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  "commentary": {
    "unit_id": "PRO_006",
    "book": "Proverbs",
    "book_abbrev": "PRO",
    "book_slug": "proverbs",
    "page_kind": "ot_commentary_unit",
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    "passage_reference": "Proverbs 3:13-35",
    "literary_unit_title": "The value and way of wisdom",
    "genre": "Wisdom",
    "subgenre": "Wisdom instruction",
    "passage_text": "3:13 Blessed is the one who finds wisdom, and the one who obtains understanding.\n3:14 For her benefit is more profitable than silver, and her gain is better than gold.\n3:15 She is more precious than rubies, and none of the things you desire can compare with her.\n3:16 Long life is in her right hand; in her left hand are riches and honor.\n3:17 Her ways are very pleasant, and all her paths are peaceful.\n3:18 She is like a tree of life to those who obtain her, and everyone who grasps hold of her will be blessed.\n3:19 By wisdom the Lord laid the foundation of the earth; he established the heavens by understanding.\n3:20 By his knowledge the primordial sea was broken open, and the clouds drip down dew.\n3:21 My child, do not let them escape from your sight; safeguard sound wisdom and discretion.\n3:22 So they will give life to you, and grace to adorn your neck.\n3:23 Then you will walk on your way with security, and you will not stumble.\n3:24 When you lie down you will not be filled with fear; when you lie down your sleep will be pleasant.\n3:25 You will not be afraid of sudden disaster, or when destruction overtakes the wicked;\n3:26 for the Lord will be the source of your confidence, and he will guard your foot from being caught in a trap.\n3:27 Do not withhold good from those who need it, when you have the ability to help.\n3:28 Do not say to your neighbor, “Go! Return tomorrow and I will give it,” when you have it with you at the time.\n3:29 Do not plot evil against your neighbor when he dwells by you unsuspectingly.\n3:30 Do not accuse anyone without legitimate cause, if he has not treated you wrongly.\n3:31 Do not envy a violent man, and do not choose to imitate any of his ways;\n3:32 for one who goes astray is an abomination to the Lord, but he reveals his intimate counsel to the upright.\n3:33 The Lord’s curse is on the household of the wicked, but he blesses the home of the righteous.\n3:34 Although he is scornful to arrogant scoffers, yet he shows favor to the humble.\n3:35 The wise inherit honor, but he holds fools up to public contempt.",
    "historical_setting_and_dynamics": "The setting is the instructional world of ancient Israel, where wisdom was taught within the household and reinforced by the covenant community’s moral order. The speaker addresses a son or disciple as one formed for life under the LORD, not merely for private success but for conduct that affects neighbors, speech, generosity, and social trust. The passage assumes a world in which honor, shame, household blessing, public reputation, and divine favor or curse are real covenantal categories. Wisdom is not detached speculation; it is skill for living rightly before God and among people.",
    "central_idea": "Wisdom is the most valuable good because it comes from the LORD, reflects his creational order, and leads to a secure, fruitful, and peaceful life. It must be held fast and expressed in generosity, honesty, neighbor-love, and humility, because the LORD blesses the righteous and opposes the wicked and proud.",
    "context_and_flow": "Proverbs 3 continues the fatherly instruction begun in the opening chapter and extends the appeal to trust the LORD, not self, in ordering life. Verses 13-18 celebrate wisdom’s incomparable worth; verses 19-20 ground wisdom in creation itself; verses 21-26 call the son to keep wisdom and enjoy the security it yields; and verses 27-35 turn that wisdom outward into social ethics and divine evaluation of the righteous and the wicked.",
    "key_hebrew_terms": [
      {
        "term_original": "חָכְמָה",
        "term_english": "wisdom",
        "transliteration": "chokmah",
        "strongs": "H2451",
        "gloss": "wisdom, skill, prudence",
        "significance": "The central noun of the passage. It denotes practical, moral, and theological skill for living in the LORD’s world, not mere intelligence."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "בִּינָה",
        "term_english": "understanding",
        "transliteration": "binah",
        "strongs": "H998",
        "gloss": "understanding, discernment",
        "significance": "Paired with wisdom, it highlights discriminating perception and the ability to distinguish what is fitting, true, and righteous."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "תְּבוּנָה",
        "term_english": "discretion / sound wisdom",
        "transliteration": "tevunah",
        "strongs": "H8394",
        "gloss": "discernment, insight",
        "significance": "In verse 21 it stresses guarded, practical insight that must be preserved rather than allowed to slip away."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "עֵץ חַיִּים",
        "term_english": "tree of life",
        "transliteration": "ets chayyim",
        "strongs": "H6086 / H2416",
        "gloss": "tree of life",
        "significance": "A deliberate creational echo that links wisdom with life-giving access to God’s good order and recalls Edenic blessing."
