Wisdom practices humble restraint before authority, speaks fitting and truthful words, preserves confidences, treats enemies with mercy, refuses compromise with wickedness, and guards the soul through self-control.
Wisdom Before Kings: Hidden Matters, Fitting Words, Faithful Messengers, Enemies, Restraint, and Self-Control
Wisdom practices humble restraint before authority, speaks fitting and truthful words, preserves confidences, treats enemies with mercy, refuses compromise with wickedness, and guards the soul through self-control.
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Wisdom practices humble restraint before authority, speaks fitting and truthful words, preserves confidences, treats enemies with mercy, refuses compromise with wickedness, and guards the soul through self-control.
Proverbs 25 argues that wisdom is not only knowledge but disciplined restraint in public, relational, and personal life. The opening royal sayings show that God conceals and kings search, that righteous rule requires removing wickedness, and that humility before authority prevents shame. The chapter then applies wisdom to speech and disputes: do not rush to litigation, do not betray confidence, speak words that fit the moment, receive wise rebuke, and be faithful as a messenger.
Speech can persuade rulers, refresh the weary, injure neighbors, expose false promises, or wound the heavy-hearted when timing and empathy are absent. The chapter also teaches enemy-love before the New Testament commands it explicitly: feed the hungry enemy and give drink to the thirsty. Finally, wisdom requires moral self-governance. The righteous must not give way to the wicked, and the person without self-control is as vulnerable as a city with broken walls.
The chapter moves from the historical introduction and royal wisdom, to humility and restraint before kings, to disputes and fitting speech, to faithful and unfaithful communication, to patience and neighborly limits, to mercy toward enemies, and finally to warnings about slander, quarrels, compromise, excess, and the necessity of self-control.
The chapter opens with a historical heading identifying these as additional proverbs of Solomon copied by Hezekiah's men. The following sayings focus on royal wisdom: it is God's glory to conceal a matter and a king's glory to search it out. The heavens, earth, and royal heart are difficult to search. Silver must have dross removed before a vessel is made, and wicked officials must be removed before a throne is established in righteousness.
The learner is warned not to exalt Himself in the king's presence but to take a lower place and be invited upward rather than be humiliated before nobles.
The learner must not rush to court hastily, lest He be shamed when His neighbor exposes Him. Disputes should be handled without betraying another's confidence. A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of silver. Wise rebuke to a listening ear is like a gold earring or fine ornament. A trustworthy messenger refreshes the one who sends Him like snow-cooled refreshment during harvest. One who boasts about gifts never given is like clouds and wind without rain.
Through patience a ruler may be persuaded, and a gentle tongue can break a bone. Honey is good, but too much makes one sick. The learner must not visit a neighbor's house too often, lest He become unwelcome. A false witness against a neighbor is compared to a club, sword, or sharp arrow. Relying on an unfaithful person in trouble is like a broken tooth or lame foot. Singing cheerful songs to a heavy heart is like taking someone's coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar on a wound.
The learner is commanded to feed a hungry enemy and give water to a thirsty enemy. In doing so, He heaps burning coals on the enemy's head, and the Lord will reward Him. Wisdom refuses personal vengeance and practices mercy under the Lord's moral government.
A north wind brings rain, and a sly tongue brings angry looks. It is better to live on a corner of the roof than share a house with a quarrelsome wife. Good news from a distant land is like cold water to a weary soul. A righteous person who gives way to the wicked is like a muddied spring or polluted well. Too much honey is not good, and it is not honorable to search out matters too deep for one's own glory.
The chapter closes with a major image: a person without self-control is like a city whose walls are broken through.
- 25:1-7: The chapter opens with a historical heading identifying these as additional proverbs of Solomon copied by Hezekiah's men. The following sayings focus on royal wisdom: it is God's glory to conceal a matter and a king's glory to search it out. The heavens, earth, and royal heart are difficult to search. Silver must have dross removed before a vessel is made, and wicked officials must be removed before a throne is established in righteousness. The learner is warned not to exalt Himself in the king's presence but to take a lower place and be invited upward rather than be humiliated before nobles.
- 25:8-14: The learner must not rush to court hastily, lest He be shamed when His neighbor exposes Him. Disputes should be handled without betraying another's confidence. A word fitly spoken is like apples of gold in settings of silver. Wise rebuke to a listening ear is like a gold earring or fine ornament. A trustworthy messenger refreshes the one who sends Him like snow-cooled refreshment during harvest. One who boasts about gifts never given is like clouds and wind without rain.
- 25:15-20: Through patience a ruler may be persuaded, and a gentle tongue can break a bone. Honey is good, but too much makes one sick. The learner must not visit a neighbor's house too often, lest He become unwelcome. A false witness against a neighbor is compared to a club, sword, or sharp arrow. Relying on an unfaithful person in trouble is like a broken tooth or lame foot. Singing cheerful songs to a heavy heart is like taking someone's coat in cold weather or pouring vinegar on a wound.
- 25:21-22: The learner is commanded to feed a hungry enemy and give water to a thirsty enemy. In doing so, He heaps burning coals on the enemy's head, and the Lord will reward Him. Wisdom refuses personal vengeance and practices mercy under the Lord's moral government.
- 25:23-28: A north wind brings rain, and a sly tongue brings angry looks. It is better to live on a corner of the roof than share a house with a quarrelsome wife. Good news from a distant land is like cold water to a weary soul. A righteous person who gives way to the wicked is like a muddied spring or polluted well. Too much honey is not good, and it is not honorable to search out matters too deep for one's own glory. The chapter closes with a major image: a person without self-control is like a city whose walls are broken through.
Theological Argument
Proverbs 25 argues that wisdom is not only knowledge but disciplined restraint in public, relational, and personal life. The opening royal sayings show that God conceals and kings search, that righteous rule requires removing wickedness, and that humility before authority prevents shame. The chapter then applies wisdom to speech and disputes: do not rush to litigation, do not betray confidence, speak words that fit the moment, receive wise rebuke, and be faithful as a messenger.
Speech can persuade rulers, refresh the weary, injure neighbors, expose false promises, or wound the heavy-hearted when timing and empathy are absent. The chapter also teaches enemy-love before the New Testament commands it explicitly: feed the hungry enemy and give drink to the thirsty. Finally, wisdom requires moral self-governance. The righteous must not give way to the wicked, and the person without self-control is as vulnerable as a city with broken walls.
The chapter moves from the historical introduction and royal wisdom, to humility and restraint before kings, to disputes and fitting speech, to faithful and unfaithful communication, to patience and neighborly limits, to mercy toward enemies, and finally to warnings about slander, quarrels, compromise, excess, and the necessity of self-control.
Theological Focus
- God's Glory and Human Searching
- Righteous Rule
- Humility Before Authority
- Fitting Speech
- Faithful Communication
- Mercy Toward Enemies
- Self Control
- Righteous Non-Compromise
- Divine Mystery and Human Responsibility
- Humility
- Speech Ethics
- Faithfulness
- Enemy Love
- Sanctification
Theological Themes
God's glory includes concealed matters beyond human mastery, while wise rulers search out what they are responsible to judge. Wisdom honors both divine mystery and human responsibility.
A throne is established in righteousness when wicked influence is removed. Public authority must be purified from corruption.
The learner is warned not to exalt Himself before the king. Wisdom takes the lower place rather than grasping for honor.
A word spoken in right circumstances is precious and beautiful. Wisdom cares about timing, setting, tone, truth, and hearer.
Trustworthy messengers refresh those who send them, while false promises and unfaithful people disappoint in time of need.
The chapter commands practical kindness toward enemies, placing vengeance and reward under the Lord's authority.
The chapter closes by portraying lack of self-control as a breached city, exposed to danger and unable to defend itself.
A righteous person who gives way to the wicked becomes like a polluted spring, damaging what should refresh others.
Covenant Significance
Proverbs 25 applies covenant wisdom to royal administration, speech, neighbor disputes, confidentiality, enemies, and self-governance. The collection's Hezekian setting underscores that wisdom must be preserved and applied across generations, especially in times when Judah needed righteous leadership and covenant renewal. The chapter's concern for removing wickedness from royal presence reflects covenant justice.
Its warnings against false witness and betrayal of confidence reflect Torah's neighbor-love. Its command to feed the enemy and wait for the Lord's reward shows that covenant righteousness refuses vengeance and practices mercy under divine judgment.
- The concern for righteous rule and removal of wickedness connects with the royal ideal of justice under the Lord.
- The warning against false witness reflects Torah's command not to bear false testimony against a neighbor.
- The instruction not to betray another's confidence reflects covenant love and protection of neighbor reputation.
- The call to feed and give drink to an enemy echoes the broader Old Testament ethic of refusing vengeance and entrusting justice to God.
- The self-control image connects wisdom with guarded life, like a city protected by walls.
Canonical Connections
Wisdom practices humble restraint before authority, speaks fitting and truthful words, preserves confidences, treats enemies with mercy, refuses compromise with wickedness, and guards the soul through self-control.
Proverbs 25 exposes the lack of restraint in the human heart. We exalt ourselves, rush disputes, betray confidences, speak at the wrong time, promise what we do not give, weaponize words, wound heavy hearts with shallow cheer, resent enemies, compromise with wickedness, and live with broken walls of self-control. The gospel announces Christ as the humble King who took the lowest place and was exalted by the Father.
He spoke only fitting words, bore false witness against Himself without retaliation, fed enemies through His own self-giving love, and entrusted judgment to the Father. At the cross, He absorbed the sin of self-exalting, vengeful, uncontrolled people. In His resurrection, He reigns as the righteous King and gives the Spirit, who forms humility, enemy-love, fitting speech, and self-control in His people.
- Do not preach humility as image-management or a technique for promotion.
- Do not use enemy-love to silence victims, block justice, or require unsafe reconciliation.
- Do not treat fitting speech as mere politeness · it must be truthful, wise, and loving.
- Do not use confidentiality to conceal abuse, criminality, or unrepentant harm.
- Do not preach self-control as flesh-powered willpower detached from grace and the Spirit.
- Do not separate Christ's forgiveness from His transforming work in speech, restraint, mercy, and self-rule.
Primary Emphasis
Proverbs 25 contributes to Christ-centered reading by portraying wisdom in humility, fitting speech, faithful mission, mercy toward enemies, righteous rule, and self-control, all of which are perfectly embodied in Christ. Christ is the humble King who did not exalt Himself but was exalted by the Father. He is the faithful messenger of God's word, the righteous ruler who purifies His kingdom, the wise speaker whose words are always fitting, and the Savior who fed enemies by giving Himself for sinners.
He did not return evil for evil but entrusted Himself to the Father who judges justly. At the cross, He endured false witness, betrayal, mockery, and enemy hatred, yet answered with mercy. In the resurrection and exaltation, the Father honored the Son, and by the Spirit Christ forms His people in humility, truthful speech, enemy-love, restraint, and self-control.
