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Text -- Proverbs 30:20-33 (NET)

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30:20 This is the way of an adulterous woman: she eats and wipes her mouth and says, “I have not done wrong.” 30:21 Under three things the earth trembles, and under four things it cannot bear up: 30:22 under a servant who becomes king, under a fool who is stuffed with food, 30:23 under an unloved woman who is married, and under a female servant who dispossesses her mistress. 30:24 There are four things on earth that are small, but they are exceedingly wise: 30:25 ants are creatures with little strength, but they prepare their food in the summer; 30:26 rock badgers are creatures with little power, but they make their homes in the crags; 30:27 locusts have no king, but they all go forward by ranks; 30:28 a lizard you can catch with the hand, but it gets into the palaces of the king. 30:29 There are three things that are magnificent in their step, four things that move about magnificently: 30:30 a lion, mightiest of the beasts, who does not retreat from anything; 30:31 a strutting rooster, a male goat, and a king with his army around him. 30:32 If you have done foolishly by exalting yourself or if you have planned evil, put your hand over your mouth! 30:33 For as the churning of milk produces butter and as punching the nose produces blood, so stirring up anger produces strife.
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 30:20 This is the amazing part of the observation. It is one thing to sin, for everyone sins, but to dismiss the act of adultery so easily, as if it were no...

NET Notes: Pro 30:21 The Hebrew verb means “to rage; to quake; to be in tumult.” The sage is using humorous and satirical hyperbole to say that the changes des...

NET Notes: Pro 30:22 The expression stuffed with food probably represents prosperity in general. So the line portrays someone who suddenly comes into wealth, but continues...

NET Notes: Pro 30:23 The verb יָרַשׁ (yarash) means either (1) “to possess; to inherit” or (2) “to dispossess.”...

NET Notes: Pro 30:24 The construction uses the Pual participle with the plural adjective as an intensive; these four creatures are the very embodiment of wisdom (BDB 314 s...

NET Notes: Pro 30:25 The wisdom of the ants is found in their diligent preparation (כּוּן, kun) of food supplies in the summer for times in t...

NET Notes: Pro 30:26 Modern scholars identify this creature with the rock badger (the Syrian hyrax), a small mammal that lives in the crevices of the rock. Its wisdom cons...

NET Notes: Pro 30:27 The Hebrew term means “divided”; they go forward in orderly divisions, or ranks (C. H. Toy, Proverbs [ICC], 535). Joel 1:4 describes their...

NET Notes: Pro 30:28 Although the Hebrew noun translated “king” is singular here, it is traditionally translated as plural: “kings’ palaces” ...

NET Notes: Pro 30:29 The construction uses the Hiphil participle again (as in the previous line) followed by the infinitive construct of הָלַך...

NET Notes: Pro 30:30 Heb “mighty among the beasts,” but referring to a superlative degree (“mightiest”).

NET Notes: Pro 30:31 This last line has inspired many suggestions. The MT has “with his army around him” (אַלְקוּ...

NET Notes: Pro 30:32 Heb “hand to mouth.” This express means “put your hand to your mouth” (e.g., Job 40:4, 5); cf. NIV “clap your hand over....

NET Notes: Pro 30:33 The analogy indicates that continuously pressing certain things will yield results, some good, some bad. So pressing anger produces strife. The prover...

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