Add parallel Print Page Options

12 Better to meet a she-bear robbed of its cubs
    than to confront a fool immersed in folly.(A)

Read full chapter

12 It’s better to meet a mother bear who has lost her cubs
    than a fool in his stupidity.

Read full chapter

Do not speak in the hearing of a fool,
    who will only despise the wisdom of your words.(A)

Read full chapter

Don’t speak when a fool is listening,
    because he’ll despise your wise words.

Read full chapter

Do not answer fools according to their folly,
    lest you be a fool yourself.(A)
Answer fools according to their folly,
    lest they be wise in their own eyes.(B)
It is like cutting off one’s foot and drinking down violence,
    to send a message by a fool.
The legs of a lame person hang limp;
    so does a proverb in the mouth of a fool.(C)
It is like binding a stone in a sling
    to give honor to a fool.(D)
Like a thornbush brandished by the hand of a drunkard
    is a proverb in the mouth of a fool.(E)
10 Like an archer who wounds everybody
    is one who hires a passing fool or drunkard.[a]
11 Like a dog that returns to its vomit
    is a fool who reverts to his folly.(F)

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. 26.10 Meaning of Heb uncertain

Don’t answer a fool according to his foolishness,
    or you will be just like him.
Answer a fool according to his foolishness,
    or he will think himself to be wise.
Whoever sends a message by the hand of a fool
    cuts off his own[a] feet and drinks violence.
Useless legs to the lame—
    that’s what a proverb quoted by a fool is.
Tying a stone to a sling—
    that’s what giving honor to a fool is.
A thorn in the hand of a drunkard—
    that’s what a proverb quoted by a fool is.
10 An archer who shoots at anyone—
    is like someone who hires a fool or anyone who passes by.
11 A dog that returns to its vomit
    is like a fool who reverts to his folly.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 26:6 The Heb. lacks his own

22 Crush a fool in a mortar with a pestle
    along with crushed grain,
    but the folly will not be driven out.(A)

Read full chapter

22 Though you crush a fool in a mortar and pestle
    as someone might crush grain,
        his stupidity still won’t leave him.

Read full chapter

If the wise go to law with fools,
    there is ranting and ridicule without relief.

Read full chapter

When a wise man has a dispute with a fool,
    the fool either rages or laughs without relief.

Read full chapter