If Kiera
Wilmot had performed her experiment during her high school science class, it
might have earned her an A. But instead she was charged with causing an
explosion. Although she had planned to have her teacher approve the experiment,
her classmates persuaded her to perform it outside the classroom. When she
mixed chemicals inside a plastic bottle, it exploded and she unintentionally
unsettled some fellow students.
The Old
Testament tells the story of another case of peer pressure. David and his men
were hiding from Saul in a cave when Saul entered (1 Sam. 24). David’s
companions suggested that God had delivered Saul to them, and they urged David
to kill him (vv.4,10). If David killed Saul, they thought they could stop
hiding and David could become king. But David refused to harm Saul because he
was “the Lord’s anointed” (v.6).
People in our lives may sometimes suggest we do what seems most gratifying or practical in the moment. But there is a difference between worldly and spiritual wisdom (1 Cor. 2:6-7). Wisdom from above “is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, willing to yield, full of mercy” (James 3:17). When others are urging us to take a certain course of action, we can invite God to influence our response.
One is truly wise who gains his wisdom from God. (RBC)