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Ecclesiasticus 18-22

The Majesty of God

18He who lives for ever created the whole universe;
2   the Lord alone is just.*
4 To none has he given power to proclaim his works;
   and who can search out his mighty deeds?
5 Who can measure his majestic power?
   And who can fully recount his mercies?
6 It is not possible to diminish or increase them,
   nor is it possible to fathom the wonders of the Lord.
7 When human beings have finished, they are just beginning,
   and when they stop, they are still perplexed.
8 What are human beings, and of what use are they?
   What is good in them, and what is evil?
9 The number of days in their life is great if they reach one hundred years.*
10 Like a drop of water from the sea and a grain of sand,
   so are a few years among the days of eternity.
11 That is why the Lord is patient with them
   and pours out his mercy upon them.
12 He sees and recognizes that their end is miserable;
   therefore he grants them forgiveness all the more.
13 The compassion of human beings is for their neighbours,
   but the compassion of the Lord is for every living thing.
He rebukes and trains and teaches them,
   and turns them back, as a shepherd his flock.
14 He has compassion on those who accept his discipline
   and who are eager for his precepts.

The Right Spirit in Giving Alms


15 My child, do not mix reproach with your good deeds,
   or spoil your gift by harsh words.
16 Does not the dew give relief from the scorching heat?
   So a word is better than a gift.
17 Indeed, does not a word surpass a good gift?
   Both are to be found in a gracious person.
18 A fool is ungracious and abusive,
   and the gift of a grudging giver makes the eyes dim.

The Need for Reflection and Self-Control


19 Before you speak, learn;
   and before you fall ill, take care of your health.
20 Before judgement comes, examine yourself;
   and at the time of scrutiny you will find forgiveness.
21 Before falling ill, humble yourself;
   and when you have sinned, repent.
22 Let nothing hinder you from paying a vow promptly,
   and do not wait until death to be released from it.
23 Before making a vow, prepare yourself;
   do not be like one who puts the Lord to the test.
24 Think of his wrath on the day of death,
   and of the moment of vengeance when he turns away his face.
25 In the time of plenty think of the time of hunger;
   in days of wealth think of poverty and need.
26 From morning to evening conditions change;
   all things move swiftly before the Lord.


27 One who is wise is cautious in everything;
   when sin is all around, one guards against wrongdoing.
28 Every intelligent person knows wisdom,
   and praises one who finds her.
29 Those who are skilled in words become wise themselves,
   and pour forth apt proverbs.*

Self-Control *


30 Do not follow your base desires,
   but restrain your appetites.
31 If you allow your soul to take pleasure in base desire,
   it will make you the laughing-stock of your enemies.
32 Do not revel in great luxury,
   or you may become impoverished by its expense.
33 Do not become a beggar by feasting with borrowed money
   when you have nothing in your purse.*

19One who does this* will not become rich;
   one who despises small things will fail little by little.
2 Wine and women lead intelligent men astray,
   and the man who consorts with prostitutes is reckless.
3 Decay and worms will take possession of him,
   and the reckless person will be snatched away.

Against Loose Talk


4 One who trusts others too quickly has a shallow mind,
   and one who sins does wrong to himself.
5 One who rejoices in wickedness* will be condemned,*
6   but one who hates gossip has less evil.
7 Never repeat a conversation,
   and you will lose nothing at all.
8 With friend or foe do not report it,
   and unless it would be a sin for you, do not reveal it;
9 for someone may have heard you and watched you,
   and in time will hate you.
10 Have you heard something? Let it die with you.
   Be brave, it will not make you burst!
11 Having heard something, the fool suffers birth-pangs
   like a woman in labour with a child.
12 Like an arrow stuck in a person’s thigh,
   so is gossip inside a fool.


13 Question a friend; perhaps he did not do it;
   or if he did, so that he may not do it again.
14 Question a neighbour; perhaps he did not say it;
   or if he said it, so that he may not repeat it.
15 Question a friend, for often it is slander;
   so do not believe everything you hear.
16 A person may make a slip without intending it.
   Who has not sinned with his tongue?
17 Question your neighbour before you threaten him;
   and let the law of the Most High take its course.*

True and False Wisdom


20 The whole of wisdom is fear of the Lord,
   and in all wisdom there is the fulfilment of the law.*
22 The knowledge of wickedness is not wisdom,
   nor is there prudence in the counsel of sinners.
23 There is a cleverness that is detestable,
   and there is a fool who merely lacks wisdom.
24 Better are the God-fearing who lack understanding
   than the highly intelligent who transgress the law.
25 There is a cleverness that is exact but unjust,
   and there are people who abuse favours to gain a verdict.
26 There is the villain bowed down in mourning,
but inwardly he is full of deceit.
27 He hides his face and pretends not to hear,
   but when no one notices, he will take advantage of you.
28 Even if lack of strength keeps him from sinning,
   he will nevertheless do evil when he finds the opportunity.
29 A person is known by his appearance,
   and a sensible person is known when first met face to face.
30 A person’s attire and hearty laughter,
   and the way he walks, show what he is.

