“‘The fear of the LORD is the principle of wisdom’ could restrict wisdom to moral obedience” (Page 16)
“It agrees with its anthropology, with its unified view of the inner man and its concentration in the heart (cf. Pr. 4:23): if the heart both thinks and wills, and is man’s religious organ, how could thought function independantly?” (Page 23)
“We may safely conclude that Old Testament דעת חכמה also satisfied man’s impulse to think and to know—without the fateful division between θεωρία and πρᾶξις which we inherited from the Greeks.” (Page 12)
“Coming to Christ, taking his yoke, receiving the Spirit which is from God, this is the equivalent of fearing the LORD, and it can be summarized in the word ‘faith’.” (Page 27)
“Three main possibilities are left: (a) beginning; (b) chief or choicest part; (c) substance, or essence.” (Page 14)