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Job 20:5

Context

20:5 that the elation of the wicked is brief, 1 

the joy of the godless 2  lasts but a moment. 3 

Proverbs 4:19

Context

4:19 The way of the wicked is like gloomy darkness; 4 

they do not know what causes them to stumble. 5 

Proverbs 13:9

Context

13:9 The light 6  of the righteous shines brightly, 7 

but the lamp 8  of the wicked goes out. 9 

Proverbs 20:20

Context

20:20 The one who curses 10  his father and his mother,

his lamp 11  will be extinguished in the blackest 12  darkness.

Proverbs 24:20

Context

24:20 for the evil person has no future, 13 

and the lamp of the wicked will be extinguished. 14 

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[20:5]  1 tn The expression in the text is “quite near.” This indicates that it is easily attained, and that its end is near.

[20:5]  2 tn For the discussion of חָנֵף (khanef, “godless”) see Job 8:13.

[20:5]  3 tn The phrase is “until a moment,” meaning it is short-lived. But see J. Barr, “Hebrew ’ad, especially at Job 1:18 and Neh 7:3,” JSS 27 (1982): 177-88.

[4:19]  4 sn The simile describes ignorance or spiritual blindness, sinfulness, calamity, despair.

[4:19]  5 tn Heb “in what they stumble.”

[13:9]  6 sn The images of “light” and “darkness” are used frequently in scripture. Here “light” is an implied comparison: “light” represents life, joy, and prosperity; “darkness” signifies adversity and death. So the “light of the righteous” represents the prosperous life of the righteous.

[13:9]  7 tn The verb יִשְׂמָח (yismah) is normally translated “to make glad; to rejoice.” But with “light” as the subject, it has the connotation “to shine brightly” (see G. R. Driver, “Problems in the Hebrew Text of Proverbs,” Bib 32 [1951]: 180).

[13:9]  8 sn The lamp is an implied comparison as well, comparing the life of the wicked to a lamp that is going to be extinguished.

[13:9]  9 tc The LXX adds, “Deceitful souls go astray in sins, but the righteous are pitiful and merciful.”

[20:20]  10 tn The form is the Piel participle of קָלַל (qalal), which means “to be light”; in the Piel stem it means “to take lightly; to treat as worthless; to treat contemptuously; to curse.” Under the Mosaic law such treatment of parents brought a death penalty (Exod 21:17; Lev 20:9; Deut 27:16).

[20:20]  11 tn “His lamp” is a figure known as hypocatastasis (an implied comparison) meaning “his life.” Cf. NLT “the lamp of your life”; TEV “your life will end like a lamp.”

[20:20]  12 tc The Kethib, followed by the LXX, Syriac, and Latin, has בְּאִישׁוֹן (bÿishon), “in the pupil of the eye darkness,” the dark spot of the eye. But the Qere has בֶּאֱשׁוּן (beeshun), probably to be rendered “pitch” or “blackest,” although the form occurs nowhere else. The meaning with either reading is approximately the same – deep darkness, which adds vividly to the figure of the lamp being snuffed out. This individual’s destruction will be total and final.

[24:20]  13 tn Heb “there is no end [i.e., future] for the evil.”

[24:20]  14 sn 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 for them – nothing to envy, or as C. H. Toy explains, there will be no good outcome for their lives (Proverbs [ICC], 449). They will die suddenly, as the implied comparison with the lamp being snuffed out signifies.



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