父亲的教诲

孩子们啊,
    你们要听从父亲的教诲,
    留心学习,以便领悟,
因为我给你们的训诲是美好的,
    不可背弃我的教导。
我年幼时在父亲身边,
    是母亲唯一的宠儿。
父亲教导我说:
    “要牢记我的话,
    遵守我的诫命,就必存活。
你要寻求智慧和悟性,
    不要忘记或违背我的吩咐。
不可离弃智慧,智慧必护佑你;
    你要热爱智慧,智慧必看顾你。
智慧至上,要寻求智慧,
    要不惜一切,求得悟性。
高举智慧,她必使你受尊崇;
    拥抱智慧,她必使你得尊荣。
她必为你戴上华冠,
    加上荣冕。”

10 孩子啊,你要听从我的教导,
    就必延年益寿。
11 我已经指示你走智慧之道,
    引导你行正确的路。
12 你行走,必不受妨碍;
    你奔跑,绝不会跌倒。
13 你要持守教诲,不要松懈;
    要守护好,因为那是你的生命。
14 不要涉足恶人的道,
    不要行走坏人的路;
15 要避开,不可踏足,
    要绕道而行。
16 因为他们不作恶就无法入睡,
    不绊倒人就无法安眠;
17 他们吃的是邪恶饼,
    喝的是残暴酒。
18 义人的道路好像黎明的曙光,
    越照越亮,直到大放光明。
19 恶人的道路一片幽暗,
    他们不知被何物绊倒。

20 孩子啊,你要聆听我的吩咐,
    侧耳听我的训言;
21 不要让它们离开你的视线,
    要牢记在心。
22 因为得到它们就得到生命,
    全身也必康健。
23 要一丝不苟地守护你的心,
    因为生命之泉从心中涌出。
24 不讲欺诈之言,
    不说荒谬的话。
25 眼睛要正视前方,
    双目要向前直看。
26 要铺平脚下的路,
    使所行之道稳妥。
27 不可偏右偏左,
    要远离恶事。

持定訓誨、不偏左右

孩子們,要聽父親的教訓,

留心學習哲理;

因為我授予你們的,是美好的學問,

我的訓誨,你們不可離棄。

我在我父親面前還是小孩子,

在我母親面前是獨一的嬌兒的時候,

父親教導我,對我說:

“你的心要持守我的話,

你要遵守我的誡命,就可以存活;

要求取智慧和哲理,

不可忘記,也不可偏離我口中的話。

不可離棄智慧,智慧就必護衛你;

喜愛智慧,智慧就必看顧你。

智慧的開端(“智慧的開端”或譯:“智慧是首要的”)是求取智慧,

要用你所得的一切換取哲理。

你要高舉智慧,智慧就必使你高升;

你要懷抱智慧,智慧就必使你得尊榮。

智慧必把華冠加在你頭上,

把榮冕賜給你。”

10 我兒,你要聽,並要接受我所說的,

這樣,你就必延年益壽。

11 我指教你走智慧的道,

引導你行正直的路。

12 你行走的時候,腳步必不會受阻礙;

你奔跑的時候,也不會跌倒。

13 你要堅守教訓,不可放鬆;

要謹守教訓,因為那是你的生命。

14 不可走進惡人的路徑,

不可踏上壞人的道路。

15 要躲避,不可從那裡經過,

要轉身離去。

16 因為他們不行惡,就不能入睡;

不使人跌倒,就要失眠。

17 他們吃的,是奸惡的飯;

他們喝的,是強暴的酒。

18 義人的路徑卻像黎明的曙光,

越來越明亮,直到日午。

19 惡人的道路幽暗,

他們不知道自己因甚麼跌倒。

20 我兒,要留心聽我的話,

側耳聽我所說的。

21 不可讓它們離開你的眼目,

要謹記在你的心中。

22 因為得著它們就是得著生命,

整個人也得著醫治。

23 你要謹守你的心,勝過謹守一切,

因為生命的泉源由此而出。

24 你要除掉欺詐的口,

遠離乖謬的嘴唇。

25 你雙眼要向前正視,

你的眼睛要向前直望。

26 你要謹慎你腳下的路徑,

你一切所行的就必穩妥。

27 不可偏左偏右,

要使你的腳遠離惡事。

Chapter 4

The Teacher as Model Disciple[a]

Hear, O children, a father’s instruction,
    be attentive, that you may gain understanding!
Yes, excellent advice I give you;
    my teaching do not forsake.
When I was my father’s child,
    tender, the darling of my mother,
He taught me and said to me:
    “Let your heart hold fast my words:(A)
    keep my commands, and live!
Get wisdom,[b] get understanding!
    Do not forget or turn aside from the words of my mouth.
Do not forsake her, and she will preserve you;
    love her, and she will safeguard you;
The beginning of wisdom is: get wisdom;
    whatever else you get, get understanding.
Extol her, and she will exalt you;
    she will bring you honors if you embrace her;
She will put on your head a graceful diadem;
    a glorious crown will she bestow on you.”

