CHAPTER 1
Exhortation to Righteousness, the Key to Life
think of the LORD in goodness,
and seek him in integrity of heart;b
and manifests himself to those who do not disbelieve him.c
and his power, put to the proof, rebukes the foolhardy;d
nor does she dwell in a body under debt of sin.e
and withdraws from senseless counsels
and is rebuked when unrighteousness occurs.f
yet she does not acquit blasphemous lips;
Because God is the witness of the inmost selfg
and the sure observer of the heart
and the listener to the tongue.h
is all-embracing, and knows whatever is said.
nor will chastising condemnation pass them by.j
and the sound of their words shall reach the LORD,
for the chastisement of their transgressions;
and discordant grumblings are not secret.
and from calumny* withhold your tongues;
For a stealthy utterance will not go unpunished,
and a lying mouth destroys the soul.
nor draw to yourselves destruction by the works of your hands.
nor does he rejoice in the destruction of the living.
and the creatures of the world are wholesome;
There is not a destructive drug among them
nor any domain of Hades* on earth,
The Wicked Reject Immortality and Righteousness Alike
considered it a friend, and pined for it,
and made a covenant with it,
Because they deserve to be allied with it.n
* [1:1–6:21] The reward is the gift of immortality, to the righteous (1:15; 3:1–3), but not to the wicked (5:1–13). Contrasts between these two groups dominate chaps. 1–5. The philosophy of the wicked and their persecution of the righteous are dramatically presented in 1:16–2:24. New light is shed on the suffering of the righteous (3:1–9), childlessness (3:13–15), and premature death (4:7–16)—in contrast to the fate of the wicked (3:10–12, 16–19; 4:3–6, 17–20).
* [1:1] Righteousness: not merely the cardinal virtue of justice (cf. 8:7), but the universal moral quality which is the application of wisdom to moral conduct. You who judge: “judges” and “kings” (cf. 6:1) are addressed in accordance with the literary customs of the times and with the putative Solomonic authorship, but the real audience is the Jewish community.
* [1:4] In these verses personified Wisdom is identified with the spirit of the Lord; so also in 9:17.
* [1:5] Discipline: here and elsewhere, another name for Wisdom.
* [1:11] Calumny: speech against God and divine providence is meant.
* [1:12] Death: as will become clear, the author is not speaking of physical death but of spiritual death, the eternal separation from God.
* [1:14] Hades: the Greek term for the Hebrew Sheol, the dwelling place of the dead.
* [1:15] Undying: immortality is not seen as an innate quality of the soul but as a gift of God to the righteous.
a. [1:1] 1 Chr 29:17; Ps 2:10; Is 26:9.
c. [1:2] 1 Chr 28:9.
e. [1:4] Sir 15:7–8; Rom 7:14.
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