Reference: Proverbs, Book of
Easton
a collection of moral and philosophical maxims of a wide range of subjects presented in a poetic form. This book sets forth the "philosophy of practical life. It is the sign to us that the Bible does not despise common sense and discretion. It impresses upon us in the most forcible manner the value of intelligence and prudence and of a good education. The whole strength of the Hebrew language and of the sacred authority of the book is thrown upon these homely truths. It deals, too, in that refined, discriminating, careful view of the finer shades of human character so often overlooked by theologians, but so necessary to any true estimate of human life" (Stanley's Jewish Church).
As to the origin of this book, "it is probable that Solomon gathered and recast many proverbs which sprang from human experience in preceeding ages and were floating past him on the tide of time, and that he also elaborated many new ones from the material of his own experience. Towards the close of the book, indeed, are preserved some of Solomon's own sayings that seem to have fallen from his lips in later life and been gathered by other hands' (Arnot's Laws from Heaven, etc.)
This book is usually divided into three parts: (1.) Consisting of ch. 1-9, which contain an exhibition of wisdom as the highest good.
(2.) Consisting of ch. 10-24.
(3.) Containing proverbs of Solomon "which the men of Hezekiah, the king of Judah, collected" (ch. 25-29).
These are followed by two supplements, (1) "The words of Agur" (ch. 30); and (2) "The words of king Lemuel" (ch. 31).
Solomon is said to have written three thousand proverbs, and those contained in this book may be a selection from these (1Ki 4:32). In the New Testament there are thirty-five direct quotations from this book or allusions to it.
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He wrote three thousand proverbs and more than a thousand songs.
Hastings
The second book among the 'Writings' is the most characteristic example of the Wisdom literature in the OT. 1. We may adopt the division of the book made by the headings in the Hebrew text as follows:
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A wise son makes a father glad: but a foolish son is sorrow (depression) (grief) for his mother.
He who gets ahead by oppressing the poor and giving to the rich will certainly suffer loss. Incline your ear and listen to the words of the wise. Apply your heart and mind to my knowledge.
Incline your ear and listen to the words of the wise. Apply your heart and mind to my knowledge.
Incline your ear and listen to the words of the wise. Apply your heart and mind to my knowledge. It is pleasant that you keep them within you. They will be firmly established on you lips.
It is pleasant that you keep them within you. They will be firmly established on you lips. Your trust may be in Jehovah. I taught you today, even you.
Your trust may be in Jehovah. I taught you today, even you. Have I not written to you excellent things in counsel and knowledge?
Have I not written to you excellent things in counsel and knowledge? I make you know the certainty of the words of truth. And you will answer the words of truth to those who speak to you.
I make you know the certainty of the words of truth. And you will answer the words of truth to those who speak to you.
Their calamity will rise suddenly! Who knows the ruin from both of them? These sayings belong to the wise. It is not good to show partiality in judgment. read more. The people curse and the nations abhor the man who says to the wicked, You are righteous. Those who rebuke the wicked are filled with delight. A good blessing will come upon them. He kisses the lips that give the right answer. Prepare your outside work. Make it fit for yourself in the field. After that build your house. Do not witness against your neighbor without cause. Do not deceive with you lips. Do not say: I will do to him as he has done to me. I will render to the man according to his work. I went by the field of the lazy man, and by the vineyard of the man lacking understanding. It was all grown over with thorns and nettles, and the wall of stone was broken down. Then I saw, and considered it well. I looked on it, and received instruction: Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep. Your poverty will come like a robber and your want like an armed man.
Be diligent to know the state of your flocks and attend to your herds. Riches are not forever: and a crown does not endure for every generation. read more. The hay appears and the tender grass shows itself. Herbs of the mountains are gathered. The lambs are for your clothing, and the goats bring the price of the field. You will have enough goats' milk for your food, for the food of your household, and for the maintenance for your maidservants.
Do not add to his words of he will reprove you. You will be found to be a liar. I require two things from you. Do not deprive me of them before I die.
The leach has two daughters. Each cry: Give, Give! There are three things that are never satisfied, yes; even four things never say: It is enough!