Chapter Contribution
Proverbs 25 argues that wisdom is not only knowledge but disciplined restraint in public, relational, and personal life. The opening royal sayings show that God conceals and kings search, that righteous rule requires removing wickedness, and that humility before authority prevents shame. The chapter then applies wisdom to speech and disputes: do not rush to litigation, do not betray confidence, speak words that fit the moment, receive wise rebuke, and be faithful as a messenger.
Speech can persuade rulers, refresh the weary, injure neighbors, expose false promises, or wound the heavy-hearted when timing and empathy are absent. The chapter also teaches enemy-love before the New Testament commands it explicitly: feed the hungry enemy and give drink to the thirsty. Finally, wisdom requires moral self-governance. The righteous must not give way to the wicked, and the person without self-control is as vulnerable as a city with broken walls.
Canonical Trajectory
- The warning against self-exaltation before a king anticipates Jesus' teaching about taking the lower place at a banquet.
- Fitting words and wise rebuke find perfect expression in Christ's words of grace, truth, warning, and comfort.
- The faithful messenger points toward Christ as the faithful witness and sent one of the Father.
- Feeding and giving drink to an enemy anticipates Jesus' command to love enemies and Paul's use of this proverb in Romans 12.
- The righteous ruler who removes wickedness points forward to Christ's final purification of His kingdom.
- The breached-city image of lack of self-control connects to the Spirit's fruit of self-control in the New Testament.
Healthy relationships depend on speech that promotes peace rather than division.
God calls His people to show empathy and care toward those who suffer.
Faithfulness requires guarding entrusted information.
Wisdom requires evaluating character before placing trust.
God uses correction to guide His people toward righteousness.
True elevation ultimately comes from God's sovereign decision.
The message of God's saving work brings ultimate refreshment to humanity.
Ultimate justice belongs to God rather than personal revenge.
Some aspects of God's purposes remain hidden within His sovereign wisdom.
God alone perfectly knows the human heart.
God establishes proper authority and order within human society.
God oversees the preservation and transmission of His truth.
God shapes character through refining processes.
God ultimately governs the decisions and directions of rulers.
God possesses infinite wisdom that often surpasses human understanding.
God's wisdom is expressed through words that guide people toward righteousness.
Speech should build up and strengthen others.
Words that strengthen others contribute to spiritual and relational flourishing.
God values reliability and integrity in fulfilling entrusted responsibilities.
God values gentle speech that reflects humility and patience.
True honor is granted by God rather than achieved through self-promotion.
True honor is granted by God rather than seized through ambition.
Encouraging truth renews strength and sustains the weary heart.
Unchecked desires easily lead to destructive excess.
Human reliability is limited and must be carefully assessed.
Human understanding cannot fully grasp the inner thoughts of others.
Pride often leads to humiliation and loss of honor.
People are called to seek truth and understanding diligently.
God honors those who patiently wait rather than those who pursue recognition through pride.
Boasting about good deeds without performing them reveals moral inconsistency.
God calls believers to maintain honesty and faithfulness in their words.
Believers are called to speak truthfully while protecting trust within relationships.
True justice requires careful examination of facts rather than impulsive judgment.
God's kingdom is characterized by righteousness and justice.
God calls His people to respond to hostility with acts of kindness.
True love seeks the well-being of others rather than imposing upon them.
Healthy family relationships reflect godly wisdom and humility.
Compassion toward adversaries reflects the moral character of God.
Individuals are responsible for the harm caused by careless speech.
The actions of the righteous influence the moral health of the community.
Impurities must be removed for righteousness and usefulness.
Human beings are responsible for governing their conduct according to wisdom.
Words carry consequences that shape relationships and communities.
Kindness has the power to confront and potentially soften hardened hearts.
Wisdom teaches restraint and patience in the pursuit of honor.
Comforting the grieving requires presence, empathy, and understanding.
God values harmony and reconciliation within the household.
Wisdom seeks peace and resolution rather than unnecessary conflict.
The pursuit of self-glory leads to spiritual harm.
Self-exaltation reflects the sinful inclination toward pride.
Patient and gentle speech can restore broken relationships.
Individuals must address conflict directly rather than spreading accusations.
Individuals are responsible for cultivating peace in their homes.
Wisdom resists corruption and refuses to yield to unjust pressure.
God reveals truth progressively according to His purposes.
God calls His people to remain steadfast in righteousness even under pressure.
God desires leaders who govern with justice and moral integrity.
God purifies His people through correction, discipline, and spiritual formation.
God ensures the faithful preservation of His revealed wisdom.
God calls His people to cultivate discipline over their desires and impulses.
Faithful service benefits others and reflects godly character.
Correction contributes to the growth and maturity of believers.
Lack of discipline opens the door to temptation and corruption.
Believers are entrusted with responsibilities that must be carried out faithfully.
God's gifts are to be enjoyed responsibly rather than abused.
Believers are responsible for preserving and teaching divine wisdom.
Words possess moral weight and can produce lasting consequences.
Faithful rebuke is a gift rather than an insult when delivered with wisdom.
Ultimate security belongs in God rather than unreliable people.
Faithful character protects the trust placed within relationships.
Faithful and reliable reports bring encouragement and stability.
God calls His people to use words that reflect truth and integrity.
God calls His people to speak truthfully and avoid false witness.
Godly wisdom governs speech with discernment and care.
Biblical wisdom governs how blessings are received and enjoyed.
Godly wisdom governs how truth is spoken and how persuasion occurs.
Righteous leadership requires deep reflection and discernment.
Relational wisdom discerns the appropriate response to different emotional situations.
God calls believers to exercise restraint and discernment before speaking or accusing.
Biblical wisdom is transmitted across generations for instruction.
God's glory includes concealed matters, while human rulers are responsible to search out what belongs to their office.
Removing wickedness from royal presence is necessary for a throne to be established in righteousness.
Wisdom avoids self-exaltation and receives honor rather than grasping it.
Fitting words, wise rebuke, truthful witness, guarded confidences, and gentle persuasion reveal wisdom.
Trustworthy messengers refresh those who send them, while unreliable people fail in trouble.
Wisdom commands practical mercy toward enemies and leaves reward and justice with the Lord.
A person without self-control is like a city broken into and left without walls.
Wisdom forms restraint, mercy, truthfulness, humility, patience, and disciplined self-governance.
C.F. Keil & F. Delitzsch, Commentary on the Old Testament (1861–91) — public domain
The Lord's wisdom forms humble, restrained, truthful, merciful, and self-controlled people who speak fitting words and refuse both vengeance and compromise.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Humility, restraint, confidentiality, fitting speech, wise rebuke, faithfulness, patience, gentleness, enemy mercy, non-compromise, and self-control.
- Choose the lower place in one setting where You want recognition.
- Delay one judgment until You have searched the matter more carefully.
- Refuse to reveal a confidence even when it would strengthen Your side of a dispute.
- Craft one fitting word for a person who needs truth with timing and tenderness.
- Serve one difficult person in a concrete way without seeking revenge.
- Identify one good thing You are overusing and practice restraint.
- Repair one place where false, exaggerated, or careless words wounded a neighbor.
- Rebuild one broken wall of self-control through repentance, accountability, and a concrete practice.
- God concealing matters versus kings searching them out.
- Dross removed from silver versus wicked removed from royal presence.
- Self-exaltation before kings versus being invited upward.
- Rash litigation versus careful dispute.
- Betrayed confidence versus guarded conflict.
- Fitly spoken word versus careless speech.
- Faithful messenger as harvest refreshment versus clouds without rain.
- Gentle tongue breaking bone versus forceful pressure.
- Too much honey versus wise restraint.
- Enemy hunger met with food versus vengeance.
- Good news as cold water versus sly tongue bringing anger.
- Polluted spring versus righteous non-compromise.
- Broken city walls versus self-control.
- Proverbs 25 warns against self-exaltation, rash litigation, betrayed confidences, unfit speech, false promises, unreliable messengers, excessive consumption, over-frequent intrusion, false witness, insensitive cheerfulness, slander, quarrels, compromise with wickedness, self-glory in searching out matters, and lack of self-control. The chapter is especially severe about speech and restraint: the wrong word, wrong timing, wrong motive, or unguarded appetite can damage neighbors, public life, and the soul.
- Do not exalt Yourself before authority.
- Do not rush into disputes without full knowledge.
- Do not betray confidences during conflict.
- Do not promise gifts or help You never give.
- Do not overuse good things.
- Do not weaponize false testimony.
- Do not give shallow cheer to a heavy heart.
- Do not gloat over or neglect a hungry enemy.
- Do not give way to the wicked.
- Do not live without self-control.
- Reading Proverbs 25:2 as permission to hide sin, injustice, or abuse. - The verse distinguishes divine glory in concealed matters and royal glory in searching out matters. It does not endorse covering evil that must be exposed, judged, or corrected.
- Using humility before kings to justify passivity, servility, or fear of man. - The text warns against self-exaltation and presumption, not against truthful courage, prophetic witness, or righteous responsibility.
- Treating a word fitly spoken as merely eloquent speech. - The beauty lies not only in language but in truth, timing, appropriateness, wisdom, and benefit to the hearer.
- Using enemy-feeding as a manipulative way to shame or control an enemy. - The command calls for genuine mercy and entrustment to the Lord, not passive-aggressive revenge disguised as kindness.
- Reading the quarrelsome-wife proverb as a broad attack on women. - The proverb warns against household strife through a specific image. It must not be used to stereotype women or excuse male sin, neglect, harshness, or abuse.
- Treating self-control as mere personality management. - Self-control is moral and spiritual protection. Without it, a person becomes exposed to destructive forces like a city with broken walls.
- Where am I trying to exalt myself rather than taking the lower place?
- Have I rushed into a dispute before understanding the matter fully?
- Do I betray confidences when I am offended, angry, or trying to win an argument?
- Are my words fit for the moment, or merely true in a blunt and careless way?
- Am I a faithful messenger who refreshes others, or an unreliable person in trouble?
- Where am I overusing a good thing until it becomes harmful?
- Have I intruded too often, spoken too much, or pressed too hard in a relationship?
- How do I respond when someone with a heavy heart needs comfort?
- What enemy or difficult person might I be called to serve in practical mercy?
- Where am I tempted to give way to wickedness for peace, approval, safety, or gain?
- What wall of self-control is broken in my life right now?
- Preach Proverbs 25 as wisdom for public and relational restraint. Emphasize humility, fitting speech, faithful communication, enemy mercy, and self-control.
- Use verses 2-5 to teach leaders to search matters carefully, remove wicked influence, and establish authority through righteousness rather than image or favoritism.
- Verses 8-10 are crucial for church conflict. Do not rush disputes, and do not betray confidences to win.
- Use verses 11-12, 15, 18, 20, and 23 to train believers in timing, rebuke, gentleness, truthful witness, and emotionally wise speech.
- Verse 20 warns against shallow encouragement. Heavy hearts need presence, lament, truth, and tenderness, not cheerful noise without discernment.
- Verses 21-22 give a concrete Old Testament foundation for enemy-love and are directly echoed in Romans 12.
- Verse 28 gives a strong image for spiritual formation: self-control is not optional polish, but protective wall-work for the soul.