Silence and Speech

20There is a rebuke that is untimely,
   and there is the person who is wise enough to keep silent.
2 How much better it is to rebuke than to fume!
3 And one who admits his fault will be kept from failure.
4 Like a eunuch lusting to violate a girl
   is the person who does right under compulsion.
5 Some people keep silent and are thought to be wise,
   while others are detested for being talkative.
6 Some people keep silent because they have nothing to say,
   while others keep silent because they know when to speak.
7 The wise remain silent until the right moment,
   but a boasting fool misses the right moment.
8 Whoever talks too much is detested,
   and whoever pretends to authority is hated.*

Paradoxes


9 There may be good fortune for a person in adversity,
   but a windfall may result in a loss.
10 There is the gift that profits you nothing,
   and the gift to be paid back double.
11 There are losses for the sake of glory,
   and there are some who have raised their heads from humble circumstances.
12 Some buy much for little,
   but pay for it seven times over.
13 The wise make themselves beloved by only few words,*
   but the courtesies of fools are wasted.
14 A fool’s gift will profit you nothing,*
   for he looks for recompense sevenfold.*
15 He gives little and upbraids much;
   he opens his mouth like a town crier.
Today he lends and tomorrow he asks for it back;
   such a one is hateful to God and humans.*
16 The fool says, ‘I have no friends,
   and I get no thanks for my good deeds.
   Those who eat my bread are evil-tongued.’
17 How many will ridicule him, and how often!*

Inappropriate Speech


18 A slip on the pavement is better than a slip of the tongue;
   the downfall of the wicked will occur just as speedily.
19 A coarse person is like an inappropriate story
   continually on the lips of the ignorant.
20 A proverb from a fool’s lips will be rejected,
   for he does not tell it at the proper time.


21 One may be prevented from sinning by poverty;
   so when he rests he feels no remorse.
22 One may lose his life through shame,
   or lose it because of human respect.*
23 Another out of shame makes promises to a friend,
   and so makes an enemy for nothing.

Lying


24 A lie is an ugly blot on a person;
   it is continually on the lips of the ignorant.
25 A thief is preferable to a habitual liar,
   but the lot of both is ruin.
26 A liar’s way leads to disgrace,
   and his shame is ever with him.

Proverbial Sayings *


27 The wise person advances himself by his words,
   and one who is sensible pleases the great.
28 Those who cultivate the soil heap up their harvest,
   and those who please the great atone for injustice.
29 Favours and gifts blind the eyes of the wise;
   like a muzzle on the mouth they stop reproofs.
30 Hidden wisdom and unseen treasure,
   of what value is either?
31 Better are those who hide their folly
   than those who hide their wisdom.*

Various Sins

21Have you sinned, my child? Do so no more,
   but ask forgiveness for your past sins.
2 Flee from sin as from a snake;
   for if you approach sin, it will bite you.
Its teeth are lion’s teeth,
   and can destroy human lives.
3 All lawlessness is like a two-edged sword;
   there is no healing for the wound it inflicts.


4 Panic and insolence will waste away riches;
   thus the house of the proud will be laid waste.*
5 The prayer of the poor goes from their lips to the ears of God,*
   and his judgement comes speedily.
6 Those who hate reproof walk in the sinner’s steps,
   but those who fear the Lord repent in their heart.
7 The mighty in speech are widely known;
   when they slip, the sensible person knows it.


8 Whoever builds his house with other people’s money
   is like one who gathers stones for his burial mound.*
9 An assembly of the wicked is like a bundle of tow,
   and their end is a blazing fire.
10 The way of sinners is paved with smooth stones,
   but at its end is the pit of Hades.

Wisdom and Foolishness


11 Whoever keeps the law controls his thoughts,
   and the fulfilment of the fear of the Lord is wisdom.
12 One who is not clever cannot be taught,
   but there is a cleverness that increases bitterness.
13 The knowledge of the wise will increase like a flood,
   and their counsel like a life-giving spring.
14 The mind* of a fool is like a broken jar;
   it can hold no knowledge.


