Proverbs 6:6-11 God’s Zoo #10
Pastor Ron Koehler
Grace—Tucson, AZ
August 8, 2021
In the name of our Savior Jesus, dear friends, We generally think of ants as a problem. Oh, we might understand that they are important as food for certain insects, birds, and animals, but they are a nuisance to us—right up there with mosquitoes. So, I don’t like it when they are on my hummingbird feeder. I don’t like them crawling around on my grill island either. I was also not excited about—and did not understand—why there were ants on my roof. I was up there trimming some branches and painting the trim on my house and there were some ants up there. They were willing to work extra hard to climb the mesquite tree to access the rooftop. What they intended to do up there wasn’t entirely clear. What all of those things tell me is not only that I have ant issues, but that ants are busy. You know what I never see? Ants just lounging around. They aren’t the type to sit in their recliners, put their six feet up, and hang out watching TV for hours on end…or play video games late into the night—or early morning. The ant’s activity, its industriousness, is the example God uses to teach us this morning. God wants us to… Learn a Laziness Lesson from the Ant I have been a pastor for a while—okay, a long while—and I think that I have not taken a lot of opportunities to study and talk about laziness. In a roundabout way, I guess, it has come up in sermons and Bible classes about using our talents and our time for God and for others, but labelling it laziness probably hasn’t happened much. So I’m glad for the opportunity these verses from Proverbs give us. Go to the ant, you slacker! is the instruction. “Slacker” is the key word here, a word that can also be translated “lazy bum” or “lazybones” or something like that. Now, you may not think of yourself as lazy, and if that’s the case, you may think this doesn’t apply to you. If so, I’d like you to hold that thought as we carefully consider this. What’s pretty clear here is that God does not want us to be lazy. Breezing through this lesson reveals that God says it is foolish to be lazy. It also comes with troubles like poverty and scarcity. In order for the lazy person to become wise, God orders them to consider the ant’s life. He uses the example of the ant to impress upon us that we are to be productive. How so? Well, in a very practical sense. This lines up with what he tells us elsewhere in Scripture—that we are to be managers of all that he has given to us, that we are to provide for our families, that we should not be idle, but should work so that we can give to others and generously support the work of the gospel. So this has to do with very practical things, things that we live every day. The hardworking ant sets the example for us: it stores its food in summer. It gathers its provisions at harvest time. It is busy and it manages what its work produces.