- Verse 13 can be applied to ministry, employment, and delegated responsibility. Faithful messengers refresh those who send them.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Believers must learn that wisdom is often shown not by doing more, saying more, or asserting more, but by speaking fitly, waiting patiently, serving enemies, and governing the self.
Track judgment as covenant accountability, divine justice, and eschatological reckoning.
Trace how divine glory, revealed majesty, and Christ-centered exaltation move across Scripture.
Study holiness as divine character, covenant identity, and sanctified life across Scripture.
Study kingdom reign, divine rule, and gospel kingdom proclamation across Scripture.
Trace servant identity, obedient mission, and suffering service across Scripture.
Trace the Spirit's presence, empowerment, renewal, and mission-bearing work across Scripture.
The Biblical World
Chapter At A Glance
The chapter moves from the historical introduction and royal wisdom, to humility and restraint before kings, to disputes and fitting speech, to faithful and unfaithful communication, to patience and neighborly limits, to mercy toward enemies, and finally to warnings about slander, quarrels, compromise, excess, and the necessity of self-control.
Proverbs 25 applies covenant wisdom to royal administration, speech, neighbor disputes, confidentiality, enemies, and self-governance. The collection's Hezekian setting underscores that wisdom must be preserved and applied across generations, especially in times when Judah needed righteous leadership and covenant renewal. The chapter's concern for removing wickedness from royal presence reflects covenant justice.
Its warnings against false witness and betrayal of confidence reflect Torah's neighbor-love. Its command to feed the enemy and wait for the Lord's reward shows that covenant righteousness refuses vengeance and practices mercy under divine judgment.
Proverbs 25 exposes the lack of restraint in the human heart. We exalt ourselves, rush disputes, betray confidences, speak at the wrong time, promise what we do not give, weaponize words, wound heavy hearts with shallow cheer, resent enemies, compromise with wickedness, and live with broken walls of self-control. The gospel announces Christ as the humble King who took the lowest place and was exalted by the Father.
He spoke only fitting words, bore false witness against Himself without retaliation, fed enemies through His own self-giving love, and entrusted judgment to the Father. At the cross, He absorbed the sin of self-exalting, vengeful, uncontrolled people. In His resurrection, He reigns as the righteous King and gives the Spirit, who forms humility, enemy-love, fitting speech, and self-control in His people.
Humility, restraint, confidentiality, fitting speech, wise rebuke, faithfulness, patience, gentleness, enemy mercy, non-compromise, and self-control.
Focus Points
- God's Glory and Human Searching
- Righteous Rule
- Humility Before Authority
- Fitting Speech
- Faithful Communication
- Mercy Toward Enemies
- Self-Control
- Righteous Non-Compromise
- Divine Mystery and Human Responsibility
- Humility
- Speech Ethics
- Faithfulness
- Enemy Love
- Sanctification
Passages
Chapter opening: Proverbs 25:1
Pro 25:6-7 There now follows a second proverb with מלך, as the one just explained was a second with מלכים: a warning against arrogance before kings and nobles. 6 Display not thyself before the king, And approach not to the place of the great. 7 For better than one say to thee, “Come up hither,” Than that they humble thee before a prince, Whom thine eyes had seen.
The גּדלים are those, like Pro 18:16, who by virtue of their descent and their office occupy a lofty place of honour in the court and in the state. נדיב ( vid . , under Pro 8:16) is the noble in disposition and the nobleman by birth, a general designation which comprehends the king and the princes. The Hithpa . התהדּר is like the reflex forms Pro 12:9; Pro 13:7, for it signifies to conduct oneself as הדוּר or נהדּר ( vid .
, Pro 20:29), to play the part of one highly distinguished. עמד has, 6b, its nearest signification: it denotes, not like נצּב, standing still, but approaching to, e. g. , Jer 7:2. The reason given in Pro 25:7 harmonizes with the rule of wisdom, Luk 14:10. : better is the saying to thee, i. e. , that one say to thee (Ewald, §304b), עלה הנּה (so the Olewejored is to be placed), προσανάβηθι ἀνώτερον (thus in Luke), than that one humble thee לפני נדיב, not: because of a prince (Hitzig), for לפני nowhere means either pro (Pro 17:18) or propter , but before a prince, so that thou must yield to him (cf.
Pro 14:19), before him whom thine eyes had seen, so that thou art not excused if thou takest up the place appropriate to him. Most interpreters are at a loss to explain this relative. Luther: “which thine eyes must see,” and Schultens: ut videant oculi tui . Michaelis, syntactically admissible: quem videre gestiverunt oculi tui , viz. , to come near to him, according to Bertheau, with the request that he receives some high office.
Otherwise Fleischer: before the king by whom thou and thine are seen, so much the more felt is the humiliation when it comes upon one after he has pressed so far forward that he can be perceived by the king. But נדיב is not specially the king, but any distinguished personage whose place he who has pressed forward has taken up, and from which he must now withdraw when the right possessor of it comes and lays claim to his place.
אשׁר is never used in poetry without emphasis. Elsewhere it is equivalent to נתנש, quippe quem , here equivalent to רפנש, quem quidem . Thine eyes have seen him in the company, and thou canst say to thyself, this place belongs to him, according to his rank, and not to thee - the humiliation which thou endurest is thus well deserved, because, with eyes to see, thou wert so blind.
The lxx, Syr. , Symmachus (who reads 8a, לרב, εις πλῆθος), and Jerome, refer the words “whom thine eyes had seen” to the proverb following; but אשר does not appropriately belong to the beginning of a proverb, and on the supposition that the word לרב is generally adopted, except by Symmachus, they are also heterogeneous to the following proverb:
Pro 25:6-7 There now follows a second proverb with מלך, as the one just explained was a second with מלכים: a warning against arrogance before kings and nobles. 6 Display not thyself before the king, And approach not to the place of the great. 7 For better than one say to thee, “Come up hither,” Than that they humble thee before a prince, Whom thine eyes had seen.
The גּדלים are those, like Pro 18:16, who by virtue of their descent and their office occupy a lofty place of honour in the court and in the state. נדיב ( vid . , under Pro 8:16) is the noble in disposition and the nobleman by birth, a general designation which comprehends the king and the princes. The Hithpa . התהדּר is like the reflex forms Pro 12:9; Pro 13:7, for it signifies to conduct oneself as הדוּר or נהדּר ( vid .
, Pro 20:29), to play the part of one highly distinguished. עמד has, 6b, its nearest signification: it denotes, not like נצּב, standing still, but approaching to, e. g. , Jer 7:2. The reason given in Pro 25:7 harmonizes with the rule of wisdom, Luk 14:10. : better is the saying to thee, i. e. , that one say to thee (Ewald, §304b), עלה הנּה (so the Olewejored is to be placed), προσανάβηθι ἀνώτερον (thus in Luke), than that one humble thee לפני נדיב, not: because of a prince (Hitzig), for לפני nowhere means either pro (Pro 17:18) or propter , but before a prince, so that thou must yield to him (cf.
Pro 14:19), before him whom thine eyes had seen, so that thou art not excused if thou takest up the place appropriate to him. Most interpreters are at a loss to explain this relative. Luther: “which thine eyes must see,” and Schultens: ut videant oculi tui . Michaelis, syntactically admissible: quem videre gestiverunt oculi tui , viz. , to come near to him, according to Bertheau, with the request that he receives some high office.
Otherwise Fleischer: before the king by whom thou and thine are seen, so much the more felt is the humiliation when it comes upon one after he has pressed so far forward that he can be perceived by the king. But נדיב is not specially the king, but any distinguished personage whose place he who has pressed forward has taken up, and from which he must now withdraw when the right possessor of it comes and lays claim to his place.
אשׁר is never used in poetry without emphasis. Elsewhere it is equivalent to נתנש, quippe quem , here equivalent to רפנש, quem quidem . Thine eyes have seen him in the company, and thou canst say to thyself, this place belongs to him, according to his rank, and not to thee - the humiliation which thou endurest is thus well deserved, because, with eyes to see, thou wert so blind.
The lxx, Syr. , Symmachus (who reads 8a, לרב, εις πλῆθος), and Jerome, refer the words “whom thine eyes had seen” to the proverb following; but אשר does not appropriately belong to the beginning of a proverb, and on the supposition that the word לרב is generally adopted, except by Symmachus, they are also heterogeneous to the following proverb:
Pro 25:8-10 8 Go not forth hastily to strife, That it may not be said, “What wilt thou do in the end thereof, When now thy neighbour bringeth disgrace upon thee? ” 9 Art thou striving with thy neighbour? strive with him, But disclose not the secret of another; 10 That he who heareth it may not despise thee, And thine evil name depart no more. Whether ריב in לריב is infin .
, as at Jdg 21:22, or subst . , as at 2Ch 19:8, is not decided: ad litigandum and ad litem harmonize. As little may it be said whether in אל־תּצא [go not forth], a going out to the gate (court of justice), or to the place where he is to be met who is to be called to account, is to be thought of; in no respect is the sense metaphorical: let not thyself transgress the bounds of moderation, ne te laisse pas emporter ; יצא לרב is correlate to בּוא לרוב, Jdg 21:22.
The use of פּן in 8b is unprecedented. Euchel and Löwenstein regard it as an imper . : reflect upon it (test it); but פּנה does not signify this, and the interjectional הס does not show the possibility of an imper . Kal פּן, and certainly not פּן (פּן). The conj. פּן is the connecting form of an original subst. (= panj), which signifies a turning away. It is mostly connected with the future, according to which Nolde, Oetinger, Ewald, and Bertheau explain מה indefinite, something, viz.
, unbecoming. In itself, it may, perhaps, be possible that פן מה was used in the sense of ne quid ( Venet . μήποτέ τι); but “to do something,” for “to commit something bad,” is improbable; also in that case we would expect the words to be thus: פן תעשׂה מה. Thus מה will be an interrogative, as at 1Sa 20:10 ( vid . , Keil), and the expression is brachyogical: that thou comest not into the situation not to know what thou oughtest to do (Rashi: פן תבא לידי לא תדע הם לעשׂות), or much rather anakoluth.
; for instead of saying פּן־לא תדע מה־לּעשׂות, the poet, shunning this unusual פן לא, adopts at once the interrogative form: that it may not be said at the end thereof (viz. , of the strife); what wilt thou do? (Umbreit, Stier, Elster, Hitzig, and Zöckler). This extreme perplexity would occur if thy neighbour (with whom thou disputest so eagerly and unjustly) put thee to shame, so that thou standest confounded (כלם, properly to hurt, French blesser ).
If now the summons 9a follows this warning against going out for the purpose of strife: fight out thy conflict with thy neighbour, then ריבך, set forth with emphasis, denotes not such a strife as one is surprised into, but that into which one is drawn, and the tuam in causam tuam is accented in so far as 9b localizes the strife to the personal relation of the two, and warns against the drawing in of an אחר, i. e.
