Proverbs 25:20
Wisdom responds to suffering with sensitivity rather than careless cheerfulness.
Scripture Text
25:20 As one who takes away a garment in cold weather, or vinegar on soda, so is one who sings songs to a heavy heart.
Wisdom responds to suffering with sensitivity rather than careless cheerfulness.
Proverbs 25:20 teaches that responding insensitively to a grieving or troubled person is harmful, just as removing a garment on a cold day or pouring vinegar on soda causes discomfort and disturbance.
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.
- Hezekiah's Collection and Royal Wisdom 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.
- Restraint in Disputes and the Wisdom of Fitting Speech 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.
- Patience, Gentle Speech, Neighborly Restraint, and False Witness 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.
- Mercy Toward Enemies and the Fire of Divine Reward 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.
- Slander, Quarrels, Bad News, Compromise, Excess, and Self-Control 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.
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 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.
- Do not interpret the proverb as condemning joy or singing itself.
- Do not assume the verse discourages encouragement when offered appropriately.
- Do not overlook the emphasis on emotional discernment and empathy.
- Do not reduce the proverb to social etiquette rather than genuine compassion.
- Do not use this passage to condemn singing, joy, praise, or encouragement.
- Do not assume a heavy heart should be left hopeless or without gospel comfort.
- Do not weaponize lament to resist all exhortation, truth, or hope.
- Do not force cheerful worship language onto someone in fresh grief as though sorrow were unbelief.
- Do not reduce pastoral care to silence only; wise comfort may include words, prayer, Scripture, tears, and practical care.
- Do not confuse emotional discernment with fear of speaking; the issue is fitting love, not avoidance.
- Do not forget that resurrection hope is real, but it must be ministered with tenderness to wounded hearts.
- Teach that not every true or cheerful word is fitting for every moment.
- Warn against shallow comfort that rushes grief, minimizes sorrow, or pressures wounded people to appear happy.
- Encourage believers to listen before speaking and to discern whether a person needs silence, lament, prayer, presence, Scripture, practical help, or gentle hope.
- Help the church recover biblical lament as part of faithful discipleship.
- Call leaders, counselors, and caregivers to avoid using songs, slogans, verses, or advice as emotional shortcuts.
- Point sufferers to Christ, who enters sorrow and gives hope without despising the heavy heart.
- 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.
Humility, restraint, confidentiality, fitting speech, wise rebuke, faithfulness, patience, gentleness, enemy mercy, non-compromise, and self-control.
- 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.
- Chapter Summary : 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 25:20 teaches sensitivity toward those who are hurting. In the gospel, Christ demonstrates perfect compassion toward the brokenhearted and calls His followers to comfort others with the same compassion they have received from Him.