      },
      {
        "term_original": "בֶּטַח",
        "term_english": "security / confidence",
        "transliteration": "betach",
        "strongs": "H983",
        "gloss": "security, trust, confidence",
        "significance": "Describes the settled safety of the wise person whose trust is in the LORD rather than in circumstance."
      }
    ],
    "exegetical_analysis": "The unit is carefully shaped as a sequence of wisdom sayings that move from value, to source, to practice, to moral contrast. Verses 13-18 use blessing language to declare that wisdom is more desirable than wealth, pleasure, or status. The repeated feminine personification is literary: wisdom is portrayed as a gracious, life-giving guide, not as a goddess. Her profit exceeds silver and gold because she yields not only material well-being but the deeper goods of long life, honor, peace, and the “tree of life” blessing.\n\nVerses 19-20 shift from exhortation to theological grounding. Wisdom is not merely useful; it is woven into creation. The LORD made the world “by wisdom,” “by understanding,” and “by knowledge,” language that presents created order as rational, purposeful, and morally structured. The mention of the deep and the dew evokes God’s ordering of the world’s powerful and life-giving realities. The point is not to provide a technical cosmology, but to show that human wisdom aligns with the way God has made the world.\n\nVerses 21-26 return to direct exhortation: the son must not let wisdom and discretion depart from sight, but guard them. The promised results are life, favor, safe walking, restful sleep, freedom from fear, and deliverance from traps. These are proverbial outcomes, not mechanical guarantees; they describe the normal fruit of life ordered under the LORD. The logic is covenantal: secure living flows from faithful attention to God-given wisdom.\n\nVerses 27-30 make wisdom concrete in neighbor ethics. Wisdom is not merely inward piety; it forbids withholding good when one has the ability to help, delaying payment or aid without cause, plotting against a trusting neighbor, and bringing false accusations. The passage moves from active generosity to honesty and restraint in speech and action. Wisdom treats the vulnerable and nearby neighbor with immediate fairness.\n\nVerses 31-35 conclude with a sharp moral contrast. The reader is told not to envy the violent man, because violence and crookedness are an abomination to the LORD. In contrast, the upright enjoy divine “intimate counsel,” blessing, favor, and ultimately honor. The wicked household stands under curse, while the righteous home is blessed. The section closes by exposing the fate of scoffers and fools: pride leads to contempt, while humility receives favor. The narrator’s theology is clear: the LORD’s moral governance orders both present character and eventual outcome.",
    "covenantal_redemptive_location": "This passage stands within Israel’s covenant life under the Mosaic order, where wisdom is the practical outworking of fearing the LORD and walking in his ways. It assumes creation order and covenant blessing/cursing together: what is wise is not arbitrary but fits the world God made and the life he requires of his people. The tree-of-life imagery reaches back to Eden, while the blessing and curse language fits the covenantal structure that later Scripture will continue to develop. In the canonical storyline, this wisdom instruction anticipates the need for a truly righteous and wise king and ultimately for the fuller restoration of life under God’s saving rule.",
    "theological_significance": "The passage teaches that God’s wisdom is supremely valuable, morally ordered, and life-giving. It presents the LORD as the creator who established the world with wisdom, the covenant Lord who rewards righteousness and opposes wickedness, and the giver of security to those who trust him. It also shows that genuine wisdom expresses itself in tangible love of neighbor, prompt generosity, truthful speech, and humility. Wisdom is therefore both theological and ethical: it is right relation to God that produces right relation to others.",
