One of the clearest ways to understand a person’s character is to observe how they respond to correction.
Most people believe wisdom is revealed in what someone says, what they know, or how confidently they speak. But God’s Word reveals something deeper. Wisdom is not first proven through knowledge. It is revealed through humility.
The way a person responds when they are corrected exposes the posture of their heart.
Proverbs teaches that there are two fundamentally different responses to truth: the response of a scoffer and the response of a wise person. Both hear correction, but what they do with it separates their path.
A scoffer rejects it.
A wise person grows through it.
Correction does not create character. It reveals it.
A scoffer is not simply someone who disagrees. In God’s Word, a scoffer is someone who despises instruction itself.
Instead of examining their own behavior, they mock the person bringing correction. Instead of listening, they defend. Instead of reflecting, they attack.
Proverbs repeatedly warns that scoffing is rooted in pride. The scoffer believes he already knows enough and therefore refuses the very thing that could help him grow.
Scoffers often appear confident, but their confidence hides a deeper problem. They are not protecting truth. They are protecting their pride.
Because of this, their growth stops. The refusal to receive correction closes the door to wisdom.
A wise person approaches correction differently. Wisdom does not mean someone is perfect. It means they are teachable.
Instead of reacting defensively, the wise person listens. Instead of protecting ego, they pursue growth.
Correction becomes an opportunity rather than a threat.
The wise person understands something that the scoffer cannot see. Correction is not an attack on identity. It is an invitation to become better.
This humility allows the wise to grow continually.
God’s Word repeatedly places these two responses side by side. The difference is not intelligence or talent. The difference is the heart’s posture toward truth.
| Scoffer | Wise Person |
|---|---|
| Mocks and ridicules wisdom | Respects and seeks wisdom |
| Reacts to correction with insult | Welcomes correction with humility |
| Closed off to learning | Open and receptive to learning |
| Prideful, rejects guidance | Values guidance and growth |
| Isolated from growth | Grows through feedback |
| Views correction as an attack | Views correction as a gift |
| Resists change, stays stagnant | Adapts and becomes wiser |
This table reflects the consistent pattern found throughout Proverbs. One heart protects pride. The other pursues transformation.
Another mark of the scoffer appears in how they handle emotion.
The fool believes every feeling deserves expression. They mistake emotional reaction for honesty. In reality, uncontrolled speech often reveals a lack of discipline over the heart.
The wise person understands something deeper. Every word carries weight before God. Restraint is not weakness. It is reverence.
Silence can be strength because it acknowledges that God governs the tongue.
Correction is one of God’s primary tools for shaping character.
The question is not whether correction will come. The question is how we will respond when it does.
Scoffers reject correction because they seek control. They want to define themselves on their own terms.
Wise people receive correction because they recognize God’s authority over their lives. They trust that growth often arrives through uncomfortable truth.
In God’s Kingdom, humility always precedes wisdom.
Ask God to reveal whether pride or humility shapes your response to correction.
When correction comes, pause before reacting. Let truth settle before defending yourself.
Seek counsel from people who are willing to speak honestly, not just affirm you.
Remember that correction is one of God’s tools for spiritual formation.
Growth rarely comes through comfort. It often comes through correction received with humility.
Father, guard our hearts from pride and teach us to love correction. Give us humility to receive truth and wisdom to grow from it. Help us listen carefully, speak thoughtfully, and honor You with the posture of our hearts. Form us into people who pursue wisdom rather than defend pride. Amen.