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Text -- Proverbs 31:23-31 (NET)

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Context
31:23 Her husband is well-known in the city gate when he sits with the elders of the land. 31:24 She makes linen garments and sells them, and supplies the merchants with sashes. 31:25 She is clothed with strength and honor, and she can laugh at the time to come. 31:26 She opens her mouth with wisdom, and loving instruction is on her tongue. 31:27 She watches over the ways of her household, and does not eat the bread of idleness. 31:28 Her children rise up and call her blessed, her husband also praises her: 31:29 “Many daughters have done valiantly, but you surpass them all!” 31:30 Charm is deceitful and beauty is fleeting, but a woman who fears the Lord will be praised. 31:31 Give her credit for what she has accomplished, and let her works praise her in the city gates.
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 31:23 The construction uses the infinitive construct with the preposition and a pronominal suffix that serves as the subject (subjective genitive) to form a...

NET Notes: Pro 31:24 Heb “to the Canaanites.” These are the Phoenician traders that survived the wars and continued to do business down to the exile.

NET Notes: Pro 31:25 Heb “day.” This word is a metonymy of subject meaning any events that take place on the day or in the time to come.

NET Notes: Pro 31:26 The Hebrew phrase תּוֹרַת־חֶסֶד (torat-khesed) is open to different inte...

NET Notes: Pro 31:27 The expression bread of idleness refers to food that is gained through idleness, perhaps given or provided for her. In the description of the passage ...

NET Notes: Pro 31:28 The text uses an independent nominative absolute to draw attention to her husband: “her husband, and he praises her.” Prominent as he is, ...

NET Notes: Pro 31:29 The word is the same as in v. 10, “noble, valiant.”

NET Notes: Pro 31:30 This chapter describes the wise woman as fearing the Lord. It is the fear of the Lord that is the beginning of wisdom – that was the motto of th...

NET Notes: Pro 31:31 “Gates” is a metonymy of subject. It refers to the people and the activity that occurs in the gates – business dealings, legal trans...

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