CHAPTER 15
but a harsh word stirs up anger.*
but the mouth of fools spews folly.
keeping watch on the evil and the good.
but a perverse one breaks the spirit.
but whoever heeds reproof is prudent.* b
but the harvest of the wicked is in peril.
but the heart of fools is not steadfast.*
but the prayer of the upright is his delight.
but he loves one who pursues justice.d
one who hates reproof will die.*
how much more the hearts of mortals!
to the wise they will not go.
but an anguished heart breaks the spirit.e
but the mouth of fools feeds on folly.*
but a good heart is a continual feast.*
than a great fortune with anxiety.
than a fatted ox and hatred with it.
but the patient settle disputes.
but the path of the diligent is a highway.
but a fool despises his mother.g
but the person of understanding goes the straight way.
but they succeed when advisers are many.* h
a word in season, how good it is!* i
turning them from Sheol below.*
but preserves intact the widow’s landmark.
but gracious words are pure.*
but those who hate bribes will live.*
but the mouth of the wicked spews evil.
but hears the prayer of the just.
good news invigorates the bones.
is at home among the wise.*
but those who heed reproof acquire understanding.
and humility goes before honors.l
* [15:1–7] These verses form a section beginning and ending with the topic of words.
* [15:1] Paradoxically, where words are concerned soft is powerful and hard is ineffective.
* [15:5] One becomes wise by keeping and foolish by rejecting. One must accept the tradition of the community.
* [15:7] “Lips” and “heart” are a fixed pair, in Proverbs signifying, respectively, expression and source. The wise disseminate what they have in their heart, but the wicked are unsound even in the source of their words, their hearts.
* [15:10] Discipline, always a good thing in Proverbs, seems bad to those deliberately wandering from justice.
* [15:11] Sheol and Abaddon: terms for the abode of the dead, signifying the profound obscurity which is open nevertheless to the sight and power of God; cf. 27:20.
* [15:14] The contrasts include heart (organ of reflection) and mouth (organ of expression), and the wise and fools. One type feeds its mind with wisdom and the other feeds its face with folly.
* [15:15] Good heart does not refer to good intentions but to an instructed mind. Wisdom makes poverty not only bearable but even joyful like the joy of feast days.
* [15:16–17] The sages favor wealth over poverty—but not at any price; cf. Ps 37:16.
* [15:21] The word “joy” occurs in the first line of vv. 20, 21, and 23. The state of folly is joy to a fool but the wise person is totally absorbed in keeping on the right or straight road.
* [15:22] Failure to consult makes it likely a plan will not succeed. The point is nicely made by contrasting the singular number in the first line (“no counsel”) with the plural number in the second line (“many advisers”).
* [15:23] Conversation is the art of saying the right thing at the right time. It gives pleasure to speaker and hearer alike.
* [15:24] Death is personified as Sheol, the underworld. “Up” and “down” in Hebrew as in English are metaphors for success and failure (see Dt 28:43). One who stays on the path of life need not fear the punishment that stalks sinners.
* [15:26] “Pure” here means acceptable. The language of ritual (acceptable or pure) is applied to ordinary human actions. “Gracious words” are words that bring peace to the neighbor.
* [15:27] The same lesson as the opening scene of Proverbs (1:8–19): one cannot build a house by unjust gain. Injustice will come back upon a house so built.
* [15:31] To become wise, one must hear and integrate perspectives contrary to one’s own, which means accepting “reproof.” Wisdom does not isolate one but places one in the company of the wise.
c. [15:8] Prv 21:27; Eccl 4:17; Is 1:11–15.
e. [15:13] Prv 12:25; 17:22; Sir 30:22.
f. [15:18] Prv 6:21; 29:22; Sir 28:11.
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