, in this case, of a third person: and expose not the secret of another אל־תּגל (after Michlol 130a, and Ben-Bileam, who places the word under the 'פ'פתחין בס, is vocalized with Pathach on ג, as is Cod. 1294, and elsewhere in correct texts). One ought not to bring forward in a dispute, as material of proof and means of acquittal, secrets entrusted to him by another, or secrets which one knows regarding the position and conduct of another; for such faithlessness and gossiping affix a stigma on him who avails himself of them, in the public estimation, Pro 25:10; that he who hears it may not blame thee (חסּד = Aram.
חסּד, vid . , under Pro 14:34), and the evil report concerning thee continue without recall. Fleischer: ne infamia tua non recedat i. e. , nunquam desinat per ora hominum propagari , with the remark, “in דבּה, which properly means in stealthy creeping on of the rumour, and in שׁוּב lies a (Arab.) tarshyḥ,” i. e. , the two ideas stand in an interchangeable relation with a play upon the words: the evil rumour, once put in circulation, will not again retrace its steps; but, on the contrary, as Virgil says: Mobilitate viget viresque acquirit eundo .
In fact, every other can sooner rehabilitate himself in the public estimation that he who is regarded as a prattler, who can keep no secret, or as one so devoid of character that he makes public what he ought to keep silent, if he can make any use of it in his own interest. In regard to such an one, the words are continually applicable, hic niger est, hunc tu, Romane, caveto , Pro 20:19.
The lxx has, instead of ודבתך 10b, read ומריבתך, and translated it with the addition of a long appendix: “They quarrel, and hostilities will not cease, but will be to thee like death. Kindness and friendship deliver, let these preserve thee, that thou mayest not become one meriting reproaches (Jerome: ne exprobrabilis fias ), but guard thy ways, εὐσυναλλάκτως.
”
Pro 25:8-10 8 Go not forth hastily to strife, That it may not be said, “What wilt thou do in the end thereof, When now thy neighbour bringeth disgrace upon thee? ” 9 Art thou striving with thy neighbour? strive with him, But disclose not the secret of another; 10 That he who heareth it may not despise thee, And thine evil name depart no more. Whether ריב in לריב is infin .
, as at Jdg 21:22, or subst . , as at 2Ch 19:8, is not decided: ad litigandum and ad litem harmonize. As little may it be said whether in אל־תּצא [go not forth], a going out to the gate (court of justice), or to the place where he is to be met who is to be called to account, is to be thought of; in no respect is the sense metaphorical: let not thyself transgress the bounds of moderation, ne te laisse pas emporter ; יצא לרב is correlate to בּוא לרוב, Jdg 21:22.
The use of פּן in 8b is unprecedented. Euchel and Löwenstein regard it as an imper . : reflect upon it (test it); but פּנה does not signify this, and the interjectional הס does not show the possibility of an imper . Kal פּן, and certainly not פּן (פּן). The conj. פּן is the connecting form of an original subst. (= panj), which signifies a turning away. It is mostly connected with the future, according to which Nolde, Oetinger, Ewald, and Bertheau explain מה indefinite, something, viz.
, unbecoming. In itself, it may, perhaps, be possible that פן מה was used in the sense of ne quid ( Venet . μήποτέ τι); but “to do something,” for “to commit something bad,” is improbable; also in that case we would expect the words to be thus: פן תעשׂה מה. Thus מה will be an interrogative, as at 1Sa 20:10 ( vid . , Keil), and the expression is brachyogical: that thou comest not into the situation not to know what thou oughtest to do (Rashi: פן תבא לידי לא תדע הם לעשׂות), or much rather anakoluth.
; for instead of saying פּן־לא תדע מה־לּעשׂות, the poet, shunning this unusual פן לא, adopts at once the interrogative form: that it may not be said at the end thereof (viz. , of the strife); what wilt thou do? (Umbreit, Stier, Elster, Hitzig, and Zöckler). This extreme perplexity would occur if thy neighbour (with whom thou disputest so eagerly and unjustly) put thee to shame, so that thou standest confounded (כלם, properly to hurt, French blesser ).
If now the summons 9a follows this warning against going out for the purpose of strife: fight out thy conflict with thy neighbour, then ריבך, set forth with emphasis, denotes not such a strife as one is surprised into, but that into which one is drawn, and the tuam in causam tuam is accented in so far as 9b localizes the strife to the personal relation of the two, and warns against the drawing in of an אחר, i. e.
, in this case, of a third person: and expose not the secret of another אל־תּגל (after Michlol 130a, and Ben-Bileam, who places the word under the 'פ'פתחין בס, is vocalized with Pathach on ג, as is Cod. 1294, and elsewhere in correct texts). One ought not to bring forward in a dispute, as material of proof and means of acquittal, secrets entrusted to him by another, or secrets which one knows regarding the position and conduct of another; for such faithlessness and gossiping affix a stigma on him who avails himself of them, in the public estimation, Pro 25:10; that he who hears it may not blame thee (חסּד = Aram.
חסּד, vid . , under Pro 14:34), and the evil report concerning thee continue without recall. Fleischer: ne infamia tua non recedat i. e. , nunquam desinat per ora hominum propagari , with the remark, “in דבּה, which properly means in stealthy creeping on of the rumour, and in שׁוּב lies a (Arab.) tarshyḥ,” i. e. , the two ideas stand in an interchangeable relation with a play upon the words: the evil rumour, once put in circulation, will not again retrace its steps; but, on the contrary, as Virgil says: Mobilitate viget viresque acquirit eundo .
In fact, every other can sooner rehabilitate himself in the public estimation that he who is regarded as a prattler, who can keep no secret, or as one so devoid of character that he makes public what he ought to keep silent, if he can make any use of it in his own interest. In regard to such an one, the words are continually applicable, hic niger est, hunc tu, Romane, caveto , Pro 20:19.
The lxx has, instead of ודבתך 10b, read ומריבתך, and translated it with the addition of a long appendix: “They quarrel, and hostilities will not cease, but will be to thee like death. Kindness and friendship deliver, let these preserve thee, that thou mayest not become one meriting reproaches (Jerome: ne exprobrabilis fias ), but guard thy ways, εὐσυναλλάκτως.
”
Pro 25:8-10 8 Go not forth hastily to strife, That it may not be said, “What wilt thou do in the end thereof, When now thy neighbour bringeth disgrace upon thee? ” 9 Art thou striving with thy neighbour? strive with him, But disclose not the secret of another; 10 That he who heareth it may not despise thee, And thine evil name depart no more. Whether ריב in לריב is infin .
, as at Jdg 21:22, or subst . , as at 2Ch 19:8, is not decided: ad litigandum and ad litem harmonize. As little may it be said whether in אל־תּצא [go not forth], a going out to the gate (court of justice), or to the place where he is to be met who is to be called to account, is to be thought of; in no respect is the sense metaphorical: let not thyself transgress the bounds of moderation, ne te laisse pas emporter ; יצא לרב is correlate to בּוא לרוב, Jdg 21:22.
The use of פּן in 8b is unprecedented. Euchel and Löwenstein regard it as an imper . : reflect upon it (test it); but פּנה does not signify this, and the interjectional הס does not show the possibility of an imper . Kal פּן, and certainly not פּן (פּן). The conj. פּן is the connecting form of an original subst. (= panj), which signifies a turning away. It is mostly connected with the future, according to which Nolde, Oetinger, Ewald, and Bertheau explain מה indefinite, something, viz.
, unbecoming. In itself, it may, perhaps, be possible that פן מה was used in the sense of ne quid ( Venet . μήποτέ τι); but “to do something,” for “to commit something bad,” is improbable; also in that case we would expect the words to be thus: פן תעשׂה מה. Thus מה will be an interrogative, as at 1Sa 20:10 ( vid . , Keil), and the expression is brachyogical: that thou comest not into the situation not to know what thou oughtest to do (Rashi: פן תבא לידי לא תדע הם לעשׂות), or much rather anakoluth.
; for instead of saying פּן־לא תדע מה־לּעשׂות, the poet, shunning this unusual פן לא, adopts at once the interrogative form: that it may not be said at the end thereof (viz. , of the strife); what wilt thou do? (Umbreit, Stier, Elster, Hitzig, and Zöckler). This extreme perplexity would occur if thy neighbour (with whom thou disputest so eagerly and unjustly) put thee to shame, so that thou standest confounded (כלם, properly to hurt, French blesser ).
If now the summons 9a follows this warning against going out for the purpose of strife: fight out thy conflict with thy neighbour, then ריבך, set forth with emphasis, denotes not such a strife as one is surprised into, but that into which one is drawn, and the tuam in causam tuam is accented in so far as 9b localizes the strife to the personal relation of the two, and warns against the drawing in of an אחר, i. e.
, in this case, of a third person: and expose not the secret of another אל־תּגל (after Michlol 130a, and Ben-Bileam, who places the word under the 'פ'פתחין בס, is vocalized with Pathach on ג, as is Cod. 1294, and elsewhere in correct texts). One ought not to bring forward in a dispute, as material of proof and means of acquittal, secrets entrusted to him by another, or secrets which one knows regarding the position and conduct of another; for such faithlessness and gossiping affix a stigma on him who avails himself of them, in the public estimation, Pro 25:10; that he who hears it may not blame thee (חסּד = Aram.
חסּד, vid . , under Pro 14:34), and the evil report concerning thee continue without recall. Fleischer: ne infamia tua non recedat i. e. , nunquam desinat per ora hominum propagari , with the remark, “in דבּה, which properly means in stealthy creeping on of the rumour, and in שׁוּב lies a (Arab.) tarshyḥ,” i. e. , the two ideas stand in an interchangeable relation with a play upon the words: the evil rumour, once put in circulation, will not again retrace its steps; but, on the contrary, as Virgil says: Mobilitate viget viresque acquirit eundo .
In fact, every other can sooner rehabilitate himself in the public estimation that he who is regarded as a prattler, who can keep no secret, or as one so devoid of character that he makes public what he ought to keep silent, if he can make any use of it in his own interest. In regard to such an one, the words are continually applicable, hic niger est, hunc tu, Romane, caveto , Pro 20:19.
The lxx has, instead of ודבתך 10b, read ומריבתך, and translated it with the addition of a long appendix: “They quarrel, and hostilities will not cease, but will be to thee like death. Kindness and friendship deliver, let these preserve thee, that thou mayest not become one meriting reproaches (Jerome: ne exprobrabilis fias ), but guard thy ways, εὐσυναλλάκτως.
”
Pro 25:11 The first emblematical distich of this collection now follows: 11 Golden apples in silver salvers. A word spoken according to its circumstances. The Syr. and Jerome vocalize דּבר דּבר, and the Targ. דּבר דּבר; both are admissible, but the figure and that which is represented are not placed in so appropriate a relation as by דּבר דּבר; the wonderfully penetrating expression of the text, which is rendered by the traditional nikkud, agrees here with the often occurring דּבר (= מדבּר), also its passive דּבוּר.
The defective writing is like, e. g. , בּטח, Psa 112:7, and gives no authority to prefer דּבּר = מדבּר (Böttcher). That דּברי, corresponding to the plur. תּפּוּחי, is not used, arises from this, that דבר is here manifestly not a word without connection, but a sentence of motive, contents, and aim united. For על־אפניו, the meaning of בּעתּו presents itself from Pro 15:23, according to which, among the old interpreters, Symmachus, Jerome, and Luther render “at its time.
