"We are to seek wisdom and understanding only in the length of days"
About this Quote
A sermon’s worth of skepticism hides inside this calm, almost homespun line. Hall, a dissenting clergyman preaching in an age drunk on “improvement,” is warning his listeners about a very specific mistake: confusing time served with insight earned. “Only in the length of days” sounds like a proverb, but it lands as a rebuke. If wisdom is treated as a simple byproduct of aging, then the young are disqualified in advance and the old are flattered by default. That’s not piety; it’s intellectual laziness dressed as respectability.
The phrasing matters. “We are to seek” casts the problem as communal and moral, not merely personal. Hall isn’t diagnosing a quirky habit; he’s correcting a social reflex. The line takes aim at a culture that grants authority by seniority, letting experience substitute for judgment and tradition substitute for thought. In a pulpit context, it also pushes back against a comfortable religious posture: the idea that time in the pew, time repeating doctrines, time accumulating “days,” will automatically mature faith into understanding.
Hall’s subtext is sharper than the surface. Wisdom isn’t a pension plan; it’s a discipline. Days can harden people as easily as they can refine them. By implying that we “seek” wisdom in the wrong place, he’s inviting a more unsettling question: what if long life, without reflection, produces not sages but simply older versions of our earlier selves?
The phrasing matters. “We are to seek” casts the problem as communal and moral, not merely personal. Hall isn’t diagnosing a quirky habit; he’s correcting a social reflex. The line takes aim at a culture that grants authority by seniority, letting experience substitute for judgment and tradition substitute for thought. In a pulpit context, it also pushes back against a comfortable religious posture: the idea that time in the pew, time repeating doctrines, time accumulating “days,” will automatically mature faith into understanding.
Hall’s subtext is sharper than the surface. Wisdom isn’t a pension plan; it’s a discipline. Days can harden people as easily as they can refine them. By implying that we “seek” wisdom in the wrong place, he’s inviting a more unsettling question: what if long life, without reflection, produces not sages but simply older versions of our earlier selves?
Quote Details
| Topic | Wisdom |
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