Wisdom builds life through understanding, courage, justice, restraint, hope, truthful speech, and diligent stewardship, while wickedness, envy, cowardice, partiality, revenge, and laziness lead to collapse.
Wisdom Builds the House: Justice, Courage, Diligence, Enemies, and the Future of the Righteous
Wisdom builds life through understanding, courage, justice, restraint, hope, truthful speech, and diligent stewardship, while wickedness, envy, cowardice, partiality, revenge, and laziness lead to collapse.
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Wisdom builds life through understanding, courage, justice, restraint, hope, truthful speech, and diligent stewardship, while wickedness, envy, cowardice, partiality, revenge, and laziness lead to collapse.
Proverbs 24 argues that wisdom is constructive, courageous, just, hopeful, and diligent. The chapter begins by warning the learner not to envy the wicked because their apparent strength is morally corrupt and futureless. Wisdom, by contrast, builds the house, fills it with true treasure, strengthens the wise, and seeks guidance. The chapter then presses moral courage: in the day of trouble, wisdom does not collapse into cowardice but acts to rescue those being led to death.
The Lord sees through excuses, weighs the heart, knows deeds, and repays. The learner must also guard His heart toward enemies, refusing to rejoice over their fall while also refusing to envy them. The additional sayings intensify the concern for public justice, truthful witness, ordered work, and diligence. Wisdom is not merely contemplation; it is house-building, rescue-working, justice-speaking, field-tending obedience before the Lord.
The chapter moves from warnings against envying the wicked, to wisdom as constructive strength, to courageous rescue, to future hope, to restraint toward enemies, to public justice and honest speech, and finally to ordered labor and the severe warning of the sluggard's ruined field.
The learner is warned not to envy the wicked or desire their company, because their hearts plot violence and their lips speak trouble. Wisdom, understanding, and knowledge build, establish, and fill the house with rare and beautiful treasures. Wisdom gives strength, and victory requires guidance and many advisers. Wisdom is too high for fools, who have nothing to say at the gate.
Whoever plots evil is known as a schemer, and foolish schemes are sin; people detest mockers. If the learner falters in a time of trouble, His strength is small. He is commanded to rescue those being led away to death and hold back those staggering toward slaughter. Excuses of ignorance are rejected because the Lord weighs the heart, guards the life, knows human deeds, and repays each person accordingly.
Wisdom is compared to honey, sweet and good. If the learner finds wisdom, there is future hope and that hope will not be cut off. The wicked are warned not to lurk near the righteous person's house or plunder His dwelling. Though the righteous may fall seven times, they rise again, but the wicked stumble when calamity strikes.
The learner must not gloat when an enemy falls or rejoice when He stumbles, lest the Lord see and disapprove. The learner must not fret because of evildoers or envy the wicked, for they have no future hope and their lamp will be snuffed out. He must fear the Lord and the king and avoid joining rebellious officials, because sudden destruction can come from either, and who knows what calamities they can bring?
A new smaller collection begins with a warning that partiality in judging is not good. Whoever tells the guilty, 'You are innocent,' will be cursed by peoples and denounced by nations, but it will go well with those who convict the guilty, and rich blessing will come on them. An honest answer is like a kiss on the lips. The learner is then told to put outdoor work in order, prepare the fields, and afterward build the house.
The learner must not testify against a neighbor without cause or use His lips to deceive. He must not say, 'I will do to them as they have done to me,' rejecting personal revenge. The chapter closes with the vivid example of the sluggard's field and vineyard, overgrown with thorns, covered with weeds, and enclosed by a broken stone wall. From this sight the teacher learns a lesson: a little sleep, slumber, and folding of the hands brings poverty like a thief and scarcity like an armed man.
- 24:1-7: The learner is warned not to envy the wicked or desire their company, because their hearts plot violence and their lips speak trouble. Wisdom, understanding, and knowledge build, establish, and fill the house with rare and beautiful treasures. Wisdom gives strength, and victory requires guidance and many advisers. Wisdom is too high for fools, who have nothing to say at the gate.
- 24:8-12: Whoever plots evil is known as a schemer, and foolish schemes are sin · people detest mockers. If the learner falters in a time of trouble, His strength is small. He is commanded to rescue those being led away to death and hold back those staggering toward slaughter. Excuses of ignorance are rejected because the Lord weighs the heart, guards the life, knows human deeds, and repays each person accordingly.
- 24:13-16: Wisdom is compared to honey, sweet and good. If the learner finds wisdom, there is future hope and that hope will not be cut off. The wicked are warned not to lurk near the righteous person's house or plunder His dwelling. Though the righteous may fall seven times, they rise again, but the wicked stumble when calamity strikes.
- 24:17-22: The learner must not gloat when an enemy falls or rejoice when He stumbles, lest the Lord see and disapprove. The learner must not fret because of evildoers or envy the wicked, for they have no future hope and their lamp will be snuffed out. He must fear the Lord and the king and avoid joining rebellious officials, because sudden destruction can come from either, and who knows what calamities they can bring?
- 24:23-27: A new smaller collection begins with a warning that partiality in judging is not good. Whoever tells the guilty, 'You are innocent,' will be cursed by peoples and denounced by nations, but it will go well with those who convict the guilty, and rich blessing will come on them. An honest answer is like a kiss on the lips. The learner is then told to put outdoor work in order, prepare the fields, and afterward build the house.
- 24:28-34: The learner must not testify against a neighbor without cause or use His lips to deceive. He must not say, 'I will do to them as they have done to me,' rejecting personal revenge. The chapter closes with the vivid example of the sluggard's field and vineyard, overgrown with thorns, covered with weeds, and enclosed by a broken stone wall. From this sight the teacher learns a lesson: a little sleep, slumber, and folding of the hands brings poverty like a thief and scarcity like an armed man.
Theological Argument
Proverbs 24 argues that wisdom is constructive, courageous, just, hopeful, and diligent. The chapter begins by warning the learner not to envy the wicked because their apparent strength is morally corrupt and futureless. Wisdom, by contrast, builds the house, fills it with true treasure, strengthens the wise, and seeks guidance. The chapter then presses moral courage: in the day of trouble, wisdom does not collapse into cowardice but acts to rescue those being led to death.
The Lord sees through excuses, weighs the heart, knows deeds, and repays. The learner must also guard His heart toward enemies, refusing to rejoice over their fall while also refusing to envy them. The additional sayings intensify the concern for public justice, truthful witness, ordered work, and diligence. Wisdom is not merely contemplation; it is house-building, rescue-working, justice-speaking, field-tending obedience before the Lord.
The chapter moves from warnings against envying the wicked, to wisdom as constructive strength, to courageous rescue, to future hope, to restraint toward enemies, to public justice and honest speech, and finally to ordered labor and the severe warning of the sluggard's ruined field.
Theological Focus
- Wisdom Builds
- Do Not Envy the Wicked
- Courageous Rescue
- The Lord Weighs the Heart
- Future Hope
- Justice and Truthful Judgment
- Restraint Toward Enemies
- Diligence and Ordered Labor
- Divine Judgment
- Courage and Rescue
- Hope
- Righteous Resilience
- Justice
- Enemy Restraint
- Speech Ethics
- Diligence
Theological Themes
Wisdom, understanding, and knowledge build, establish, and fill the house. Wisdom creates durable life rather than violent gain.
The learner is repeatedly warned not to envy evildoers or desire their company because they have no future hope.
Wisdom requires intervention for those being led away to death. Passive ignorance is exposed before the Lord who weighs the heart.
The Lord guards life, weighs the heart, knows deeds, and repays each person. Hidden motives and cowardly excuses are not hidden from Him.
Wisdom gives a future hope that will not be cut off, while the wicked have no future and their lamp is extinguished.
Partiality in judgment is condemned, and those who excuse the guilty invite public curse. Honest answers and truthful judgments are essential to wisdom.
The learner must not rejoice over an enemy's fall. Wisdom refuses vindictive delight even when the wicked stumble.
Wisdom prepares the field before building the house and learns from the ruined field of the sluggard. Neglected stewardship invites poverty.
Covenant Significance
Proverbs 24 applies covenant wisdom to justice, rescue, household formation, enemies, work, and public truth. The chapter assumes that the Lord sees the heart and repays according to deeds, making cowardice, false judgment, and personal revenge covenantal issues. The command to rescue those being led to death reflects the covenant community's obligation to protect life and defend the vulnerable.
The warnings against false witness, partiality, and declaring the guilty innocent reflect Torah's concern for righteous judgment. The chapter trains God's people to build life, practice justice, resist envy of wicked success, and labor faithfully under the Lord.
- The warning not to envy evildoers echoes Psalm 37 and other wisdom texts on the temporary success of the wicked.
- The command to rescue those being led to death reflects the Old Testament concern for protecting innocent life and vulnerable persons.
- The Lord weighing the heart resonates with the Old Testament witness that God sees motives and hidden realities.
- The warning against partiality and false witness reflects Torah's standards for righteous judgment.
- The refusal of revenge aligns with the Old Testament command not to seek vengeance but to leave justice to the Lord.
- The sluggard's field continues Proverbs' broader wisdom teaching about diligence, stewardship, and the consequences of laziness.
Canonical Connections
Wisdom builds life through understanding, courage, justice, restraint, hope, truthful speech, and diligent stewardship, while wickedness, envy, cowardice, partiality, revenge, and laziness lead to collapse.
Proverbs 24 exposes the cowardice and compromise of the human heart. We envy the wicked, fail in trouble, excuse ourselves from rescuing the endangered, gloat over enemies, distort justice, testify falsely, seek revenge, and neglect the field entrusted to us. The gospel announces Christ as the wisdom of God who builds the true house, rescues those being led to death, speaks honest judgment, refuses sinful revenge, and gives a future hope that cannot be cut off.
He was the righteous one ambushed by the wicked, falsely accused, condemned as guilty, and led away to death. Yet He rose again, proving that the righteous one ultimately rises and that the Lord's wisdom prevails. By the Spirit, Christ forms His people to build, rescue, judge truthfully, labor diligently, love enemies, and hope beyond the wicked's temporary success.
- Do not reduce rescue of the endangered to activism without gospel hope, or to evangelism without practical courage.
- Do not use the righteous rising again to excuse moral carelessness or repeated unrepentant sin.
- Do not preach diligence as self-salvation or shame every poor person as lazy.
- Do not confuse refusal to gloat with denial of justice.
- Do not use fear of authority to silence obedience to God or truthful judgment.
- Do not separate Christ's rescue from the Spirit's formation of courageous, just, diligent disciples.
Primary Emphasis
Proverbs 24 contributes to Christ-centered reading by portraying the wisdom Christ perfectly embodies and the rescue mission He accomplishes. Christ is the wisdom of God who builds the true house of God, speaks truthfully, judges justly, refuses sinful revenge, and rescues those being led to death. He is the righteous one who fell under suffering and death, yet rose again in ultimate vindication.
He did not gloat over enemies but prayed for those who crucified Him and died for the ungodly. Human injustice declared the innocent guilty and released the guilty, yet through the cross and resurrection the Lord's saving wisdom prevailed. By the Spirit, Christ forms His people to build wisely, rescue courageously, judge truthfully, labor diligently, and live with future hope.
Chapter Contribution
Proverbs 24 argues that wisdom is constructive, courageous, just, hopeful, and diligent. The chapter begins by warning the learner not to envy the wicked because their apparent strength is morally corrupt and futureless. Wisdom, by contrast, builds the house, fills it with true treasure, strengthens the wise, and seeks guidance. The chapter then presses moral courage: in the day of trouble, wisdom does not collapse into cowardice but acts to rescue those being led to death.
The Lord sees through excuses, weighs the heart, knows deeds, and repays. The learner must also guard His heart toward enemies, refusing to rejoice over their fall while also refusing to envy them. The additional sayings intensify the concern for public justice, truthful witness, ordered work, and diligence. Wisdom is not merely contemplation; it is house-building, rescue-working, justice-speaking, field-tending obedience before the Lord.
Canonical Trajectory
- Wisdom building the house points toward Christ building God's household and establishing His people.
- The command to rescue those being led to death anticipates Christ's redemptive mission to save sinners from death.
- The righteous falling and rising finds its deepest canonical fulfillment in Christ's death and resurrection, while also giving hope to the righteous under trial.
- The refusal to gloat over enemies anticipates Christ's mercy toward enemies and the New Testament call to love enemies.
- Condemning the guilty truthfully and rejecting false witness point forward to Christ as the righteous judge and the one unjustly condemned.
- The warning against slothful neglect supports the New Testament call to faithful stewardship until Christ returns.
Individuals and leaders are responsible for upholding truth.
Jesus embodies perfect truth and calls believers to follow His example.
The New Testament reveals Christ as the ultimate embodiment of divine wisdom.
Earthly rulers function within God's providential order.
God often provides wisdom through the counsel of others.
Wisdom includes active concern for the vulnerable and endangered.
Persistent wickedness damages both one's relationship with God and reputation among people.
Believers are called to trust God's purposes rather than envying others.
God calls His people to faithful and disciplined work.
Wisdom equips individuals to participate in righteous judgment and leadership.
God's character establishes the standard for righteous judgment.
God observes not only actions but also the motives of the heart.
God sustains the righteous through adversity.
God provides spiritual nourishment through His wisdom.
God governs human affairs and establishes authority structures.
Reverence for God forms the foundation of wisdom.
Believers are called to resist revenge and extend grace.
Stable foundations enable lasting spiritual and practical growth.
Those who live in wisdom possess a future grounded in God's purposes.
Individuals are responsible for receiving or rejecting the instruction that leads to wisdom.
Sin originates in the heart and mind before appearing in outward behavior.
Believers must maintain a humble posture even toward those who oppose them.
Justice must not be influenced by favoritism or social status.
Righteous living requires resisting the temptation to admire sinful success.
Scripture calls believers to respond to enemies without hatred or revenge.
Rejecting wisdom results in exclusion from wise influence and decision-making.
Scripture consistently contrasts the paths of the righteous and the wicked.
Leaders must maintain honesty and courage when confronting wrongdoing.
Individuals are responsible for cultivating strength before trials occur.
God calls His people to avoid patterns and influences associated with wickedness.
Godly living recognizes the importance of proper priorities.
The righteous endure trials and continue in faithfulness.
God blesses lives that are built upon wisdom and obedience.
Careful planning and discernment lead to success.
Honest communication strengthens relationships and community.
True riches include moral integrity, relational harmony, and divine blessing.
True strength is rooted in wisdom and moral courage.
Individuals are responsible for caring for what God has entrusted to them.
The success of the wicked is temporary and deceptive.
Adversity reveals and refines a person's character.
God calls His people to speak honestly and faithfully.
All people face the consequences of their actions before God.
True wisdom comes from reverence for God and willingness to receive instruction.
Believers must exercise discernment in choosing relationships and influences.
Folly manifests through mockery, arrogance, and rejection of instruction.
