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To: AnalogReigns
You can apply whatever interpretation you like, however King Solomon, and his original Jewish readers, did NOT take any proverb as an absolute truth, which is one reason the very book is called PROVERBS. The definition of the word "proverb" in English, (and in its Hebrew equivalent too) is A TRUISM...that is a wise saying with is USUALLY (but not always) true.

Anything to bring doubt on the Bible in the minds of those who have no heart intent to obey God. I know how it works.

You say, "A TRUISM...that is a wise saying with is USUALLY (but not always) true."

Millions of bible-believing Christians will enjoy the fruits of raising a godly family heritage. You are free to look for some linguistic explanation for other professing Christians to raise worldlings, if you like. I find those linguistic manipulations a ploy, and a trick of the devil, to lure people away from God's standards and to lower theeir estimation of the Bible.

147 posted on 12/02/2010 10:23:41 PM PST by John Leland 1789 (Grateful)
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To: John Leland 1789

Understanding God’s Word rightly is no trick of the devil—and I’m a firm believer in the inerrancy of scripture, and all the fundamentals of Christianity. Jesus is Lord, and I’ll gladly praise Him forever for that!

Knowing the basic common-sense fact that proverbs are, by their nature...proverbial, that is truisms, or maxims, is not exactly an advanced “literary manipulation.” It is taking God’s Word as it was written, not as how your proud heart would like it to be.

If your children are terrific, thank God for it, not yourself.

Don’t believe me about the word proverb? Lets see what Noah Webster said back in 1828:

PROV’ERB, n. [L. proverbium; pro and verbum, a word.]

1. A short sentence often repeated, expressing a well known truth or common fact, ascertained by experience or observation; a maxim of wisdom.

The proverb is true, that light gains make heavy purses, for light gains come often, great gains now and then.

2. A by-word; a name often repeated; and hence frequently, a reproach or object of contempt. Jer.24.

3. In Scripture, it sometimes signifies a moral sentence or maxim that is enigmatical; a dark saying of the wise that requires interpretation. Prov.1.

4. Proverbs, a canonical book of the Old Testament, containing a great variety of wise maxims, rich in practical truths and excellent rules for the conduct of all classes of men.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Are all the proverbs in the book of Proverbs true? ABSOLUTELY. They are however true in the way they were written, by the writer, and the Holy Spirit, AS PROVERBS.

Does that mean thinking people understand other bible passages, which were written not as proverbs, but as literal history, not as literally true? Absolutely not—narrative passages are absolutely true, in a literal sense, as that is how, in Hebrew, and in English, language functions.

All I’m doing is applying common sense...if we tried to make every proverb into an absolute promise...(a way God never intended) we’ll distort scripture, and drive ourselves and others, nuts.


148 posted on 12/02/2010 10:49:31 PM PST by AnalogReigns
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To: John Leland 1789

ABSOLUTELY INDEED:


Millions of bible-believing Christians will enjoy the fruits of raising a godly family heritage. You are free to look for some linguistic explanation for other professing Christians to raise worldlings, if you like. I find those linguistic manipulations a ploy, and a trick of the devil, to lure people away from God’s standards and to lower theeir estimation of the Bible.


163 posted on 12/03/2010 5:45:46 AM PST by Quix (Times are a changin' INSURE you have believed in your heart & confessed Jesus as Lord Come NtheFlesh)
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