    "prophecy_typology_symbols": "No major prophecy or direct messianic oracle appears in this unit. The main symbolic image is the tree of life, which is a strong creational echo and a legitimate wisdom symbol for life, blessing, and restored nearness to God’s good order. That said, the image should not be over-allegorized; in Proverbs it functions first as a poetic description of wisdom’s life-giving quality.",
    "eastern_thought_cultural_figures": "The passage reflects a household-based pedagogical world in which fathers train sons for covenant life. It also assumes honor/shame patterns: the wise inherit honor, fools receive contempt, and public reputation matters. Neighbor ethics are concrete and relational, not abstract; the point is faithful conduct toward people who live near enough to be harmed or helped. The sayings also reflect Hebrew poetic parallelism and concrete imagery rather than systematic prose definition.",
    "canonical_christological_trajectory": "Within Proverbs, wisdom is the God-given path of life that reflects creation order and covenant faithfulness. Later Scripture continues to treat wisdom as more than technique, and the New Testament ultimately reveals that true wisdom is embodied in the Lord Jesus Christ, without erasing the original proverb’s meaning. The tree of life echo and the life-giving, peace-producing character of wisdom contribute to the Bible’s larger hope for restored life under God’s righteous reign. Christ fulfills, rather than cancels, the pattern of righteous wisdom that Proverbs commends.",
    "practical_doctrinal_implications": "Believers should value wisdom above wealth, status, and immediate gratification. They should trust that God’s moral order is good, even when shortcuts seem profitable. Wisdom must show up in generosity, promptness, truthful dealings, and refusal to exploit or envy the violent. The passage also encourages peace of conscience: fear is lessened where life is governed by the LORD’s wisdom. Finally, it warns that pride, violence, and contempt for God’s order end in disgrace, not honor.",
    "textual_critical_note": "No major textual-critical issue requires special comment.",
    "interpretive_cruxes": "The main interpretive issue is how strongly to read the promised benefits in verses 16-18 and 21-26. These are proverb-level descriptions of the normal fruit of wisdom, not unconditional guarantees that every wise person will enjoy uninterrupted prosperity or ease.",
    "application_boundary_note": "Readers should not flatten this wisdom poem into a mechanical prosperity formula. Its blessings belong to proverbial patterns within covenant life, not to a simplistic promise that righteousness eliminates all suffering. Nor should the tree-of-life image be over-symbolized beyond what the text itself supports.",
    "second_pass_needed": false,
    "second_pass_reasons": [],
    "second_pass_reason_detail": "No second-pass specialist review is needed.",
    "confirmed_second_pass_reasons": [],
    "qa_summary": "The entry is text-governed, genre-sensitive, and covenantally restrained. It handles Proverbs’ proverbial promises carefully and avoids the main control failures: no material overstatement, speculative typology, Israel/church flattening, poetic literalism, or prophecy-handling error.",
    "qa_lint_flags": [],
    "qa_priority_actions": "[]",
    "qa_final_note": "Suitable for publication as-is.",
    "confidence_note": "High confidence. The main meaning and theological movement are clear, though the proverb-style promises should be read with appropriate restraint.",
    "editorial_risk_flags": [
      "application_misuse_risk",
      "symbolism_requires_restraint",
      "poetic_literalism_risk"
    ],
    "qa_status": "pass",
    "publish_recommendation": "publish",
    "unit_slug": "pro_006",
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    "testament": "OT"
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}