πβπ βππππ‘ ππ πππ£πππ ππππππππ πππ πππ£πππ ππ πππ‘π‘πππ ππ’π‘π πππ ππ πππ’π ππππ€πππππ ππ ππππππ‘ππππ.
Such a beautiful word for such an ugly habit, huh?
πππ‘ππππππππππππππ are rarely polite people. They are the know-it-all type. Jumping into conversations they have no business getting into. They are presumptuous and get on your nerves. They are the type of friend who tell your story before you can tell it. They go βπππ¦πππ π‘βπ π βππβ!
The Bible has a simpler word for such people – fools! Proverbs 18:2 says: βπ΄ ππππ π‘ππππ ππ πππππ π’ππ ππ π’πππππ π‘ππππππ, ππ’π‘ ππππ¦ ππ ππ₯ππππ π πππ βππ πππππππ.β
In this era of social media, there are more ultracrepidarians than I care to count. Fools who comment on every post with hasty, ill-considered words, without the social cues that are borne of wisdom.
Fools who emphasize what is shocking and outrageous over what is true and good and pure. You know them, don’t you?
I hope to remain wise on these streets. Proverbs 14:7 advises: βπΏπππ£π π‘βπ ππππ ππππ ππ π ππππ, πππ π‘βπππ π¦ππ’ ππ πππ‘ ππππ‘ π€ππππ ππ ππππ€πππππ.β
The word was πΌππππππππππ ππππππππ. No idea how I ended up with these wise sayings. But there you have it – from now on you can call me The Anti-ultracrepidarian!