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Text -- Proverbs 26:1-23 (NET)

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Context
26:1 Like snow in summer or rain in harvest, so honor is not fitting for a fool. 26:2 Like a fluttering bird or like a flying swallow, so a curse without cause does not come to rest. 26:3 A whip for the horse and a bridle for the donkey, and a rod for the backs of fools! 26:4 Do not answer a fool according to his folly, lest you yourself also be like him. 26:5 Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own estimation. 26:6 Like cutting off the feet or drinking violence, so is sending a message by the hand of a fool. 26:7 Like legs that hang limp from the lame, so is a proverb in the mouth of fools. 26:8 Like tying a stone in a sling, so is giving honor to a fool. 26:9 Like a thorn that goes into the hand of a drunkard, so is a proverb in the mouth of a fool. 26:10 Like an archer who wounds at random, so is the one who hires a fool or hires any passer-by. 26:11 Like a dog that returns to its vomit, so a fool repeats his folly. 26:12 Do you see a man wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a fool than for him. 26:13 The sluggard says, “There is a lion in the road! A lion in the streets!” 26:14 Like a door that turns on its hinges, so a sluggard turns on his bed. 26:15 The sluggard plunges his hand in the dish; he is too lazy to bring it back to his mouth. 26:16 The sluggard is wiser in his own estimation than seven people who respond with good sense. 26:17 Like one who grabs a wild dog by the ears, so is the person passing by who becomes furious over a quarrel not his own. 26:18 Like a madman who shoots firebrands and deadly arrows, 26:19 so is a person who deceives his neighbor, and says, “Was I not only joking?” 26:20 Where there is no wood, a fire goes out, and where there is no gossip, contention ceases. 26:21 Like charcoal is to burning coals, and wood to fire, so is a contentious person to kindle strife. 26:22 The words of a gossip are like delicious morsels; they go down into a person’s innermost being. 26:23 Like a coating of glaze over earthenware are fervent lips with an evil heart.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Fool | Speaking | Conceit | Laziness | PROVERB | Hypocrisy | Strife | COAL | Pride | SWALLOW | Wicked | HINGE | Dross | POTSHERD | Gossip | Bit | Seven | FIREBRAND | TALE | Door | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 26:1 The first twelve verses of this chapter, Prov 26:1-12, are sometimes called “the Book of Fools” because they deal with the actions of fool...

NET Notes: Pro 26:2 The MT has the negative with the verb “to enter; to come” to mean “will not come” (לֹא תָב...

NET Notes: Pro 26:3 A fool must be disciplined by force like an animal – there is no reasoning. The fool is as difficult to manage as the donkey or horse.

NET Notes: Pro 26:4 The person who descends to the level of a fool to argue with him only looks like a fool as well.

NET Notes: Pro 26:5 Heb “in his own eyes” (so NAB, NASB, NIV).

NET Notes: Pro 26:6 The consequence is given in the first line and the cause in the second. It would be better not to send a message at all than to use a fool as messenge...

NET Notes: Pro 26:7 As C. H. Toy puts it, the fool is a “proverb-monger” (Proverbs [ICC], 474); he handles an aphorism about as well as a lame man can walk. T...

NET Notes: Pro 26:8 The point is that only someone who does not know how a sling works would do such a stupid thing (R. N. Whybray, Proverbs [CBC], 152). So to honor a fo...

NET Notes: Pro 26:9 A fool can read or speak a proverb but will be intellectually and spiritually unable to handle it; he will misapply it or misuse it in some way. In do...

NET Notes: Pro 26:10 The participle שֹׂכֵר (shokher) is rendered here according to its normal meaning “hires” or “pay...

NET Notes: Pro 26:11 The point is clear: Fools repeat their disgusting mistakes, or to put it another way, whenever we repeat our disgusting mistakes we are fools. The pro...

NET Notes: Pro 26:12 Previous passages in the book of Proverbs all but deny the possibility of hope for the fool. So this proverb is saying there is absolutely no hope for...

NET Notes: Pro 26:13 Heb “in the broad plazas”; NAB, NASB “in the square.” This proverb makes the same point as 22:13, namely, that the sluggard us...

NET Notes: Pro 26:14 The term “turns” is not in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation from the parallelism.

NET Notes: Pro 26:15 The proverb is stating that the sluggard is too lazy to eat; this is essentially the same point made in 19:24 (see the note there).

NET Notes: Pro 26:16 The term means “taste; judgment.” The related verb means “to taste; to perceive,” that is, “to examine by tasting,”...

NET Notes: Pro 26:17 The word מִתְעַבֵּר (mit’abber) means “to put oneself in a fury” or R...

NET Notes: Pro 26:18 Heb “arrows and death” (so KJV, NASB). This expression can be understood as a nominal hendiadys: “deadly arrows” (so NAB, NIV)...

NET Notes: Pro 26:19 The subject of this proverb is not simply a deceiver, but one who does so out of jest, or at least who claims he was joking afterward. The participle ...

NET Notes: Pro 26:20 Heb “becomes silent.”

NET Notes: Pro 26:21 The Pilpel infinitive construct לְחַרְחַר (lÿkharkhar) from חָרַ...

NET Notes: Pro 26:22 The proverb is essentially the same as 18:8; it observes how appealing gossip is.

NET Notes: Pro 26:23 The analogy fits the second line very well. Glaze makes a vessel look beautiful and certainly different from the clay that it actually is. So is one w...

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