God teaches wisdom through reflection on life's patterns.
Wisdom, understanding, and knowledge build, establish, and fill the house with true treasure.
The Lord weighs the heart, knows deeds, and repays each person accordingly.
Wisdom requires action to rescue those being led to death and refuses cowardly excuses.
Wisdom gives future hope that will not be cut off, while the wicked have no future hope.
The righteous may fall repeatedly, yet rise again, while the wicked collapse under calamity.
Partiality, declaring the guilty innocent, and false testimony are condemned.
The wise do not gloat over an enemy's fall, because the Lord sees the heart.
Honest answers are fitting, while deceptive testimony and false witness violate neighbor righteousness.
Ordered labor and faithful stewardship protect against the creeping ruin of sloth.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Lord weighs hearts, knows deeds, and gives the wise a future hope, so wisdom must build, rescue, judge rightly, labor diligently, and refuse envy or revenge.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Non-envy, constructive wisdom, courage, rescue, hope, restraint toward enemies, impartial justice, honest speech, ordered stewardship, diligence, and trust in the Lord.
- Identify one area where You envy the wicked and answer it with Proverbs 24:19-20.
- Strengthen one part of Your household or ministry through wisdom, understanding, and knowledge.
- Seek counsel before a significant decision or conflict.
- Take one concrete step to help someone moving toward destruction.
- Confess any excuse-making where You claimed ignorance to avoid responsibility.
- Refuse to gloat over one enemy, rival, critic, or difficult person.
- Give an honest answer where flattery, silence, or evasion would be easier.
- Put one area of work in proper order before trying to build further.
- Walk Your own 'field' and name one neglected responsibility that needs immediate attention.
- Envy of the wicked versus future hope of the wise.
- Violent plotting versus wisdom building the house.
- Faltering in trouble versus courageous rescue.
- Excuse of ignorance versus the Lord weighing the heart.
- Honey's sweetness versus wisdom's future hope.
- Righteous falling and rising versus wicked stumbling in calamity.
- Gloating over enemies versus reverent restraint before the Lord.
- Calling the guilty innocent versus convicting truthfully.
- Honest answer as kiss on the lips versus deceptive testimony.
- Prepared fields before house building versus neglected field of the sluggard.
- A little sleep versus poverty like an armed man.
- Proverbs 24 warns against envying the wicked, joining violent company, plotting evil, mocking, faltering in trouble, refusing to rescue the endangered, excusing cowardice, ambushing the righteous, gloating over fallen enemies, rebelling against authority, partiality in judgment, declaring the guilty innocent, false witness, personal revenge, disordered labor, and laziness. The chapter is especially severe about moral passivity. To say 'we knew nothing about this' does not excuse the one whose heart the Lord has weighed.
- Do not envy the wicked or desire their company.
- Do not mistake evil scheming for wisdom.
- Do not collapse in the day of trouble.
- Do not excuse failure to rescue the endangered.
- Do not ambush or plunder the righteous.
- Do not rejoice when Your enemy falls.
- Do not call the guilty innocent.
- Do not testify against a neighbor without cause.
- Do not repay evil with personal revenge.
- Do not underestimate small laziness.
- Using 'the righteous fall seven times and rise again' as a casual slogan for repeated moral compromise. - The proverb primarily contrasts the resilience of the righteous under adversity with the collapse of the wicked in calamity. It should not be used to minimize sin or excuse repeated rebellion.
- Treating the command to rescue those being led to death as only metaphorical. - The command has broad moral force, including literal protection of life, advocacy for the endangered, and intervention where people are being destroyed. It may have wider application, but should not be spiritualized away.
- Using fear of the king to justify blind obedience to unjust rulers. - The chapter teaches proper fear of the Lord and the king, but it also strongly demands justice and condemns false judgment. Authority does not erase moral accountability before God.
- Reading 'do not gloat over Your enemy' as indifference to justice. - The proverb condemns vindictive delight, not righteous concern for justice, protection, or deliverance from evil.
- Using diligence texts to shame all poverty. - The chapter warns against laziness through the sluggard's field, but Scripture also recognizes poverty from oppression, calamity, injustice, and vulnerability.
- Treating honest answers as bluntness without wisdom. - An honest answer is fitting and covenantally good, but biblical honesty must be joined to love, timing, humility, and justice.
- Where am I envying the wicked because their path appears easier, stronger, or more profitable?
- Am I building my household, ministry, and life with wisdom, understanding, and knowledge?
- Who are my advisers, and where am I trying to win without guidance?
- What does my response in trouble reveal about the true strength of my faith and wisdom?
- Who is being led toward destruction near me, and what would faithful rescue require?
- Have I used 'I did not know' as an excuse for not acting when I should have acted?
- Does my hope rest in wisdom's future, or in the visible success of the wicked?
- Do I secretly rejoice when an enemy falls?
- Where am I tempted to show partiality in judgment because of relationship, fear, money, or pressure?
- Have I called someone innocent because truth would be costly?
- Is my work ordered rightly, or am I trying to build the house before preparing the field?
- What does the condition of my 'field' reveal about diligence or neglect?
- Preach Proverbs 24 as wisdom for courage, justice, hope, and diligence. Emphasize that wisdom builds and rescues, while folly envies, excuses, retaliates, and neglects.
- Use verses 3-4 to teach constructive discipleship: wisdom builds the house, understanding establishes it, and knowledge fills it with true treasure.
- Verses 11-12 are crucial for forming believers who intervene for the endangered. This includes advocacy, protection, evangelistic urgency, and practical rescue where life is being destroyed.
- Use verses 10, 16, and 17 to address crisis strength, resilience, shame after falling, and sinful gloating over enemies.
- Verses 5-6 and 23-26 should shape leadership culture: seek counsel, reject partiality, judge truthfully, and give honest answers.
- Verses 17-18 and 28-29 help distinguish righteous pursuit of justice from revenge, gloating, and deceptive testimony.
- Verses 27 and 30-34 provide a framework for ordered labor and diligence. Prepare the field before building the house, and learn from visible neglect.
- The sluggard's field is a powerful diagnostic image for neglected spiritual life, household responsibilities, ministry systems, finances, and personal habits.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Believers must be trained out of passive religion and into courageous, just, disciplined wisdom that acts before the Lord's searching gaze.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace remnant preservation, covenant continuity, and mercy under judgment across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Follow faith, believing response, trust, and persevering allegiance across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Follow resurrection hope, vindication, and life-over-death patterns across the canon.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from warnings against envying the wicked, to wisdom as constructive strength, to courageous rescue, to future hope, to restraint toward enemies, to public justice and honest speech, and finally to ordered labor and the severe warning of the sluggard's ruined field.
Proverbs 24 applies covenant wisdom to justice, rescue, household formation, enemies, work, and public truth. The chapter assumes that the Lord sees the heart and repays according to deeds, making cowardice, false judgment, and personal revenge covenantal issues. The command to rescue those being led to death reflects the covenant community's obligation to protect life and defend the vulnerable.
The warnings against false witness, partiality, and declaring the guilty innocent reflect Torah's concern for righteous judgment. The chapter trains God's people to build life, practice justice, resist envy of wicked success, and labor faithfully under the Lord.
Proverbs 24 exposes the cowardice and compromise of the human heart. We envy the wicked, fail in trouble, excuse ourselves from rescuing the endangered, gloat over enemies, distort justice, testify falsely, seek revenge, and neglect the field entrusted to us. The gospel announces Christ as the wisdom of God who builds the true house, rescues those being led to death, speaks honest judgment, refuses sinful revenge, and gives a future hope that cannot be cut off.
He was the righteous one ambushed by the wicked, falsely accused, condemned as guilty, and led away to death. Yet He rose again, proving that the righteous one ultimately rises and that the Lord's wisdom prevails. By the Spirit, Christ forms His people to build, rescue, judge truthfully, labor diligently, love enemies, and hope beyond the wicked's temporary success.
Non-envy, constructive wisdom, courage, rescue, hope, restraint toward enemies, impartial justice, honest speech, ordered stewardship, diligence, and trust in the Lord.
Focus Points
- Wisdom Builds
- Do Not Envy the Wicked
- Courageous Rescue
- The Lord Weighs the Heart
- Future Hope
- Justice and Truthful Judgment
- Restraint Toward Enemies
- Diligence and Ordered Labor
- Divine Judgment
- Courage and Rescue
- Hope
- Righteous Resilience
- Justice
- Enemy Restraint
- Speech Ethics
- Diligence
Passages
Chapter opening: Proverbs 24:1-2
Pro 24:5-6 The praise of wisdom is continued: it brings blessings in the time of peace, and gives the victory in war. 5 A wise man is full of strength; And a man of understanding showeth great power. 6 For with wise counsel shalt thou carry on successful war; And safety is where counsellors are not wanting. The ב of בּעוז (thus with Pathach in old impressions, Cod.
1294, Cod. Jaman . , and elsewhere with the Masoretic note לית ומלא) introduces, as that of בכּח, Psa 24:4, the property in which a person or thing appears; the article (cf. העזבים, Pro 2:13, Gesen, §35, 2A) is that of gender. The parallel מאמץ כח, a Greek translates by ὑπὲρ κραταιὸν ἰσχύΐ = מאמּיץ כּח (Job 9:4; Isa 40:26). But after 5a it lies nearer that the poet means to express the power which lies in wisdom itself (Ecc 7:19), and its superiority to physical force (Pro 21:22); the lxx, Syr.
, and Targ. also, it is true, translate 5a as if מעז ( prae potente ) were the words used. אמּץ כּח means to strengthen the strength, and that is (Nah 2:2) equivalent to, to collect the strength (to take courage), here and at Amo 2:14, to show strong (superior) strength. The reason is gathered from Pro 20:18 and Pro 11:14. The לך here added, Hitzig is determined to read תּעשׂה: for with prudent counsel the war shall be carried out by thee.
The construction of the passive with ל of the subject is correct in Heb. ( vid . , at Pro 14:20) as well as in Aram. , and עשׂה frequently means, in a pregnant sense: to complete, to carry out, to bring to an end; but the phrase עשׂה מלחמה means always to carry on war, and nothing further. לך is the dat. commod . , as in נלחם ל, to wage war (to contend) for any one, e.
g. , Exo 14:14. Instead of ברב, the lxx reads בלב; regarding γεωργίου μεγάλου for מאמץ כח, without doubt a corrupt reading, vid . , Lagarde.
Pro 24:7 Till now in this appendix we have found only two distichs ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17); now several of them follow. From this, that wisdom is a power which accomplishes great things, it follows that it is of high value, though to the fool it appears all too costly. 7 Wisdom seems to the fool to be an ornamental commodity; He openeth not his mouth in the gate.
Most interpreters take ראמות for רמות (written as at 1Ch 6:58; cf. Zec 14:10; ראשׁ, Pro 10:4; קאם, Hos 10:14), and translate, as Jerome and Luther: “Wisdom is to the fool too high;” the way to wisdom is to him too long and too steep, the price too costly, and not to be afforded. Certainly this thought does not lie far distant from what the poet would say; but why does he say חכמות, and not חכמה?
This חכמות is not a numerical plur. , so as to be translated with the Venet . : μετέωροι τῷ ἄφρονι αἱ ἐπιστῆμαι; it is a plur. , as Psa 49:4 shows; but, as is evident from the personification and the construction, Pro 1:20, one inwardly multiplying and heightening, which is related to חכמה as science or the contents of knowledge is to knowledge. That this plur.
comes here into view as in chap. 1-9 ( vid . , vol. i. p. 34), is definitely accounted for in these chapters by the circumstance that wisdom was to be designated, which is the mediatrix of all wisdom; here, to be designated in intentional symphony with ראמות, whose plur. ending ôth shall be for that very reason, however, inalienable. Thus ראמות will be the name of a costly foreign bijouterie , which is mentioned in the Book of Job, where the unfathomableness and inestimableness of wisdom is celebrated; vid .
, Job 27:18, where we have recorded what we had to say at the time regarding this word. But what is now the meaning of the saying that wisdom is to the fool a pearl or precious coral? Joël Bril explains: “The fool uses the sciences like a precious stone, only for ornament, but he knows not how to utter a word publicly,” This is to be rejected, because ראמות is not so usual a trinket or ornament as to serve as an expression of this thought.
The third of the comparison lies in the rarity, costliness, unattainableness; the fool despises wisdom, because the expenditure of strength and the sacrifices of all kinds which are necessary to put one into the possession of wisdom deter him from it (Rashi). This is also the sense which the expression has when ראמות = רמות; and probably for the sake of this double meaning the poet chose just this word, and not פנינים, גבישׁ, or any other name, for articles of ornament (Hitzig).
The Syr. has incorrectly interpreted this play upon words: sapientia abjecta stulto ; and the Targumist: the fool grumbles (מתרעם) against wisdom. He may also find the grapes to be sour because they hang too high for him; here it is only said that wisdom remains at a distance from him because he cannot soar up to its attainment; for that very reason he does not open his mouth in the gate, where the council and the representatives of the people have their seats: he has not the knowledge necessary for being associated in counselling, and thus must keep silent; and this is indeed the most prudent thing he can do.
Pro 24:8 From wisdom, which is a moral good, the following proverb passes over to a kind of σοφία δαιμονιώδης: He that meditateth to do evil, We call such an one an intriguer. A verbal explanation and definition like Pro 21:24 (cf. p. 29), formed like Pro 16:21 from נבון. Instead of בּעל־מזמּות [lord of mischief] in Pro 12:2, the expression is 'אישׁ מ (cf. at Pro 22:24).
Regarding מזמות in its usual sense, vid . , Pro 5:2. Such definitions have of course no lexicographical, but only a moral aim. That which is here given is designed to warn one against gaining for himself this ambiguous title of a refined (cunning, versutus ) man; one is so named whose schemes and endeavours are directed to the doing of evil. One may also inversely find the turning-point of the warning in 8b: “he who projects deceitful plans against the welfare of others, finds his punishment in this, that he falls under public condemnation as a worthless intriguer” (Elster).
But מזמות is a ῥῆμα μέσον, vid . , Pro 5:2; the title is thus equivocal, and the turning-point lies in the bringing out of his kernel: מחשּׁב להרע = meditating to do evil.
Pro 24:9 This proverb is connected by זמת with Pro 24:8, and by אויל with Pro 24:7; it places the fool and the mocker over against one another. The undertaking of folly is sin; And an abomination to men is the scorner. Since it is certain that for 9b the subject is “the scorner,” so also “sin” is to be regarded as the subject of 9a. The special meaning flagitium , as Pro 21:27, זמּה will then not have here, but it derives it from the root-idea “to contrive, imagine,” and signifies first only the collection and forthputting of the thoughts towards a definite end (Job 17:11), particularly the refined preparation, the contrivance of a sinful act.