15 When an intelligent person hears a wise saying,
   he praises it and adds to it;
when a fool* hears it, he laughs at* it
   and throws it behind his back.
16 A fool’s chatter is like a burden on a journey,
   but delight is found in the speech of the intelligent.
17 The utterance of a sensible person is sought in the assembly,
   and they ponder his words in their minds.


18 Like a house in ruins is wisdom to a fool,
   and to the ignorant, knowledge is talk that has no meaning.
19 To a senseless person education is fetters on his feet,
   and like manacles on his right hand.
20 A fool raises his voice when he laughs,
   but the wise* smile quietly.
21 To the sensible person education is like a golden ornament,
   and like a bracelet on the right arm.


22 The foot of a fool rushes into a house,
   but an experienced person waits respectfully outside.
23 A boor peers into the house from the door,
   but a cultivated person remains outside.
24 It is ill-mannered for a person to listen at a door;
   the discreet would be grieved by the disgrace.


25 The lips of babblers speak of what is not their concern,*
   but the words of the prudent are weighed in the balance.
26 The mind of fools is in their mouth,
   but the mouth of the wise is in* their mind.
27 When an ungodly person curses an adversary,*
   he curses himself.
28 A whisperer degrades himself
   and is hated in his neighbourhood.

The Idler

22The idler is like a filthy stone,
   and everyone hisses at his disgrace.
2 The idler is like the filth of dunghills;
   anyone that picks it up will shake it off his hand.

Degenerate Children


3 It is a disgrace to be the father of an undisciplined son,
   and the birth of a daughter is a loss.
4 A sensible daughter obtains a husband of her own,
   but one who acts shamefully is a grief to her father.
5 An impudent daughter disgraces father and husband,
   and is despised by both.
6 Like music in time of mourning is ill-timed conversation,
   but a thrashing and discipline are at all times wisdom.*

Wisdom and Folly


9 Whoever teaches a fool is like one who glues potsherds together,
   or who rouses a sleeper from deep slumber.
10 Whoever tells a story to a fool tells it to a drowsy man;
   and at the end he will say, ‘What is it?’
11 Weep for the dead, for he has left the light behind;
   and weep for the fool, for he has left intelligence behind.
Weep less bitterly for the dead, for he is at rest;
   but the life of the fool is worse than death.
12 Mourning for the dead lasts seven days,
   but for the foolish or the ungodly it lasts all the days of their lives.


13 Do not talk much with a senseless person
   or visit an unintelligent person.*
Stay clear of him, or you may have trouble,
   and be spattered when he shakes himself.
Avoid him and you will find rest,
   and you will never be wearied by his lack of sense.
14 What is heavier than lead?
   And what is its name except ‘Fool’?
15 Sand, salt, and a piece of iron
   are easier to bear than a stupid person.


16 A wooden beam firmly bonded into a building
   is not loosened by an earthquake;
so the mind firmly resolved after due reflection
   will not be afraid in a crisis.
17 A mind settled on an intelligent thought
   is like stucco decoration that makes a wall smooth.
18 Fences* set on a high place
   will not stand firm against the wind;
so a timid mind with a fool’s resolve
   will not stand firm against any fear.

The Preservation of Friendship


19 One who pricks the eye brings tears,
   and one who pricks the heart makes clear its feelings.
20 One who throws a stone at birds scares them away,
   and one who reviles a friend destroys a friendship.
21 Even if you draw your sword against a friend,
   do not despair, for there is a way back.
22 If you open your mouth against your friend,
   do not worry, for reconciliation is possible.
But as for reviling, arrogance, disclosure of secrets, or a treacherous blow—
   in these cases any friend will take to flight.


23 Gain the trust of your neighbour in his poverty,
   so that you may rejoice with him in his prosperity.
Stand by him in time of distress,
   so that you may share with him in his inheritance.*
24 The vapour and smoke of the furnace precede the fire;
   so insults precede bloodshed.
25 I am not ashamed to shelter a friend,
   and I will not hide from him.
26 But if harm should come to me because of him,
   whoever hears of it will beware of him.

A Prayer for Help against Sinning


27 Who will set a guard over my mouth,
   and an effective seal upon my lips,
so that I may not fall because of them,
   and my tongue may not destroy me?

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30 June 2021

From the oremus Bible Browser https://bible.oremus.org v2.9.2 30 June 2021.