Cancer researcher Dr Robert  Good was a hard working individual with an enormous faculty for new ideas. According to an article I read about him, he had the ability to make use of any information he came across.

I was most impressed, however, with a statement that credited him with a willingness to recognise any error in his theories and abandon them faster than anyone else in medical research. An associate said, “Dr Good never gets married to his hypotheses, so he doesn’t go through the pangs of divorce when one is proven wrong.”

Proverbs 9 puts a high premium on such a willingness to see one’s error and admit it. It describes a wise man as one who wants to learn from his mistakes. When challenged, he resists the urge to get his back up like a threatened tomcat. Instead, correction becomes a faithful friend and a necessary means to improvement (v.9). On the other hand, when ‘scoffers’ are rebuked, they respond with anger and hate (v.8). Because of their overinflated ego, they won’t listen when told they have erred.

We need to follow the path of wisdom by giving heed to words of reproof. To be truly wise we must remember that at times we too have played the fool.


The person who refuses to hear criticism has no chance to learn from it.

Author

Mart DeHaan

Topics

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