In a similar way we speak of a sinful beginning or undertaking. But if one regards sin in itself, or in its consequences, it is always a contrivance or desire of folly ( gen. subjecti ), or: one that bears on itself ( gen. qualitatis ) the character of folly; for it disturbs and destroys the relation of man to God and man, and rests, as Socrates in Plato says, on a false calculation.
And the mocker (the mocker at religion and virtue) is תועבת לאדם. The form of combination stands here before a word with ל, as at Job 18:2; Job 24:5, and frequently. but why does not the poet say directly תועבת אדם? Perhaps to leave room for the double sense, that the mocker is not only an abomination to men, viz. , to the better disposed; but also, for he makes others err as to their faith, and draws them into his frivolous thoughts, becomes to them a cause of abomination, i.
e. , of such conduct and of such thoughts as are an abomination before God (Pro 15:9, Pro 15:26).
Pro 24:10 The last of these four distichs stands without visible connection: Hast thou shown thyself slack in the day of adversity, Then is thy strength small. The perf. 10a is the hypothetic, vid . , at Pro 22:29. If a man shows himself remiss (Pro 18:9), i. e. , changeable, timorous, incapable of resisting in times of difficulty, then shall he draw therefrom the conclusion which is expressed in 10b.
Rightly Luther, with intentional generalization, “he is not strong who is not firm in need. ” But the address makes the proverb an earnest admonition, which speaks to him who shows himself weak the judgment which he has to pronounce on himself. And the paronomasia צרה and צר may be rendered, where possible, “if thy strength becomes, as it were, pressed together and bowed down by the difficulty just when it ought to show itself (viz.
, להרחיב לך), then it is limited, thou art a weakling. ” Thus Fleischer accordingly, translating: si segnis fueris die angustiae, angustae sunt vires tuae . Hitzig, on the contrary, corrects after Job 7:11, רוּחך “ Klemm (klamm) ist dein Mut ” [= strait is thy courage]. And why? Of כסה [strength], he remarks, one can say כשׁל [it is weak] (Psa 31:11), but scarcely צר [strait, straitened]; for force is exact, and only the region of its energy may be wide or narrow.
To this we answer, that certainly of strength in itself we cannot use the word כסה drow eht esu t in the sense here required; the confinement (limitation) may rather be, as with a stream, Isa 59:19, the increasing (heightening) of its intensity. But if the strength is in itself anything definite, then on the other hand its expression is something linear, and the force in view of its expression is that which is here called צר, i.
e. , not extending widely, not expanding, not inaccessible. צר is all to which narrow limits are applied. A little strength is limited, because it is little also in its expression.
Pro 24:11-12 Now, again, we meet with proverbs of several lines. The first here is a hexastich: 11 Deliver them that are taken to death, And them that are tottering to destruction, oh stop them! 12 If thou sayest, “We knew not of it indeed,” - It is not so: The Weigher of hearts, who sees through it, And He that observeth thy soul, He knoweth it, And requiteth man according to his work.
If אם is interpreted as a particle of adjuration, then אם־תּחשׂוך is equivalent to: I adjure thee, forbear not (cf. Neh 13:25 with Isa 58:1), viz. , that which thou hast to do, venture all on it (lxx, Syr. , Jerome). But the parallelism requires us to take together מטים להרג (such as with tottering steps are led forth to destruction) as object along with אם־תחשׂוך, as well as לקחים למּות (such as from their condition are carried away to death, cf.
Exo 14:11) as object to הצּל, in which all the old interpreters have recognised the imper . , but none the infin . ( eripere ... ne cesses , which is contrary to Heb. idiom, both in the position of the words and in the construction). אם also is not to be interpreted as an interrogative; for, thus expressed, an retinetis ought rather to have for the converse the meaning: thou shalt indeed not do it!
(cf. e. g. , Isa 29:16). And אם cannot be conditional: si prohibere poteris (Michaelis and others), for the fut. after אם has never the sense of a potential. Thus אם is, like לוּ, understood in the sense of utinam , as it is used not merely according to later custom (Hitzig), but from ancient times (cf. e. g. , Exo 32:32 with Gen 23:13). כּי־תאמר (reminding us of the same formula of the Rabbinical writings) introduces an objection, excuse, evasion, which is met by הלא; introducing “so say I on the contrary,” it is of itself a reply, vid .
, Deu 7:17. זה we will not have to interpret personally (lxx τοῦτον); for, since Pro 24:11 speaks of several of them, the neut. rendering (Syr. , Targ. , Venet . , Luther) in itself lies nearer, and זה, hoc , after ידע, is also in conformity with the usus loq . ; vid . , at Psa 56:10. But the neut. זה does not refer to the moral obligation expressed in Pro 24:11; to save human life when it is possible to do so, can be unknown to no one, wherefore Jerome (as if the words of the text were אין לאל ידנוּ זה): vires non suppetunt .
זה refers to the fact that men are led to the tribunal; only thus is explained the change of ידעתי, which was to be expected, into ידענוּ: the objection is, that one certainly did not know, viz. , that matters had come to an extremity with them, and that a short process will be made with them. To this excuse, with pretended ignorance, the reply of the omniscient God stands opposed, and suggests to him who makes the excuse to consider: It is not so: the Searcher of hearts ( vid .
, at Pro 16:2), He sees through it, viz. , what goes on in thy heart, and He has thy soul under His inspection (נצר, as Job 7:20 : lxx καὶ ὁ πλάσας; יצרו, which Hitzig prefers, for he thinks that נצר must be interpreted in the sense of to guard, preserve; Luther rightly); He knows, viz. , how it is with thy mind, He looks through it, He knows (cf. for both, Psa 139:1-4), and renders to man according to his conduct, which, without being deceived, He judges according to the state of the heart, out of which the conduct springs.
It is to be observed that Pro 24:11 speaks of one condemned to death generally, and not expressly of one innocently condemned, and makes no distinction between one condemned in war and in peace. One sees from this that the Chokma generally has no pleasure in this, that men are put to death by men, not even when it is done legally as punishment for a crime. For, on the one side, it is true that the punishment of the murderer by death is a law proceeding from the nature of the divine holiness and the inviolability of the divine ordinance, and the worth of man as formed in the image of God, and that the magistrate who disowns this law as a law, disowns the divine foundation of his office; but, on the other side, it is just as true that thousands and thousands of innocent persons, or at least persons not worthy of death, have fallen a sacrifice to the abuse or the false application of this law; and that along with the principle of recompensative righteousness, there is a principle of grace which rules in the kingdom of God, and is represented in the O.
T. by prophecy and the Chokma . It is, moreover, a noticeable fact, that God did not visit with the punishment of death the first murderer, the murderer of the innocent Abel, his brother, but let the principle of grace so far prevail instead of that of law, that He even protected his life against any avenger of blood. But after that the moral ruin of the human race had reached that height which brought the Deluge over the earth, there was promulgated to the post-diluvians the word of the law, Gen 9:6, sanctioning this inviolable right of putting to death by the hand of justice.
The conduct of God regulates itself thus according to the aspect of the times. In the Mosaic law the greatness of guilt was estimated not externally (cf. Num 35:31), but internally, a very flexible limitation in its practical bearings. And that under certain circumstances grace might have the precedence of justice, the parable having in view the pardon of Absalom (2 Sam 14) shows.
But a word from God, like Eze 18:23, raises grace to a principle, and the word with which Jesus (Joh 8:11) dismisses the adulteress is altogether an expression of this purpose of grace passing beyond the purpose of justice. In the later Jewish commonwealth, criminal justice was subordinated to the principle of predominating compassion; practical effect was given to the consideration of the value of human life during the trial, and even after the sentence was pronounced, and during a long time no sentence of death was passed by the Sanhedrim.
But Jesus, who was Himself the innocent victim of a fanatical legal murder, adjudged, it is true, the supremacy to the sword; but He preached and practised love, which publishes grace for justice. He was Himself incarnate Love, offering Himself for sinners, the Mercy which Jahve proclaims by Eze 18:23. The so-called Christian state [“ Citivas Dei ”] is indeed in manifest opposition to this.
But Augustine declares himself, on the supposition that the principle of grace must penetrate the new ear, in all its conditions, that began with Christianity, for the suspension of punishment by death, especially because the heathen magistrates had abused the instrument of death, which, according to divine right, they had control over, to the destruction of Christians; and Ambrosius went so far as to impress it as a duty on a Christian judge who had pronounced the sentence of death, to exclude himself from the Holy Supper. The magisterial control over life and death had at that time gone to the extreme height of bloody violence, and thus in a certain degree it destroyed itself.
Therefore Jansen changes the proverb (Pro 24:11) with the words of Ambrosius into the admonition: Quando indulgentia non nocet publico, eripe intercessione, eripe gratia tu sacerdos, aut tu imperator eripe subscriptionie indulgentiae . When Samuel Romilly’s Bill to abolish the punishment of death for a theft amounting to the sum of five shillings passed the English House of Commons, it was thrown out by a majority in the House of Lords.
Among those who voted against the Bill were one archbishop and five bishops. Our poet here in the Proverbs is of a different mind. Even the law of Sinai appoints the punishment of death only for man-stealing. The Mosaic code is incomparably milder than even yet the Carolina . In expressions, however, like the above, a true Christian spirit rules the spirit which condemns all blood-thirstiness of justice, and calls forth to a crusade not only against the inquisition, but also against such unmerciful, cruel executions even as they prevailed in Prussia in the name of law in the reign of Friedrich Wilhelm I, the Inexorable.
Pro 24:11-12 Now, again, we meet with proverbs of several lines. The first here is a hexastich: 11 Deliver them that are taken to death, And them that are tottering to destruction, oh stop them! 12 If thou sayest, “We knew not of it indeed,” - It is not so: The Weigher of hearts, who sees through it, And He that observeth thy soul, He knoweth it, And requiteth man according to his work.
If אם is interpreted as a particle of adjuration, then אם־תּחשׂוך is equivalent to: I adjure thee, forbear not (cf. Neh 13:25 with Isa 58:1), viz. , that which thou hast to do, venture all on it (lxx, Syr. , Jerome). But the parallelism requires us to take together מטים להרג (such as with tottering steps are led forth to destruction) as object along with אם־תחשׂוך, as well as לקחים למּות (such as from their condition are carried away to death, cf.
Exo 14:11) as object to הצּל, in which all the old interpreters have recognised the imper . , but none the infin . ( eripere ... ne cesses , which is contrary to Heb. idiom, both in the position of the words and in the construction). אם also is not to be interpreted as an interrogative; for, thus expressed, an retinetis ought rather to have for the converse the meaning: thou shalt indeed not do it!
(cf. e. g. , Isa 29:16). And אם cannot be conditional: si prohibere poteris (Michaelis and others), for the fut. after אם has never the sense of a potential. Thus אם is, like לוּ, understood in the sense of utinam , as it is used not merely according to later custom (Hitzig), but from ancient times (cf. e. g. , Exo 32:32 with Gen 23:13). כּי־תאמר (reminding us of the same formula of the Rabbinical writings) introduces an objection, excuse, evasion, which is met by הלא; introducing “so say I on the contrary,” it is of itself a reply, vid .
, Deu 7:17. זה we will not have to interpret personally (lxx τοῦτον); for, since Pro 24:11 speaks of several of them, the neut. rendering (Syr. , Targ. , Venet . , Luther) in itself lies nearer, and זה, hoc , after ידע, is also in conformity with the usus loq . ; vid . , at Psa 56:10. But the neut. זה does not refer to the moral obligation expressed in Pro 24:11; to save human life when it is possible to do so, can be unknown to no one, wherefore Jerome (as if the words of the text were אין לאל ידנוּ זה): vires non suppetunt .
זה refers to the fact that men are led to the tribunal; only thus is explained the change of ידעתי, which was to be expected, into ידענוּ: the objection is, that one certainly did not know, viz. , that matters had come to an extremity with them, and that a short process will be made with them. To this excuse, with pretended ignorance, the reply of the omniscient God stands opposed, and suggests to him who makes the excuse to consider: It is not so: the Searcher of hearts ( vid .
, at Pro 16:2), He sees through it, viz. , what goes on in thy heart, and He has thy soul under His inspection (נצר, as Job 7:20 : lxx καὶ ὁ πλάσας; יצרו, which Hitzig prefers, for he thinks that נצר must be interpreted in the sense of to guard, preserve; Luther rightly); He knows, viz. , how it is with thy mind, He looks through it, He knows (cf. for both, Psa 139:1-4), and renders to man according to his conduct, which, without being deceived, He judges according to the state of the heart, out of which the conduct springs.
It is to be observed that Pro 24:11 speaks of one condemned to death generally, and not expressly of one innocently condemned, and makes no distinction between one condemned in war and in peace. One sees from this that the Chokma generally has no pleasure in this, that men are put to death by men, not even when it is done legally as punishment for a crime. For, on the one side, it is true that the punishment of the murderer by death is a law proceeding from the nature of the divine holiness and the inviolability of the divine ordinance, and the worth of man as formed in the image of God, and that the magistrate who disowns this law as a law, disowns the divine foundation of his office; but, on the other side, it is just as true that thousands and thousands of innocent persons, or at least persons not worthy of death, have fallen a sacrifice to the abuse or the false application of this law; and that along with the principle of recompensative righteousness, there is a principle of grace which rules in the kingdom of God, and is represented in the O.
T. by prophecy and the Chokma . It is, moreover, a noticeable fact, that God did not visit with the punishment of death the first murderer, the murderer of the innocent Abel, his brother, but let the principle of grace so far prevail instead of that of law, that He even protected his life against any avenger of blood. But after that the moral ruin of the human race had reached that height which brought the Deluge over the earth, there was promulgated to the post-diluvians the word of the law, Gen 9:6, sanctioning this inviolable right of putting to death by the hand of justice.
The conduct of God regulates itself thus according to the aspect of the times. In the Mosaic law the greatness of guilt was estimated not externally (cf. Num 35:31), but internally, a very flexible limitation in its practical bearings. And that under certain circumstances grace might have the precedence of justice, the parable having in view the pardon of Absalom (2 Sam 14) shows.
But a word from God, like Eze 18:23, raises grace to a principle, and the word with which Jesus (Joh 8:11) dismisses the adulteress is altogether an expression of this purpose of grace passing beyond the purpose of justice. In the later Jewish commonwealth, criminal justice was subordinated to the principle of predominating compassion; practical effect was given to the consideration of the value of human life during the trial, and even after the sentence was pronounced, and during a long time no sentence of death was passed by the Sanhedrim.
But Jesus, who was Himself the innocent victim of a fanatical legal murder, adjudged, it is true, the supremacy to the sword; but He preached and practised love, which publishes grace for justice. He was Himself incarnate Love, offering Himself for sinners, the Mercy which Jahve proclaims by Eze 18:23. The so-called Christian state [“ Citivas Dei ”] is indeed in manifest opposition to this.
