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23. Sayings of the Wise

1 When you sit to dine with a ruler,
   note well what Or who is before you,

2 and put a knife to your throat
   if you are given to gluttony.

3 Do not crave his delicacies,
   for that food is deceptive.

    Saying 8

    4 Do not wear yourself out to get rich;
   do not trust your own cleverness.

5 Cast but a glance at riches, and they are gone,
   for they will surely sprout wings
   and fly off to the sky like an eagle.

    Saying 9

    6 Do not eat the food of a begrudging host,
   do not crave his delicacies;

7 for he is the kind of person
   who is always thinking about the cost. Or for as he thinks within himself, / so he is; or for as he puts on a feast, / so he is
“Eat and drink,” he says to you,
   but his heart is not with you.

8 You will vomit up the little you have eaten
   and will have wasted your compliments.

    Saying 10

    9 Do not speak to fools,
   for they will scorn your prudent words.

    Saying 11

    10 Do not move an ancient boundary stone
   or encroach on the fields of the fatherless,

11 for their Defender is strong;
   he will take up their case against you.

    Saying 12

    12 Apply your heart to instruction
   and your ears to words of knowledge.

    Saying 13

    13 Do not withhold discipline from a child;
   if you punish them with the rod, they will not die.

14 Punish them with the rod
   and save them from death.

    Saying 14

    15 My son, if your heart is wise,
   then my heart will be glad indeed;

16 my inmost being will rejoice
   when your lips speak what is right.

    Saying 15

    17 Do not let your heart envy sinners,
   but always be zealous for the fear of the LORD.

18 There is surely a future hope for you,
   and your hope will not be cut off.

    Saying 16

    19 Listen, my son, and be wise,
   and set your heart on the right path:

20 Do not join those who drink too much wine
   or gorge themselves on meat,

21 for drunkards and gluttons become poor,
   and drowsiness clothes them in rags.

    Saying 17

    22 Listen to your father, who gave you life,
   and do not despise your mother when she is old.

23 Buy the truth and do not sell it—
   wisdom, instruction and insight as well.

24 The father of a righteous child has great joy;
   a man who fathers a wise son rejoices in him.

25 May your father and mother rejoice;
   may she who gave you birth be joyful!

    Saying 18

    26 My son, give me your heart
   and let your eyes delight in my ways,

27 for an adulterous woman is a deep pit,
   and a wayward wife is a narrow well.

28 Like a bandit she lies in wait
   and multiplies the unfaithful among men.

    Saying 19

    29 Who has woe? Who has sorrow?
   Who has strife? Who has complaints?
   Who has needless bruises? Who has bloodshot eyes?

30 Those who linger over wine,
   who go to sample bowls of mixed wine.

31 Do not gaze at wine when it is red,
   when it sparkles in the cup,
   when it goes down smoothly!

32 In the end it bites like a snake
   and poisons like a viper.

33 Your eyes will see strange sights,
   and your mind will imagine confusing things.

34 You will be like one sleeping on the high seas,
   lying on top of the rigging.

35 “They hit me,” you will say, “but I’m not hurt!
   They beat me, but I don’t feel it!
When will I wake up
   so I can find another drink?”


4 Labour not to be rich: cease from thine own wisdom.   5 Wilt thou set thine eyes upon that which is not? for riches certainly make themselves wings; they fly away as an eagle toward heaven.

As some are given to appetite (v. 2) so others to covetousness, and those Solomon here takes to task. Men cheat themselves as much by setting their hearts on money (though it seems most substantial) as by setting them on dainties. Observe,

I. How he dissuades the covetous man from toiling and tormenting himself (v. 4). "Do not aim to be rich, to raise an estate, and to make what thou hast in abundance more than it is." We must endeavor to live comfortably, and provide for our children and families, according as our rank and condition are, but we must not seek great things. Be not of those that will be rich, that desire it as their chief good and design it as their highest end, 1 Tim. vi. 9. Covetous men think it is their wisdom, imagining that if they be rich to such a degree they shall be completely happy. Cease from that wisdom, for it is a mistake; a man's life consists not in the abundance of the things which he possesses, Luke xii. 15. 1. Those that aim at great things fill their hands with business more than they can grasp, so that their life is both a perfect drudgery and a perpetual hurry; but be not thou such a fool; labour not to be rich. What thou hast, or doest, be master of it, and not a slave to it as those that rise up early, sit up late, and eat the bread of carefulness, and all to be rich. Moderate labour, that we may have to give, is our wisdom and duty, Eph. iv. 28. Immoderate labour, that we may have to hoard, is our sin and folly. 2. They fill their heads with projects more than they understand, so that their life is a constant toss of care and fear; but do not thou thus vex thyself: Cease from thy own wisdom; go on quietly in the way of thy business, not contriving new ways and setting thy wits to work to find out new inventions. Acquiesce in God's wisdom, and cease from thy own, ch. iii. 5, 6.

II. How he dissuades the covetous man from cheating and deceiving himself by an inordinate love and pursuit of that which is vanity and vexation of spirit; for,

1. It is not substantial and satisfying: "Wilt thou be such a fool as to set thy eyes, to cause thy eyes to fly with eagerness and violence, upon that which is not?" Note, (1.) The things of this world are things that are not. They have a real existence in nature and are the real gifts of Providence, but in the kingdom of grace they are things that are not; they are not a happiness and portion for a soul, are not what they promise to be nor what we expect them to be; they are a show, a shadow, a sham upon the soul that trusts to them. They are not, for in a little while they will not be, they will not be ours; they perish in the using; the fashion of them passes away. (2.) It is therefore folly for us to set our eyes upon them, to admire them as the best things, to appropriate them to ourselves as our good things, and to aim at them as our mark at which all our actions are levelled, to fly upon them as the eagle upon her prey. "Wilt thou do a thing so absurd in itself? What thou, a reasonable creature, wilt thou dote upon shadows? The eyes are put for rational and intellectual powers; wilt thou throw those away upon such undeserving objects? To set the hands and feet upon the world is well enough, but not the eyes, the eyes of the mind; those were made to contemplate better things. Wilt thou, my son, that professest religion, put such an affront upon God (towards whom the eyes should ever be) and such an abuse upon thy soul?"

2. It is not durable and abiding. Riches are very uncertain things; certainly they are so: They make themselves wings, and fly away. The more we cause our eyes to fly upon them the more likely they are to fly away from us. (1.) Riches will leave us. Those that hold them ever so fast cannot hold them long; either they must be taken from us or we must be taken from them. The goods are said to flow away as a stream (Job xx. 28), here to flee as a bird. (2.) Perhaps they may leave us suddenly, when we have taken a great deal of pains for them and begin to take a great deal of pride and pleasure in them. The covetous man sits hatching upon his wealth, and brooding over it, till it is fledged, as the young ones under the hen, and then it is gone. Or, as if a man should be fond of a flight of wild-fowl that light in his field, and call them his own because they are upon his ground, whereas, if he offers to come near them, they take wing immediately and are gone to another man's field. (3.) The wings they fly away upon are of their own making. They have in themselves the principles of their own corruption, their own moth and rust. They are wasting in their own nature, and like a handful of dust, which, if it be grasped, slips through the fingers. Snow will last awhile, and look pretty, if it be left to lie on the ground where it fell, but, if gathered up and laid in the bosom, it is dissolved and gone immediately. (4.) They go irresistibly and irrecoverably, as an eagle toward heaven, that flies strongly (there is no stopping her), and flies out of sight and out of call (there is no bringing her back); thus do riches leave men, and leave them in grief and vexation if they set their hearts upon them.


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