The Two Ways[c]

10 Hear, my son, and receive my words,
    and the years of your life shall be many.(B)
11 On the way of wisdom I direct you,
    I lead you on straight paths.
12 When you walk, your step will not be impeded,
    and should you run, you will not stumble.
13 Hold fast to instruction, never let it go;
    keep it, for it is your life.
14 [d]The path of the wicked do not enter,
    nor walk in the way of the evil;
15 Shun it, do not cross it,
    turn aside from it, pass on.
16 For they cannot rest unless they have done evil;
    if they do not trip anyone they lose sleep.
17 For they eat the bread of wickedness
    and drink the wine of violence.
18 But the path of the just is like shining light,
    that grows in brilliance till perfect day.[e]
19 The way of the wicked is like darkness;
    they do not know on what they stumble.

With Your Whole Being Heed My Words and Live[f]

20 My son, to my words be attentive,
    to my sayings incline your ear;
21 Let them not slip from your sight,
    keep them within your heart;
22 For they are life to those who find them,(C)
    bringing health to one’s whole being.
23 With all vigilance guard your heart,
    for in it are the sources of life.
24 [g]Dishonest mouth put away from you,
    deceitful lips put far from you.
25 Let your eyes look straight ahead
    and your gaze be focused forward.
26 Survey the path for your feet,
    and all your ways will be sure.
27 Turn neither to right nor to left,
    keep your foot far from evil.

Footnotes

  1. 4:1–9

    The teacher draws a parallel between his teaching the disciples now and his father’s teaching him in his youth (vv. 3–4): what my father taught me about wisdom is what I am teaching you. The poem implies that the teacher has acquired wisdom and has in fact been protected and honored as his father promised long ago. Thus the teacher has the authority of someone who has been under wisdom’s sway since earliest youth.

    There are two sections, a call for attention and introduction of the speaker (vv. 1–3) and the father’s quoting of his own father’s teaching (vv. 4–9). Beginning with v. 5, the father’s words are no longer quoted, wisdom herself becoming the active agent; she becomes the subject, not the object, of the verbs. Three Hebrew verbs are repeated in the two parts, “to forsake” in vv. 2 and 6, “to keep/guard” in vv. 4 and 6, and “to give/bestow” in vv. 2 and 9. Each verb in its first appearance has the father’s words as its object; in its second appearance each verb has wisdom as its subject or object. The teaching process is like that in 2:1–22 and 3:1–12: heeding the words of one’s parent puts one in touch with wisdom, who completes the process and bestows her gifts.

  2. 4:5, 7 Get wisdom: the same Hebrew word “to get” can mean to acquire merchandise and to acquire a wife (18:22; 31:10); both meanings are in keeping with Proverbs’ metaphors of acquiring wisdom over gold and silver and of acquiring wisdom as a personified woman, a wife.
  3. 4:10–19 A central metaphor of the poem is “the way.” The way of wisdom leads directly to life (vv. 10–13); it is a light that grows brighter (v. 18). The wise are bound to shun (vv. 14–17) the dark and violent path of the wicked (v. 19). Singleness of purpose and right conduct proceed from the heart of the wise as from the source of life (vv. 23–26), saving them from destruction on evil paths (4:27; 5:21–23). As in 1:8–19 and 2:12–15, the obstacles to the quest are men and their way. Elsewhere in chaps. 1–9, the obstacle is the foreign woman (2:16–19; chap. 5; 6:20–35; chap. 7; 9:13–18).
  4. 4:14–15 One is always free to choose. The righteous may choose to leave their path to walk on the wicked path and the wicked may choose the righteous path.
  5. 4:18 Till perfect day: lit., “till the day is established”; this may refer to full daylight or to noonday.
  6. 4:20–27 Acquiring wisdom brings life and health. The learning process involves two stages: (1) hearing the teacher’s words and treasuring them in the heart; (2) speaking and acting in accord with the wisdom that one has stored in one’s heart. Seven organs of the body are mentioned: ear, eyes, heart, mouth, lips, eyelids (“gaze,” v. 25), feet. Each of the organs is to be strained to its limit as the disciple puts wisdom into practice. The physical organ stands for the faculty, e.g., the eye for sight, the foot for movement. The figure of speech is called metonymy; one word is substituted for another on the basis of a causal relation.
  7. 4:24–27 In vv. 20–21 the faculties of hearing (ear) and seeing (eye) take in the teaching and the heart stores and ponders it, so in the second half of the poem, vv. 24–27, the faculties of speech, sight, and walking enable the disciple to put the teaching into practice.