But Augustine declares himself, on the supposition that the principle of grace must penetrate the new ear, in all its conditions, that began with Christianity, for the suspension of punishment by death, especially because the heathen magistrates had abused the instrument of death, which, according to divine right, they had control over, to the destruction of Christians; and Ambrosius went so far as to impress it as a duty on a Christian judge who had pronounced the sentence of death, to exclude himself from the Holy Supper. The magisterial control over life and death had at that time gone to the extreme height of bloody violence, and thus in a certain degree it destroyed itself.
Therefore Jansen changes the proverb (Pro 24:11) with the words of Ambrosius into the admonition: Quando indulgentia non nocet publico, eripe intercessione, eripe gratia tu sacerdos, aut tu imperator eripe subscriptionie indulgentiae . When Samuel Romilly’s Bill to abolish the punishment of death for a theft amounting to the sum of five shillings passed the English House of Commons, it was thrown out by a majority in the House of Lords.
Among those who voted against the Bill were one archbishop and five bishops. Our poet here in the Proverbs is of a different mind. Even the law of Sinai appoints the punishment of death only for man-stealing. The Mosaic code is incomparably milder than even yet the Carolina . In expressions, however, like the above, a true Christian spirit rules the spirit which condemns all blood-thirstiness of justice, and calls forth to a crusade not only against the inquisition, but also against such unmerciful, cruel executions even as they prevailed in Prussia in the name of law in the reign of Friedrich Wilhelm I, the Inexorable.
Pro 24:13-14 The proverb now following stands in no obvious relation with the preceding. But in both a commencement is made with two lines, which contain, in the former, the principal thought; in this here, its reason: 13 My son, eat honey, for it is good, And honeycomb is sweet to thy taste. 14 So apprehend wisdom for thy soul; When thou hast found it, there is a future, And thy hope is not destroyed.
After its nearest fundamental thought, טוב, Arab. ṭejjib, means that which smells and tastes well; honey (דּבשׁ, from דּבשׁ, to be thick, consistent) has, besides, according to the old idea ( e. g. , in the Koran), healing virtue, as in general bitterness is viewed as a property of the poisonous, and sweetness that of the wholesome. נפתו is second accus. dependent on אכל־, for honey and honeycomb were then spoken of as different; נפת (from נפת, to pour, to flow out) is the purest honey (virgin-honey), flowing of itself out of the comb.
With right the accentuation takes 13b as independent, the substantival clause containing the reason, “for it is good:” honeycomb is sweet to thy taste, i. e. , applying itself to it with the impression of sweetness; על, as at Neh 2:5; Psa 16:6 (Hitzig). In the כּן of 14a, it is manifest that Pro 24:13 is not spoken for its own sake. To apprehend wisdom, is elsewhere equivalent to, to receive it into the mind, Pro 1:2; Ecc 1:17 (cf.
דעת בינה, Pro 4:1, and frequently), according to which Böttcher also here explains: learn to understand wisdom. But כן unfolds itself in 14bc: even as honey has for the body, so wisdom has for the soul, beneficent wholesome effects. דעה חכמה is thus not absolute, but is meant in relation to these effects. Rightly Fleischer: talem reputa ; Ewald: sic ( talem ) scito spaientiam ( esse ) animae tuae , know, recognise wisdom as something advantageous to thy soul, and worthy of commendation.
Incorrectly Hitzig explains אם־מצאת, “if the opportunity presents itself. ” Apart from this, that in such a case the words would rather have been כּי תמצא, to find wisdom is always equivalent to, to obtain it, to make it one’s own, Pro 3:13; Pro 8:35; cf. Pro 2:5; Pro 8:9. דּעה stands for דּעה, after the form רדה; שׁבה (after Böttcher, §396, not without the influence of the following commencing sound), cf.
the similar transitions of ā into ě placed together at Psa 20:4; the form דּעה is also found, but דּעה is the form in the Cod. Hilleli , as confirmed by Moses Kimchi in Comm. , and by David Kimchi, Michlol 101b. With ישׁו begins the apodosis (lxx, Jerome, Targ. , Luther, Rashi, Ewald, and others). In itself, וישׁ (cf. Gen 47:6) might also continue the conditional clause; but the explanation, si inveneris ( eam ) et ad postremum ventum erit (Fleischer, Bertheau, Zöckler), has this against it, that ישׁ אחרית does not mean: the end comes, but: there is an end, Pro 23:18; cf.
Pro 19:18; here: there is an end for thee, viz. , an issue that is a blessed reward. The promise is the same as at Pro 23:18. In our own language we speak of the hope of one being cut off; (Arab.) jaz'a, to be cut off, is equivalent to, to give oneself up to despair.
Pro 24:13-14 The proverb now following stands in no obvious relation with the preceding. But in both a commencement is made with two lines, which contain, in the former, the principal thought; in this here, its reason: 13 My son, eat honey, for it is good, And honeycomb is sweet to thy taste. 14 So apprehend wisdom for thy soul; When thou hast found it, there is a future, And thy hope is not destroyed.
After its nearest fundamental thought, טוב, Arab. ṭejjib, means that which smells and tastes well; honey (דּבשׁ, from דּבשׁ, to be thick, consistent) has, besides, according to the old idea ( e. g. , in the Koran), healing virtue, as in general bitterness is viewed as a property of the poisonous, and sweetness that of the wholesome. נפתו is second accus. dependent on אכל־, for honey and honeycomb were then spoken of as different; נפת (from נפת, to pour, to flow out) is the purest honey (virgin-honey), flowing of itself out of the comb.
With right the accentuation takes 13b as independent, the substantival clause containing the reason, “for it is good:” honeycomb is sweet to thy taste, i. e. , applying itself to it with the impression of sweetness; על, as at Neh 2:5; Psa 16:6 (Hitzig). In the כּן of 14a, it is manifest that Pro 24:13 is not spoken for its own sake. To apprehend wisdom, is elsewhere equivalent to, to receive it into the mind, Pro 1:2; Ecc 1:17 (cf.
דעת בינה, Pro 4:1, and frequently), according to which Böttcher also here explains: learn to understand wisdom. But כן unfolds itself in 14bc: even as honey has for the body, so wisdom has for the soul, beneficent wholesome effects. דעה חכמה is thus not absolute, but is meant in relation to these effects. Rightly Fleischer: talem reputa ; Ewald: sic ( talem ) scito spaientiam ( esse ) animae tuae , know, recognise wisdom as something advantageous to thy soul, and worthy of commendation.
Incorrectly Hitzig explains אם־מצאת, “if the opportunity presents itself. ” Apart from this, that in such a case the words would rather have been כּי תמצא, to find wisdom is always equivalent to, to obtain it, to make it one’s own, Pro 3:13; Pro 8:35; cf. Pro 2:5; Pro 8:9. דּעה stands for דּעה, after the form רדה; שׁבה (after Böttcher, §396, not without the influence of the following commencing sound), cf.
the similar transitions of ā into ě placed together at Psa 20:4; the form דּעה is also found, but דּעה is the form in the Cod. Hilleli , as confirmed by Moses Kimchi in Comm. , and by David Kimchi, Michlol 101b. With ישׁו begins the apodosis (lxx, Jerome, Targ. , Luther, Rashi, Ewald, and others). In itself, וישׁ (cf. Gen 47:6) might also continue the conditional clause; but the explanation, si inveneris ( eam ) et ad postremum ventum erit (Fleischer, Bertheau, Zöckler), has this against it, that ישׁ אחרית does not mean: the end comes, but: there is an end, Pro 23:18; cf.
Pro 19:18; here: there is an end for thee, viz. , an issue that is a blessed reward. The promise is the same as at Pro 23:18. In our own language we speak of the hope of one being cut off; (Arab.) jaz'a, to be cut off, is equivalent to, to give oneself up to despair.
Pro 24:15-16 15 Lie not in wait, oh wicked man, against the dwelling of the righteous; Assault not his resting-place. 16 For seven times doth the righteous fall and rise again, But the wicked are overthrown when calamity falls on them. The ארב [lying in wait] and שׁדּד [practising violence], against which the warning is here given, are not directed, as at Pro 1:11; Pro 19:26, immediately against the person, but against the dwelling-place and resting-place (רבץ, e.
g. , Jer 50:6, as also נוה, 3:33) of the righteous, who, on his part, does injustice and wrong to no one; the warning is against coveting his house, Exo 20:17, and driving him by cunning and violence out of it. Instead of רשׁע, Symmachus and Jerome have incorrectly read רשׁע daer, and from this misunderstanding have here introduced a sense without sense into Pro 24:15; many interpreters (Löwenstein, Ewald, Elster, and Zöckler) translate with Luther appositionally: as a wicked man, i.
e. , “with mischievous intent,” like one stealthily lurking for the opportunity of taking possession of the dwelling of another, as if this could be done with a good intent: רשׁע is the vocative (Syr. , Targ. , Venet . : ἀσεβές), and this address (cf. Psa 75:5.) sharpens the warning, for it names him who acts in this manner by the right name. The reason, 16a, sounds like an echo of Job 5:19.
שׁבע signifies, as at Psa 119:164, seven times; cf. מאה, Pro 17:10. וקם (not וקם) is perf. consec . , as וחי, e. g. , Gen 3:22 : and he rises afterwards (notwithstanding), but the transgressors come to ruin; בּרעה, if a misfortune befall them (cf. Pro 14:32), they stumble and fall, and rise no more.
Pro 24:15-16 15 Lie not in wait, oh wicked man, against the dwelling of the righteous; Assault not his resting-place. 16 For seven times doth the righteous fall and rise again, But the wicked are overthrown when calamity falls on them. The ארב [lying in wait] and שׁדּד [practising violence], against which the warning is here given, are not directed, as at Pro 1:11; Pro 19:26, immediately against the person, but against the dwelling-place and resting-place (רבץ, e.
g. , Jer 50:6, as also נוה, 3:33) of the righteous, who, on his part, does injustice and wrong to no one; the warning is against coveting his house, Exo 20:17, and driving him by cunning and violence out of it. Instead of רשׁע, Symmachus and Jerome have incorrectly read רשׁע daer, and from this misunderstanding have here introduced a sense without sense into Pro 24:15; many interpreters (Löwenstein, Ewald, Elster, and Zöckler) translate with Luther appositionally: as a wicked man, i.
e. , “with mischievous intent,” like one stealthily lurking for the opportunity of taking possession of the dwelling of another, as if this could be done with a good intent: רשׁע is the vocative (Syr. , Targ. , Venet . : ἀσεβές), and this address (cf. Psa 75:5.) sharpens the warning, for it names him who acts in this manner by the right name. The reason, 16a, sounds like an echo of Job 5:19.
שׁבע signifies, as at Psa 119:164, seven times; cf. מאה, Pro 17:10. וקם (not וקם) is perf. consec . , as וחי, e. g. , Gen 3:22 : and he rises afterwards (notwithstanding), but the transgressors come to ruin; בּרעה, if a misfortune befall them (cf. Pro 14:32), they stumble and fall, and rise no more.
Pro 24:17-18 Warning against a vindictive disposition, and joy over its satisfaction. 17 At the fall of thine enemy rejoice not, And at his overthrow let not thine heart be glad; 18 That Jahve see it not, and it be displeasing to Him, And He turns away His anger from Him. The Chethı̂b, which in itself, as the plur. of category, אויביך, might be tolerable, has 17b against it: with right, all interpreters adhere to the Kerı̂ אויבך (with i from ē in doubled close syllable, as in the like Kerı̂, 1Sa 24:5).
וּבבּשׁלו, for וּבהכּשׁלו, is the syncope usual in the inf . Niph . and Hiph . , which in Niph . occurs only once with the initial guttural (as בּעטף) or half guttural (לראות). רעו is not adj. here as at 1Sa 25:3, but perf . with the force of a fut . (Symmachus: καὶ μὴ ἀρέσῃ ἐνώπιον αὐτοῦ). The proverb extends the duty of love even to an enemy; for it requires that we do good to him and not evil, and warns against rejoicing when evil befalls him.
Hitzig, indeed, supposes that the noble morality which is expressed in Pro 24:17 is limited to a moderate extent by the motive assigned in 18b. Certainly the poet means to say that God could easily give a gracious turn for the better, as to the punishment of the wicked, to the decree of his anger against his enemy; but his meaning is not this, that one, from joy at the misfortune of others, ought to desist from interrupting the process of the destruction of his enemy, and let it go on to its end; but much rather, that one ought to abstain from this joy, so as not to experience the manifestation of God’s displeasure thereat, but His granting grace to him against whom we rejoice to see God’s anger go forth.
Pro 24:17-18 Warning against a vindictive disposition, and joy over its satisfaction. 17 At the fall of thine enemy rejoice not, And at his overthrow let not thine heart be glad; 18 That Jahve see it not, and it be displeasing to Him, And He turns away His anger from Him. The Chethı̂b, which in itself, as the plur. of category, אויביך, might be tolerable, has 17b against it: with right, all interpreters adhere to the Kerı̂ אויבך (with i from ē in doubled close syllable, as in the like Kerı̂, 1Sa 24:5).
וּבבּשׁלו, for וּבהכּשׁלו, is the syncope usual in the inf . Niph . and Hiph . , which in Niph . occurs only once with the initial guttural (as בּעטף) or half guttural (לראות). רעו is not adj. here as at 1Sa 25:3, but perf . with the force of a fut . (Symmachus: καὶ μὴ ἀρέσῃ ἐνώπιον αὐτοῦ). The proverb extends the duty of love even to an enemy; for it requires that we do good to him and not evil, and warns against rejoicing when evil befalls him.
Hitzig, indeed, supposes that the noble morality which is expressed in Pro 24:17 is limited to a moderate extent by the motive assigned in 18b. Certainly the poet means to say that God could easily give a gracious turn for the better, as to the punishment of the wicked, to the decree of his anger against his enemy; but his meaning is not this, that one, from joy at the misfortune of others, ought to desist from interrupting the process of the destruction of his enemy, and let it go on to its end; but much rather, that one ought to abstain from this joy, so as not to experience the manifestation of God’s displeasure thereat, but His granting grace to him against whom we rejoice to see God’s anger go forth.
Pro 24:19-20 Warning against envying the godless for their external prosperity: 19 Be not enraged on account of evil-doers, Envy not the godless; 20 For the wicked men shall have no future, The light of the godless is extinguished. Ver. 19 is a variation of Psa 37:1; cf. also Pro 3:21 (where with בכל־דרכיו following the traditional תבחר is more appropriate than תתחר, which Hupfeld would here insert).
תּתחר is fut. apoc . of התחרה, to be heated (to be indignant), distinguished from the Tiphel תּחרה, to be jealous. The ground and occasion of being enraged, and on the other side, of jealousy or envy, is the prosperity of the godless, Psa 73:3; cf. Jer 12:1. This anger at the apparently unrighteous division of fortune, this jealousy at the success in which the godless rejoice, rest on short-sightedness, which regards the present, and looks not on to the end.
