Contemporary English Version 1Lazy people are like stones that everyone spits on, 2or a pile of manure that you have to walk around. If you touch them, you want to wash your hands. Children's Behavior 3A father is ashamed if his son isn't well behaved, and a disobedient daughter is even worse. 4If a daughter is sensible she will get a good husband, but a shameless girl only brings her father pain. 5If a woman insults her father and her husband, they will be disgraced and in return will humiliate her. 6Picking the wrong time to criticize your children is like playing happy music at a funeral, but punishment and correction are always wise. 7Bring up your children well and no one will guess you were poor as a child. 8But rude and arrogant children are a disgrace to a good family. Trying To Teach Fools 9Just try to wake someone from deep sleep, to fix shattered pottery, or to teach fools! 10Tell them a story, and they will doze off; and afterwards, they will ask, "So what's your point?" 11Mourn for the dead, who rest in darkness, but weep even more for fools, doomed to live in the darkness of stupidity. 12 After a death, you mourn seven days, but you mourn for ungodly fools until the day they die. 13To avoid lots of problems and have a peaceful life, stay away from stupid people and do not talk to them. When a wet dog shakes itself, water flies everywhere, but humans who have no sense splatter everyone nearby with troubles. 14A fool is a heavier burden than a load of lead, 15or a bag of sand or salt, or a lump of iron ore. A Mind That Thinks and Reasons Well 16An earthquake cannot loosen a wooden beam set firmly in the walls of a building, and no crisis can shake you up if you have prepared your mind and decided what you must do. 17A mind that thinks and reasons well is like a smooth wall decorated with carvings. 18But foolish cowards will not stand firm when fearsome disaster hits, just as small rocks are blown from the top of a vineyard wall by the wind. Friends and Neighbors 19Poke someone in the eye and they will shed tears; but wound their heart and they will show deep pain. 20You can throw stones to frighten birds away, and you can end a friendship by tossing insults. 21Threaten a friend with a sword, and you can still hope the friendship will heal. 22And you can argue with friends and later, win them back. But if you are arrogant and insult them, if you tell their secrets or harm them when they trusted you, they will be gone for good. 23Earn the trust of your neighbors when they are poor, and if they become wealthy you can celebrate with them. Be a true friend when they have troubles, and later they will share their inheritance with you. 24When you smell smoke you will soon see flames, and when you hear insults, you will soon see murder. 25I will never be ashamed to protect my friends, and I will always be there when I am needed. 26But if they turn and harm me, all who find out will be on their guard against them. A Prayer 27Our Lord, help me to be careful in everything I say, so that my mouth will not be my downfall. Contemporary English Version, Second Edition (CEV®) © 2006 American Bible Society. All rights reserved. Bible text from the Contemporary English Version 2nd Edition (CEV®) is not to be reproduced in copies or otherwise by any means except as permitted in writing by American Bible Society, 101 North Independence Mall East, Floor 8, Philadelphia, PA 19106-2155 (www.americanbible.org). Learn more at www.cev.bible. Discover .BIBLE resources for your ministry at www.get.bible/cev. |