The words of king Lemuel, the prophecy that his mother taught him. What, O my son? And what, O son of my womb? And what, O son of my vows? read more. Do not give your strength to women. Do not give your ways to that which destroys kings. It is not for kings, O Lemuel; it is not for kings to drink wine; nor for princes to desire strong drink. They will drink and forget the law, and pervert the judgment of any of the afflicted. Give strong drink to him who is ready to perish, and wine to those who are bitter. Let him drink and forget his poverty. Let him remember his misery no more. Open your mouth for the dumb in the cause of all who are appointed to destruction. Open your mouth and judge righteously. Plead the cause of the poor and needy. Who can find a virtuous woman? For her value is far above corals.
Give her of the fruit of her hands. Let her own works praise her in the gates.
Morish
In this book God has furnished, through the wisest of men, principles and precepts for the guidance and security of the believer in passing through the temptations to which he is exposed in an evil world. The admonitions speak in terms of affectionate warning 'as to sons:' Heb 12:5. Under symbolic terms, such as 'the evil man' and 'the strange woman,' the great forms of evil in the world, violent self-will, and corrupting folly, are laid bare in their course and end. Wisdom is shown as the alone guard against one or the other. Wisdom is presented, not as a faculty residing in man, but as an object to be diligently sought after and acquired. It is often personified, and is spoken of as lifting up her voice. In Prov. 8, under the idea of wisdom, we have doubtless Christ presented as the resource that was with God from 'the beginning of His way,' so that God could independently of man establish and bring into effect His thoughts of grace for men.
In detail the book refers to the world, showing what things are to be sought and what to be avoided, and evinces that in the government of God a man reaps according to what he sows, irrespective of the spiritual blessings of God in grace beyond and above this world. It maintains integrity in the earthly relationships of this life, which cannot be violated with impunity. The instruction rises altogether above mere human prudence and sagacity, for "the fear of the Lord is the beginning or 'principal part,' margin of knowledge." We have in it the wisdom of God for the daily path of human life.
The book divides itself into two parts: the first nine chapters give general principles, and Prov. 10 onwards are the proverbs themselves. This latter portion divides itself into three parts: Prov. 10: to Prov. 24, the proverbs of Solomon; Prov. 25 to Prov. 29, also the proverbs of Solomon, which were gathered by "the men of Hezekiah king of Judah." Prov. 30 gives the words of Agur; and Prov. 31 the words of king Lemuel.
The Proverbs is a book of poetry. The proverbs vary in style: some are antithetical couplets, one being the opposite of the other, as "a wise son maketh a glad father; but a foolish son is the heaviness of his mother." Others are synthetical, the second sentence enforcing the first, as "The Lord hath made all things for himself, yea, even the wicked for the day of evil." See POETRY.
In Prov. 1 the purport of the proverbs is pointed out: it is that instruction in wisdom, justice, judgement, and equity might be received: the fear of the Lord is the starting point. Satan would of course oppose this, so warnings are at once given to avoid the enticings of sinners. Wisdom cries aloud and in the streets: her instructions are for all. Retribution is for such as refuse her call.
Prov. 2 gives the results of following in the path of wisdom, whereas the wicked will be rooted out.
Prov. 3 shows that it is the fear of God, and subjection to His word, that is the only true path in an evil world.
Prov. 4 enforces the study of wisdom: it will surely bring into blessing. Evil must be avoided and be kept at a distance. The heart, the eye, and the feet must be watched.
Prov. 5 warns a man against leaving the wife of his youth (the lawful connection) for the strange woman, which leads to utter demoralisation.
Prov. 6 enjoins one not to be surety for another. Wisdom is not slothful, violent, nor deceitful. There are seven things which are an abomination to the Lord. The strange woman is again pointed out to be avoided as fire: there is no ransom for adultery.
Prov. 7 again shows the traps laid by the strange woman, which alas, are often too successful. Her house is the way to hell (Sheol).
Prov. 8 proclaims that wisdom calls, and invites all to listen: it is valuable for all
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Jehovah created me in the beginning of his way, before his works of antiquity.
I rejoiced in the inhabited earth. My delights were with the sons of men.
There is a generation that curses their father, and doe not bless their mother. There is a generation pure in their own eyes, and yet not washed from their filthiness. read more. There is a generation, O how lofty are their eyes! Their eyelids are lifted up. There is a generation, whose teeth are like swords, and their jaw teeth like knives, to devour the poor from off the earth, and the needy from among men. The leach has two daughters. Each cry: Give, Give! There are three things that are never satisfied, yes; even four things never say: It is enough! The grave; and the barren womb; the earth that is not filled with water; and the fire that does not say: It is enough.
