Proverbs Chapter 4 verse 5 Holy Bible

ASV Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom, get understanding; Forget not, neither decline from the words of my mouth;
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BBE Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom, get true knowledge; keep it in memory, do not be turned away from the words of my mouth.
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DARBY Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom, get intelligence: forget [it] not; neither decline from the words of my mouth.
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KJV Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom, get understanding: forget it not; neither decline from the words of my mouth.
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WBT Proverbs 4:5


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WEB Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom. Get understanding. Don't forget, neither swerve from the words of my mouth.
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YLT Proverbs 4:5

Get wisdom, get understanding, Do not forget, nor turn away From the sayings of my mouth.
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 5. - After the general exhortation given above, the father's instruction becomes more specific, and deals with the acquirement of wisdom. This subject seems to be continued in ver. 13, where the second and concluding branch of the instruction begins, which consists mainly of warning, as the first part does with exhortation. We are thus furnished with an example how to teach. In our teaching it is not sufficient simply to point out what is to be done, but we must show what is to be avoided. Get wisdom, get understanding. The father urges the acquirement of wisdom in the same way and with the same importunity as the trader or merchant presses his goods upon buyers. Wisdom and understanding are put forward as objects of merchandise; for the verb kanah, from which the imperative k'neh, signifies not only "to acquire for one's self," or "to possess," but especially "to buy." The verb occurs again in the same sense in ver. 7, "Get [k'neh, i.e. buy] wisdom;" and in Proverbs 23:23, "Buy (k'neh) the truth, and sell it not; also wisdom, and instruction, and understanding" (cf. also Proverbs 15:22: 16:16; 19:9, where we also meet with the same verb). The reiteration of the word "get," as Umbreit remarks, is "an imitation of the exclamation of a merchant who is offering his wares." The importunity of the father measures the value he sets upon wisdom as an inestimable treasure, a pearl of great price (see Proverbs 3:14). Forget it not, etc.; rather, forget not, neither turn from the words of my mouth, - so Zockler, Delitzsch, Hodg., and others; Vulgate, ne obliviscaris, neque declines a verbis oris mei. There is no need to supply "it" after the verb al-tish'-kakh, "forget not," as Holden states, and as appears in the Authorized Version, since shakakh is found with min (מִן), "of" or "from," in Psalm 12:4 (5), "I forgot to eat (shakakh'ti meakol)," and the same construction may obtain here. The two verbs, "forget" and "decline from," are not so very wide in meaning, since the former, shakakh, is to "leave" something from forgetfulness, and the latter, natah, rendered here "decline from," is "to turn away" from something. The words of my mouth represent as it were the means by which wisdom may be purchased.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(5) Get wisdom, get understanding.--Like the pearl of great price (Matthew 13:46).