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Text -- Proverbs 23:1-35 (NET)

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Context
23:1 When you sit down to eat with a ruler, consider carefully what is before you, 23:2 and put a knife to your throat if you possess a large appetite. 23:3 Do not crave that ruler’s delicacies, for that food is deceptive. 23:4 Do not wear yourself out to become rich; be wise enough to restrain yourself. 23:5 When you gaze upon riches, they are gone, for they surely make wings for themselves, and fly off into the sky like an eagle! 23:6 Do not eat the food of a stingy person, do not crave his delicacies; 23:7 for he is like someone calculating the cost in his mind. “Eat and drink,” he says to you, but his heart is not with you; 23:8 you will vomit up the little bit you have eaten, and will have wasted your pleasant words. 23:9 Do not speak in the ears of a fool, for he will despise the wisdom of your words. 23:10 Do not move an ancient boundary stone, or take over the fields of the fatherless, 23:11 for their Protector is strong; he will plead their case against you. 23:12 Apply your heart to instruction and your ears to the words of knowledge. 23:13 Do not withhold discipline from a child; even if you strike him with the rod, he will not die. 23:14 If you strike him with the rod, you will deliver him from death. 23:15 My child, if your heart is wise, then my heart also will be glad; 23:16 my soul will rejoice when your lips speak what is right. 23:17 Do not let your heart envy sinners, but rather be zealous in fearing the Lord all the time. 23:18 For surely there is a future, and your hope will not be cut off. 23:19 Listen, my child, and be wise, and guide your heart on the right way. 23:20 Do not spend time among drunkards, among those who eat too much meat, 23:21 because drunkards and gluttons become impoverished, and drowsiness clothes them with rags. 23:22 Listen to your father who begot you, and do not despise your mother when she is old. 23:23 Acquire truth and do not sell it– wisdom, and discipline, and understanding. 23:24 The father of a righteous person will rejoice greatly; whoever fathers a wise child will have joy in him. 23:25 May your father and your mother have joy; may she who bore you rejoice. 23:26 Give me your heart, my son, and let your eyes observe my ways; 23:27 for a prostitute is like a deep pit; a harlot is like a narrow well. 23:28 Indeed, she lies in wait like a robber, and increases the unfaithful among men. 23:29 Who has woe? Who has sorrow? Who has contentions? Who has complaints? Who has wounds without cause? Who has dullness of the eyes? 23:30 Those who linger over wine, those who go looking for mixed wine. 23:31 Do not look on the wine when it is red, when it sparkles in the cup, when it goes down smoothly. 23:32 Afterward it bites like a snake, and stings like a viper. 23:33 Your eyes will see strange things, and your mind will speak perverse things. 23:34 And you will be like one who lies down in the midst of the sea, and like one who lies down on the top of the rigging. 23:35 You will say, “They have struck me, but I am not harmed! They beat me, but I did not know it! When will I awake? I will look for another drink.”
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Sheol the place of the dead


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Young Men | Drunkeess | Children | Wisdom | Wine | DRUNKENNESS | Guest | DAINTIES; DAINTY (MEATS) | Adder | Prudence | Mother | Hospitality | Citizenship | Hypocrisy | Abstinence, Total | Serpent | Temperance | Truth | GLUTTON; GLUTTONOUS | Greed | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 23:1 Or “who,” referring to the ruler (so ASV, NAB, TEV).

NET Notes: Pro 23:2 Heb “lord of appetite.” The idiom בַּעַל נֶפֶשׁ (ba’al nefes...

NET Notes: Pro 23:3 Verses 1-3 form the sixth saying about being cautious before rulers (cf. Instruction of Amememope, chap. 23, 23:13-18). One should not get too familia...

NET Notes: Pro 23:4 Heb “from your understanding cease.” In the context this means that the person should have enough understanding to stop wearing himself ou...

NET Notes: Pro 23:5 This seventh saying warns people not to expend all their energy trying to get rich because riches are fleeting (cf. Instruction of Amememope, chap. 7,...