” Abulwalîd compared the Arab. âiffan (âibban, also 'iffan, whence 'aly 'iffanihi, justo tempore ), which, as Orelli has shown in his Synon. der Zeitbegriffe , p. 21f. , comes from the roots af ab, to drive (from within) going out, time as consisting of individual moments, the one of which drives on the other, and thus denotes time as a course of succession.
One may not hesitate as to the prep. על, for אפנים would, like עתּות, denote the circumstances, the relations of the time, and על would, as e. g. , in על־פּי and על־דּברתי, have the meaning of κατά. But the form אפניו, which like חפניו, Lev 16:12, sounds dualistic, appears to oppose this. Hitzig supposes that אפנים may designate the time as a circle, with reference to the two arches projecting in opposite directions, but uniting themselves together; but the circle which time describes runs out from one point, and, moreover, the Arab.
names for time âfaf, âifaf, and the like, which interchange with âiffan, show that this does not proceed from the idea of circular motion. Ewald and others take for אפניו the meaning of wheels (the Venet . , after Kimchi, ἐπὶ τῶν τροχῶν αὐτῆς), whereby the form is to be interpreted as dual of אפן = אופן, “a word driven on its wheels,” - so Ewald explains: as the potter quickly and neatly forms a vessel on his wheels, thus a fit and quickly framed word.
But דבר signifies to drive cattle and to speak = to cause words to follow one another (cf. Arab. syâḳ, pressing on = flow of words), but not to drive = to fashion in that artisan sense. Otherwise Böttcher, “a word fitly spoken, a pair of wheels perfect in their motion,” to which he compares the common people “in their jesting,” and adduces all kinds of heterogeneous things partly already rejected by Orelli ( e.
g. , the Homeric ἐπιτροχάδην, which is certainly no commendation). But “jesting” is not appropriate here; for what man conceives of human speech as a carriage, one only sometimes compares that of a babbler to a sledge, or says of him that he shoves the cart into the mud. Is it then thus decided that אפניו is a dual? It may be also like אשׂריו, the plur. especially in the adverbial expression before us, which readily carried the abbreviation with it ( vid .
, Gesen. Lehrgebr . §134, Anm. 17). On this supposition, Orelli interprets אפן from אפן, to turn, in the sense of turning about, circumstances, and reminds of this, that in the post-bibl. Heb. this word is used as indefinitely as τρόπος, e. g. , באופן מה, quodammodo ( vid . , Reland’s Analecta Rabbinica , 1723, p. 126). This late Talm. usage of the word can, indeed, signify nothing as to the bibl.
word; but that אפנים, abbreviated אפנים, can mean circumstances, is warranted by the synon. אודות. Aquila and Theodotion appear to have thus understood it, for their ἐπὶ ἁρμόζουσιν αὐτῷ, which they substitute for the colourless οὕτως of the lxx, signifies: under the circumstances, in accordance therewith. So Orelli thus rightly defines: “אפנים denote the âḥwâl, circumstances and conditions, as they form themselves in each turning of time, and those which are ascribed to דבר by the suffix are those to which it is proper, and to which it fits in.
Consequently a word is commended which is spoken whenever the precise time arrives to which it is adapted, a word which is thus spoken at its time as well as at its place (van Dyk, fay mahllah), and the grace of which is thereby heightened. ” Aben Ezra’s explanation, על פנים הראויים, in the approved way, follows the opinion of Abulwalîd and Parchon, that אפניו is equivalent to פניו (cf.
aly wajhihi, sua ratione ), which is only so far true, that both words are derived from R. פן, to turn. In the figure, it is questionable whether by תּפּוּחי זהב, apples of gold, or gold-coloured apples, are meant (Luther: as pomegranates and citrons); thus oranges are meant, as at Zec 4:12. הזּהב denotes golden oil. Since כסף, besides, signifies a metallic substance, one appears to be under the necessity of thinking of apples of gold; cf.
the brazen pomegranates. But (1) apples of gold of natural size and massiveness are obviously too great to make it probable that such artistic productions are meant; (2) the material of the emblem is usually not of less value than that of which it is the emblem (Fleischer); (3) the Scriptures are fond of comparing words with flowers and fruits, Pro 10:31; Pro 12:14; Pro 13:2; Pro 18:20, and to the essence of the word which is rooted in the spirit, and buds and grows up to maturity through the mouth and the lips, the comparison with natural fruits corresponds better in any case than with artificial.
Thus, then, we interpret “golden apples” as the poetic name for oranges, aurea mala , the Indian name of which with reference to or (gold) was changed into the French name orange , as our pomeranze is equivalent to pomum aurantium . משׂכּיּות is the plur. of משׂכּית, already explained, Pro 18:11; the word is connected neither with שׂכך, to twist, wreathe (Ewald, with most Jewish interpreters) nor with שׂכה, to pierce, infigere (Redslob, vid .
, under Psa 73:7); it signifies medal or ornament, from שׂכה, to behold (cf. שׂכיּה, θέα = θέαμα, Isa 2:6), here a vessel which is a delight to the eyes. In general the Venet . rightly, ἐν μορφώμασιν ἀργύρου; Symmachus and Theodotion, more in accordance with the fundamental idea, ἐν περιβλέπτοις ἀργύρου; the Syr. and Targ. specially: in vessels of embossed work (נגוּדי, from נגד, to draw, to extend); yet more specially the lxx, ἐν ὁρμίσκῳ σαρδίου, on a chain of cornelian stone, for which, perhaps, ἐν φορμίσκῳ (Jäger) ἀργυρίου, in a little silver basket, is the original phrase.
Aquila, after Bereschith rabba c . 93, translates by μῆλα χρύσου ἐν δίσκοις ἀργυφίου. Jerome: in lectis argenteis , appears to have fallen into the error of taking משב for משכב, lectus . Hitzig here emends a self-made ἅπαξ λεγ. Luther’s “golden apples in silver baskets” is to be preferred. A piece of sculpture which represents fruit by golden little disks or points within groups of leaves is not meant - for the proverb does not speak of such pretty little apples - but golden oranges are meant.
A word in accordance with the circumstances which occasion it, is like golden oranges which are handed round in silver salvers or on silver waiters. Such a word is, as adopting another figure we might say, like a well-executed picture, and the situation into which it appropriately fits is like its elegant frame. The comparison with fruit is, however, more significant; it designates the right word as a delightful gift, in a way which heightens its impression and its influences.
Pro 25:12 Another proverb continues the commendation of the effective word; for it represents, in emblem, the interchangeable relation of speaker and hearer: A golden earring and an ornament of fine gold - A wise preacher to an ear that heareth; i. e. , as the former two ornaments form a beautiful ensemble , so the latter two, the wise preacher of morality and an attentive ear, form a harmonious whole: על, down upon, is explained by Deu 32:2.
נזם, at Pro 11:12, standing along with באף, meant a ring for the nose; but here, as elsewhere, it means an earring (lxx, Jerome, Venet .) , translated by the Syr. and Targ. by קדשׁא, because it serves as a talisman. A ring for the nose cannot also be here thought of, because this ornament is an emblem of the attentive ear: willingly accepted chastisement or instruction is an ear-ornament to him who hears (Stier).
But the gift of the wise preacher, which consists in rightly dividing the word of truth, 2Ti 2:15, is as an ornament for the neck or the breast חלי (= Arab. khaly, fem. חליה = ḥilyt), of fine gold (כּתם, jewel, then particularly precious gold, from כּתם, Arab. katam, recondere ). The Venet . well: κόσμος ἀπυροχρύσου (fine gold); on the contrary (perhaps in want of another name for gold), כתם is translated, by the lxx and Syr.
, by sardine; by the Targ. , by emerald; and by Jerome, by margaritum . It looks well when two stand together, the one of whom has golden earrings, and the other wears a yet more precious golden necklace - such a beautiful mutual relationship is formed by a wise speaker and a hearer who listens to his admonitions.
Pro 25:13 The following comparative tristich refers to faithful service rendered by words: Like the coolness of snow on a harvest day Is a faithful messenger to them that send him: He refresheth the soul of his master. The coolness (צנּה from צנן, צנן, to be cool) of snow is not that of a fall of snow, which in the time of harvest would be a calamity, but of drink cooled with snow, which was brought from Lebanon or elsewhere, from the clefts of the rocks; the peasants of Damascus store up the winter’s snow in a cleft of the mountains, and convey it in the warm months to Damascus and the coast towns.
Such a refreshment is a faithful messenger ( vid . , regarding ציר, Pro 13:17, here following קציר as a kind of echo) to them that send him ( vid . , regarding this plur. at Pro 10:26, cf. Pro 22:21); he refreshes, namely (ו explicativum , as e. g. , Eze 18:19, etenim filius , like the ו et quidem , Mal 1:11, different from the ו of conditional clause Pro 23:3), the soul of his master; for the answer which he brings to his master refreshes him, as does a drink of snow-cooled water on a hot harvest day.
Pro 25:14 This proverb relates to the word which promises much, but remains unaccomplished: Clouds and wind, and yet no rain - A man who boasteth with a false gift. Incorrectly the lxx and Targ. refer the predicate contained in the concluding word of the first line to all the three subjects; and equally incorrectly Hitzig, with Heidenheim, interprets מתּת שׁקר, of a gift that has been received of which one boasts, although it is in reality of no value, because by a lying promise a gift is not at all obtained.
But as לחם כזבים, Pro 23:3, is bread which, as it were, deceives him who eats it, so מתת שׁקר is a gift which amounts to a lie, i. e. , a deceitful pretence. Rightly Jerome: vir gloriosus et promissa non complens . In the Arab. ṣaliḍ, which Fleischer compares, the figure 14a and its counterpart 14b are amalgamated, for this word signifies both a boaster and a cloud, which is, as it were, boastful, which thunders much, but rains only sparsely or not at all.
Similar is the Arab. khullab, clouds which send forth lightning, and which thunder, but yet give no rain; we say to one, magno promissor hiatu : thou art (Arab.) kabaraḳn khullabin, i. e. , as Lane translates it: “Thou art only like lightning with which is no rain. ” Schultens refers to this proverbial Arabic, fulmen nubis infecundae . Liberality is called (Arab.)
nadnay, as a watering, cf. Pro 11:25. The proverb belongs to this circle of figures. It is a saying of the German peasants, “ Wenn es sich wolket, so will es regnen ” [when it is cloudy, then there will be rain]; but according to another saying, “ nicht alle Wolken regnen ” [it is not every cloud that yields rain]. “There are clouds and wind without rain. ”
Pro 25:15 Three proverbs follow, which have this in common, that they exhort to moderation: 15 By forbearance is a judge won over, And a gentle tongue breaketh the bone. קצין ( vid . , Pro 6:7) does not denote any kind of distinguished person, but a judge or a person occupying a high official position. And פּתּה does not here mean, to talk over or delude; but, like Jer 20:7, to persuade, to win over, to make favourable to one; for ארך אפּים ( vid .