אחרית, merely as in the expression 'ישׁ אח, 14b (cf. Psa 37:37), always denotes the happy, glorious issue indemnifying for past sufferings. Such an issue the wicked man has not; his light burns brightly on this side, but one day it is extinguished. In 20b is repeated Pro 13:9; cf. Pro 20:20.
Pro 24:19-20 Warning against envying the godless for their external prosperity: 19 Be not enraged on account of evil-doers, Envy not the godless; 20 For the wicked men shall have no future, The light of the godless is extinguished. Ver. 19 is a variation of Psa 37:1; cf. also Pro 3:21 (where with בכל־דרכיו following the traditional תבחר is more appropriate than תתחר, which Hupfeld would here insert).
תּתחר is fut. apoc . of התחרה, to be heated (to be indignant), distinguished from the Tiphel תּחרה, to be jealous. The ground and occasion of being enraged, and on the other side, of jealousy or envy, is the prosperity of the godless, Psa 73:3; cf. Jer 12:1. This anger at the apparently unrighteous division of fortune, this jealousy at the success in which the godless rejoice, rest on short-sightedness, which regards the present, and looks not on to the end.
אחרית, merely as in the expression 'ישׁ אח, 14b (cf. Psa 37:37), always denotes the happy, glorious issue indemnifying for past sufferings. Such an issue the wicked man has not; his light burns brightly on this side, but one day it is extinguished. In 20b is repeated Pro 13:9; cf. Pro 20:20.
Pro 24:21-22 A warning against rebellious thoughts against God and the king: 21 My son, honour Jahve and the king, And involve not thyself with those who are otherwise disposed; 22 For suddenly their calamity ariseth, And the end of their years, who knoweth it? The verb שׁנה, proceeding from the primary idea of folding ( complicare, duplicare ), signifies transitively to do twice, to repeat, Pro 17:9; Pro 26:11, according to which Kimchi here inappropriately thinks on relapsing; and intransitively, to change, to be different, Est 1:7; Est 3:8.
The Syr. and Targ. translate the word שׁטיי, fools; but the Kal (טעמו) שׁנה occurs, indeed, in the Syr. , but not in the Heb. , in the meaning alienata est ( mens ejus ); and besides, this meaning, alieni , is not appropriate here. A few, however, with Saadia (cf. Deutsch-Morgenländische Zeitschr . xxi. 616), the dualists (Manichees), understand it in a dogmatic sense; but then שׁונים must be denom.
of שׁנים, while much more it is its root-word. Either שׁונים means those who change, novantes = novarum rerum studiosi , which is, however, exposed to this objection, that the Heb. שׁנה, in the transitive sense to change, does not elsewhere occur; or it means, according to the usus loq . , diversos = diversum sentientes (C. B. Michaelis and others), and that with reference to 21a: הממרים דבריהם ומצותם (Meîri, Immanuel), or משׁנים מנהג החכמה (Ahron b.
Joseph). Thus they are called (for it is a common name of a particular class of men) dissidents, oppositionists, or revolutionaries, who recognise neither the monarchy of Jahve, the King of kings, nor that of the earthly king, which perhaps Jerome here means by the word detractoribus (= detractatoribus ). The Venet . incorrectly, σὺν τοῖς μισοῦσι, i. e. , שׂונאים.
with ב at Pro 14:10, התערב meant to mix oneself up with something, here with עם, to mix oneself with some one, i. e. , to make common cause with him. The reason assigned in Pro 24:22 is, that although such persons as reject by thought and action human and divine law may for a long time escape punishment, yet suddenly merited ruin falls on them. איד is, according to its primary signification, weighty, oppressive misfortune, vid .
, i. 27. In יקוּם it is thought of as hostile power (Hos 10:14); or the rising up of God as Judge ( e. g. , Isa 33:10) is transferred to the means of executing judgment. פּיד (= פּוד of פוד or פיד ro פו, Arab. fâd, fut. jafûdu or jafı̂du, a stronger power of bâd, cogn. אבד) is destruction (Arab. fied, fı̂d, death); this word occurs, besides here, only thrice in the Book of Job.
But to what does שׁניהם refer? Certainly not to Jahve and the king (lxx, Schultens, Umbreit, and Bertheau), for in itself it is doubtful to interpret the genit. after פיד as designating the subject, but improper to comprehend God and man under one cipher. Rather it may refer to two, of whom one class refuse to God, the other to the king, the honour that is due (Jerome, Luther, and at last Zöckler); but in the foregoing, two are not distinguished, and the want of reverence for God, and for the magistrates appointed by Him, is usually met with, because standing in interchangeable relationship, in one and the same persons.
Is there some misprint then in this word? Ewald suggests שׁניהם, i. e. , of those who show themselves as שׁונים ( altercatores ) towards God and the king. In view of קמיהם, Exo 32:25, this brevity of expression must be regarded as possible. But if this were the meaning of the word, then it ought to have stood in the first member (איד שׁניהם), and not in the second.
No other conjecture presents itself. Thus שׁניהם is perhaps to be referred to the שׁונים, and those who engage with them: join thyself not with the opposers; for suddenly misfortune will come upon them, and the destruction of both (of themselves and their partisans), who knows it? But that also is not satisfactory, for after the address שׁניכם was to have been expected, 22b.
Nothing remains, therefore, but to understand שׁניהם, with the Syr. and Targ. , as at Job 36:11; the proverb falls into rhythms פּתאם and פּיד, שׁונים and שׁניהם. But “the end of their year” is not equivalent to the hour of their death (Hitzig), because for this פּידם (cf. Arab. feid and fı̂d, death) was necessary; but to the expiring, the vanishing, the passing by of the year during which they have succeeded in maintaining their ground and playing a part.
There will commence a time which no one knows beforehand when all is over with them. In this sense, “who knoweth,” with its object, is equivalent to “suddenly ariseth,” with its subject. In the lxx, after Pro 24:22, there follow one distich of the relations of man to the word of God as deciding their fate, one distich of fidelity as a duty towards the king, and the duty of the king, and one pentastich or hexastich of the power of the tongue and of the anger of the king.
The Heb. text knows nothing of these three proverbs. Ewald has, Jahrb . xi. 18f. , attempted to translate them into Heb. , and is of opinion that they are worthy of being regarded as original component parts of chap. 1-29, and that they ought certainly to have come in after Pro 24:22. We doubt this originality, but recognise their translation from the Heb. Then follows in the lxx the series of Prov; Pro 30:1-14, which in the Heb.
text bear the superscription of “the Words of Agur;” the second half of the “Words of Agur,” together with the “Words of Lemuel,” stand after Pro 24:34 of the Heb. text. The state of the matter is this, that in the copy from which the Alexandrines translated the Appendix 30:1-31:9, stood half of it, after the “Words of the Wise” [which extend from Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22], and half after the supplement headed “these also are from wise men” [Pro 24:23-34], so that only the proverbial ode in praise of the excellent matron [Pro 31:10] remains as an appendix to the Book of Hezekiah’s collection, chap.
25-29.
Pro 24:21-22 A warning against rebellious thoughts against God and the king: 21 My son, honour Jahve and the king, And involve not thyself with those who are otherwise disposed; 22 For suddenly their calamity ariseth, And the end of their years, who knoweth it? The verb שׁנה, proceeding from the primary idea of folding ( complicare, duplicare ), signifies transitively to do twice, to repeat, Pro 17:9; Pro 26:11, according to which Kimchi here inappropriately thinks on relapsing; and intransitively, to change, to be different, Est 1:7; Est 3:8.
The Syr. and Targ. translate the word שׁטיי, fools; but the Kal (טעמו) שׁנה occurs, indeed, in the Syr. , but not in the Heb. , in the meaning alienata est ( mens ejus ); and besides, this meaning, alieni , is not appropriate here. A few, however, with Saadia (cf. Deutsch-Morgenländische Zeitschr . xxi. 616), the dualists (Manichees), understand it in a dogmatic sense; but then שׁונים must be denom.
of שׁנים, while much more it is its root-word. Either שׁונים means those who change, novantes = novarum rerum studiosi , which is, however, exposed to this objection, that the Heb. שׁנה, in the transitive sense to change, does not elsewhere occur; or it means, according to the usus loq . , diversos = diversum sentientes (C. B. Michaelis and others), and that with reference to 21a: הממרים דבריהם ומצותם (Meîri, Immanuel), or משׁנים מנהג החכמה (Ahron b.
Joseph). Thus they are called (for it is a common name of a particular class of men) dissidents, oppositionists, or revolutionaries, who recognise neither the monarchy of Jahve, the King of kings, nor that of the earthly king, which perhaps Jerome here means by the word detractoribus (= detractatoribus ). The Venet . incorrectly, σὺν τοῖς μισοῦσι, i. e. , שׂונאים.
with ב at Pro 14:10, התערב meant to mix oneself up with something, here with עם, to mix oneself with some one, i. e. , to make common cause with him. The reason assigned in Pro 24:22 is, that although such persons as reject by thought and action human and divine law may for a long time escape punishment, yet suddenly merited ruin falls on them. איד is, according to its primary signification, weighty, oppressive misfortune, vid .
, i. 27. In יקוּם it is thought of as hostile power (Hos 10:14); or the rising up of God as Judge ( e. g. , Isa 33:10) is transferred to the means of executing judgment. פּיד (= פּוד of פוד or פיד ro פו, Arab. fâd, fut. jafûdu or jafı̂du, a stronger power of bâd, cogn. אבד) is destruction (Arab. fied, fı̂d, death); this word occurs, besides here, only thrice in the Book of Job.
But to what does שׁניהם refer? Certainly not to Jahve and the king (lxx, Schultens, Umbreit, and Bertheau), for in itself it is doubtful to interpret the genit. after פיד as designating the subject, but improper to comprehend God and man under one cipher. Rather it may refer to two, of whom one class refuse to God, the other to the king, the honour that is due (Jerome, Luther, and at last Zöckler); but in the foregoing, two are not distinguished, and the want of reverence for God, and for the magistrates appointed by Him, is usually met with, because standing in interchangeable relationship, in one and the same persons.
Is there some misprint then in this word? Ewald suggests שׁניהם, i. e. , of those who show themselves as שׁונים ( altercatores ) towards God and the king. In view of קמיהם, Exo 32:25, this brevity of expression must be regarded as possible. But if this were the meaning of the word, then it ought to have stood in the first member (איד שׁניהם), and not in the second.
No other conjecture presents itself. Thus שׁניהם is perhaps to be referred to the שׁונים, and those who engage with them: join thyself not with the opposers; for suddenly misfortune will come upon them, and the destruction of both (of themselves and their partisans), who knows it? But that also is not satisfactory, for after the address שׁניכם was to have been expected, 22b.
Nothing remains, therefore, but to understand שׁניהם, with the Syr. and Targ. , as at Job 36:11; the proverb falls into rhythms פּתאם and פּיד, שׁונים and שׁניהם. But “the end of their year” is not equivalent to the hour of their death (Hitzig), because for this פּידם (cf. Arab. feid and fı̂d, death) was necessary; but to the expiring, the vanishing, the passing by of the year during which they have succeeded in maintaining their ground and playing a part.
There will commence a time which no one knows beforehand when all is over with them. In this sense, “who knoweth,” with its object, is equivalent to “suddenly ariseth,” with its subject. In the lxx, after Pro 24:22, there follow one distich of the relations of man to the word of God as deciding their fate, one distich of fidelity as a duty towards the king, and the duty of the king, and one pentastich or hexastich of the power of the tongue and of the anger of the king.
The Heb. text knows nothing of these three proverbs. Ewald has, Jahrb . xi. 18f. , attempted to translate them into Heb. , and is of opinion that they are worthy of being regarded as original component parts of chap. 1-29, and that they ought certainly to have come in after Pro 24:22. We doubt this originality, but recognise their translation from the Heb. Then follows in the lxx the series of Prov; Pro 30:1-14, which in the Heb.
text bear the superscription of “the Words of Agur;” the second half of the “Words of Agur,” together with the “Words of Lemuel,” stand after Pro 24:34 of the Heb. text. The state of the matter is this, that in the copy from which the Alexandrines translated the Appendix 30:1-31:9, stood half of it, after the “Words of the Wise” [which extend from Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22], and half after the supplement headed “these also are from wise men” [Pro 24:23-34], so that only the proverbial ode in praise of the excellent matron [Pro 31:10] remains as an appendix to the Book of Hezekiah’s collection, chap.
25-29.
Pro 24:23-25 The curse of partiality and the blessing of impartiality: Respect of persons in judgment is by no means good: 24 He that saith to the guilty, “Thou art in the right,” Him the people curse, nations detest. 25 But to them who rightly decide, it is well, And upon them cometh blessing with good. Partiality is either called שׂאת פנים, Pro 18:5, respect to the person, for the partisan looks with pleasure on the פני, the countenance, appearance, personality of one, by way of preference; or הכּר־פּנים, as here and at Pro 28:21, for he places one person before another in his sight, or, as we say, has a regard to him; the latter expression is found in Deu 1:17; Deu 16:19.
הכּיר ( vid . , Pro 20:11) means to regard sharply, whether from interest in the object, or because it is strange. בּל Heidenheim regards as weaker than לא; but the reverse is the case ( vid . , vol. i. p. 204), as is seen from the derivation of this negative (= balj, from בּלה, to melt, to decay); thus it does not occur anywhere else than here with the pred.
adj. The two supplements delight in this בל, Deu 22:29; Deu 23:7, 35. The thesis 23b is now confirmed in Pro 24:24 and Pro 24:25, from the consequences of this partiality and its opposite: He that saith (אמר, with Mehuppach Legarmeh from the last syllable, as rightly by Athias, Nissel, and Michaelis, vid . , Thorath Emeth , p. 32) to the guilty: thou art right, i.
e. , he who sets the guilty free (for רשׁע and צדּיק have here the forensic sense of the post-bibl. חיּב and זכּי), him they curse, etc. ; cf. the shorter proverb, Pro 17:15, according to which a partial, unjust judge is an abomination to God. Regarding נקב (קבב) here and at Pro 11:26, Schultens, under Job 3:8, is right; the word signifies figere , and hence to distinguish and make prominent by distinguishing as well as by branding; cf.
defigere , to curse, properly, to pierce through. Regarding זעם, vid . , at Pro 22:14. עמּים and לאמּים (from עמם and לאם, which both mean to bind and combine) are plur. of categ. : not merely individuals, not merely families, curse such an unrighteous judge and abhor him, but the whole people in all conditions and ranks of society; for even though such an unjust judge bring himself and his favourites to external honour, yet among no people is conscience so blunted, that he who absolves the crime and ennobles the miscarriage of justice shall escape the vox populi .
On the contrary, it goes well (ינעם, like Pro 2:10; Pro 9:17, but here with neut. indef. subj. as ייטב, Gen 12:13, and frequently) with those who place the right, and particularly the wrong, fully to view; מוכיח is he who mediates the right, Job 9:33, and particularly who proves, censures, punishes the wrong, Pro 9:7, and in the character of a judge as here, Amo 5:10; Isa 29:21.
