CHAPTER 26*
honor for a fool is out of place.*
a curse uncalled-for never lands.*
and the rod for the back of fools.a
lest you too become like them.
lest they become wise in their own eyes.
cut off their feet; they drink down violence.
hangs limp, like crippled legs.
is like entangling a stone in the sling.
is a proverb in the mouth of fools.
is anyone who hires a drunken fool.
so fools repeat their folly.b
There is more hope for fools than for them.
a lion in the middle of the square!”c
and sluggards, on their beds.
too weary to lift it to the mouth.d
than seven who answer with good judgment.
is one who grabs a passing dog by the ears.
scattering firebrands and deadly arrows,
and then say, “I was only joking.”
without a talebearer strife subsides.
such are the quarrelsome, enkindling strife.e
they sink into one’s inmost being.* f
are smooth lips and a wicked heart.*
but inwardly they maintain deceit;
for seven abominations* are in their hearts.
but malice will be revealed in the assembly.*
and a stone comes back upon the one who rolls it.h
and the flattering mouth works ruin.
* [26:1–28] Concrete images describe the vices of fools (vv. 1–12), of sluggards (vv. 13–16), of meddlers (vv. 17–19), of talebearers (vv. 20–22), and of flatterers (vv. 23–28).
* [26:1] There is no fit (“out of place”) between weather and agricultural season.
* [26:2] The point is the similarity of actions: a hovering bird that never lands, a groundless curse that never “lands.” It hangs in the air posing no threat to anyone.
* [26:4–5] There is no contradiction between these two proverbs. In their answers, the wise must protect their own interests against fools. Or perhaps the juxtaposition of the two proverbs suggests that no single proverb can resolve every problem in life.
* [26:7–9] Fools either abuse or are unable to use whatever knowledge they have. A thorn: a proverb is “words spoken at the proper time” (25:11). Fools have no sense of the right time; their statements are like thorns that fasten on clothing randomly.
* [26:13–16] Each verse mentions the sluggard, whom Proverbs regards with derision. The criticism is not against low energy but failure to act and take responsibility. Proverbs’ ideal is the active person who uses heart, lips, hands, feet to keep to the good path. The verses are examples of the sardonic humor of the book.
* [26:20–22] The three proverbs have a common theme—the destructive power of slanderous words. Certain words are repeated: wood and fire, talebearer.
* [26:22] Malicious gossip is compared to delicious food that is swallowed and lodges in the deepest recesses of one’s body. Negative comments are seldom forgotten. Prv 18:8 is a duplicate.
* [26:23] Heart = what is within, and lips (words) = what is expressed, are compared to an earthenware jar covered with glaze.
* [26:25] Seven abominations: many evil intentions.
* [26:26] Hate may be concealed for a time, but it will eventually issue in a deed and become known in the public assembly. There is a play on words: the consonants of the word “hatred” (ś’n) are literally concealed in the word “pretense” (mś’n).
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