, Pro 14:29) is dispassionate calmness, not breaking out into wrath, which finally makes it manifest that he who has become the object of accusation, suspicion, or of disgrace, is one who nevertheless has right on his side; for indecent, boisterous passion injures even a just cause; while, on the contrary, a quiet, composed, thoughtful behaviour, which is not embarrassed by injustice, either experienced or threatened, in the end secures a decision in our favour. “Patience overcomes” is an old saying.
The soft, gentle tongue (cf. רך, Pro 15:1) is the opposite of a passionate, sharp, coarse one, which only the more increases the resistance which it seeks to overcome. “Patience,” says a German proverb, “breaks iron;” another says, “Patience is stronger than a diamond. ” So here: a gentle tongue breaketh the bone (גּרם = עצם, as at Pro 17:22), it softens and breaks to pieces that which is hardest.
Sudden anger makes the evil still worse; long-suffering, on the contrary, operates convincingly; cutting, immoderate language, embitters and drives away; gentle words, on the contrary, persuade, if not immediately, yet by this, that they remain as it were unchangeable.
Pro 25:16 Another way of showing self-control: Hast thou found honey? eat thy enough, Lest thou be surfeited with it, and vomit it up. Honey is pleasant, salutary, and thus to be eaten sparingly, Pro 24:13, but ne quid nimis . Too much is unwholesome, 27a: αὐτοῦ καὶ μέλιτος τὸ πλέον ἐστὶ χολή, i. e. , even honey enjoyed immoderately is as bitter as gall; or, as Freidank says: des honges süeze erdruizet sô mans ze viel geniuzet [the sweetness of honey offends when one partakes too much of it].
Eat if thou hast found any in the forest or the mountains, דּיּךּ, thy enough (lxx τὸ ἱκανόν; the Venet . τὸ ἀρκοῦν σοι), i. e. , as much as appeases thine appetite, that thou mayest not become surfeited and vomit it out (והקאתו with Tsere , and א quiesc. , as at 2Sa 14:10; vid . , Michlol 116a, and Parchon under קוא). Fleischer, Ewald, Hitzig, and others, place Pro 25:16 and Pro 25:17 together, so as to form an emblematic tetrastich; but he who is surfeited is certainly, in Pro 25:16, he who willingly enjoys, and in 17, he to whom it is given to enjoy without his will; and is not, then, Pro 25:16 a sentence complete in itself in meaning?
That it is not to be understood in a purely dietetic sense (although thus interpreted it is a rule not to be despised), is self-evident. As one can suffer injury from the noblest of food if he overload his stomach therewith, so in the sphere of science, instruction, edification, there is an injurious overloading of the mind; we ought to measure what we receive by our spiritual want, the right distribution of enjoyment and labour, and the degree of our ability to change it in succum et sanguinem , - else it at last awakens in us dislike, and becomes an evil to us.
Pro 25:17 This proverb is of a kindred character to the foregoing. “If thy comrade eats honey,” says an Arabic proverb quoted by Hitzig, “do not lick it all up. ” But the emblem of honey is not continued in this verse: Make rare thy foot in thy neighbour’s house, Lest he be satiated with thee, and hate thee. To make one’s foot rare or dear from a neighbour’s house is equivalent to: to enter it seldom, and not too frequently; הוקר includes in itself the idea of keeping at a distance (Targ.
כּלה רגלך; Symmachus, ὑπόστειλον; and another: φίμωσον πόδα σου), and מן has the sense of the Arab. 'an, and is not the comparative, as at Isa 13:12 : regard thy visit dearer than the house of a neighbour (Heidenheim). The proverb also is significant as to the relation of friend to friend, whose reciprocal love may be turned into hatred by too much intercourse and too great fondness.
But רעך is including a friend, any one with whom we stand in any kind of intercourse. “Let him who seeks to be of esteem,” says a German proverb, “come seldom;” and that may be said with reference to him whom his heart draws to another, and also to him who would be of use to another by drawing him out of the false way and guiding on the right path - a showing of esteem, a confirming of love by visiting, should not degenerate into forwardness which appears as burdensome servility, as indiscreet self-enjoyment; nor into a restless impetuosity, which seeks at once to gain by force that which one should allow gradually to ripen.
This group of proverbs has the word רע in each of them, connecting them together. The first of the group represents a false tongue:
Pro 25:18 18 A hammer, and a sword, and a sharp arrow - A man that beareth false witness against his neighbour. An emblematic, or, as we might also say, an iconological proverb; for 18a is a quodlibet of instruments of murder, and 18b is the subscription under it: that which these weapons of murder accomplish, is done to his neighbour by a man who bears false witness against him - he ruins his estate, takes away his honour, but yet more: he murders him, at one time more grossly, at another time with more refinement; at one time slowly, at another time more quickly.
מפיץ, from פּוּץ, is equivalent to מפּץ, and מפּץ from נפץ; the Syr. and Targ. have instead פדועא (פדיעא) from פּדע = פּצע; the word פּריעא, on which Hitzig builds a conjecture, is an error of transcription ( vid . , Lagarde and Levy). The expression, 18b, is from the decalogue, Exo 20:16; Deu 5:17. It is for the most part translated the same here as there: he who speaks against his neighbour as a false witness.
But rightly the lxx, Jerome, the Venet . , and Luther: false testimony. As אל sA . y signifies both that which is mighty = power, and Him who is mighty = God, so עד signifies both him who bears testimony and the testimony that is borne, properly that which repeats itself and thereby strengthens itself; accordingly we say ענה עד, to give testimony in reply - viz.
to the judge who asks - or generally to offer testimony (even unasked); as well as ענה לעד, Deu 31:21, i. e. , as evidence (Jerome, pro testimonio ). The prep. ב with this ענה has always the meaning of contra , also at 1Sa 12:3; Gen 30:33 is, however, open to question.
Pro 25:19 19 A worthless tooth and an unsteady foot - Trust in a faithless man in the day of need. The form רעה (with Mercha on the antepenult), Isa 29:19, takes the place of an inf . absol . ; רעה here (about the tone syllable of which Dechî does not decide, thus without doubt Milra ) is certainly not a subst. : tooth of breaking (Gesen.) ; for how strange such a designation of a worthless tooth!
שׁן is indeed mas. in 1Sa 14:5, but it can also be used as fem. , as רגל, which is for the most part fem. , also occurs as mas. , Göttche. §650. Böttcher, in the new Aehrenlese , and in the Lehrbuch, takes רעה as fem. of an adj. רע, after the form חל; but חל is not an adj. , and does not form a fem. , although it means not merely profanity, but that which is profane; this is true also of the Aram.
חוּל; for חוּלתּא, Est 2:9, Targ. , is a female name mistaken by Buxtorf. Are we then to read רעה, with Hitzig, after the lxx? - an unimportant change. We interpret the traditional רעה, with Fleischer, as derived from רועעה, from רועע, breaking to pieces (crumbling), in an intransitive sense. The form מוּעדת is also difficult. Böttcher regards it as also, e.
g. , Aben Ezra after the example of Gecatilia as part . Kal . = מועדת, “only on account of the pausal tone and the combination of the two letters מע with û instead of ô . ” But this vocal change, with its reasons, is merely imaginary. מוּעדת is the part. Pual , with the preformative מ struck out, Ewald 169d. The objection that the part. Pual should be ממעד, after the form מבער, does not prove anything to the contrary; for מועדת cannot be the fem.
so as not to coincide with the fem. of the part . Kal , cf. besides to the long û the form without the Dagesh יוּקשׁים, Ecc 9:12 = מיקּשׁים (Arnheim, Gramm . p. 139). רגל מוּעדת is a leg that has become tottering, trembling. He who in a time of need makes a faithless man his ground of confidence, is like one who seeks to bite with a broken tooth, and which he finally crushes, and one who supports himself on a shaking leg, and thus stumbles and falls.
The gen. connection מבטח בוגד signifies either the ground of confidence consisting in a faithless man, or the confidence placed in one who is faithless. But, after the Masora, we are to read here, as at Psa 65:6, מבטח, which Michlol 184a also confirms, and as it is also found in the Venice 1525, Basel 1619, and in Norzi. This מבטה is constr. according to Kimchi, notwithstanding the Kametz ; as also משׁקל, Ezr 8:30 (after Abulwalîd, Kimchi, and Norzi).
In this passage before us, מבטח בוגד may signify a deceitful ground of confidence (cf. Hab 2:5), but the two other passages present a genit. connection of the words. We must thus suppose that the ā of מבטח and משׁקל, in these three passages, is regarded as fixed, like the â of the form (Arab.) mif'âl.
Pro 25:20 The above proverb, which connects itself with Pro 25:18, not only by the sound רע, but also by שׁן, which is assonant with שׁנון, is followed by another with the catchword רע: 20 He that layeth aside his coat on a day of frost, vinegar on nitre, And he who welcomes with songs a dejected heart. Is not this intelligible, sensible, ingenious? All these three things are wrong.
The first is as wrong as the second, and the third, which the proverb has in view, is morally wrong, for one ought to weep with those that weep, Rom 12:15; he, on the contrary, who laughs among those who weep, is, on the most favourable judgment, a fool. That which is wrong in 20a, according to Böttcher in the Aehrenlese , 1849, consists in this, that one in severe cold puts on a fine garment.
As if there were not garments which are at the same time beautiful, and keep warm? In the new Aehrenlese he prefers the reading משׁנּה: if one changes his coat. But that surely he might well enough do, if the one were warmer than the other! Is it then impossible that מעדה, in the connection, means transire faciens = removens ? The Kal עדה, tarnsiit , occurs at Job 28:8.
So also, in the poetic style. העדה might be used in the sense of the Aram. אעדּי. Rightly Aquila, Symmachus, περιαιρῶν; the Venet . better, ἀφαιρούμενος (Mid.) בּגד is an overcoat or mantle, so called from covering, as לבוּשׁ (R. לב, to fasten, fix), the garment lying next the body, vid . , at Psa 22:19. Thus, as it is foolish to lay off upper clothing on a frosty day, so it is foolish also to pour vinegar on nitre; carbonic acid nitre, whether it be mineral (which may be here thought of) or vegetable, is dissolved in water, and serves diverse purposes ( vid .
, under Isa 1:25); but if one pours vinegar on it, it is destroyed. לב־רע is, at Pro 26:23 and elsewhere, a heart morally bad, here a heart badly disposed, one inclined to that which is evil; for שׁר שׁיר is the contrast of קונן קינה, and always the consequence of a disposition joyfully excited; the inconsistency lies in this, that one thinks to cheer a sorrowful heart by merry singing, if the singing has an object, and is not much more the reckless expression of an animated pleasure in view of the sad condition of another.
שׁיר על . rehtona signifies, as at Job 33:27, to sing to any one, to address him in singing; cf. דּבּר על, Jer 6:10, and particularly על־לב, Hos 2:16; Isa 40:2. The ב of בּשּׁרים is neither the partitive, Pro 9:5, nor the transitive, Pro 20:30, but the instrumental; for, as e. g. , at Exo 7:20, the obj. of the action is thought of as its means (Gesen. §138, Anm.
