The Edge

You’ve seen the scene. The hero dangles from the edge of a cliff — white-knuckled, arms burning, gravity winning. Every second matters. One slip and it’s over.
That image is a perfect picture of what Solomon is warning us about in Proverbs 3.
He doesn’t say find your grip. He says don’t lose it — which means you already have it. The question is whether you’ll hold on.
The Wisest Man in the Room

Solomon knew something about pressure. He inherited the throne of Israel at a young age, responsible for an entire nation, with enemies on every side. When God offered him anything he wanted, Solomon didn’t ask for power, revenge, or wealth.
He asked for wisdom.
And God gave it to him — so much of it that a foreign queen traveled hundreds of miles to test it. She was left speechless.
That’s the man giving us this advice. He’s not writing from a classroom. He’s writing from a throne.
Tie It Around Your Neck

Solomon’s instruction in Proverbs 3 isn’t subtle:
“Don’t lose your grip on Love and Loyalty. Tie them around your neck; carve their initials on your heart.” (Proverbs 3:3-4 MSG)
Notice the escalation there. Don’t just remember it — tie it around your neck. Not a phone reminder. Not a sticky note. A necklace. Something you feel when you move.
Then go further — carve it on your heart. That’s not decoration. That’s surgery.
Solomon is saying these two things — Love and Loyalty — need to be so embedded in you that losing them would mean losing yourself.
BE Before You DO

Here’s what most men get backward: they try to do impressive things before they’ve become anything.
Solomon flips it. He says when you grip Love and Loyalty, you earn a reputation — not by marketing yourself, but by being something worth knowing.
Love and loyalty announce you before you walk into the room.
They tell people: this man has a grip on something bigger than himself.
The Cliff Is Real

Here’s the uncomfortable truth the movies skip over: heroes drop things all the time.
They drop loyalty when it gets costly. They drop love when it stops feeling good. They loosen their grip a little — just for a season — and then wonder why they’re falling.
Solomon saw it happen to whole kingdoms. He watched men lose everything because they let go of the right things while chasing the wrong ones.
Don’t be that man.
Tie it around your neck. Carve it on your heart. And whatever the wind does, whatever gravity says —
Don’t lose your grip.
Discover more from Timothy Dickert
Subscribe to get the latest posts sent to your email.
