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Text -- Proverbs 24:1-22 (NET)

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24:1 Do not envy evil people, do not desire to be with them; 24:2 for their hearts contemplate violence, and their lips speak harm. 24:3 By wisdom a house is built, and through understanding it is established; 24:4 by knowledge its rooms are filled with all kinds of precious and pleasing treasures. 24:5 A wise warrior is strong, and a man of knowledge makes his strength stronger; 24:6 for with guidance you wage your war, and with numerous advisers there is victory. 24:7 Wisdom is unattainable for a fool; in court he does not open his mouth. 24:8 The one who plans to do evil will be called a scheming person. 24:9 A foolish scheme is sin, and the scorner is an abomination to people. 24:10 If you faint in the day of trouble, your strength is small! 24:11 Deliver those being taken away to death, and hold back those slipping to the slaughter. 24:12 If you say, “But we did not know about this,” does not the one who evaluates hearts consider? Does not the one who guards your life know? Will he not repay each person according to his deeds? 24:13 Eat honey, my child, for it is good, and honey from the honeycomb is sweet to your taste. 24:14 Likewise, know that wisdom is sweet to your soul; if you find it, you will have a future, and your hope will not be cut off. 24:15 Do not lie in wait like the wicked against the place where the righteous live; do not assault his home. 24:16 Although a righteous person may fall seven times, he gets up again, but the wicked will be brought down by calamity. 24:17 Do not rejoice when your enemy falls, and when he stumbles do not let your heart rejoice, 24:18 lest the Lord see it, and be displeased, and turn his wrath away from him. 24:19 Do not fret because of evil people or be envious of wicked people, 24:20 for the evil person has no future, and the lamp of the wicked will be extinguished. 24:21 Fear the Lord, my child, as well as the king, and do not associate with rebels, 24:22 for suddenly their destruction will overtake them, and who knows the ruinous judgment both the Lord and the king can bring?
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 24:1 The Hitpael jussive is from the verb that means “to crave; to desire.” This is more of a coveting, an intense desire.

NET Notes: Pro 24:2 This nineteenth saying warns against evil associations. Evil people are obsessed with destruction and trouble. See on this theme 1:10-19; 3:31 and 23:...

NET Notes: Pro 24:3 The twentieth saying, vv. 3-4, concerns the use of wisdom for domestic enterprises. In Prov 9:1 wisdom was personified as a woman who builds a house; ...

NET Notes: Pro 24:5 The expression בַּעוֹז (ba’oz) employs a beth essentiae, meaning he “is strong,” not ̶...

NET Notes: Pro 24:6 The point of the saying is that wise counsel is necessary in war. Victory, strategy, and counsel are more important than mere military strength –...

NET Notes: Pro 24:7 The verse portrays a fool out of his element: In a serious moment in the gathering of the community, he does not even open his mouth (a metonymy of ca...

NET Notes: Pro 24:8 Heb “possessor of schemes”; NAB “an intriguer.” The picture of the wicked person is graphic: He devises plans to do evil and i...

NET Notes: Pro 24:9 This describes evil people who flout all morality and goodness; sooner or later the public will have had enough of them.

NET Notes: Pro 24:10 The test of strength is adversity, for it reveals how strong a person is. Of course a weak person can always plead adverse conditions in order to quit...

NET Notes: Pro 24:11 God holds people responsible for rescuing those who are in mortal danger. The use of “death” and “slaughter” seems rather stro...

NET Notes: Pro 24:12 The verse completes the saying by affirming that people will be judged responsible for helping those in mortal danger. The verse uses a series of rhet...

NET Notes: Pro 24:13 The twenty-sixth saying teaches that one should develop wisdom because it has a profitable future. The saying draws on the image of honey; its health-...

NET Notes: Pro 24:14 Heb “there will be an end.” The word is אַחֲרִית (’akhrit, “after-part, end...

NET Notes: Pro 24:15 The saying warns that it is futile and self-defeating to mistreat God’s people, for they survive – the wicked do not. The warning is again...

NET Notes: Pro 24:16 The verb could be translated with an English present tense (“are brought down,” so NIV) to express what happens to the wicked in this life...

NET Notes: Pro 24:17 The saying (vv. 17, 18) warns against gloating over the misfortune of one’s enemies. The prohibition is formed with two negated jussives “...

NET Notes: Pro 24:18 The judgment of God should strike a note of fear in the heart of people (e.g., Lev 19:17-18). His judgment is not to be taken lightly, or personalized...

NET Notes: Pro 24:20 The saying warns against envying the wicked; v. 19 provides the instruction, and v. 20 the motivation. The motivation is that there is no future hope ...

NET Notes: Pro 24:21 The form rendered “rebellious” is difficult; it appears to be the Qal active participle, plural, from שָׁנָ&...

NET Notes: Pro 24:22 The reward for living in peace under God in this world is that those who do will escape the calamities that will fall on the rebellious. Verse 21a is ...

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