3*); one sings “with songs,” for definite songs underlie his singing. The lxx, which the Syr. , Targ. , and Jerome more or less follow, has formed from this proverb one quite different: “As vinegar is hurtful to a wound, so an injury to the body makes the heart sorrowful; as the moth in clothes, and the worm in wood, so the sorrow of a man injures his heart.
” The wisdom of this pair of proverbs is not worth much, and after all inquiry little or nothing comes of it. The Targ. at least preserves the figure 20b: as he who pours vinegar (Syr. chalo) on nitre; the Peshito, however, and here and there also the Targum, has jathro (arrow-string) instead of methro (nitre). Hitzig adopts this, and changes the tristich into the distich: He that meeteth archers with arrow on the string, Is like him who singeth songs with a sad heart.
The Hebrew of this proverb of Hitzig’s (מרים קרה על־יתר) is unhebraic, the meaning dark as an oracle, and its moral contents nil.
Pro 25:21-22 21 If thine enemy hunger, feed him with bread; And if he thirst, give him water to drink. 22 For thereby thou heapest burning coals on his head, And Jahve will recompense it to thee. The translation of this proverb by the lxx is without fault; Paul cites therefrom Rom 12:20. The participial construction of 22a, the lxx, rightly estimating it, thus renders: for, doing this, thou shalt heap coals on his head.
The expression, “thou shalt heap” (σωρεύσεις), is also appropriate; for חתה certainly means first only to fetch or bring fire ( vid . , Pro 6:27); but here, by virtue of the constructio praegnans with על, to fetch, and hence to heap up - to pile upon. Burning pain, as commonly observed, is the figure of burning shame, on account of undeserved kindness shown by an enemy (Fleischer).
But how burning coals heaped on the head can denote burning shame, is not to be perceived, for the latter is a burning on the cheeks; wherefore Hitzig and Rosenmüller explain: thou wilt thus bring on him the greatest pain, and appease thy vengeance, while at the same time Jahve will reward thy generosity. Now we say, indeed, that he who rewards evil with good takes the noblest revenge; but if this doing of good proceed from a revengeful aim, and is intended sensibly to humble an adversary, then it loses all its moral worth, and is changed into selfish, malicious wickedness.
Must the proverb then be understood in this ignoble sense? The Scriptures elsewhere say that guilt and punishment are laid on the head of any one when he is made to experience and to bear them. Chrysostom and others therefore explain after Psa 140:10 and similar passages, but thereby the proverb is morally falsified, and Pro 25:22 accords with Pro 25:21, which counsels not to the avenging of oneself, but to the requital of evil with good.
The burning of coals laid on the head must be a painful but wholesome consequence; it is a figure of self-accusing repentance (Augustine, Zöckler), for the producing of which the showing of good to an enemy is a noble motive. That God rewards such magnanimity may not be the special motive; but this view might contribute to it, for otherwise such promises of God as Isa 58:8-12 were without moral right.
The proverb also requires one to show himself gentle and liberal toward a needy enemy, and present a twofold reason for this: first, that thereby his injustice is brought home to his conscience; and, secondly, that thus God is well-pleased in such practical love toward an enemy, and will reward it; - by such conduct, apart from the performance of a law grounded in our moral nature, one advances the happiness of his neighbour and his own.
Pro 25:21-22 21 If thine enemy hunger, feed him with bread; And if he thirst, give him water to drink. 22 For thereby thou heapest burning coals on his head, And Jahve will recompense it to thee. The translation of this proverb by the lxx is without fault; Paul cites therefrom Rom 12:20. The participial construction of 22a, the lxx, rightly estimating it, thus renders: for, doing this, thou shalt heap coals on his head.
The expression, “thou shalt heap” (σωρεύσεις), is also appropriate; for חתה certainly means first only to fetch or bring fire ( vid . , Pro 6:27); but here, by virtue of the constructio praegnans with על, to fetch, and hence to heap up - to pile upon. Burning pain, as commonly observed, is the figure of burning shame, on account of undeserved kindness shown by an enemy (Fleischer).
But how burning coals heaped on the head can denote burning shame, is not to be perceived, for the latter is a burning on the cheeks; wherefore Hitzig and Rosenmüller explain: thou wilt thus bring on him the greatest pain, and appease thy vengeance, while at the same time Jahve will reward thy generosity. Now we say, indeed, that he who rewards evil with good takes the noblest revenge; but if this doing of good proceed from a revengeful aim, and is intended sensibly to humble an adversary, then it loses all its moral worth, and is changed into selfish, malicious wickedness.
Must the proverb then be understood in this ignoble sense? The Scriptures elsewhere say that guilt and punishment are laid on the head of any one when he is made to experience and to bear them. Chrysostom and others therefore explain after Psa 140:10 and similar passages, but thereby the proverb is morally falsified, and Pro 25:22 accords with Pro 25:21, which counsels not to the avenging of oneself, but to the requital of evil with good.
The burning of coals laid on the head must be a painful but wholesome consequence; it is a figure of self-accusing repentance (Augustine, Zöckler), for the producing of which the showing of good to an enemy is a noble motive. That God rewards such magnanimity may not be the special motive; but this view might contribute to it, for otherwise such promises of God as Isa 58:8-12 were without moral right.
The proverb also requires one to show himself gentle and liberal toward a needy enemy, and present a twofold reason for this: first, that thereby his injustice is brought home to his conscience; and, secondly, that thus God is well-pleased in such practical love toward an enemy, and will reward it; - by such conduct, apart from the performance of a law grounded in our moral nature, one advances the happiness of his neighbour and his own.
Pro 25:23 The next group of proverbs extends from Pro 25:23 to Pro 25:28. 23 Wind from the north produceth rain; And a secret tongue a troubled countenance. The north is called צפון, from צפן, to conceal, from the firmament darkening itself for a longer time, and more easily, like the old Persian apâkhtara, as (so it appears) the starless, and, like aquilo , the north wind, as bringing forward the black clouds.
But properly the “fathers of rain” are, in Syria, the west and the south-west; and so little can צפון here mean the pure north wind, that Jerome, who knew from his own experience the changes of weather in Palestine, helps himself, after Symmachus (διαλύει βροχήν), with a quid pro quo out of the difficulty: ventus aquilo dissipat pluvias ; the Jewish interpreters (Aben Ezra, Joseph Kimchi, and Meîri) also thus explain, for they connect together תחולל, in the meaning תמנע, with the unintelligible חלילה (far be it!) But צפון may also, perhaps like ζόφος ( Deutsch.
Morgenl. Zeitsch . xxi. 600f.) , standing not without connection therewith, denote the northwest; and probably the proverb emphasized the northern direction of the compass, because, according to the intention of the similitude, he seeks to designate such rain as is associated with raw, icy-cold weather, as the north wind (Pro 27:16, lxx, Sir. 43:20) brings along with it.
The names of the winds are gen. fem . , e. g. , Isa 43:6. תּחולל (Aquila, ὠδίνει; cf. Pro 8:24, ὠδινήθην) has in Codd. , e. g. , the Jaman . , the tone on the penult . , and with Tsere Metheg ( Thorath Emeth , p. 21) serving as העמדה. So also the Arab. nataj is used of the wind, as helping the birth of the rain-clouds. Manifestly פנים נזעמים, countenances manifesting extreme displeasure ( vid .
, the Kal זעם, Pro 24:24), are compared to rain. With justice Hitzig renders פנים, as e. g. , Joh 2:6, in the plur. sense; because, for the influence which the tongue slandering in secret (Psa 101:5) has on the slandered, the “sorrowful countenance” would not be so characteristic as for the influence which it exercises on the mutual relationships of men: the secret babbler, the confidential communication throwing suspicion, now on this one and now on that one, behind their backs, excites men against one another, so that one shows to another a countenance in which deep displeasure and suspicion express themselves.
Pro 25:24 24 Better to sit on the top of a roof, Than a quarrelsome woman and a house in common. A repetition of Pro 21:9.
Pro 25:25 25 Fresh water to a thirsty soul; And good news from a far country. Vid . , regarding the form of this proverb, vol. i. p. 9; we have a similar proverb regarding the influence of good news at Pro 15:30. Fresh cold water is called at Jer 18:14 מים קרים; vid . , regarding קר, 18:27. “עיף, cogn. יעף, and עוּף, properly to become darkened, therefore figuratively like (Arab.)
gushiya 'alyh, to become faint, to become feeble unto death, of the darkness which spreads itself over the eyes” (Fleischer). This proverb, with the figure of “fresh water,” is now followed by one with the figure of a “fountain”:
Pro 25:26 26 A troubled fountain and a ruined spring - A righteous man yielding to a godless man. For the most part, in מט one thinks of a yielding in consequence of being forced. Thus e. g. , Fleischer: as a troubled ruined spring is a misfortune for the people who drink out of it, or draw from it, so is it a misfortune for the surrounding of the righteous, when he is driven from his dwelling or his possession by an unrighteous man.
And it is true: the righteous can be compared to a well (מעין, well-spring, from עין, a well, as an eye of the earth, and מקור, fountain, from קוּר, R. קר, כר, to round out, to dig out), with reference to the blessing which flows from it to its surroundings (cf. Pro 10:11 and Joh 7:38). But the words “yielding to” (contrast “stood before,” 2Ki 10:4, or Jos 7:12), in the phrase “yielding to the godless,” may be understood of a spontaneous as well as of a constrained, forced, wavering and yielding, as the expression in the Psalm בּל־אמּוט [ non movebor , Psa 10:6] affirms the certainty of being neither inwardly nor outwardly ever moved or shaken.
The righteous shall stand fast and strong in God without fearing the godless (Isa 51:12.) , unmoveable and firm as a brazen wall (Jer 1:17.) If, however, he is wearied with resistance, and from the fear of man, or the desire to please man, or from a false love of peace he yields before it, and so gives way - then he becomes like to a troubled fountain (רפשׂ, cogn.
רמס, Eze 34:18; Isa 41:25; Jerome: fans turbatus pede ), a ruined spring; his character, hitherto pure, is now corrupted by his own guilt, and now far from being a blessing to others, his wavering is a cause of sorrow to the righteous, and an offence to the weak - he is useful no longer, but only injurious. Rightly Lagarde: “The verse, one of the most profound of the whole book, does not speak of the misfortunate, but of the fall of the righteous, whose sin compromises the holy cause which he serves, 2Sa 12:14.
” Thus also e. g. , Löwenstein, with reference to the proverb Sanhedrin 92b: also in the time of danger let not a man disown his honour. Bachja, in his Ethics , referring to this figure, 26a, thinks of the possibility of restoration: the righteous wavers only for the moment, but at last he comes right (מתמוטט ועולה). But this interpretation of the figure destroys the point of the proverb.