There are three things that are too wonderful for me, yes, four I do not know: The way of an eagle in the air; the way of a serpent upon a rock; the way of a ship in the middle of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid.
Under three things the earth is disquieted, and for four it cannot bear: For a servant when he reigns; and a fool when he is filled with food; read more. For a detestable woman when she is married; and a handmaid who is heir to her mistress. There are four things that are little upon the earth, but they (chakam: teach wisdom) are exceeding wise: The ants are beings that are not strong, yet they prepare their food in the summer. The rock badgers are a feeble folk, yet they make their houses in the rocks. The locusts have no king, yet they advance in ranks. The spider grasps with her hands, and in kings' palaces. There are three things that go well, yes, four go well: A lion is strongest among beasts and does not run from anything. A greyhound, a he goat also and a king, against whom there is no rising up.
Glory to God in the highest. Peace on earth among men with whom he is pleased.
You have forgotten the exhortation that reasons with you as to sons: My son, do not despise (regard lightly) discipline from Jehovah and do not lose heart when he corrects you. (Proverbs 3:11, 12)
Smith
Prov'erbs, Book of.
The title of this book in Hebrew is taken from its first word, mashal, which originally meant "a comparison." It is sometimes translated parable, sometimes proverb as here. The superscriptions which are affixed to several portions of the book, in chs.
attribute the authorship of those portions to Solomon the son of David, king of Israel. With the exception of the last two chapters, which are distinctly assigned to other author it is probable that the statement of the superscriptions is in the main correct, and that the majority of the proverbs contained in the book were uttered or collected by Solomon. Speaking roughly, the book consists of three main divisions, with two appendices:--
1. Chs. 1-9 form a connected didactic Wisdom is praised and the youth exhorted to devote himself to her. This portion is preceded by an introduction and title describing the character and general aim of the book.
2. Chs. 10-24 with the title "The Proverbs of Solomon," consist of three parts:
a collection of single proverbs and detached sentences out of the region of moral teaching and worldly prudence;
a more connected didactic poem, with an introduction,
which contains precepts of righteousness and prudence;
with the inscription "These also belong to the wise," a collection of unconnected maxims, which serve as an appendix to the preceding. Then follows the third division chs. 25-29, which, according to the superscription, professes to be collection of Solomon's proverbs, consisting of single sentences, which the men of the court of Hezekiah copied out. The first appendix, ch. 30, "The words of Agur the son of Jakeh," is a collection of partly proverbial and partly enigmatical sayings; the second, ch. 31, is divided into two parts, "The words of King Lemuel," vs. 1-6, and an alphabetical acrostic in praise of a virtuous woman, which occupies the rest of the chapter. Who was Agur and who was Jakeh, are questions which have been often asked and never satisfactorily answered. All that can be said of the first is that he was an unknown Hebrew sage, the son of an equally unknown Jakeh, and that he lived after the time of Hezekiah. Lemuel, like Agur, is unknown. It is even uncertain whether he is to be regarded as a real personage, or whether the name is merely symbolical. The Proverbs are frequently quoted or alluded to in the New Testament and the canonicity of the book thereby confirmed. The following is a list of the principal passages:--
compare Roma 3:10,15
compare Roma 12:16
compare Hebr 12:5,6, see also Reve 3:19
compare Jame 4:6
compare 1Pet 4:8
compare 1Pet 4:18
compare Roma 12:17; 1The 5:15; 1Pet 3:9
compare Jame 1:19
compare 1Joh 1:8
(LXX.), compare 2Cor 9:7
compare, Roma 12:20
compare, 2Pet 2:22
compare, Jame 4:13,14
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The proverbs 0f Solomon son of David, king of Israel:
For their feet run to evil. They hurry to shed blood.
Do not think you are wise enough. Respect Jehovah and turn away from evil.
My son, do not despise Jehovah's discipline or be weary of his correction. For whom Jehovah loves He reproves, just like a father corrects the son he loves dearly. (Hebrews 12:6)
He has no use for conceited people. He shows loving kindness to the humble.
A wise son makes a father glad: but a foolish son is sorrow (depression) (grief) for his mother.
