Full Word of God · 3.13 Full Word of God — Orientation, Interpretive Tools, and Back Matter

Layer 3 — Full Word of God

Wisdom Literature Concordance

Layer
Full Word of God
Collection
3.13 Full Word of God — Orientation, Interpretive Tools, and Back Matter
Classification
Ancient biblical-world witness
Relationship to Scripture
Closely related · not in the Restored Bible

Wisdom Literature Concordance

The Unified Voice of Wisdom — From Proverbs to the Sealed Scrolls Purpose: To trace the flow of divine wisdom across the canonical and restored texts — showing how the Voice of Wisdom continues, expands, and culminates in the Anointed One

Framing Introduction

Wisdom was never a concept. She was a voice — crying out from the streets, from the mountain, from the mouth of prophets, poets, and psalmists.

In the Hebrew Scriptures, she is personified as a woman calling out for the simple to turn. In the restored scrolls, she becomes the Breath of the Anointed — the inner whisper of the Kingdom.

This concordance brings together the sacred echoes of Wisdom across the known and hidden scrolls — restoring her voice for a generation that longs to hear.

Canonical Foundations

Proverbs 1–9 Wisdom is portrayed as a woman crying out at the city gates:

“Turn, you simple, and live. I will pour out My Spirit upon you.”

Ecclesiastes 7:12

“Wisdom preserves the life of the one who possesses it.”

Sirach (Ecclesiasticus) 1:1, 24:1–3

“All wisdom comes from the Lord… She came forth from the mouth of the Most High.”

Job 28

“Where is wisdom found? God understands her way. He alone knows her path.”

Sealed Scrolls Echo

Book of Enoch (Ch. 42)

“Wisdom found no place to dwell among men… She returned to her place in the heavens.”

Insight: The voice of Wisdom was rejected — and so she withdrew. Yet she waits to return to those who seek righteousness.

Odes of Solomon 6

“She stretched out her arms and welcomed me. Her light entered me and made me whole.”

Insight: Wisdom in the Odes is not distant — she is received into the soul, transforming it from within.

Wisdom of Solomon 6–9

“Wisdom is a breath of the power of God… She passes into holy souls and makes them friends of God.”

Insight: This wisdom is not cold knowledge — it is divine intimacy, friendship, and insight that leads to justice and love.

Gospel of Thomas (Saying 114)

“Every woman who becomes male will enter the kingdom.” (i.e., every soul who becomes complete in Spirit)

Insight: Wisdom literature in the restored scrolls redefines completeness — not in flesh, but in restored identity and divine union.

Gospel of Truth

“The Father’s wisdom was hidden. The Anointed came to reveal her.”

Insight: Yeshua is not only the Son — He is the embodiment of Wisdom, revealing what was hidden since the beginning.

Concordant Themes Across Scrolls

Theme

Canonical

Restored Scroll Echo

Wisdom as a woman

Proverbs 8, Sirach 24

Enoch 42, Odes 6

Wisdom as breath/light

Job 28, Wisdom of Solomon 7

Gospel of Truth, Gospel of Philip

Wisdom rejected by the world

Proverbs 1:24

Enoch 42, Gospel of Thomas 28

Wisdom dwelling in the righteous

Sirach 1, Wisdom 6–7

Odes 8, Hodayot Psalm 1

Wisdom as the Anointed One’s Spirit

Isaiah 11:2, Luke 2:40

Gospel of Truth, Dialogue of the Savior

Wisdom as union/bridal mystery

Song of Songs (hidden metaphor)

Gospel of Philip, Odes 27

Closing Reflection — The Voice That Continues

Wisdom is not gone. She is not merely a character.

She is the Breath that still calls:

“Come to Me, all who are simple. Learn from Me. Walk with Me.”

Her fullness is found in the Anointed — and He gives Her freely to all who trust, who hunger, who turn.

Let the one who has ears, hear.

Wisdom Literature Concordance — Fully and Faithfully Restored

Note on Completeness: All major ancient wisdom writings that are either preserved canonically or echoed in the restored scrolls have been faithfully reflected here. Additional minor fragments (e.g. sapiential fragments from Qumran or Egypt) were reviewed but excluded due to fragmentary status, redundancy, or late provenance lacking consistent theological integrity with the unified voice of Wisdom revealed in the Anointed.