NET Notes: Pro 23:6 Heb “an evil eye.” This is the opposite of the “good eye” which meant the generous man. The “evil eye” refers to a...

NET Notes: Pro 23:7 Heb “soul.”

NET Notes: Pro 23:8 This is the eighth saying; it claims that it would be a mistake to accept hospitality from a stingy person. He is always thinking about the cost, his ...

NET Notes: Pro 23:9 Saying number nine indicates that wisdom is wasted on a fool. The literature of Egypt has no specific parallel to this one.

NET Notes: Pro 23:10 Or “encroach on” (NIV, NRSV); Heb “go into.”

NET Notes: Pro 23:11 This is the tenth saying; once again there is a warning not to encroach on other people’s rights and property, especially the defenseless (see v...

NET Notes: Pro 23:12 Heb “bring.” The Hiphil imperative “come; enter” means “to apply the heart,” to use the heart or mind in the proce...

NET Notes: Pro 23:14 The term שְׁאוֹל (shÿ’ol, “Sheol”) in this context probably means “death”...

NET Notes: Pro 23:15 Heb “my son,” although the context does not limit this exhortation to male children.

NET Notes: Pro 23:16 This twelfth saying simply observes that children bring joy to their parents when they demonstrate wisdom. The quatrain is arranged in a chiastic stru...

NET Notes: Pro 23:17 Heb “the fear of the Lord.” This expression features an objective genitive: “fearing the Lord.”

NET Notes: Pro 23:18 The saying is an understatement; far from being cut off, the “hope” will be realized in the end. So this saying, the thirteenth, advises p...

NET Notes: Pro 23:19 Heb “my son,” but the immediate context does not limit this to male children.

NET Notes: Pro 23:20 The verb זָלַל (zalal) means “to be light; to be worthless; to make light of.” Making light of something cam...

NET Notes: Pro 23:21 This is the fourteenth saying, warning about poor associations. Drunkenness and gluttony represent the epitome of the lack of discipline. In the Mishn...

NET Notes: Pro 23:23 The sixteenth saying is an instruction to buy/acquire the kind of life that pleases God and brings joy to parents. “Getting truth” would m...

NET Notes: Pro 23:24 The term “child” is supplied for the masculine singular adjective here.

NET Notes: Pro 23:25 The form תָגֵל (tagel) is clearly a short form and therefore a jussive (“may she…rejoice”); if this se...

NET Notes: Pro 23:26 Heb “my son”; the reference to a “son” is retained in the translation here because in the following lines the advice is to avo...

NET Notes: Pro 23:27 In either case, whether a prostitute or an adulteress wife is involved, the danger is the same. The metaphors of a “deep pit” and a “...

NET Notes: Pro 23:28 Verses 26-28 comprise the seventeenth saying; it warns the young person to follow the instructions about temptations because there are plenty of tempt...

NET Notes: Pro 23:29 The Hebrew word translated “dullness” describes darkness or dullness of the eyes due to intoxication, perhaps “redness” (so KJ...

NET Notes: Pro 23:30 The answer to the question posed in v. 29 is obviously one who drinks too much, which this verse uses metonymies to point out. Lingering over wine is ...

NET Notes: Pro 23:31 The expression is difficult, and is suspected of having been added from Song 7:10, although the parallel is not exact. The verb is the Hitpael imperfe...

NET Notes: Pro 23:32 Heb “its end”; NASB “At the last”; TEV (interpretively) “The next morning.”

NET Notes: Pro 23:33 The feminine plural of זָר (zar, “strange things”) refers to the trouble one has in seeing and speaking when drunk.

NET Notes: Pro 23:34 The point of these similes is to compare being drunk with being seasick. One who tries to sleep when at sea, or even worse, when up on the ropes of th...

NET Notes: Pro 23:35 The last line has only “I will add I will seek it again.” The use of אוֹסִיף (’osif) signa...

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