The genitive connection ברכּת־טוב is not altogether of the same signification as יין הטּוב, wine of a good sort, Sol 7:10, and אושׁת רע, a woman of a bad kind, Pro 6:24, for every blessing is of a good kind; the gen. טוב thus, as at Psa 21:4, denotes the contents of the blessing; cf. Eph 1:3, “with all spiritual blessings,” in which the manifoldness of the blessing is presupposed.
Pro 24:23-25 The curse of partiality and the blessing of impartiality: Respect of persons in judgment is by no means good: 24 He that saith to the guilty, “Thou art in the right,” Him the people curse, nations detest. 25 But to them who rightly decide, it is well, And upon them cometh blessing with good. Partiality is either called שׂאת פנים, Pro 18:5, respect to the person, for the partisan looks with pleasure on the פני, the countenance, appearance, personality of one, by way of preference; or הכּר־פּנים, as here and at Pro 28:21, for he places one person before another in his sight, or, as we say, has a regard to him; the latter expression is found in Deu 1:17; Deu 16:19.
הכּיר ( vid . , Pro 20:11) means to regard sharply, whether from interest in the object, or because it is strange. בּל Heidenheim regards as weaker than לא; but the reverse is the case ( vid . , vol. i. p. 204), as is seen from the derivation of this negative (= balj, from בּלה, to melt, to decay); thus it does not occur anywhere else than here with the pred.
adj. The two supplements delight in this בל, Deu 22:29; Deu 23:7, 35. The thesis 23b is now confirmed in Pro 24:24 and Pro 24:25, from the consequences of this partiality and its opposite: He that saith (אמר, with Mehuppach Legarmeh from the last syllable, as rightly by Athias, Nissel, and Michaelis, vid . , Thorath Emeth , p. 32) to the guilty: thou art right, i.
e. , he who sets the guilty free (for רשׁע and צדּיק have here the forensic sense of the post-bibl. חיּב and זכּי), him they curse, etc. ; cf. the shorter proverb, Pro 17:15, according to which a partial, unjust judge is an abomination to God. Regarding נקב (קבב) here and at Pro 11:26, Schultens, under Job 3:8, is right; the word signifies figere , and hence to distinguish and make prominent by distinguishing as well as by branding; cf.
defigere , to curse, properly, to pierce through. Regarding זעם, vid . , at Pro 22:14. עמּים and לאמּים (from עמם and לאם, which both mean to bind and combine) are plur. of categ. : not merely individuals, not merely families, curse such an unrighteous judge and abhor him, but the whole people in all conditions and ranks of society; for even though such an unjust judge bring himself and his favourites to external honour, yet among no people is conscience so blunted, that he who absolves the crime and ennobles the miscarriage of justice shall escape the vox populi .
On the contrary, it goes well (ינעם, like Pro 2:10; Pro 9:17, but here with neut. indef. subj. as ייטב, Gen 12:13, and frequently) with those who place the right, and particularly the wrong, fully to view; מוכיח is he who mediates the right, Job 9:33, and particularly who proves, censures, punishes the wrong, Pro 9:7, and in the character of a judge as here, Amo 5:10; Isa 29:21.
The genitive connection ברכּת־טוב is not altogether of the same signification as יין הטּוב, wine of a good sort, Sol 7:10, and אושׁת רע, a woman of a bad kind, Pro 6:24, for every blessing is of a good kind; the gen. טוב thus, as at Psa 21:4, denotes the contents of the blessing; cf. Eph 1:3, “with all spiritual blessings,” in which the manifoldness of the blessing is presupposed.
Pro 24:23-25 The curse of partiality and the blessing of impartiality: Respect of persons in judgment is by no means good: 24 He that saith to the guilty, “Thou art in the right,” Him the people curse, nations detest. 25 But to them who rightly decide, it is well, And upon them cometh blessing with good. Partiality is either called שׂאת פנים, Pro 18:5, respect to the person, for the partisan looks with pleasure on the פני, the countenance, appearance, personality of one, by way of preference; or הכּר־פּנים, as here and at Pro 28:21, for he places one person before another in his sight, or, as we say, has a regard to him; the latter expression is found in Deu 1:17; Deu 16:19.
הכּיר ( vid . , Pro 20:11) means to regard sharply, whether from interest in the object, or because it is strange. בּל Heidenheim regards as weaker than לא; but the reverse is the case ( vid . , vol. i. p. 204), as is seen from the derivation of this negative (= balj, from בּלה, to melt, to decay); thus it does not occur anywhere else than here with the pred.
adj. The two supplements delight in this בל, Deu 22:29; Deu 23:7, 35. The thesis 23b is now confirmed in Pro 24:24 and Pro 24:25, from the consequences of this partiality and its opposite: He that saith (אמר, with Mehuppach Legarmeh from the last syllable, as rightly by Athias, Nissel, and Michaelis, vid . , Thorath Emeth , p. 32) to the guilty: thou art right, i.
e. , he who sets the guilty free (for רשׁע and צדּיק have here the forensic sense of the post-bibl. חיּב and זכּי), him they curse, etc. ; cf. the shorter proverb, Pro 17:15, according to which a partial, unjust judge is an abomination to God. Regarding נקב (קבב) here and at Pro 11:26, Schultens, under Job 3:8, is right; the word signifies figere , and hence to distinguish and make prominent by distinguishing as well as by branding; cf.
defigere , to curse, properly, to pierce through. Regarding זעם, vid . , at Pro 22:14. עמּים and לאמּים (from עמם and לאם, which both mean to bind and combine) are plur. of categ. : not merely individuals, not merely families, curse such an unrighteous judge and abhor him, but the whole people in all conditions and ranks of society; for even though such an unjust judge bring himself and his favourites to external honour, yet among no people is conscience so blunted, that he who absolves the crime and ennobles the miscarriage of justice shall escape the vox populi .
On the contrary, it goes well (ינעם, like Pro 2:10; Pro 9:17, but here with neut. indef. subj. as ייטב, Gen 12:13, and frequently) with those who place the right, and particularly the wrong, fully to view; מוכיח is he who mediates the right, Job 9:33, and particularly who proves, censures, punishes the wrong, Pro 9:7, and in the character of a judge as here, Amo 5:10; Isa 29:21.
The genitive connection ברכּת־טוב is not altogether of the same signification as יין הטּוב, wine of a good sort, Sol 7:10, and אושׁת רע, a woman of a bad kind, Pro 6:24, for every blessing is of a good kind; the gen. טוב thus, as at Psa 21:4, denotes the contents of the blessing; cf. Eph 1:3, “with all spiritual blessings,” in which the manifoldness of the blessing is presupposed.
Pro 24:26 Then follows a distich with the watchword נצחים: 26 He kisseth the lips Who for the end giveth a right answer. The lxx, Syr. , and Targ. translate: one kisseth the lips who, or: of those who... ; but such a meaning is violently forced into the word (in that case the expression would have been שׂפתי משׁיב or שׂפתים משׁיבים). Equally impossible is Theodotion’s χείλεσι καταφιληθήσεται, for ישּׁק cannot be the fut.
Niph . Nor is it: lips kiss him who... (Rashi); for, to be thus understood, the word ought to have been למשׁיב. משׁיב is naturally to be taken as the subj. , and thus it supplies the meaning: he who kisseth the lips giveth an excellent answer, viz. , the lips of him whom the answer concerns (Jerome, Venet . , Luther). But Hitzig ingeniously, “the words reach from the lips of the speaker to the ears of the hearer, and thus he kisses his ear with his lips.
” But since to kiss the ear is not a custom, not even with the Florentines, then a welcome answer, if its impression is to be compared to a kiss, is compared to a kiss on the lips. Hitzig himself translates: he commends himself with the lips who... ; but נשׁק may mean to join oneself, Gen 41:40, as kissing is equivalent to the joining of the lips; it does not mean intrans.
to cringe. Rather the explanation: he who joins the lips together... ; for he, viz. , before reflecting, closed his lips together (suggested by Meîri); but נשׁק, with שׂפתים, brings the idea of kissing, labra labris jungere , far nearer. This prevails against Schultens’ armatus est ( erit ) labia , besides נשׁק, certainly, from the primary idea of connecting (laying together) ( vid .
, Psa 78:9), to equip (arm) oneself therewith; but the meaning arising from thence: with the lips he arms himself... is direct nonsense. Fleischer is essentially right, Labra osculatur ( i. e. , quasi osculum oblatum reddit ) qui congrua respondet . Only the question has nothing to do with a kiss; but if he who asks receives a satisfactory answer, an enlightening counsel, he experiences it as if he received a kiss.
The Midrash incorrectly remarks under דּברים נצחים, “words of merited denunciation,” according to which the Syr. translates. Words are meant which are corresponding to the matter and the circumstances, and suitable for the end (cf. Pro 8:9). Such words are like as if the lips of the inquirer received a kiss from the lips of the answerer.
Pro 24:27 Warning against the establishing of a household where the previous conditions are wanting: Set in order thy work without, And make it ready for thyself beforehand in the fields, - After that then mayest thou build thine house. The interchange of בּחוּץ and בּשּׂדה shows that by מלאכת השּׂדה field-labour, 1Ch 27:26, is meant. הכין, used of arrangement, procuring, here with מלאכה, signifies the setting in order of the word, viz.
, the cultivation of the field. In the parallel member, עתּדה, carrying also its object, in itself is admissible: make preparations (lxx, Syr.) ; but the punctuation עתּדהּ (Targ. , Venet . ; on the other hand, Jerome and Luther translate as if the words were ועתדה השּׂדה) is not worthy of being contended against: set it (the work) in the fields in readiness, i.
e. , on the one hand set forward the present necessary work, and on the other hand prepare for that which next follows; thus: do completely and circumspectly what thy calling as a husbandman requires of thee - then mayest thou go to the building and building up of thy house ( vid . , at Pro 24:3, Pro 14:1), to which not only the building and setting in order of a convenient dwelling, but also the bringing home of a housewife and the whole setting up of a household belongs; prosperity at home is conditioned by this - one fulfils his duty without in the fields actively and faithfully.
One begins at the wrong end when he begins with the building of his house, which is much rather the result and goal of an intelligent discharge of duty within the sphere of one’s calling. The perf . , with ו after a date, such as אחר, עוד מעט, and the like, when things that will or should be done are spoken of, has the fut. signification of a perf. consec . , Gen 3:5; Exo 16:6.
, Pro 17:4; Ewald, §344b.
Pro 24:28 Warning against unnecessary witnessing to the disadvantage of another: Never be a causeless witness against thy neighbour; And shouldest thou use deceit with thy lips? The phrase עד־חנּם does not mean a witness who appears against his neighbour without knowledge of the facts of the case, but one who has no substantial reason for his giving of testimony; חנּם means groundless, with reference to the occasion and motive, Pro 3:30; Pro 23:29; Pro 26:2.
Other designations stood for false witnesses (lxx, Syr. , Targ.) Rightly Jerome, the Venet . , and Luther, without, however, rendering the gen. connection עד־חנם, as it might have been by the adj. In 28b, Chajûg derives והפתּית from פּתת, to break in pieces, to crumble; for he remarks it might stand, with the passing over of ô into î , for והפתּות [and thou wilt whisper].
But the ancients had no acquaintance with the laws of sound, and therefore with naive arbitrariness regarded all as possible; and Böttcher, indeed, maintains that the Hiphil of פתת may be הפתּית as well as הפתּות; but the former of these forms with î could only be metaplastically possible, and would be הפתּית ( vid . , Hitzig under Jer 11:20). And what can this Hiph .
of פתת mean? “To crumble” one’s neighbours (Chajûg) is an unheard of expression; and the meanings, to throw out crumbs, viz. , crumbs of words (Böttcher), or to speak with a broken, subdued voice (Hitzig), are extracted from the rare Arab. fatâfit (faṭafiṭ), for which the lexicographers note the meaning of a secret, moaning sound. When we see והפתית standing along with בּשׂפתיך, then before all we are led to think of פתה [to open], Pro 20:19; Ps.
73:36. But we stumble at the interrog. ה, which nowhere else appears connected with ו. Ewald therefore purposes to read והפתּית [and will open wide] (lxx μηδὲ πλατύνου): “that thou usest treachery with thy lips;” but from הפתה, to make wide open, Gen 9:27, “to use treachery” is, only for the flight of imagination, not too wide a distance. On וה, et num , one need not stumble; והלוא, 2Sa 15:35, shows that the connection of a question by means of ו is not inadmissible; Ewald himself takes notice that in the Arab.
the connection of the interrogatives 'a and hal with w and f is quite common; and thus he reaches the explanation: wilt thou befool then by thy lips, i. e. , pollute by deceit, by inconsiderate, wanton testimony against others? This is the right explanation, which Ewald hesitates about only from the fact that the interrog. ה comes in between the ו consec . and its perf .
, a thing which is elsewhere unheard of. But this difficulty is removed by the syntactic observation, that the perf . after interrogatives has often the modal colouring of a conj. or optative, e. g. , after the interrog. pronoun, Gen 21:7, quis dixerit , and after the interrogative particle, as here and at 2Ki 20:9, iveritne , where it is to be supplied ( vid .
, at Isa 38:8). Thus: et num persuaseris ( deceperis ) labiis tuis , and shouldest thou practise slander with thy lips, for thou bringest thy neighbour, without need, by thy uncalled for rashness, into disrepute? “It is a question, âl'nakar (cf. Pro 23:5), for which 'a (not hal), in the usual Arab. interrogative: how, thou wouldest? one then permits the inquirer to draw the negative answer: “No, I will not do it” (Fleischer).
Pro 24:29 The following proverb is connected as to its subject with the foregoing: one ought not to do evil to his neighbour without necessity; even evil which has been done to one must not be requited with evil: Say not, “As he hath done to me, so I do to him: I requite the man according to his conduct. ” On the ground of public justice, the talio is certainly the nearest form of punishment, Lev 24:19.
; but even here the Sinaitic law does not remain in the retortion of the injury according to its external form (it is in a certain manner practicable only with regard to injury done to the person and to property), but places in its stead an atonement measured and limited after a higher point of view. On pure moral grounds, the jus talionis (“as thou to me, so I to thee”) has certainly no validity.
Here he to whom injustice is done ought to commit his case to God, Pro 20:22, and to oppose to evil, not evil but good; he ought not to set himself up as a judge, nor to act as one standing on a war-footing with his neighbour (Jdg 15:11); but to take God as his example, who treats the sinner, if only he seeks it, not in the way of justice, but of grace (Exo 34:6.) The expression 29b reminds of Pro 24:12.
Instead of לאדם, there is used here, where the speaker points to a definite person, the phrase לאישׁ. Jerome, the Venet . , and Luther translate: to each one, as if the word were vocalized thus, לאישׁ (Ps. 62:13).
