Proverbs 7:6-23
When wisdom is ignored, seductive temptation leads the naive person step by step into destructive sin.
Scripture Text
7:6 For at the window of my house, I looked out through my lattice.
7:7 I saw among the simple ones. I discerned among the youths a young man void of understanding,
7:8 Passing through the street near her corner, He went the way to her house,
7:9 In the twilight, in the evening of the day, in the middle of the night and in the darkness.
7:10 Behold, there a woman met Him with the attire of a prostitute, and with crafty intent.
7:11 She is loud and defiant. Her feet don’t stay in her house.
7:12 Now she is in the streets, now in the squares, and lurking at every corner.
7:13 So she caught Him, and kissed Him. With an impudent face she said to Him:
7:14 “Sacrifices of peace offerings are with me. Today I have paid my vows.
7:15 Therefore I came out to meet You, to diligently seek Your face, and I have found You.
7:16 I have spread my couch with carpets of tapestry, with striped cloths of the yarn of Egypt.
7:17 I have perfumed my bed with myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon.
7:18 Come, let’s take our fill of loving until the morning. Let’s solace ourselves with loving.
7:19 For my husband isn’t at home. He has gone on a long journey.
7:20 He has taken a bag of money with Him. He will come home at the full moon.”
7:21 With persuasive words, she led Him astray. With the flattering of her lips, she seduced Him.
7:22 He followed her immediately, as an ox goes to the slaughter, as a fool stepping into a noose.
7:23 Until an arrow strikes through His liver, as a bird hurries to the snare, and doesn’t know that it will cost His life.
When wisdom is ignored, seductive temptation leads the naive person step by step into destructive sin.
Proverbs 7:6-23 teaches that a lack of wisdom and moral vigilance leads a person into the trap of sexual temptation, which ultimately results in destruction.
Believers must be trained to recognize the early path into sin and flee before desire, secrecy, and opportunity converge.
- Keep Wisdom Close to the Heart The chapter opens with an urgent call to keep the father's words, store up His commands, and guard His teaching as the apple of the eye. Wisdom must be bound on the fingers and written on the tablet of the heart. The son is told to call wisdom His sister and insight His intimate friend so that He will be protected from the adulterous woman and her seductive words.
- The Father Observes the Naive Young Man The father looks through the lattice and sees among the simple a young man lacking judgment. He passes along the street near the adulterous woman's corner and walks in the direction of her house at twilight, as day fades into night. The setting signals moral vulnerability, proximity to danger, and movement toward darkness.
- The Adulterous Woman's Calculated Approach The woman comes out to meet Him dressed as a prostitute and with crafty intent. She is loud, defiant, restless, and positioned in the streets, squares, and corners. Her conduct is not accidental but predatory and strategic.
- Seduction Through Boldness, Religion, Absence, and Pleasure She seizes the young man, kisses Him, and speaks with brazen confidence. She invokes fellowship offerings, suggesting religious respectability or celebratory abundance. She flatters Him as the one she came to find, describes her prepared bed with linens, perfume, myrrh, aloes, and cinnamon, and promises love until morning. She removes fear of discovery by saying her husband is away on a long journey with money in hand.
- The Collapse of Judgment and the Path to Death With persuasive words and smooth speech, she leads Him astray. He follows at once like an ox going to slaughter, like a deer stepping into a noose, and like a bird darting into a snare, not knowing it will cost Him His life. The images expose the young man's blindness, passivity, and deadly vulnerability.
- Final Warning to the Sons The father turns from narrative to direct exhortation. The sons must listen and pay attention. Their hearts must not turn to her ways or stray into her paths. She has brought down many victims, and her house is a highway to the grave, leading down to the chambers of death.
The chapter moves from internalized wisdom, to observed naivety, to the seducer's calculated strategy, to the young man's collapse, to a final warning that her house leads to death.
Proverbs 7 argues that sexual folly advances through unguarded desire, dangerous proximity, calculated seduction, and the collapse of judgment. The father does not merely condemn adultery after the fact; He traces the path into it. The young man lacks judgment before He meets the woman, walks near her corner before He falls into her house, and enters the darkness before He recognizes the cost. The adulterous woman uses boldness, touch, flattery, religious language, sensory pleasure, secrecy, and opportunity to make death look like delight. The chapter's theological burden is that wisdom must govern the heart before temptation reaches the senses. Without internalized instruction, the simple become prey.
- Assuming temptation appears only as obvious evil The narrative shows that temptation often appears attractive and persuasive.
- Blaming the seducer alone for the fall The young man's poor decisions and lack of wisdom contribute significantly to His downfall.
- Treating the story as merely a warning about sexual sin The passage illustrates the broader pattern of temptation and moral compromise.
- Ignoring the gradual nature of sin The narrative shows that destructive choices develop step by step.
- Assuming wisdom removes all temptation Wisdom equips believers to recognize and resist temptation rather than eliminating its presence.
- Do not treat the narrative as merely descriptive; it is instructive and cautionary.
- Do not assume the young man is innocent, as He actively moves toward danger.
- Do not reduce the woman to a stereotype, as she represents the broader reality of temptation.
- Do not ignore the progression of sin, focusing only on the final act.
- Do not detach the consequences from the choices leading up to them.
- Teach believers to recognize the progression of temptation before it reaches full expression.
- Warn against placing oneself in environments where sin is easily pursued.
- Encourage vigilance in moments of vulnerability, especially when judgment is weakened.
- Address the role of desire and deception in leading people away from God’s truth.
- Equip the church to identify and resist manipulative influences in relationships.
- Identify one recurring place or pattern that functions as a corner of temptation and take a concrete step away from it.
- Memorize Proverbs 7:2-3 or Proverbs 7:25 as a heart-level guardrail.
- Write down the sequence by which temptation usually progresses in Your own life.
- Confess one hidden vulnerability to a trusted mature believer before it becomes open ruin.
- Remove one source of flattery, secrecy, or sensory temptation that has weakened discernment.
- Pray for the Spirit to make wisdom not merely known but loved and written on the heart.
Heart-written wisdom, sober self-awareness, moral vigilance, sexual purity, discernment of seductive speech, hatred of secrecy, and decisive avoidance.
- Wisdom written on the heart versus desire written into the path.
- The apple of the eye versus the captivation of sinful beauty.
- A sister named Wisdom versus a stranger who seduces.
- The simple young man versus the guarded son.
- Smooth words versus slaughter.
- Prepared bed versus hidden grave.
- Secret pleasure versus public death.
- A heart that turns versus feet that stray.
- Chapter Summary : Wisdom must be written on the heart before temptation speaks, because seduction flatters, deceives, and leads the unguarded soul down the path of death.
Proverbs 7:6-23 reveals the tragic pattern of temptation leading the unguarded heart into sin and destruction. The gospel proclaims that Christ delivers sinners from the power of sin and gives believers the wisdom and strength to resist temptation. Through Him believers receive both forgiveness for past failure and the power to walk in purity.