Pro 25:27 This verse, as it stands, is scarcely to be understood. The Venet . translates 27b literally: ἔρευνά τε δόξας αὐτῶν δόξα; but what is the reference of this כּבדם? Euchel and others refer it to men, for they translate: “to set a limit to the glory of man is true glory;” but the “glory of man” is denoted by the phrase כּבד אדם, not by כּבדם; and, besides, חקר does not mean measure and limit.
Oetinger explains: “To eat too much honey is not good; whereas the searching after their glory, viz. , of pleasant and praiseworthy things, which are likened to honey, is glory, cannot be too much done, and is never without utility and honour;” but how can כּבדם be of the same meaning as כּבד הדברים אשׁר or הנמשׁלים כּדּבשׁ - such an abbreviation of the expression is impossible.
Schultens, according to Rashi: vestigatio gravitatis eorum est gravitas , i. e. , the searching out of their difficulty is a trouble; better Vitringa (since כבוד nowhere occurs in this sense of gravitas molesta ac pondere oppressura ): investigatio praestantiae eorum est gloriosa ; but Vitringa, in order to gain a connection to 27a, needs to introduce etiamsi , and in both explanations the reference of the כּבדם is imaginary, and it by no means lies near, since the Scripture uses the word כבוד of God, and His kingdom and name, but never of His law or His revelation.
Thus also is an argument against Bertheau, who translates: the searching out of their glory (viz. , of the divine law and revelation) is a burden, a strenuous occupation of the mind, since חקר does not in itself mean searching out, and is equivocally, even unintelligibly, expressed, since כבוד denotes, it is true, here and there, a great multitude, but never a burden (as כּבד).
The thought which Jerome finds in 27b: qui scrutator est majestatis opprimetur a gloria , is judicious, and connects itself synonym. with 27a; but such a thought is unwarranted, for he disregards the suff. of כּבדם, and renders כבוד in the sense of difficulty (oppression). Or should it perhaps be vocalized כּבדם (Syr. , Targ. , Theodotion, δεδοξασμένα = נכבּדות)?
Thus vocalized, Umbreit renders it in the sense of honores ; Elster and Zöckler in the sense of difficultates ( difficilia ); but this plur. , neither the biblical, nor, so far as I know, the post-bibl. usage of the word has ever adopted. However, the sense of the proverb which Elster and Zöckler gain is certainly that which is aimed at. We accordingly translate: To surfeit oneself in eating honey is not good, But as an inquirer to enter on what is difficult is honour.
We read כּבדם instead of כּבדם. This change commends itself far more than כּבד מכּבוד (וחקר), according to which Gesenius explains: nimium studium honoris est sine honore - impossible, for חקר does not signify nimium studium , in the sense of striving, but only that of inquiry: one strives after honour, but does not study it. Hitzig and Ewald, after the example of J.
D. Michaelis, Arnoldi, and Ziegler, betake themselves therefore to the Arabic; Ewald explains, for he leaves the text unchanged: “To despise their honour (that is, of men) is honour (true, real honour);” Hitzig, for he changes the text like Gesenius: “To despise honour is more than honour,” with the ingenious remark: To obtain an order [ insigne ordinis ] is an honour, but not to wear it then for the first time is its bouquet.
Nowhere any trace either in Hebrew or in Aramaic is to be found of the verb חקר, to despise (to be despised), and so it must here remain without example. Nor have we any need of it. The change of כּבדם into כּבדם is enough. The proverb is an antithetic distich; 27a warns against inordinate longing after enjoyments, 27b praises earnest labour. Instead of דּבשׁ הרבּות, if honey in the mass were intended, the words would have been דּבשׁ הרבּה (Ecc 5:11; 1Ki 10:10), or at least הרבּות דּבשׁ (Amo 4:9); הרבות can only be a n.
actionis , and אכל דּבשׁ its inverted object (cf. Jer 9:4), as Böttcher has discerned: to make much of the eating of honey, to do much therein is not good (cf. Pro 25:16). In 27b Luther also partly hits on the correct rendering: “and he who searches into difficult things, to him it is too difficult,” for which it ought to be said: to him it is an honour. כּבדם, viz.
, דברים, signifies difficult things, as ריקים, Pro 12:11, vain things. The Heb. כּבד, however, never means difficult to be understood or comprehended (although more modern lexicons say this), but always only burdensome and heavy, gravis , not difficilis . כבדם are also things of which the חקר, i. e. , the fundamental searching into them (Pro 18:17; Pro 25:2.)
, costs an earnest effort, which perhaps, according to the first impression, appears to surpass the available strength (cf. Exo 18:18). To overdo oneself in eating honey is not good; on the contrary, the searching into difficult subjects is nothing less than an eating of honey, but an honour. There is here a paronomasia . Fleischer translates it: explorare gravia grave est ; but we render grave est not in the sense of molestiam creat , but gravitatem parit (weight = respect, honour).
Pro 25:28 This verse, counselling restraint as to the spirit, is connected with the foregoing, which counsels to self-control as to enjoyment: A city broken through, now without walls - A man without self-control over his spirit. A “city broken down” is one whose wall is “broken,” 2Ch 32:5, whether it has met with breaches (פּרצים), or is wholly broken; in the former case also the city is incapable of being defended, and it is all one as if it had no wall.
Such a city is like a man “who hath no control over his own spirit” (for the accentuation of the Heb. words here, vid . , Thorath Emeth , p. 10): cujus spiritui nulla cohibitio (Schultens), i. e. , qui animum suum cohibere non potest (Fleischer: עצר, R. צר, to press together, to oppress, and thereby to hold back). As such a city can be plundered and laid waste without trouble, so a man who knows not to hold in check his desires and affections is in constant danger of blindly following the impulse of his unbridled sensuality, and of being hurried forward to outbreaks of passion, and thus of bringing unhappiness upon himself.
There are sensual passions ( e. g. , drunkenness), intellectual ( e. g. , ambition), mingled ( e. g. , revenge); but in all of these a false ego rules, which, instead of being held down by the true and better ego, rises to unbounded supremacy. Therefore the expression used is not לנפשׁו, but לרוּחו; desire has its seat in the soul, but in the spirit it grows into passion, which in the root of all its diversities is selfishness ( Psychol .
p. 199); self-control is accordingly the ruling of the spirit, i. e. , the restraining (keeping down) of the false enslaved ego-life by the true and free, and powerful in God Himself.
Pro 26:1 There now follows a group of eleven proverbs of the fool; only the first of the group has after it a proverb of different contents, but of similar form: As snow in summer, and rain in harvest; So honour befitteth not a fool. If there is snow in high summer (קיץ, to be glowing hot), it is contrary to nature; and if there is rain in harvest, it is (according to the alternations of the weather in Palestine) contrary to what is usually the case, and is a hindrance to the ingathering of the fruits of the field.
Even so a fool and respect, or a place of honour, are incongruous things; honour will only injure him (as according to Pro 19:10, luxury); he will make unjust use of it, and draw false conclusions from it; it will strengthen him in his folly, and only increase it. נאוה (= נאוי) is the adj. to the Pil . נאוה, Psa 93:5 (plur. נאווּ); נאוה, Pro 19:10, and נאוה, Pro 17:7, are also masc.
and fem. of the adj. , according to which, that which is said under Pro 19:10 is to be corrected. Symmachus and Theodotion have translated οὐκ ἔπρεψεν, and have therefore read נאוה. The root word is נאה (as שׁחה to שׁחוה) = נוה, to aim at something ( vid . , Hupfeld under Psa 23:2).
Pro 26:2 This verse is formed quite in the same way as the preceding: As the sparrow in its fluttering, as the swallow in its flying, So the curse that is groundless: it cometh not. This passage is one of those fifteen ( vid . , under Psa 100:3) in which the לא of the text is changed by the Kerı̂ into לו; the Talm. , Midrash, and Sohar refer this לּו partly to him who utters the curse himself, against whom also, if he is a judge, such inconsiderate cursing becomes an accusation by God; partly to him who is cursed, for they read from the proverb that the curse of a private person also (הדיוט, ἰδιώτης) is not wont to fall to the ground, and that therefore one ought to be on his guard against giving any occasion for it ( vid .
, Norzi). But Aben Ezra supposes that לא and לו interchange, as much as to say that the undeserved curse falls on him (לו) who curses, and does not fall (לא) on him who is cursed. The figures in 2a harmonize only with לא, according to which the lxx, the Syr. , Targ. , Venet . , and Luther (against Jerome) translate, for the principal matter, that the sparrow and the swallow, although flying out (Pro 27:8), return home again to their nest (Ralbag), would be left out of view in the comparison by לו.
This emphasizes the fluttering and flying, and is intended to affirm that a groundless curse is a פּרח בּאוּיר, aimless, i. e. , a thing hovering in the air, that it fails and does not take effect. Most interpreters explain the two Lameds as declaring the destination: ut passer ( sc. natus est ) ad vagandum , as the sparrow, through necessity of nature, roves about...
(Fleischer). But from Pro 25:3 it is evident that the Lamed in both cases declares the reference or the point of comparison: as the sparrow in respect to its fluttering about, etc. The names of the two birds are, according to Aben Ezra, like dreams without a meaning; but the Romanic exposition explains rightly צפּור by passereau , and דּרור by hirondelle , for צפור (Arab.
'uṣfuwr), twitterer, designates at least preferably the sparrow, and דרור the swallow, from its flight shooting straight out, as it were radiating ( vid . , under Psa 84:4); the name of the sparrow, dûrı̂ (found in courtyards), which Wetstein, after Saadia, compares to דרור, is etymologically different. Regarding חנּם, vid . , under Pro 24:28. Rightly the accentuation separates the words rendered, “so the curse undeserved” (קללת, after Kimchi, Michlol 79b, קללת), from those which follow; לא תבא is the explication of כן: thus hovering in the air is a groundless curse - it does not come (בוא, like e.
g. , Jos 21:43). After this proverb, which is formed like Pro 26:1, the series now returns to the “fool. ”
Pro 26:3 3 A whip for the horse, a bridle for the ass, And a rod for the back of fools. J. D. Michaelis supposes that the order should be reversed: a bridle for the horse, a whip for the ass; but Arnoldi has here discovered the figure of speech merismus (cf. Pro 10:1); and Hitzig, in the manner of the division, the rhythmical reason of the combination (cf. שׁם חם ויפת for שׁם יפת וחם): whip and bridle belong to both, for one whips a horse (Neh 3:2) and also bridles him; one bridles an ass (Psa 32:9) and also whips him (Num 22:28.)
As whip and bridle are both serviceable and necessary, so also serviceable and necessary is a rod, לגו כּסילים, Pro 10:13; Pro 19:29.
Pro 26:4 4 Answer not the fool according to his folly, Lest thou thyself also become like unto him. After, or according to his folly, is here equivalent to recognising the foolish supposition and the foolish object of his question, and thereupon considering it, as if, e. g. , he asked why the ignorant man was happier than the man who had much knowledge, or how one may acquire the art of making gold; for “a fool can ask more than ten wise men can answer.
” He who recognises such questions as justifiable, and thus sanctions them, places himself on an equality with the fool, and easily himself becomes one. The proverb that follows affirms apparently the direct contrary: