The Living Bible (515 page)

Read The Living Bible Online

Authors: Inc. Tyndale House Publishers

Tags: #BIBLES / Other Translations / Text

BOOK: The Living Bible
13.93Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

Back

 

19:1
 
rich,
literally, “a fool.”

Back

 

19:7
 
turn away from him in embarrassment,
literally, “despise him.”

Back

 

20:10
 
every kind of cheating,
literally, “diverse weights and diverse measures.”

Back

 

20:12
 
thank,
implied.

Back

 

20:23
 
all cheating and dishonesty,
literally, “diverse weights . . . false scales.”

Back

 

20:27
 
conscience,
literally, “spirit.”

Back

 

20:29
 
their experience,
literally, “the hoary head.”

Back

 

21:4
 
evil actions,
literally, “the tillage of the wicked.”

Back

 

21:8
 
A man is known by his actions,
implied.

Back

 

21:18
 
The wicked will finally lose; the righteous will finally win,
literally, “The wicked is a ransom for the righteous.”

Back

 

21:20
 
The wise man saves for the future,
literally, “There is precious treasure and oil in the dwelling of the wise.”

Back

 

21:29
 
An evil man is stubborn, but a godly man will reconsider,
or “The wicked man is brazen; the godly man is thoughtful.”

Back

 

21:31
 
Go ahead and prepare for the conflict,
literally, “The horse is prepared against the day of battle.”

Back

 

22:12
 
the plans,
literally, “the words.”

Back

 

22:28
 
That is stealing,
implied, see 23:10-11.

Back

 

23:1-3
 
a rich man,
literally, “a ruler.”

Back

 

23:12
 
help,
literally, “knowledge.”

Back

 

25:1
 
These proverbs of Solomon,
see 1 Kings 4:32.
King Hezekiah.
Hezekiah lived 200 years after Solomon.

Back

 

25:13
 
a cool day,
literally, “snow.”

Back

 

25:20
 
rubbing salt in his wounds,
literally, “like vinegar upon soda.”

Back

 

25:23
 
cold,
literally, “rain.”

Back

 

26:4-5
 
Prick his conceit with silly replies,
implied; literally, “Reply to a fool as his folly requires.”

Back

 

26:21
 
as easily as a match sets fire to paper,
literally, “like coals to hot embers and wood to fire.”

Back

 

27:20
 
Ambition,
literally, “A man’s eyes.” Possibly the reference is to lust.

Back

 

27:23-24
 
business,
implied.

Back

 

29:19
 
Sometimes,
literally, “For a servant.”

Back

 

30:3
 
I cannot understand man,
literally, “I have not learned wisdom.”

Back

 

30:18-19
 
The growth of love between a man and a girl,
literally, “The way of a man with a maid.” Some linguists believe the meaning is, “Why a girl will let herself be seduced.”

Back

 

30:21-23
 
who marries the husband of her mistress,
literally, “who succeeds her mistress.”

Back

 

31:1
 
King Lemuel of Massa,
or “King Lemuel the oracle.”

Back

 

31:31
 
These good deeds of hers shall bring her honor and recognition from people of importance,
literally, “Give her the fruit of her hands; and let her works praise her in the gates.”

Back

 

1:1
 
Solomon,
implied; literally, “the words of the Preacher, the son [or descendant] of David, King of Jerusalem.”

Back

 

1:3-7
 
but it makes no difference,
literally, “but the earth remains forever.”
getting nowhere,
implied.

Back

 

1:16-18
 
So I worked hard to be wise instead of foolish,
or “So I sought to learn about composure and madness.”

Back

 

2:12
 
and anyone else would come to the same conclusion I did,
literally, “for what can the man do who comes after the king?”

Back

 

3:14
 
God’s purpose in this is that man should fear the all-powerful God,
implied.

Back

 

3:15
 
God brings to pass again what was in the distant past and disappeared,
literally, “God seeks what has been driven away.”

Back

 

5:6-7
 
to make the vow,
implied.
he might,
implied.

Back

 

5:8
 
And so the matter is lost in red tape and bureaucracy,
literally, “And there are yet higher ones over them.”

