks wanted wisdom.

The Jews wanted signs.

But God gave a crucified Messiah.

And to the world, that still looks foolish.

But to us?

It’s life.

God Still Chooses the Unlikely

“God chose what is foolish in the world to shame the wise,” Paul writes. “God chose what is weak in the world to shame the strong.” (v. 27)

So maybe there’s hope for those of us with half-shaven chests after all.

Maybe the reason the world doesn’t applaud our choices—our faithfulness, our daily surrender, even homeschooling—is because they’re not meant to.

Because God’s not after applause. He’s after allegiance.

He’s not impressed by strength.

He’s drawn to surrender.

He doesn’t call the qualified.

He chooses the foolish—and calls them His.

Lord, thank You for pasta, birthday girls, and humility-instilling razors. But mostly—thank You for the cross and Your victory over it. For kindness we didn’t earn. For a table we don’t deserve. Teach us to choose the cross-shaped way—even when it looks foolish to the world. To live not for comfort, but for calling. Not for praise, but for Your presence. Let us be fools for Your glory. Because the world might mock—but Your kingdom never will. And let us not waste a single day—because eternity is always closer than we realize.

Amen.


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Comments

One response to “When the Wise Look Foolish (and the Foolish Look Hairless)”

  1. Kirsten

    Reading your posts over the last few days reminds me of something I’ve come to say at certain times of duress: God puts the right people in our path.

    Ok I never had to shave my chest for the cardiologist, but 170/90 is definitely a wake up call for a woman. Stress can be a killer. Literally. Or a blocked widow maker. Either way, you don’t get a do-over, as you said. And the night nurse who heard my story, cared enough to shed a tear, and referred me to a cardiologist…

    God puts the right people in our path.

    Homeschooling. You just know. You think about sending your child to public school and say huh, hmmm. Then you randomly meet the superintendent of a highly respected public school district, who skied all day with your son, and at the end of the day told you not to send him to public school. “They’d ruin him,” he said. Started homeschooling our son at four years old. No curriculum. At the time it was called “unschooling.” Revolutionary. Teach your child to love to learn. Teach respect and discipline. Teach life and love and faith. And wow. At the age of seven he was referred to MIT. And by the age of 13 he was running the household budget, learning how to buy and sell a house, build, engineer, mechanic, negotiate with customer service, and engaging in countless other adult daily life activities that helped him grow and mature in a way that seventh grade never would.

    God puts the right people in our path.

    That fateful night, a week after his 16th birthday. Every time my husband and I encounter stressful situations, my husband just looks at me and says “the knock at the door.” Those five words instantly calm me, because no matter what stress I’m facing, it will never, ever compare to “the knock at the door.” When you’re told you need to come, your life is about to change forever. And the time that followed…

    God puts the right people in our path.

    How does one prepare for a child’s death? Do you have a funeral plan, a gravesite? End of life all mapped out? Of course not. But God did. And he put the right people in our path, right from the moment it happened.

    Stumbling through the first 10 days, family showing up from far away and staying for days, friends and neighbors and coworkers coming and going all day. Gifts, memories, food, comfort. Blur. Writing your son’s obituary. Blur. Autopsy results. Blur. Where are we going to bury him? Blur. The sudden unexpected offer of a grave in the generations-old family section of a beautiful cemetery that has become a state landmark, and that has no available gravesites. Six hundred miles from where you lived and your son was killed, but in the neighborhood where you grew up and the area where you had supporting family. Unbelievable comfort, knowing exactly where your son will lie.

    God puts the right people in our path.

    A year later. Lost, feeling adrift. The home that was no longer a home. The numbness that’s wearing off. Visiting family close to your son’s grave. Deciding to move back home. Selling a home in February in the middle of blizzard season? Right. We lived in unbelievably beautiful country, serene, cabin-in-the-woods, cozy fires, ideal place to go for the weekend. But it took a certain kind of person to want to live that way. All year. Not exactly a quick home sale. But word gets around. Before we even decided to sell we had an offer.

    God puts the right people in our path.

    Buying a home “back home” where our son was buried. For the last 20 years we’ve had land, big gardens, bear country, milky way stars, serenity, quiet beauty, closest neighbor a half mile away. “Downstate” back home was way too citified. Loud. Busy. I honestly couldn’t imagine having neighbors. Or those who didn’t know you or wouldn’t be willing to help each other. Curtains and blinds are foreign to me. Abhorrent. Where could I possibly find a house that wasn’t in a cage? We visited home for Christmas week. On December 23rd we made an offer on a home and 65 quiet acres. Unheard of in the area. The sellers had it on the market for five years, several offers that fell through, and a sale six months earlier that didn’t close. The day we looked at it is the day they decided to take it off the market.

    God puts the right people in our path.

    I try to remember that, to learn from my experience, to fully realize what it means to put myself in God’s hands. Because every time I have, I’ve never regretted it, and I’ve always been in a better place because of it. No matter what it cost or the pain I endured to get there. He knows when we need and who we need, and He puts the right people in our path. God does, after all, work through people. Hebrews 11:1 … walk by faith, not by sight. An indescribable sense of being, especially when you embrace it and allow it to happen.

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