Proverbs 30:15-16
Unrestrained desire is never satisfied and ultimately consumes those who follow it.
Scripture Text
30:15 “The leech has two daughters: ‘Give, give.’ “There are three things that are never satisfied; four that don’t say, ‘Enough:’
30:16 Sheol, the barren womb; the earth that is not satisfied with water; and the fire that doesn’t say, ‘Enough.’
Unrestrained desire is never satisfied and ultimately consumes those who follow it.
Agur uses numerical proverb structure and metaphorical imagery to reveal that certain forces within creation—especially human greed and death—are never satisfied.
Believers must be formed away from arrogance, restless appetite, Scripture-tampering, self-sufficiency, moral denial, and anger-pressing, and toward humble, truthful, contented dependence on God.
- Agur's Confession of Human Limitation The chapter opens with the sayings of Agur son of Jakeh. Agur confesses His own limitation and lack of human mastery. He says He has not learned wisdom in the sense of possessing divine knowledge, nor has He attained knowledge of the Holy One. He asks who has gone up to heaven and come down, who has gathered the wind, wrapped up the waters, established the ends of the earth, and what is His name and the name of His son. The questions expose the distance between human limitation and divine sovereignty.
- The Flawless Word of God Agur declares that every word of God is flawless and that God is a shield to those who take refuge in Him. The learner is warned not to add to God's words, lest God rebuke Him and prove Him a liar. Divine revelation is pure, sufficient, and not to be manipulated by human addition.
- Agur's Prayer for Truth and Contentment Agur asks two things before He dies: that falsehood and lies be kept far from Him, and that He be given neither poverty nor riches but only daily bread. He fears that wealth may lead Him to deny the Lord and say, 'Who is the Lord?' and that poverty may lead Him to steal and dishonor the name of His God. Wisdom prays for contentment because both abundance and lack carry spiritual danger.
- Warnings Against Slander, Arrogance, Greed, and Disrespect Agur warns against slandering a servant to His master. He then describes four corrupt generations or kinds of people: those who curse parents, those pure in their own eyes yet unwashed, those with haughty eyes, and those whose teeth are swords to devour the poor and needy. The leech has two daughters crying, 'Give! Give!' Four things are never satisfied: the grave, the barren womb, land never satisfied with water, and fire that never says enough. The eye that mocks a father and scorns an aged mother will be picked out by ravens and eaten by vultures.
- Four Mysterious Ways Agur names three things too amazing for Him and four He does not understand: the way of an eagle in the sky, a snake on a rock, a ship on the high seas, and a man with a young woman. He then compares this to the way of an adulterous woman who eats, wipes her mouth, and says she has done nothing wrong. The unit juxtaposes wonder at mysterious movement with the disturbing secrecy and moral denial of adultery.
- Four Things That Shake the Earth Agur lists four things under which the earth trembles: a servant who becomes king, a godless fool who gets plenty of food, a contemptible woman who gets married, and a servant who displaces her mistress. The sayings observe social and moral disorder when people without wisdom, humility, or proper character are suddenly placed in positions of power, provision, or prominence.
- Four Small but Wise Creatures Agur points to four small creatures that are exceedingly wise: ants, which are weak yet store food in summer; hyraxes or rock badgers, which are weak yet make their homes in crags; locusts, which have no king yet advance together in ranks; and lizards, which can be caught by hand yet are found in kings' palaces. Wisdom is visible in weakness, preparation, refuge, cooperation, and surprising access.
- Four Stately Things and the Warning Against Self-Exaltation Agur lists three things stately in their stride and four that move with stately bearing: the lion, the strutting rooster or greyhound, the He-goat, and a king secure against revolt. The chapter closes with practical warning: if one has played the fool by exalting Himself or has planned evil, He must clap His hand over His mouth. Pressing milk produces curds, pressing the nose produces blood, and pressing anger produces strife.
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.
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.
- Do not interpret the numerical structure as a literal limitation to only four examples.
- Do not overlook the metaphorical nature of the imagery used in the proverb.
- Do not reduce the passage to observations about nature without recognizing the moral warning.
- Do not assume the proverb condemns all human desire rather than warning against uncontrolled desire.
- Do not treat the barren womb as morally sinful; in the image, it represents deep longing, not blame.
- Do not use this passage to shame grief, infertility, hunger, thirst, or legitimate need.
- Do not reduce the leech image only to individual greed while ignoring social and economic predation.
- Do not assume all desire is evil; Scripture condemns disordered and ungoverned appetite, not God-given longing rightly ordered.
- Do not teach contentment as indifference to suffering or injustice.
- Do not miss the connection with the devouring generation in Proverbs 30:14 and Agur’s prayer for daily bread in Proverbs 30:7-9.
- Do not forget that Christ alone can satisfy the deepest hunger and break the grave’s power.
- Teach that unchecked desire is never healed by endless supply.
- Warn that greed, lust, control, recognition-hunger, consumerism, and power-seeking often grow stronger when indulged.
- Help believers distinguish legitimate longing, such as grief over barrenness or need for provision, from sinful insatiability.
- Connect this passage to Agur’s prayer for daily bread and contentment in Proverbs 30:7-9.
- Call churches to recognize predatory systems that keep saying, 'Give! Give!' while consuming the poor.
- Point believers to Christ, who satisfies the soul, conquers the grave, and forms contented generosity.
- Pray Proverbs 30:7-9 slowly for one week, asking the Lord for truthfulness and contentment.
- Identify one place where You are adding assumptions to God's word instead of submitting to it.
- Name one form of greed that keeps crying, 'Give! Give!' in Your life.
- Choose one daily-bread act of trust rather than anxious grasping.
- Confess one area where You have been pure in Your own eyes but not washed before God.
- Learn one practical habit from the ant, rock badger, locust, or lizard.
- Put Your hand over Your mouth in one situation where self-exaltation would normally speak.
- Stop pressing an anger point before it produces strife.
Humility, Scripture confidence, truthfulness, contentment, daily dependence, wonder, protection of the poor, moral discernment, creation-attentiveness, weakness-wisdom, and speech restraint.
- Human limitation versus the Holy One's knowledge.
- Human inability to ascend versus God's rule over wind, waters, and earth.
- Flawless word of God versus lying addition to God's words.
- Daily bread versus poverty or riches.
- Truthful contentment versus falsehood and self-sufficiency.
- Self-declared purity versus true washing.
- Greed crying 'Give! Give!' versus contented dependence.
- Mystery of creation versus denial of adultery.
- Earth trembling under disorder versus small creatures showing wisdom.
- Ant weakness versus summer preparation.
- Rock badger weakness versus secure refuge.
- Locusts without king versus ordered advance.
- Lizard caught by hand versus presence in kings' palaces.
- Self-exalting speech versus hand over mouth.
- Pressed anger versus produced 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.
This proverb exposes the endless appetite of sinful desire. In the gospel, Christ satisfies the deepest human hunger by providing life that overcomes death and contentment that frees believers from destructive greed.