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Wealth adds many friends,
    but the poor will be left by his friends.

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Wealth brings many friends,
    but the poor are left friendless.(A)

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Many will seek favor before the generous,
    and everyone is the friend of a man of gifts.[a]
All the brothers of the poor, if they hate him,
    how much more will his friends keep away from him.
    He pursues them with words, and they are gone.[b]

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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 19:6 Hebrew “gift”
  2. Proverbs 19:7 Or “when he pursues words and not them”

Many seek the favor of the generous,
    and everyone is a friend to a giver of gifts.(A)
If the poor are hated even by their kin,
    how much more are they shunned by their friends!
When they call after them, they are not there.[a](B)

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Footnotes

  1. 19.7 Meaning of Heb uncertain

Rich and poor have much in common;
    Yahweh is the maker of all of them.

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The rich and the poor have this in common:
    the Lord is the maker of them all.

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The rich will rule over the poor,
    and the borrower is a slave of the lender.[a]

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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 22:7 Literally “the borrower belonging to a man”

The rich rule over the poor,
    and the borrower is the slave of the lender.(A)

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Do not tire in order to become rich;
    out of your understanding, may you desist.
Your eyes will alight[a] on it, but there is nothing to it,
    for suddenly it will make for itself wings
    like an eagle and it will be exhausted in the heavens.

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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 23:5 Literally “cause to fly”

Do not wear yourself out to get rich;
    be wise enough to desist.(A)
When your eyes light upon it, it is gone,
    for suddenly it takes wings to itself,
    flying like an eagle toward heaven.

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An appetite[a] that is sated spurns honey,
    but to an appetite[b] that is ravenous, all bitterness is sweet.

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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 27:7 Literally “soul”
  2. Proverbs 27:7 Literally “soul”

The sated appetite spurns honey,
    but to a ravenous appetite even the bitter is sweet.(A)

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Better to be poor and walking in one’s integrity
    than to be crooked of ways when one is rich.

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Better to be poor and walk in integrity
    than to be crooked in one’s ways even though rich.(A)

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He who augments his wealth with interest and with usury
    gathers it for him who is kind to the poor.

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One who augments wealth by exorbitant interest
    gathers it for another who is kind to the poor.(A)

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11 A man of wealth is wise in his own eyes,
    but the intelligent poor sees through him.

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11 The rich is wise in self-esteem,
    but an intelligent poor person sees through the pose.(A)

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20 A man of faithfulness has abundant blessings,
    but he who hurries to become rich will not go unpunished.
21 Showing partiality[a] is not good,
    and over a morsel of bread, a strong man will do wrong.
22 He who hurries for wealth is a man with an evil eye,[b]
    but he does not know that poverty will come upon him.

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Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 28:21 Literally “Recognizing faces”
  2. Proverbs 28:22 Literally “a man of evil of eye”

20 The faithful will abound with blessings,
    but one who is in a hurry to be rich will not go unpunished.(A)
21 To show partiality is not good,
    yet for a piece of bread a person may do wrong.
22 The miser is in a hurry to get rich
    and does not know that loss is sure to come.

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