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Psalms 132:18

Context

132:18 I will humiliate his enemies, 1 

and his crown will shine.

Proverbs 11:2

Context

11:2 When pride 2  comes, 3  then comes disgrace, 4 

but with humility 5  comes 6  wisdom.

Proverbs 16:18

Context

16:18 Pride 7  goes 8  before destruction,

and a haughty spirit before a fall. 9 

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[132:18]  1 tn Heb “his enemies I will clothe [with] shame.”

[11:2]  2 tn Heb “presumptuousness.” This term is from the root זִיד, zid (or זוּד, zud) which means “to boil; to seethe; to act proudly; to act presumptuously.” The idea is that of boiling over the edge of the pot, signifying overstepping the boundaries (e.g., Gen 25:29).

[11:2]  3 tn The verbs show both the sequence and the correlation. The first is the perfect tense of בּוֹא (bo’, “to enter; to come”); it is followed by the preterite with vav consecutive from the same verb, showing that one follows or comes with the other. Because the second verb in the colon is sequential to the first, the first may be subordinated as a temporal clause.

[11:2]  4 sn This proverb does not state how the disgrace will come, but affirms that it will follow pride. The proud will be brought down.

[11:2]  5 tn Heb “modesty”; KJV, ASV “the lowly.” The adjective צְנוּעִים (tsÿnuim, “modest”) is used as a noun; this is an example of antimeria in which one part of speech is used in the place of another (see E. W. Bullinger, Figures of Speech, 491-506), e.g., “Let the dry [adjective] appear!” = dry land (Gen 1:9). The root צָנַע (tsana’, “to be modest; to be humble”) describes those who are reserved, retiring, modest. The plural form is used for the abstract idea of humility.

[11:2]  6 tn The term “comes” does not appear in the Hebrew, but is supplied in the translation from parallelism.

[16:18]  7 sn The two lines of this proverb are synonymous parallelism, and so there are parasynonyms. “Pride” is paired with “haughty spirit” (“spirit” being a genitive of specification); and “destruction” is matched with “a tottering, falling.”

[16:18]  8 tn Heb “[is] before destruction.”

[16:18]  9 sn Many proverbs have been written in a similar way to warn against the inevitable disintegration and downfall of pride. W. McKane records an Arabic proverb: “The nose is in the heavens, the seat is in the mire” (Proverbs [OTL], 490).



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