The episode begins by addressing possible misinterpretations of Matthew 5:22 where Christ says, "whoever says, 'You fool,' shall be guilty enough to go into the fiery hell." Calling someone a fool here amounted to declaring that someone is worthless, a value judgment contradicted by the image of God in all men. We judge behavior not intrinsic worth. Along these lines, the program warns against rigidly labeling people, where we identify someone, for example, as a "nabal" fool. We can assess and identify behavior (in ourselves and others) that is characteristic of a certain level fool, without labeling or boxing them in as such. All saints are recovering fools who periodically act "foolish," though their fundamental identity is the "righteousness of God in Christ." (2 Corinthians 5:21) The episode lastly suggests strategies to subtly correct the eviyl fool. Since he/she is hypersensitive about being right all the time, try to avoid dialogue that makes one party "right" and the other party "wrong." Validate the opinions of others, when possible, maybe stating "I can see why you think that.." Then ask a question that is informed by a correct Biblical understanding. "What do you think of this take on the issue? Dialogue doesn't have to have "winners" and "losers," so try to take that zero-sum-game approach to conversation off the table.
Don’t Cast Pearls before Eviyl
This episode surveys descriptions of the second level fool described in Proverbs, the "eviyl fool." Unlike the pethey fool who is very teachable, to the point of credulity, the eviyl fool despises wisdom and instruction. (Proverbs 1:7) "The way of a fool is right in his own eyes" (Proverbs 12:15), and he hates correction. The insecurity of eviyl fools often manifests in quarrelsome behavior: they're not content to be right in their own eyes, for they need to be right in the eyes of others. "Any fool will quarrel." (Proverbs 20:3) Correcting an eviyl fool accomplishes little. "When a wise man has a controversy with a foolish man, the foolish man either rages or laughs, and there is no rest." (Proverbs 29:9) Wisdom is a threat to fools who hate correction, so predictably rage and/or scoffing are designed to protect the fragile self-image of the fool. This fool is so resistant to correction, that foolishness doesn't depart, "though you pound a fool in a mortar with a pestle along with crushed grain." (Proverbs 27:22)


