Mike Tune is the son of missionary parents - and his father, now 80, still works in Asia. Mike grew up in Hong Kong, and in his High School years, Nashville, Tennessee. He graduated from Murray State University in Murray, KY with a Bachelors degree in Accounting and Finance and went on to complete a Masters degree in Religion at Harding University's Graduate School of Religion.

Mike and his wife Monica met in Murray, and married a year after his graduation while he was serving as the Pulpit Minister for the Harrisburg church of Christ in Illinois. They have three sons, all grown, and three grandchildren. Mike has served churches in Tennessee (Paris and Lebanon), Louisiana(Monroe), and now in Virginia (Falls Church). He founded the Gospel Advocate's AIM program and taught Bible teachers throughout the United States for six years in that ministry. He served one year as the author of the Gospel Advocate Companion Adult Bible study materials. His writings have appeared in every Church of Christ publication and he is the author of Going Home, an eight-lesson Bible correspondence course. He is also president of Amazing Grace International, a non-profit corporation dedicated to using mainstream media to reach Bible students. Thus far, over 6000 students have taken their Bible courses. Mike serves as president of a French corporation dedicated to providing educational funding for poor students in Vietnam.

In June of 2007, Mike completed his 8th year with the Falls Church congregation and became our longest tenured minister in a nearly 60 year history. In August of 2009, he will complete his 35th year of full-time ministry. His hobbies are reading and golf.

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Thursday, April 23, 2009

Introduction to the Bible - Proverbs

“Well done is better than well said.”

“God helps those who help themselves.”

“Early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise.”

These are but a few of our “American proverbs,” all of which came, at least through, if not from, Benjamin Franklin.

Every culture has its proverbs. From Babylon during the days of Abraham we have the following: “Build like a Lord, live like a slave. Build like a slave, live like a Lord.” From Egypt we have this one: “A petitioner likes attention to his words better than the fulfilling of that for which he came . . . a good hearing is a soothing of the heart.”

The culture of Israel in the Old Testament was no different. Solomon himself was said to have spoken three thousand proverbs, and over 300 of them are specifically to be found in the book of Proverbs, part of what is called the “wisdom literature” of the Old Testament. The book of Proverbs has more parallels with ancient literature than any other book in the Bible.

Proverbs has little organizational structure, but may be outlined as follows:

I) Title and aim of the book. 1:1-7
II) The importance of wisdom. 1:8 - 9:18
III) Proverbs of Solomon (374 two liners) 10:1 - 22:16
IV) Sayings of other wise men 22:17 - 24:22
V) Hezekiah’s collection of Solomon’s proverbs chapters 25 - 29
VI) Wisdom from the wise man Agur - chapter 30
VII) Wisdom from King Lemuel 31:1-9
VIII) The Woman of Noble character 31:10-31

Wisdom has to do with “how” we live our lives in order to be successful. Proverbs are wise rules of conduct. They are not “guarantees.” Our proverb, “early to bed, early to rise, makes a man healthy, wealthy, and wise” is a good rule to follow, but not a guarantee. Some labor from dawn to dusk, destroy their health, and never become “wealthy.” But on the other hand, “go to bed late, get up late,” is a prescription for disaster.

Since they are not guarantees, they should not be read or treated as laws. Thus the parent who “trains up his child in the way he should go” can expect that his child will live accordingly. But that is not a guarantee. If a child turns from the wise path later in life, it should not serve as an indictment against his parents. On the other hand, of course, the parent who offers no guidance for his child can fairly well expect him to turn out poorly.

Proverbs offers direction for daily manners, work, sex, family life, friendship, and our relationship with God. These particular proverbs are important because they come to us by the approval of God and as such, provide us not with earthly wisdom, but heavenly.

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