King Solomon had everything: wisdom, wealth, power, and direct access to divine revelation. Yet he asked a question that strips away all pretence: who can possibly understand what God is thinking? If the wisest person who ever lived couldn’t figure God out completely, what does that mean for the rest of us? The answer might surprise you, and it might just set you free.
This reflection explores the tension between human limitation and divine invitation, emphasising that recognising our inability to fully comprehend God’s counsel is itself the beginning of wisdom.
This blog post weaves together themes of humility, trust, and the revelation of God’s will through Christ, while maintaining an encouraging and contemplative tone suitable for daily spiritual reading.
Daily Biblical Reflection – Verse for Today (12th December 2025)
Forwarded every morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan, upon whom Johnbritto Kurusumuthu wrote reflections.
“For who can learn the counsel of God? Or who can discern what the Lord wills?”
A Reflection on Divine Mystery and Human Humility
In the heart of Solomon’s great prayer for wisdom, we encounter this insightful question that speaks directly to the human condition. It is not a question born of despair, but of humble recognition. The wisest king who ever lived understood what we too must grasp: the infinite gap between divine wisdom and human understanding.
This verse invites us into a sacred paradox. On the one hand, it acknowledges our limitations. We cannot, by our own power, fully comprehend the mind of God. His thoughts are higher than our thoughts, His ways beyond our ways. The mystery of God’s providence often exceeds our capacity to understand. When we face suffering we cannot explain, when prayers seem unanswered, when life takes unexpected turns, we stand before this truth: God’s counsel is beyond our complete comprehension.
Yet this is not a call to intellectual resignation or spiritual passivity. Rather, it is an invitation to deeper trust. Solomon asked this question precisely because he was seeking wisdom. He knew that recognising our limitations is itself the beginning of true wisdom. The proud person thinks they have God figured out, contained within their theological systems and certainties. The wise person knows that God is always greater, always deeper, always more mysterious than our finite minds can grasp.
This humility before divine mystery should shape our spiritual lives in beautiful ways. It teaches us patience when we cannot understand God’s timing. It cultivates gentleness when we encounter others who interpret God’s will differently than we do. It opens us to wonder and awe, keeping our faith fresh and alive rather than reduced to mere formulas and certainties.
But here is the beautiful promise hidden within this verse: though we cannot fully know God’s counsel, God has not left us in darkness. Through Scripture, through the Church, through prayer, through the indwelling Holy Spirit, God reveals enough for us to walk faithfully. We may not know everything, but we know the One who knows everything. We may not understand all His ways, but we can trust His heart.
Jesus himself became the ultimate revelation of God’s will. In Him, the mystery is not eliminated but illuminated. When we follow Christ, we walk in the light even when we cannot see the entire path ahead. His life, death, and resurrection show us that God’s will is always oriented toward love, redemption, and life abundant.
As we reflect on this verse today, let us embrace both sides of this truth. Let us acknowledge honestly what we cannot know, releasing our need to have all the answers, to control every outcome, to understand every circumstance. Let us also receive gratefully what God has revealed, trusting that His wisdom guides us even when we cannot trace His hand.
In our uncertainties, may we find not anxiety but peace. In our questions, may we discover not doubt but deeper faith. And in our acknowledgement that we cannot fully know God’s mind, may we draw closer to His heart, which has been made known to us in Jesus Christ, who is the wisdom of God made flesh among us.
Lord, grant us the humility to accept what we cannot know, the wisdom to embrace what You have revealed, and the faith to trust You completely in all circumstances. Amen.
Minor note:
This reflection attributes the prayer in Wisdom 9 to “King Solomon.” While the book is traditionally ascribed to Solomon (and written in his persona), most modern Catholic biblical scholars date its composition to the 1st century BC in Alexandria. However, the Church has always accepted it as inspired Scripture and traditionally links it to Solomon (as do the liturgy and magisterial documents).

Liturgy is the Church’s public worship (Mass, sacraments), while Magisterial Documents are official teachings from the Pope and bishops (like Vatican II’s *Sacrosanctum Concilium or Apostolic Constitutions) guiding its renewal, theology, and practice, ensuring continuity with tradition while adapting for the modern world, forming the authoritative basis for how liturgy is celebrated. These documents clarify liturgical principles, define roles, and direct reforms for better worship.
Scripture Comparison Table
1. Human Limitation & Divine Transcendence
| Theme | God’s ways and wisdom are infinitely higher than ours; humans cannot fully comprehend Him. |
| Isaiah 55:8–9 | God’s thoughts and ways are higher than human thoughts and ways. |
| Romans 11:33–34 | God’s wisdom is deep and unsearchable; no one can know His mind. |
| Job 11:7 | God’s mysteries cannot be fully understood. |
| Job 38–41 | God reveals Job’s limited understanding through questions about creation. |
2. Humility as the Beginning of Wisdom
| Theme | Wisdom begins with humility and fear of the Lord; Solomon exemplifies receiving wisdom through humble request. |
| Proverbs 9:10 | The fear of the Lord is the beginning of wisdom. |
| Sirach 1:14–20 | Wisdom comes from humility and reverence for God. |
| James 4:10 | Humble yourselves before God, and He will lift you up. |
| 1 Peter 5:6 | Humble yourselves, and God will exalt you in due time. |
| 1 Kings 3:5–14 | Solomon asks humbly for wisdom; God grants it abundantly. |
| 2 Chronicles 1:7–12 | Parallel account confirming Solomon’s humble request and God’s generous response. |
3. Revelation Is Partial but Sufficient
| Theme | God has not revealed everything, but what He has revealed is enough for faith, obedience, and salvation. |
| Deuteronomy 29:29 | The secret things belong to God; revealed things belong to us. |
| John 15:15 | Jesus reveals what the Father has made known to Him. |
| 2 Timothy 3:16–17 | Scripture equips believers for every good work—sufficient for guidance. |
4. Christ as the Full Revelation of God
| Theme | Jesus is the complete and final revelation of God’s nature, will, and heart. |
| John 1:18 | The Son reveals the unseen Father. |
| John 14:9 | Seeing Jesus is seeing the Father. |
| Hebrews 1:1–3 | Jesus is the radiance of God’s glory and the exact representation of His being. |
| Colossians 2:9 | All the fullness of the Godhead dwells bodily in Christ. |
© 2025 Johnbritto Kurusumuthu | Rise & Inspire Devotional Series
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