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Text -- Proverbs 22:1-13 (NET)

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22:1 A good name is to be chosen rather than great wealth, good favor more than silver or gold. 22:2 The rich and the poor meet together; the Lord is the creator of them both. 22:3 A shrewd person sees danger and hides himself, but the naive keep right on going and suffer for it. 22:4 The reward for humility and fearing the Lord is riches and honor and life. 22:5 Thorns and snares are in the path of the perverse, but the one who guards himself keeps far from them. 22:6 Train a child in the way that he should go, and when he is old he will not turn from it. 22:7 The rich rule over the poor, and the borrower is servant to the lender. 22:8 The one who sows iniquity will reap trouble, and the rod of his fury will end. 22:9 A generous person will be blessed, for he gives some of his food to the poor. 22:10 Drive out the scorner and contention will leave; strife and insults will cease. 22:11 The one who loves a pure heart and whose speech is gracious– the king will be his friend. 22:12 The eyes of the Lord guard knowledge, but he overthrows the words of the faithless person. 22:13 The sluggard says, “There is a lion outside! I will be killed in the middle of the streets!”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Poor | Lion | Prudence | Associations | Humility | EYE | God | Instruction | Integrity | Laziness | Frugality | Ignorance | Holiness | Lending | Heart | Name | Strife | Speaking | Thorn | Vanity | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 22:1 Heb “favor of goodness.” This is a somewhat difficult expression. Some English versions render the phrase “favor is better than silv...

NET Notes: Pro 22:2 Heb “all.” The Lord is sovereign over both groups, that is, he has had the final say whether a person is rich or poor. People would do wel...

NET Notes: Pro 22:3 The verb עָנַשׁ (’anash) means “to fine” specifically. In the Niphal stem it means “to be ...

NET Notes: Pro 22:4 Heb “the fear of the Lord.” This is an objective genitive; the Lord is the object of the fear.

NET Notes: Pro 22:5 “Thorns and snares” represent the dangers and threats to life. They would be implied comparisons (hypocatastasis): As a path strewn with t...

NET Notes: Pro 22:6 The expected consequence of such training is that it will last throughout life. The sages were confident of the character-forming quality of their tra...

NET Notes: Pro 22:7 Or “slave” (so NAB, NASB, NRSV, TEV, CEV). This may refer to the practice in Israel of people selling themselves into slavery to pay off d...

NET Notes: Pro 22:8 There is a variant reading in the LXX; instead of “the rod of his wrath” it reads “the punishment of his deeds.” C. H. Toy wis...

NET Notes: Pro 22:9 It is from his own food that he gives to the poor. Of the many observations that could be made, it is worth noting that in blessing this kind of perso...

NET Notes: Pro 22:10 The LXX freely adds “when he sits in council (ἐν συνεδρίῳ, ejn sunedriw), he insults everyon...

NET Notes: Pro 22:11 The syntax of the line is somewhat difficult, because “grace of his lips” seems to be intruding on the point of the verse with little expl...

NET Notes: Pro 22:12 The proverb affirms that God in safeguarding true knowledge will frustrate deception from faithless people – what they say will not have its int...

NET Notes: Pro 22:13 The LXX changes the phrase to read “murderers in the street” to form a better parallelism, possibly because the verb רָצ...

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