Proverbs26
English Standard Version
1Like in or in , so is not for a .
2Like a in its , like a in its , that is does .
3A for the , a for the , and a for the of .
4 a according to his , be him yourself.
5 a according to his , he be in his own .
6Whoever a by the of a his own and .
7Like a , which , is a in the of .
8Like one who the in the is one who to a .
9Like a that goes into the of a is a in the of .
10Like an who is one who a or .
11Like a that to his is a who his .
12Do you a who is in his own ? There is more for a .
13The , There is a in the ! There is a in the !
14As a its , so does a on his .
15The his in the ; it wears him to bring it to his .
16The is in his own than who can .
17Whoever in a his own is like one who a by the .
18Like a who , , and
19is the who his and , I am !
20For of the , and where there is , .
21As to and to , so is a for .
22The of a are like ; they into the of the .
23Like the are with an .
24Whoever with his and in his ;
25when he , him , there are in his ;
26though his be with , his will be in the .
27Whoever a will into it, and a will come on him who starts it .
28A its , and a .
Study Guide
Public-domain commentary and original-language notes for Proverbs 26.
v1
Honour is out of season to those unworthy and unfit for it.
v2
He that is cursed without cause, the curse shall do him no more harm than the bird that flies over his head.
v3
Every creature must be dealt with according to its nature, but careless and profligate sinners never will be ruled by reason and persuasion. Man indeed is born like the wild ass's colt; but some, by the grace of God, are changed.
Key Words
שֶׁלֶג: snow (probably from its whiteness)
קַיִץ: harvest (as the crop), whether the product (grain or fruit) or the (dry) season
מָטַר: rain
קָצִיר: severed, i.e. harvest (as reaped), the crop, the time, the reaper, or figuratively; also a limb (of a tree, or simply foliage)
כָּבוֹד: properly, weight, but only figuratively in a good sense, splendor or copiousness
נָאוֶה: suitable, or beautiful
כְּסִיל: properly, fat, i.e. (figuratively) stupid or silly
צִפּוֹר: a little bird (as hopping)
נוּד: to nod, i.e. waver; figuratively, to wander, flee, disappear; also (from shaking the head in sympathy), to console, deplore, or (from tossing the head in scorn) taunt
דְּרוֹר: the swift, a kind of swallow
Cross References
Proverbs 26Directly quotes/cites this proverb regarding a dog returning to its vomit as a picture of apostasy.
Supported by Matthew Henry
Parallels the concept of a person's violent mischief returning upon their own head.
Supported by JFB
Parallels the incongruity of excellent speech or a parable coming from a fool's mouth.
Supported by JFB
Identical excuse of the lazy man claiming there is a lion in the streets.
Supported by JFB
Nearly identical wording regarding the sluggard hiding his hand in his bosom, refusing to feed himself.
Supported by JFB
Verbatim parallel regarding the words of a talebearer being like deep wounds in the belly.
Supported by JFB
Provides a historical example of the unusual and destructive nature of rain in harvest time.
Illustrates how an undeserved curse (like Balaam's attempted curses) cannot take effect.
Parallels the rod being the only appropriate instrument of correction for a fool's back.
Parallels the impropriety of giving honor, luxury, or authority to a foolish person.
Supported by JFB
Parallels the depiction of the sluggard clinging to his bed and sleeping.
Supported by JFB
Parallels how whisperers and talebearers separate chief friends and fuel ongoing strife.
Supported by JFB
Internal chapter parallel regarding a parable being completely useless and awkward in a fool's mouth.
Supported by Matthew Poole
Internal chapter parallel linking the sluggard's self-conceit to the general danger of intellectual pride.