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Text -- Proverbs 17:15-28 (NET)

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17:15 The one who acquits the guilty and the one who condemns the innocent– both of them are an abomination to the Lord. 17:16 Of what use is money in the hand of a fool, since he has no intention of acquiring wisdom? 17:17 A friend loves at all times, and a relative is born to help in adversity. 17:18 The one who lacks wisdom strikes hands in pledge, and puts up financial security for his neighbor. 17:19 The one who loves a quarrel loves transgression; whoever builds his gate high seeks destruction. 17:20 The one who has a perverse heart does not find good, and the one who is deceitful in speech falls into trouble. 17:21 Whoever brings a fool into the world does so to his grief, and the father of a fool has no joy. 17:22 A cheerful heart brings good healing, but a crushed spirit dries up the bones. 17:23 A wicked person receives a bribe secretly to pervert the ways of justice. 17:24 Wisdom is directly in front of the discerning person, but the eyes of a fool run to the ends of the earth. 17:25 A foolish child is a grief to his father, and bitterness to the mother who bore him. 17:26 It is terrible to punish a righteous person, and to flog honorable men is wrong. 17:27 The truly wise person restrains his words, and the one who stays calm is discerning. 17:28 Even a fool who remains silent is considered wise, and the one who holds his tongue is deemed discerning.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: FOOL; FOLLY | Surety | Speaking | Rulers | Medicine | Children | Fool | Justice | LOAN | Contracts | Court | Disease | Contentment | Young Men | Blindness | Bribery | Brother | Wisdom | Friendship | Tongue | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 17:15 Heb “an abomination of the Lord.”

NET Notes: Pro 17:16 W. McKane envisions a situation where the fool comes to a sage with a fee in hand, supposing that he can acquire a career as a sage, and this gives ri...

NET Notes: Pro 17:17 Heb “is born for adversity.” This is not referring to sibling rivalry but to the loyalty a brother shows during times of calamity. This is...

NET Notes: Pro 17:18 It is foolish to pledge security for someone’s loans (e.g., Prov 6:1-5).

NET Notes: Pro 17:19 Some have taken this second line literally and interpreted it to mean he has built a pretentious house. Probably it is meant to be figurative: The gat...

NET Notes: Pro 17:20 Heb “tongue”; NIV “whose tongue is deceitful.”

NET Notes: Pro 17:21 Parents of fools, who had hoped for children who would be a credit to the family, find only bitter disappointment (cf. TEV “nothing but sadness ...

NET Notes: Pro 17:22 The “bones” figuratively represent the whole body encased in a boney framework (metonymy of subject). “Fat bones” in scripture...

NET Notes: Pro 17:23 The form לְהַטּוֹת (lÿhattot) is the Hiphil infinitive construct of נָט&#...

NET Notes: Pro 17:24 To say that “the eyes of the fool run to the ends of the earth” means that he has no power to concentrate and cannot focus his attention o...

NET Notes: Pro 17:25 The proverb is similar to v. 21, 10:1, and 15:20.

NET Notes: Pro 17:26 The two lines could be synonymous parallelism; but the second part is being used to show how wrong the first act would be – punishing the righte...

NET Notes: Pro 17:27 Heb “cool of spirit.” This genitive of specification describes one who is “calm” (so NCV, TEV, CEV) or “even-tempered...

NET Notes: Pro 17:28 The Niphal participle is used in the declarative/estimative sense with stative verbs: “to be discerning” (Qal) becomes “to be declar...

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