Add parallel Print Page Options

27 It is not good to eat too much honey,
nor does it bring you honor to ·brag about yourself [seek honor].

Read full chapter

27 It is not good to eat much honey,
Nor is it glory to (A)search out [a]one’s own glory.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 25:27 Lit their

12 There is more hope for a foolish person
than for those who ·think they are wise [L are wise in their own eyes].

Read full chapter

12 Do you see a person (A)wise in his own eyes?
(B)There is more hope for a fool than for him.

Read full chapter

27 Don’t brag about tomorrow;
you don’t know what ·may happen then [L the day may bear/ bring forth].

Don’t praise yourself. Let ·someone else [another; a stranger] do it.
Let the praise come from a ·stranger [outsider] and not from your own mouth [Jer. 9:23–24; 1 Cor. 1:31; 2 Cor. 10:17].

Read full chapter

Warnings and Instructions

27 (A)Do not boast about tomorrow,
For you (B)do not know what a day may bring.
Let (C)another praise you, and not your own mouth;
A stranger, and not your own lips.

Read full chapter

11 Rich people may ·think they are wise [L be wise in their own eyes],
but the poor with understanding will ·prove them wrong [see through them].

Read full chapter

11 The rich person is (A)wise in his own eyes,
But the poor who has understanding [a]sees through him.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 28:11 Lit examines him

25 A greedy person ·causes trouble [L stirs up conflict],
but the one who trusts the Lord will ·succeed [escape].

Read full chapter

25 An [a]arrogant person (A)stirs up strife,
But one who (B)trusts in the Lord (C)will [b]prosper.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 28:25 Lit broad soul
  2. Proverbs 28:25 Lit be made fat

23 Pride will ·ruin people [cause people to fall],
but ·those who are humble will be honored [a lowly spirit holds honor/glory tight].

Read full chapter

23 A person’s (A)pride will bring him low,
But a (B)humble spirit will obtain honor.

Read full chapter

“I am ·the most stupid person there is [a dullard/brute more than a human; Ps. 73:22],
    and I have no understanding.
I have not learned to be wise,
    and I don’t know much about ·God, the Holy One [or the holy ones; C a reference to angels].
Who has gone up to heaven and come back down [John 3:12–13]?
    Who can hold the wind ·in his hand [or by the handful; Gen. 8:1; Ex. 10:13; 15:10; Num. 11:31; Amos 4:13]?
Who can gather up the waters in his coat [Job 26:8]?
    Who has set in place the ends of the earth [8:27–29]?
What is his name or his son’s name?
    Tell me, if you know!

Read full chapter

I am certainly more (A)stupid than any man,
And I do not have the understanding of a man;
Nor have I learned wisdom,
Nor do I have the (B)knowledge of the Holy One.
Who has (C)ascended into heaven and descended?
Who has gathered the (D)wind in His fists?
Who has (E)wrapped the waters in [a]His garment?
Who has (F)established all the ends of the earth?
What is His (G)name or His [b]Son’s name?
Surely you know!

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 30:4 Lit the
  2. Proverbs 30:4 Or son’s

21 “There are three things that make the earth tremble,
    really four it cannot ·stand [bear]:
22 a servant who becomes a king [Eccl. 10:5–7],
    a foolish person who has plenty to eat,
23 a ·hated [unloved] woman who gets married,
    and a maid who ·replaces [displaces; succeeds] her mistress [Gen. 16:4].

Read full chapter

21 Under three things the earth quakes,
And under four, it cannot endure:
22 Under a (A)slave when he becomes king,
And a fool when he is satisfied with food,
23 Under an unloved woman when she gets a husband,
And a female servant when she dispossesses her mistress.

Read full chapter

29 “There are three things that ·strut proudly [L are excellent in gait],
    really four that ·walk as if they were important [L are excellent as they walk]:
30 a lion, ·the proudest animal [or a warrior among beasts],
    which ·is strong and runs from nothing [backs down from nothing],
31 a rooster, a male goat,
    and a king when his army is around him.

32 “If you have been foolish and proud,
    or if you have planned evil, ·shut [L put your hand to] your mouth [Job 40:2].
33 Just as ·stirring [L pressing] milk makes ·butter [curds],
    and ·twisting [L pressing] noses makes ·them bleed [blood],
so ·stirring up [L pressing] anger ·causes trouble [leads to accusations].”

Read full chapter

29 There are three things which are stately in their march,
Even four which are stately when they walk:
30 The lion, which is (A)mighty among animals
And does not [a](B)retreat from anything,
31 The [b]strutting rooster or the male goat,
And a king when his army is with him.

32 If you have been foolish in exalting yourself,
Or if you have plotted evil, (C)put your hand on your mouth.
33 For the [c]churning of milk produces butter,
And pressing the nose produces blood;
So the [d]churning of (D)anger produces strife.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 30:30 Lit turn back
  2. Proverbs 30:31 Lit girt in the loins
  3. Proverbs 30:33 Lit pressing
  4. Proverbs 30:33 Lit pressing

30 Charm ·can fool you [is deceptive], and beauty ·can trick you [is meaningless; or fleeting],
    but a woman who ·respects [fears] the Lord [1:7] should be praised.

Read full chapter

30 Charm is deceitful and beauty is vain,
But a woman who [a](A)fears the Lord, she shall be praised.

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Proverbs 31:30 Or reveres