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Proverbs 30

The Sayings of Agur: Humility, the Word of God, Contentment, Wonder, and the Limits of Human Wisdom

Wisdom begins with humble confession before the Holy One, trusts the flawless word of God, prays for truthful contentment, learns from creation, rejects arrogance and greed, and restrains self-exalting speech before it produces strife.

Chapter Summary

Wisdom begins with humble confession before the Holy One, trusts the flawless word of God, prays for truthful contentment, learns from creation, rejects arrogance and greed, and restrains self-exalting speech before it produces strife.

Overview

Proverbs 30 argues that true wisdom is impossible without humility before God. Agur begins not by boasting of wisdom but by confessing limitation before the Holy One. Human beings cannot ascend to heaven, gather the wind, bind the waters, or establish the earth. Therefore, wisdom must receive what God has spoken rather than add to it. God's word is flawless, and He is a shield to those who take refuge in Him.

From that foundation, Agur prays for a life guarded from falsehood, greed, and spiritual danger. He recognizes that both riches and poverty can tempt the soul into dishonoring God. The rest of the chapter trains perception through warnings and numerical observations: arrogant generations devour the poor, greed is never satisfied, adultery hides guilt under denial, social disorder trembles under unwise elevation, and small creatures display profound wisdom.

The chapter concludes by calling self-exalting fools to silence before anger becomes strife.

The Biblical World

Chapter At A Glance

Chapter Movement

The chapter moves from Agur's confession of human limitation, to confidence in God's flawless word, to prayer for truth and contentment, to warnings about arrogance, greed, and dishonor, to wonder at creation and the mystery of hidden ways, to social disorder, to wisdom learned from small creatures, and finally to restraint against self-exaltation and anger.

Covenant Significance

Proverbs 30 applies covenant wisdom by placing the learner before the Holy One, the flawless word of God, and the dangers of falsehood, greed, arrogance, and oppression. The chapter's insistence not to add to God's words reflects Israel's covenant obligation to receive divine instruction as given. Agur's prayer for daily bread recalls covenant dependence on the Lord's provision.

The warnings against dishonoring parents, devouring the poor, and hiding adultery reflect Torah-shaped righteousness. The chapter teaches that covenant life requires humility before revelation, contentment under providence, and ethical restraint in speech, appetite, sexuality, and power.

Gospel Clarity

Proverbs 30 exposes the proud limits of human wisdom. We do not ascend to heaven, master creation, purify ourselves, secure ourselves by wealth, or satisfy ourselves by greed. We add to God's words, deny sin, devour the weak, boast in ourselves, and press anger into strife. The gospel announces that Christ is the Son who came down from heaven, reveals the Father, embodies the wisdom of God, and gives the true bread of life.

He trusted the Father's word perfectly, lived in truthful contentment, identified with the poor, resisted self-exaltation, and humbled Himself to the cross. There He bore judgment for proud, greedy, lying, self-sufficient sinners. In His resurrection, He gives living refuge and, by the Spirit, forms people who trust God's word, pray for daily bread, tell the truth, live contentedly, and walk humbly before the Holy One.

Formation Aim

Humility, Scripture confidence, truthfulness, contentment, daily dependence, wonder, protection of the poor, moral discernment, creation-attentiveness, weakness-wisdom, and speech restraint.

Focus Points

  • Human Limitation Before God
  • The Flawless Word of God
  • God as Refuge
  • Truthfulness
  • Contentment
  • Greed and Insatiability
  • Concern for the Poor
  • Creation as Wisdom Teacher
  • Self-Exaltation and Restraint
  • Divine Transcendence
  • Human Limitation
  • Scripture
  • Refuge in God
  • Greed
  • Care for the Poor
  • Creation Wisdom
  • Sanctification

Passages

Book Arc