Pro 24:30-34 A Mashal ode of the slothful, in the form of a record of experiences, concludes this second supplement ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17): 30 The field of a slothful man I came past, And the vineyard of a man devoid of understanding. 31 And, lo! it was wholly filled up with thorns; Its face was covered with nettles; And its wall of stones was broken down.
32 But I looked and directed my attention to it; I saw it, and took instruction from it: 33 “A little sleep, a little slumber, A little folding of the hands to rest. 34 Then cometh thy poverty apace, And thy want as an armed man. ” The line 29b with לאישׁ is followed by one with אישׁ. The form of the narrative in which this warning against drowsy slothfulness is clothed, is like Psa 37:35.
The distinguishing of different classes of men by אישׁ and אדם (cf. Pro 24:20) is common in proverbial poetry. עברתּי, at the close of the first parallel member, retains its Pathach unchanged. The description: and, lo! (הנּהו, with Pazer , after Thorath Emeth , p. 34, Anm. 2) it was... refers to the vineyard, for נדר אבניו (its stone wall, like Isa 2:20, “its idols of silver”) is, like Num 22:24; Isa 5:5, the fencing in of the vineyard.
עלה כלּו, totus excreverat ( in carduos ), refers to this as subject, cf. in Ausonius: apex vitibus assurgit ; the Heb. construction is as Isa 5:6; Isa 34:13; Gesen. §133, 1, Anm. 2. The sing. קמּשׁון of קמּשׁונים does not occur; perhaps it means properly the weed which one tears up to cast it aside, for (Arab.) kumâsh is matter dug out of the ground. The ancients interpret it by urticae ; and חרוּל, plur.
חרלּים (as from חרל), R. חר, to burn, appears, indeed, to be the name of the nettle; the botanical name (Arab.) khullar (beans, pease, at least a leguminous plant) is from its sound not Arab. , and thus lies remote. The Pual כּסּוּ sounds like Psa 80:11 (cf. כּלּוּ, Psa 72:20); the position of the words is as this passage of the Psalm; the Syr. , Targ. , Jerome, and the Venet .
render the construction actively, as if the word were כּסּוּ. In Pro 24:32, Hitzig proposes to read ואחזה: and I stopped (stood still); but אחז is trans. , not only at Ecc 7:9, but also at Ecc 2:15 : to hold anything fast; not: to hold oneself still. And for what purpose the change? A contemplating and looking at a thing, with which the turning and standing near is here connected, manifestly includes a standing still; ראיתי, after ואחזה, is, as commonly after הביט ( e.
g. , Job 35:5, cf. Isa 42:18), the expression of a lingering looking at an object after the attention has been directed to it. In modern impressions, ואחזה אנכי are incorrectly accentuated; the old editions have rightly ואחזה with Rebîa ; for not אנכי 'וא, but אנכי אשׁית are connected. In Pro 8:17, this prominence of the personal pronoun serves for the expression of reciprocity; elsewhere, as e.
g. , Gen 21:24; 2Ki 6:3, and particularly, frequently in Hosea, this circumstantiality does not make the subject prominent, but the action; here the suitable extension denotes that he rightly makes his comments at leisure (Hitzig). שׁית לב is, as at Pro 22:17, the turning of attention and reflection; elsewhere לקח מוּסר, to receive a moral, Pro 8:10, Jer 7:28, is here equivalent to, to abstract, deduce one from a fact, to take to oneself a lesson from it.
In Pro 24:33 and Pro 24:34 there is a repetition of Pro 6:9-10. Thus, as Pro 24:33 expresses, the sluggard speaks to whom the neglected piece of ground belongs, and Pro 24:34 places before him the result. Instead of כמהלּך of the original passage [Pro 6:9-10], here מתהלך, of the coming of poverty like an avenging Nemesis; and instead of וּמחסרך, here וּמחסריך (the Cod.
Jaman . has it without the י), which might be the plene written pausal form of the sing. ( vid . , at Pro 6:3, cf. Pro 6:11), but is more surely regarded as the plur. : thy deficits, or wants; for to thee at one time this, and at another time that, and finally all things will be wanting. Regarding the variants ראשׁך and רישׁך (with א in the original passage, here in the borrowed passage with י), vid .
, at Pro 10:4. כּאישׁ מגן is translated in the lxx by ὥσπερ ἀγαθὸς δρομεύς ( vid . , at Pro 6:11); the Syr. and Targ. make from it a גּברא טבלרא, tabellarius , a letter-carrier, coming with the speed of a courier.
Pro 24:30-34 A Mashal ode of the slothful, in the form of a record of experiences, concludes this second supplement ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17): 30 The field of a slothful man I came past, And the vineyard of a man devoid of understanding. 31 And, lo! it was wholly filled up with thorns; Its face was covered with nettles; And its wall of stones was broken down.
32 But I looked and directed my attention to it; I saw it, and took instruction from it: 33 “A little sleep, a little slumber, A little folding of the hands to rest. 34 Then cometh thy poverty apace, And thy want as an armed man. ” The line 29b with לאישׁ is followed by one with אישׁ. The form of the narrative in which this warning against drowsy slothfulness is clothed, is like Psa 37:35.
The distinguishing of different classes of men by אישׁ and אדם (cf. Pro 24:20) is common in proverbial poetry. עברתּי, at the close of the first parallel member, retains its Pathach unchanged. The description: and, lo! (הנּהו, with Pazer , after Thorath Emeth , p. 34, Anm. 2) it was... refers to the vineyard, for נדר אבניו (its stone wall, like Isa 2:20, “its idols of silver”) is, like Num 22:24; Isa 5:5, the fencing in of the vineyard.
עלה כלּו, totus excreverat ( in carduos ), refers to this as subject, cf. in Ausonius: apex vitibus assurgit ; the Heb. construction is as Isa 5:6; Isa 34:13; Gesen. §133, 1, Anm. 2. The sing. קמּשׁון of קמּשׁונים does not occur; perhaps it means properly the weed which one tears up to cast it aside, for (Arab.) kumâsh is matter dug out of the ground. The ancients interpret it by urticae ; and חרוּל, plur.
חרלּים (as from חרל), R. חר, to burn, appears, indeed, to be the name of the nettle; the botanical name (Arab.) khullar (beans, pease, at least a leguminous plant) is from its sound not Arab. , and thus lies remote. The Pual כּסּוּ sounds like Psa 80:11 (cf. כּלּוּ, Psa 72:20); the position of the words is as this passage of the Psalm; the Syr. , Targ. , Jerome, and the Venet .
render the construction actively, as if the word were כּסּוּ. In Pro 24:32, Hitzig proposes to read ואחזה: and I stopped (stood still); but אחז is trans. , not only at Ecc 7:9, but also at Ecc 2:15 : to hold anything fast; not: to hold oneself still. And for what purpose the change? A contemplating and looking at a thing, with which the turning and standing near is here connected, manifestly includes a standing still; ראיתי, after ואחזה, is, as commonly after הביט ( e.
g. , Job 35:5, cf. Isa 42:18), the expression of a lingering looking at an object after the attention has been directed to it. In modern impressions, ואחזה אנכי are incorrectly accentuated; the old editions have rightly ואחזה with Rebîa ; for not אנכי 'וא, but אנכי אשׁית are connected. In Pro 8:17, this prominence of the personal pronoun serves for the expression of reciprocity; elsewhere, as e.
g. , Gen 21:24; 2Ki 6:3, and particularly, frequently in Hosea, this circumstantiality does not make the subject prominent, but the action; here the suitable extension denotes that he rightly makes his comments at leisure (Hitzig). שׁית לב is, as at Pro 22:17, the turning of attention and reflection; elsewhere לקח מוּסר, to receive a moral, Pro 8:10, Jer 7:28, is here equivalent to, to abstract, deduce one from a fact, to take to oneself a lesson from it.
In Pro 24:33 and Pro 24:34 there is a repetition of Pro 6:9-10. Thus, as Pro 24:33 expresses, the sluggard speaks to whom the neglected piece of ground belongs, and Pro 24:34 places before him the result. Instead of כמהלּך of the original passage [Pro 6:9-10], here מתהלך, of the coming of poverty like an avenging Nemesis; and instead of וּמחסרך, here וּמחסריך (the Cod.
Jaman . has it without the י), which might be the plene written pausal form of the sing. ( vid . , at Pro 6:3, cf. Pro 6:11), but is more surely regarded as the plur. : thy deficits, or wants; for to thee at one time this, and at another time that, and finally all things will be wanting. Regarding the variants ראשׁך and רישׁך (with א in the original passage, here in the borrowed passage with י), vid .
, at Pro 10:4. כּאישׁ מגן is translated in the lxx by ὥσπερ ἀγαθὸς δρομεύς ( vid . , at Pro 6:11); the Syr. and Targ. make from it a גּברא טבלרא, tabellarius , a letter-carrier, coming with the speed of a courier.
Pro 24:30-34 A Mashal ode of the slothful, in the form of a record of experiences, concludes this second supplement ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17): 30 The field of a slothful man I came past, And the vineyard of a man devoid of understanding. 31 And, lo! it was wholly filled up with thorns; Its face was covered with nettles; And its wall of stones was broken down.
32 But I looked and directed my attention to it; I saw it, and took instruction from it: 33 “A little sleep, a little slumber, A little folding of the hands to rest. 34 Then cometh thy poverty apace, And thy want as an armed man. ” The line 29b with לאישׁ is followed by one with אישׁ. The form of the narrative in which this warning against drowsy slothfulness is clothed, is like Psa 37:35.
The distinguishing of different classes of men by אישׁ and אדם (cf. Pro 24:20) is common in proverbial poetry. עברתּי, at the close of the first parallel member, retains its Pathach unchanged. The description: and, lo! (הנּהו, with Pazer , after Thorath Emeth , p. 34, Anm. 2) it was... refers to the vineyard, for נדר אבניו (its stone wall, like Isa 2:20, “its idols of silver”) is, like Num 22:24; Isa 5:5, the fencing in of the vineyard.
עלה כלּו, totus excreverat ( in carduos ), refers to this as subject, cf. in Ausonius: apex vitibus assurgit ; the Heb. construction is as Isa 5:6; Isa 34:13; Gesen. §133, 1, Anm. 2. The sing. קמּשׁון of קמּשׁונים does not occur; perhaps it means properly the weed which one tears up to cast it aside, for (Arab.) kumâsh is matter dug out of the ground. The ancients interpret it by urticae ; and חרוּל, plur.
חרלּים (as from חרל), R. חר, to burn, appears, indeed, to be the name of the nettle; the botanical name (Arab.) khullar (beans, pease, at least a leguminous plant) is from its sound not Arab. , and thus lies remote. The Pual כּסּוּ sounds like Psa 80:11 (cf. כּלּוּ, Psa 72:20); the position of the words is as this passage of the Psalm; the Syr. , Targ. , Jerome, and the Venet .
render the construction actively, as if the word were כּסּוּ. In Pro 24:32, Hitzig proposes to read ואחזה: and I stopped (stood still); but אחז is trans. , not only at Ecc 7:9, but also at Ecc 2:15 : to hold anything fast; not: to hold oneself still. And for what purpose the change? A contemplating and looking at a thing, with which the turning and standing near is here connected, manifestly includes a standing still; ראיתי, after ואחזה, is, as commonly after הביט ( e.
g. , Job 35:5, cf. Isa 42:18), the expression of a lingering looking at an object after the attention has been directed to it. In modern impressions, ואחזה אנכי are incorrectly accentuated; the old editions have rightly ואחזה with Rebîa ; for not אנכי 'וא, but אנכי אשׁית are connected. In Pro 8:17, this prominence of the personal pronoun serves for the expression of reciprocity; elsewhere, as e.
g. , Gen 21:24; 2Ki 6:3, and particularly, frequently in Hosea, this circumstantiality does not make the subject prominent, but the action; here the suitable extension denotes that he rightly makes his comments at leisure (Hitzig). שׁית לב is, as at Pro 22:17, the turning of attention and reflection; elsewhere לקח מוּסר, to receive a moral, Pro 8:10, Jer 7:28, is here equivalent to, to abstract, deduce one from a fact, to take to oneself a lesson from it.
In Pro 24:33 and Pro 24:34 there is a repetition of Pro 6:9-10. Thus, as Pro 24:33 expresses, the sluggard speaks to whom the neglected piece of ground belongs, and Pro 24:34 places before him the result. Instead of כמהלּך of the original passage [Pro 6:9-10], here מתהלך, of the coming of poverty like an avenging Nemesis; and instead of וּמחסרך, here וּמחסריך (the Cod.
Jaman . has it without the י), which might be the plene written pausal form of the sing. ( vid . , at Pro 6:3, cf. Pro 6:11), but is more surely regarded as the plur. : thy deficits, or wants; for to thee at one time this, and at another time that, and finally all things will be wanting. Regarding the variants ראשׁך and רישׁך (with א in the original passage, here in the borrowed passage with י), vid .
, at Pro 10:4. כּאישׁ מגן is translated in the lxx by ὥσπερ ἀγαθὸς δρομεύς ( vid . , at Pro 6:11); the Syr. and Targ. make from it a גּברא טבלרא, tabellarius , a letter-carrier, coming with the speed of a courier.
Pro 24:30-34 A Mashal ode of the slothful, in the form of a record of experiences, concludes this second supplement ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17): 30 The field of a slothful man I came past, And the vineyard of a man devoid of understanding. 31 And, lo! it was wholly filled up with thorns; Its face was covered with nettles; And its wall of stones was broken down.
32 But I looked and directed my attention to it; I saw it, and took instruction from it: 33 “A little sleep, a little slumber, A little folding of the hands to rest. 34 Then cometh thy poverty apace, And thy want as an armed man. ” The line 29b with לאישׁ is followed by one with אישׁ. The form of the narrative in which this warning against drowsy slothfulness is clothed, is like Psa 37:35.
The distinguishing of different classes of men by אישׁ and אדם (cf. Pro 24:20) is common in proverbial poetry. עברתּי, at the close of the first parallel member, retains its Pathach unchanged. The description: and, lo! (הנּהו, with Pazer , after Thorath Emeth , p. 34, Anm. 2) it was... refers to the vineyard, for נדר אבניו (its stone wall, like Isa 2:20, “its idols of silver”) is, like Num 22:24; Isa 5:5, the fencing in of the vineyard.
עלה כלּו, totus excreverat ( in carduos ), refers to this as subject, cf. in Ausonius: apex vitibus assurgit ; the Heb. construction is as Isa 5:6; Isa 34:13; Gesen. §133, 1, Anm. 2. The sing. קמּשׁון of קמּשׁונים does not occur; perhaps it means properly the weed which one tears up to cast it aside, for (Arab.) kumâsh is matter dug out of the ground. The ancients interpret it by urticae ; and חרוּל, plur.