A wise son makes a father glad: but a foolish son is sorrow (depression) (grief) for his mother. Treasures of wickedness (the morally wrong) profit nothing, but righteousness delivers from death. read more. Jehovah will not allow the righteous to hunger. He rejects the mischief of the wicked. He becomes poor who deals with a lazy hand. The hand of the diligent makes rich. He who gathers in summer is a wise son. He who sleeps at the harvest is a son who causes shame. Blessings cover the head of the righteous. Violence covers the mouth of the wicked. The memory of the righteous is blessed. The name of the wicked will waste away. The wise in heart will accept the law but a babbling fool will fall. He who walks with integrity walks safely. He who perverts his ways will be found out. He who winks the eye [in a jesture of malice] causes trouble. A babbling fool will fall. The mouth of a righteous man is a fountain of life. Aggression comes from the mouth of the wicked. Hatred stirs up strife. Love covers all sins.
Hatred stirs up strife. Love covers all sins. Wisdom is found on the lips of the understanding (discerning). A rod is for the back of him who lacks understanding. read more. Wise men preserve knowledge. The mouth of the foolish is near destruction. The rich man's wealth is his strength. The destruction of the poor is their poverty. The labor of the righteous leads to life. The yield of the wicked is punishment.
The labor of the righteous leads to life. The yield of the wicked is punishment. He who regards instruction is in the way of life. He who refuses reproof goes (mentally and morally) astray. read more. Truly a fool hides hatred with lying lips, and speaks slander. Sin does not hide from a multitude of words. The wise controls his lips. The tongue of the righteous is like choice silver. The heart of the wicked has little worth. The lips of the righteous feed many. Fools die for lack of understanding. The blessing of Jehovah makes rich and he adds no grief to it.
The righteous will be rewarded on the earth much more than the wicked and the sinner.
Offer evil for good and evil will not depart from your house.
The man with knowledge restrains his words. A man of understanding has a quiet spirit.
Who can say: I have made my heart clean. I am pure from my sin?
He who curses his father or his mother, his lamp will be put out in obscure darkness.
He who sows unrighteousness will reap vanity. The rod of his anger will fail.
Incline your ear and listen to the words of the wise. Apply your heart and mind to my knowledge.
Incline your ear and listen to the words of the wise. Apply your heart and mind to my knowledge. It is pleasant that you keep them within you. They will be firmly established on you lips.
It is pleasant that you keep them within you. They will be firmly established on you lips. Your trust may be in Jehovah. I taught you today, even you.
Your trust may be in Jehovah. I taught you today, even you. Have I not written to you excellent things in counsel and knowledge?
Have I not written to you excellent things in counsel and knowledge? I make you know the certainty of the words of truth. And you will answer the words of truth to those who speak to you.
I make you know the certainty of the words of truth. And you will answer the words of truth to those who speak to you.
I make you know the certainty of the words of truth. And you will answer the words of truth to those who speak to you. Do not rob the poor because he is poor, or crush the afflicted at the gate.
Do not rob the poor because he is poor, or crush the afflicted at the gate. Jehovah will plead their cause and take the life of those who rob them. read more. Do not befriend an angry man. Do not associate with a man who throws fits.
These sayings belong to the wise. It is not good to show partiality in judgment. The people curse and the nations abhor the man who says to the wicked, You are righteous. read more. Those who rebuke the wicked are filled with delight. A good blessing will come upon them. He kisses the lips that give the right answer. Prepare your outside work. Make it fit for yourself in the field. After that build your house. Do not witness against your neighbor without cause. Do not deceive with you lips. Do not say: I will do to him as he has done to me. I will render to the man according to his work. I went by the field of the lazy man, and by the vineyard of the man lacking understanding. It was all grown over with thorns and nettles, and the wall of stone was broken down. Then I saw, and considered it well. I looked on it, and received instruction: Yet a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep. Your poverty will come like a robber and your want like an armed man.
These are also proverbs of Solomon, which the men of Hezekiah king of Judah transcribed.
If your enemy is hungry, give him bread to eat. If he is thirsty, give him water to drink. You will heap coals of fire upon his head, and Jehovah will reward you.
As a dog returns to his vomit so a fool returns to his folly.
Do not brag about tomorrow for you do not know what a day may bring.
Let each man do according as he has purposed in his heart: not grudgingly, or of necessity: for God loves a cheerful giver.
Above all things have intense love for one another, for love covers a multitude of sins.
If the righteous is scarcely saved, where shall the ungodly and sinners appear?
It happened to them according to the true proverb: The dog returns to his own vomit, and the sow that had washed to wallowing in the mire.
If we say that we have no sin, we deceive ourselves, and the truth is not in us.