Back

 

7:13
 
Don’t fight the facts of nature,
implied.

Back

 

7:26
 
A prostitute,
literally, “The woman whose heart is snares and nets.”

Back

 

9:5
 
But the dead know nothing; they don’t even have their memories.
These statements are Solomon’s discouraged opinion and do not reflect a knowledge of God’s truth on these points. Also v. 10.

Back

 

10:11
 
When the horse is stolen, it is too late to lock the barn,
literally, “If the serpent bites before it is charmed, there is no advantage to the charmer.”

Back

 

10:15
 
for the simplest matter,
literally, “for a trip to the city.”

Back

 

11:2
 
Divide your gifts among many,
literally, “Give a portion to seven, yes, even to eight.”

Back

 

11:4
 
If you wait for perfect conditions, you will never get anything done,
literally, “He that observeth the wind shall not sow, and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap.”

Back

 

1:2
 
The Girl.
The headings identifying the speakers are conjectures and are not in the original text.

Back

 

1:6
 
you city girls,
implied in v. 5.
sent me out into the sun,
implied.
but see what it has done to me,
literally, “but my own vineyards are neglected.”

Back

 

1:9
 
What a lovely filly you are,
literally, “I compare you to my mare harnessed to Pharaoh’s chariot.”

Back

 

1:10
 
with your hair,
literally, “with your ornaments.”

Back

 

2:7
 
do not awaken my lover,
literally, “stir not up nor awaken love until it pleases.”

Back

 

2:12
 
spring is here,
literally, “the voice of the turtledove is heard in our land.”

Back

 

2:13
 
The leaves are coming out,
literally, “The fig tree puts forth its figs.”

Back

 

3:7
 
chariot,
literally, “litter.”

Back

 

4:3
 
matched loveliness,
literally, “like halves of a pomegranate.”
behind your locks,
literally, “behind your veil.”

Back

 

4:4
 
Your neck is stately,
implied.

Back

 

4:8
 
look down from the summit of the mountain, from the top of Mount Hermon,
literally, “depart from the peak of Amana, from the peak of Senir and Hermon.”

Back

 

4:13-14
 
You are like a lovely orchard bearing precious fruit,
literally, “Your shoots are an orchard of pomegranates.”

Back

 

6:4
 
how you capture my heart,
literally, “terrible as an army with banners.”

Back

 

6:7
 
matched loveliness,
literally, “like the halves of a pomegranate.”

Back

 

6:10
 
so utterly captivating,
literally, “terrible as an army with banners.”

Back

 

6:12
 
among my own people,
literally, “among the chariots of my princely people.” Another possible reading is, “beside my beloved in his chariot.”

Back

 

6:13
 
you dance so beautifully,
literally, “you move as upon a dance before two armies.”

Back

 

7:2
 
Your waist,
literally, “Your belly.”

Back

 

7:3
 
lovely twins,
literally, “twins of a gazelle.”

Back

 

7:4
 
Your nose is shapely,
implied.

Back

 

8:2
 
my childhood home,
literally, “my mother’s house.”

Back

 

8:9
 
If she has no breasts,
literally, “If she be a wall.”
build upon her a battlement of silver . . . enclose her with cedar boards,
the meaning is obscure.

Back

 

8:10
 
I am slim, tall,
literally, “I am as a wall.”
full-breasted,
literally, “my breasts are as towers.”

Back

 

1:10
 
An apt comparison,
implied.

Back

 

2:2
 
will become the world’s greatest attraction,
literally, “shall be established as the highest of the mountains.”

Back

 

2:4
 
will convert their weapons of war into implements of peace,
literally, “will beat their swords into plowshares and their spears into pruning hooks.”

Back

 

Other books

The Mystery of the 99 Steps by Carolyn G. Keene
Jewels by Danielle Steel
Butchers Hill by Laura Lippman
Vindication by Lyndall Gordon
Mrs. Jeffries Defends Her Own by Emily Brightwell
Rocky Mountain Oasis by Lynnette Bonner