חרלּים (as from חרל), R. חר, to burn, appears, indeed, to be the name of the nettle; the botanical name (Arab.) khullar (beans, pease, at least a leguminous plant) is from its sound not Arab. , and thus lies remote. The Pual כּסּוּ sounds like Psa 80:11 (cf. כּלּוּ, Psa 72:20); the position of the words is as this passage of the Psalm; the Syr. , Targ. , Jerome, and the Venet .
render the construction actively, as if the word were כּסּוּ. In Pro 24:32, Hitzig proposes to read ואחזה: and I stopped (stood still); but אחז is trans. , not only at Ecc 7:9, but also at Ecc 2:15 : to hold anything fast; not: to hold oneself still. And for what purpose the change? A contemplating and looking at a thing, with which the turning and standing near is here connected, manifestly includes a standing still; ראיתי, after ואחזה, is, as commonly after הביט ( e.
g. , Job 35:5, cf. Isa 42:18), the expression of a lingering looking at an object after the attention has been directed to it. In modern impressions, ואחזה אנכי are incorrectly accentuated; the old editions have rightly ואחזה with Rebîa ; for not אנכי 'וא, but אנכי אשׁית are connected. In Pro 8:17, this prominence of the personal pronoun serves for the expression of reciprocity; elsewhere, as e.
g. , Gen 21:24; 2Ki 6:3, and particularly, frequently in Hosea, this circumstantiality does not make the subject prominent, but the action; here the suitable extension denotes that he rightly makes his comments at leisure (Hitzig). שׁית לב is, as at Pro 22:17, the turning of attention and reflection; elsewhere לקח מוּסר, to receive a moral, Pro 8:10, Jer 7:28, is here equivalent to, to abstract, deduce one from a fact, to take to oneself a lesson from it.
In Pro 24:33 and Pro 24:34 there is a repetition of Pro 6:9-10. Thus, as Pro 24:33 expresses, the sluggard speaks to whom the neglected piece of ground belongs, and Pro 24:34 places before him the result. Instead of כמהלּך of the original passage [Pro 6:9-10], here מתהלך, of the coming of poverty like an avenging Nemesis; and instead of וּמחסרך, here וּמחסריך (the Cod.
Jaman . has it without the י), which might be the plene written pausal form of the sing. ( vid . , at Pro 6:3, cf. Pro 6:11), but is more surely regarded as the plur. : thy deficits, or wants; for to thee at one time this, and at another time that, and finally all things will be wanting. Regarding the variants ראשׁך and רישׁך (with א in the original passage, here in the borrowed passage with י), vid .
, at Pro 10:4. כּאישׁ מגן is translated in the lxx by ὥσπερ ἀγαθὸς δρομεύς ( vid . , at Pro 6:11); the Syr. and Targ. make from it a גּברא טבלרא, tabellarius , a letter-carrier, coming with the speed of a courier.
Pro 24:30-34 A Mashal ode of the slothful, in the form of a record of experiences, concludes this second supplement ( vid . , vol. i. p. 17): 30 The field of a slothful man I came past, And the vineyard of a man devoid of understanding. 31 And, lo! it was wholly filled up with thorns; Its face was covered with nettles; And its wall of stones was broken down.
32 But I looked and directed my attention to it; I saw it, and took instruction from it: 33 “A little sleep, a little slumber, A little folding of the hands to rest. 34 Then cometh thy poverty apace, And thy want as an armed man. ” The line 29b with לאישׁ is followed by one with אישׁ. The form of the narrative in which this warning against drowsy slothfulness is clothed, is like Psa 37:35.
The distinguishing of different classes of men by אישׁ and אדם (cf. Pro 24:20) is common in proverbial poetry. עברתּי, at the close of the first parallel member, retains its Pathach unchanged. The description: and, lo! (הנּהו, with Pazer , after Thorath Emeth , p. 34, Anm. 2) it was... refers to the vineyard, for נדר אבניו (its stone wall, like Isa 2:20, “its idols of silver”) is, like Num 22:24; Isa 5:5, the fencing in of the vineyard.
עלה כלּו, totus excreverat ( in carduos ), refers to this as subject, cf. in Ausonius: apex vitibus assurgit ; the Heb. construction is as Isa 5:6; Isa 34:13; Gesen. §133, 1, Anm. 2. The sing. קמּשׁון of קמּשׁונים does not occur; perhaps it means properly the weed which one tears up to cast it aside, for (Arab.) kumâsh is matter dug out of the ground. The ancients interpret it by urticae ; and חרוּל, plur.
חרלּים (as from חרל), R. חר, to burn, appears, indeed, to be the name of the nettle; the botanical name (Arab.) khullar (beans, pease, at least a leguminous plant) is from its sound not Arab. , and thus lies remote. The Pual כּסּוּ sounds like Psa 80:11 (cf. כּלּוּ, Psa 72:20); the position of the words is as this passage of the Psalm; the Syr. , Targ. , Jerome, and the Venet .
render the construction actively, as if the word were כּסּוּ. In Pro 24:32, Hitzig proposes to read ואחזה: and I stopped (stood still); but אחז is trans. , not only at Ecc 7:9, but also at Ecc 2:15 : to hold anything fast; not: to hold oneself still. And for what purpose the change? A contemplating and looking at a thing, with which the turning and standing near is here connected, manifestly includes a standing still; ראיתי, after ואחזה, is, as commonly after הביט ( e.
g. , Job 35:5, cf. Isa 42:18), the expression of a lingering looking at an object after the attention has been directed to it. In modern impressions, ואחזה אנכי are incorrectly accentuated; the old editions have rightly ואחזה with Rebîa ; for not אנכי 'וא, but אנכי אשׁית are connected. In Pro 8:17, this prominence of the personal pronoun serves for the expression of reciprocity; elsewhere, as e.
g. , Gen 21:24; 2Ki 6:3, and particularly, frequently in Hosea, this circumstantiality does not make the subject prominent, but the action; here the suitable extension denotes that he rightly makes his comments at leisure (Hitzig). שׁית לב is, as at Pro 22:17, the turning of attention and reflection; elsewhere לקח מוּסר, to receive a moral, Pro 8:10, Jer 7:28, is here equivalent to, to abstract, deduce one from a fact, to take to oneself a lesson from it.
In Pro 24:33 and Pro 24:34 there is a repetition of Pro 6:9-10. Thus, as Pro 24:33 expresses, the sluggard speaks to whom the neglected piece of ground belongs, and Pro 24:34 places before him the result. Instead of כמהלּך of the original passage [Pro 6:9-10], here מתהלך, of the coming of poverty like an avenging Nemesis; and instead of וּמחסרך, here וּמחסריך (the Cod.
Jaman . has it without the י), which might be the plene written pausal form of the sing. ( vid . , at Pro 6:3, cf. Pro 6:11), but is more surely regarded as the plur. : thy deficits, or wants; for to thee at one time this, and at another time that, and finally all things will be wanting. Regarding the variants ראשׁך and רישׁך (with א in the original passage, here in the borrowed passage with י), vid .
, at Pro 10:4. כּאישׁ מגן is translated in the lxx by ὥσπερ ἀγαθὸς δρομεύς ( vid . , at Pro 6:11); the Syr. and Targ. make from it a גּברא טבלרא, tabellarius , a letter-carrier, coming with the speed of a courier.
Pro 25:1 1 These also are proverbs of Solomon, Which the men of Hezekiah the king of Judah have collected. Hezekiah, in his concern for the preservation of the national literature, is the Jewish Pisistratos, and the “men of Hezekiah” are like the collectors of the poems of Homer, who were employed by Pisistratos for that purpose. גּם־אלּה is the subject, and in Cod.
1294, and in the editions of Bomberg 1515, Hartmann 1595, Nissel, Jablonsky, Michaelis, has Dechî . This title is like that of the second supplement, Pro 24:23. The form of the name חזקיּה, abbreviated from יחזקיּהוּ (חזקיּהוּ), is not favourable to the derivation of the title from the collectors themselves. The lxx translates: Αὗται αἱ παιδεῖαι Σαλωμῶντος αἱ ἀδιάκριτοι (cf.
Jam 3:17), ἃς ἐξεγράψαντο οἱ φίλοι Ἐζεκίου, for which Aquila has ἃς μετῆραν ἄνδρες ἐζεκίου, Jerome, transtulerunt . העתיק signifies, like (Arab.) nsaḥ, נסח, to snatch away, to take away, to transfer from another place; in later Hebrew_Bible_to transcribe from one book into another, to translate from one language into another: to take from another place and place together; the Whence?
remains undetermined: according to the anachronistic rendering of the Midrash מגניזתם, i. e. , from the Apocrypha; according to Hitzig, from the mouths of the people; more correctly Euchel and others: from their scattered condition, partly oral, partly written. Vid . , regarding העתיק, Zunz, in Deutsch-Morgenl. Zeitsch . xxv. 147f. , and regarding the whole title, vol.
i. pp. 5, 6; regarding the forms of proverbs in this second collection, vol. i. p. 17; regarding their relation to the first, and their end and aim, vol. i. pp. 25, 26. The first Collection of Proverbs is a Book for Youth, and this second a Book for the People.
Pro 25:2 It is characteristic of the purpose of the book that it begins with proverbs of the king: It is the glory of God to conceal a thing; And the glory of the king to search out a matter. That which is the glory of God and the glory of the king in itself, and that by which they acquire glory, stand here contrasted. The glory of God consists in this, to conceal a matter, i.
e. , to place before men mystery upon mystery, in which they become conscious of the limitation and insufficiency of their knowledge, so that they are constrained to acknowledge, Deu 29:28, that “secret things belong unto the Lord our God. ” There are many things that are hidden and are known only to God, and we must be contented with that which He sees it good to make known to us.
The honour of kings, on the contrary, who as pilots have to steer the ship of the state (Pro 11:14), and as supreme judges to administer justice (1Ki 3:9), consists in this, to search out a matter, i. e. , to place in the light things that are problematical and subjects of controversy, in conformity with their high position, with surpassing intelligence, and, in conformity with their responsibility, with conscientious zeal.
The thought that it is the glory of God to veil Himself in secrecy (Isa 55:1-13 :15; cf. 1Ki 8:12), and of the king, on the contrary, not to surround himself with an impenetrable nimbus, and to withdraw into inaccessible remoteness - this thought does not, immediately at least, lie in the proverb, which refers that which is concealed, and its contrary, not to the person, but to a matter.
Also that God, by the concealment of certain things, seeks to excite to activity human research, is not said in this proverb; for 2b does not speak of the honour of wise men, but of kings; the searching out, 2b, thus does not refer to that which is veiled by God. But since the honour of God at the same time as the welfare of men, and the honour of the king as well as the welfare of his people, is to be thought of, the proverb states that God and the king promote human welfare in very different ways - God, by concealing that which sets limits to the knowledge of man, that he may not be uplifted; and the king, by research, which brings out the true state of the matter, and thereby guards the political and social condition against threatening danger, secret injuries, and the ban of offences unatoned for.
This proverb, regarding the difference between that which constitutes the honour of God and of the king, is followed by one which refers to that in which the honour of both is alike.
Pro 25:3 3 The heavens in height, and the earth in depth, And the heart of kings are unsearchable. This is a proverb in the priamel-form, vid . , p. 13. The praeambulum consists of three subjects to which the predicate אין חקר [= no searching out] is common. “As it is impossible to search through the heavens and through the earth, so it is also impossible to search the hearts of common men (like the earth), and the hearts of kings (like the heavens)” (Fleischer).
The meaning, however, is simple. Three unsearchable things are placed together: the heavens, with reference to their height, stretching into the impenetrable distance; the earth, in respect to its depth, reaching down into the immeasurable abyss; and the heart of kings - it is this third thing which the proverb particularly aims at - which in themselves, and especially with that which goes on in their depths, are impenetrable and unsearchable.
The proverb is a warning against the delusion of being flattered by the favour of the king, which may, before one thinks of it, be withdrawn or changed even into the contrary; and a counsel to one to take heed to his words and acts, and to see to it that he is influenced by higher motives than by the fallacious calculation of the impression on the view and disposition of the king. The ל in both cases is the expression of the reverence, as e.
g. , at 2Ch 9:22. וארץ, not = והארץ, but like Isa 26:19; Isa 65:17, for וארץ, which generally occurs only in the st. constr .
Pro 25:4-5 There now follows an emblematic ( vid . , vol. i. p. 10) tetrastich: 4 Take away the dross from silver, So there is ready a vessel for the goldsmith; 5 Take away the wicked from the king, And his throne is established by righteousness. The form הגו (cf. the inf . Poal הגו, Isa 59:13) is regarded by Schultens as showing a ground-form הגו; but there is also found e.
g. , עשׂו, whose ground-form is עשׂי; the verb הגה, R. הג (whence Arab. hajr, discedere ), cf. יגה (whence הגה, semovit , 2Sa 20:13 = Syr. âwagy, cf. Arab. âwjay, to withhold, to abstain from), signifies to separate, withdraw; here, of the separation of the סיגים, the refuse, i. e. , the dross ( vid . , regarding the plena scriptio , Baer’s krit. Ausg. des Jesaia , under Pro 1:22); the goldsmith is designated by the word צרף, from צרף morf, to turn, change, as he who changes the as yet drossy metal by means of smelting, or by purification in water, into that which is pure.
In 5a הגה is, as at Isa 27:8, transferred to a process of moral purification; what kind of persons are to be removed from the neighbourhood of the king is shown by Isa 1:22-23. Here also (as at Isa. l. c. ) the emblem or figure of Pro 25:4 is followed in Pro 25:5 by its moral antitype aimed at. The punctuation of both verses is wonderfully fine and excellent.
In Pro 25:4, ויצא is not pointed ויצא, but as the consecutive modus ויּצא; this first part of the proverb refers to a well-known process of art: the dross is separated from the silver ( inf . absol . , as Pro 12:7; Pro 15:22), and so a vessel (utensil) proceeds from the goldsmith, for he manufactures pure silver; the ל is here similarly used as the designation of the subject in the passive, Pro 13:13; Pro 14:20.
In Pro 25:5, on the contrary, ויּכּון (ויּכּן) is not the punctuation used, but the word is pointed indicatively ויכּון; this second part of the proverb expresses a moral demand ( inf . absol . in the sense of the imperative, Gesen. §131, 4b like Pro 17:12, or an optative or concessive conjunction): let the godless be removed, לפני מלך, i. e. , not from the neighbourhood of the king, for which the words are מלּפני מלך; also not those standing before the king, i.
e. , in his closest neighbourhood (Ewald, Bertheau); but since, in the absolute, הגה, not an act of another in the interest of the king, but of the king himself, is thought of: let the godless be removed from before the king, i. e. , because he administers justice (Hitzig), or more generally: because after that Psalm (101), which is the “mirror of princes,” he does not suffer him to come into his presence.
Accordingly, the punctuation is בּצּדק, not בּצדק (Pro 16:12); because such righteousness is meant as separates the רשׁע from it and itself from him, as Isa 16:5 ( vid . , Hitzig), where the punctuation of בּחסד denotes that favour towards Moab seeking protection.