| I. |
TITLE: |
| |
A. |
In Hebrew:
hm)lv= yl@v=m! meaning
“Proverbs of Solomon.” The term
yl@v=m! means
“parallel” or “similar” and thus represents a description by
means of comparison |
| |
B. |
In Greek: PAROIMIAI has
the sense of “being like” or “similar” (see
paroimi'a,
paromoia'zw and
paro'moio"). These are
clever sayings using similes and comparisons-proverbs |
| II. |
AUTHORS: |
| |
A. |
Solomon: Solomon, the son
of David, was said to have written over three thousand proverbs
(1 Ki 4:32). Many of them are found in the book of Proverbs: |
| |
|
1. |
1:1-9:18 |
| |
|
2. |
10:1-22:16 |
| |
|
3. |
25:1-29:27 (these were
selected by a committee appointed under king Hezekiah (726-698
B.C.) |
| |
B. |
Wisemen: Perhaps these
were the ones who attended Solomon (cf. 1 Ki 4:31; 12:6). Their
units are two: |
| |
|
1. |
22:17-24:22 |
| |
|
2. |
24:23-34 |
| |
C. |
Agur son of Jakeh: We do
not know who this was. This is found in 30:1-33 |
| |
D. |
King Lemuel: He was a
non-Israelite who may have lived in the area of Uz where people
still believed in the true God. This is in 31:1-9 and perhaps
31:10-31. |
| III. |
DATE: It seems that
Proverbs was written and then compiled sometime between the
tenth and sixth centuries B.C. |
| |
A. |
Very Late Date (Fourth
Century B.C. 350 B.C. or Later) |
| |
|
1. |
This is held by C. H. Toy
in ICC. |
| |
|
2. |
Solomon was identified
with all wisdom literature (Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of
Songs) as with the apocryphal book the Wisdom of SolomonWhile
pseudonyms were popular in the intertestamental period, this was
not the case in pre-Hellenistic Israel. In addition it is
probable that Solomon’s reputation came from real compositions
of wisdom |
| |
|
3. |
It is assumed that the
pure monotheism in Proverbs reflects a postexilic origin since
it was a late evolutionary development. The presupposition of an
evolution of religion is not necessary since Israel’s religion
was revealed from the days of the patriarchs and idolatry was
always regarded as evil |
| |
|
4. |
Since Proverbs does not
demonstrate “national” references, it must have been composed
after the fall of the nation. But the lack of national
references is a part of the genre of literature known as wisdom
literature and the multi-cultural nature setting of Israel. |
| |
|
5. |
Social customs and vices
are from the time after the exile. But there is nothing in the
customs or vices which require that they be limited to one
particular time or another |
| |
|
6. |
The emphasis upon
knowledge as a source for resolving problems is a Hellenistic
approach to moral philosophy. This is a basic misunderstanding
between Greek and Hebrew wisdom. Greek wisdom was concerned with
speculation and cosmogony which was behind principles of the
universe. Hebrew wisdom was interested in the revealed will of
God (the Law) and the observable order which God placed into the
universe. |
| |
|
7. |
Proverbs was the product
of a professional group of wise men who also put together
Ecclesiastes, the Wisdom of Solomon, and Ecclesiasticus. But
there must have been an earlier, classical model of written
proverbial literature before a professional group of wise men
could have arisen |
| |
B. |
Moderately Late Date
(Seventh-Sixth Centuries 600 B.C.): |
| |
|
1. |
This is held to by
Driver, Norwack, and A.B. Davidson |
| |
|
2. |
The material ascribed to
Solomon is identified with a later period of time: |
| |
|
|
|
a. 1-9 to the period just before the
exile |
| |
|
|
|
b. 10-22 may have Solomonic roots,
but reached its present form in the seventh century B.C. |
| |
|
3. |
The units attributed to
the wisemen (22:17-24:34) are identified with the postexilic
period |
| |
|
4. |
25-29 is considered to be
postexilic |
| |
|
5. |
30-31 were added at a
much later time |
| |
|
6. |
Some moderate critics
place chapters 22-24 in an earlier period than chapters 1-9 and
view the entire book as having been written no later than the
time of Hezekiah |
| |
C. |
Early Date (Tenth Century
to Sixth Century B.C.): |
| |
|
1. |
Much of the book was
written during the time of Solomon (1-9; 10-22:6; [22:17-24:34];
25-29:27) |
| |
|
2. |
There was a compilation
of Solomon’s writings which occurred during the reign king
Hezekiah (726-698 B.C.) |
| |
|
3. |
It is not possible to
know when some of the material was written (30-31) |
| |
|
4. |
Proverbs 22-24 were
probably a source for the Egyptian work, The Wisdom of Amenemope
which has been dated to from 1000 B.C. to the Persian and/or
Greek periods |
| |
D. |
Conclusion: Tenth to
Sixth Century |
| |
|
1. |
Much of the material in
Proverbs is old dating at least from the time of Solomon |
| |
|
2. |
Some of Proverbs was
probably compiled as a canonical book at a later time (at least
during the time of Hezekiah (726-698 B.C.)Perhaps the placement
of the two sections of anonymous sayings by the wisemen
(22:17-24:22; and 24:23-34) suggests that they came from period
between Solomon’s reign and the collection of Hezekiah’s scribes |
| |
|
3. |
Proverbs 30-31 could have
been added at a later time (the time of the exile?) |
| |
|
4. |
Albright wrote, “In a
nutshell, my opinion with regard to the provenience and date of
Proverbs is that its entire contents is probably pre-Exilic, but
that much of the book was handed down orally until the fifth
century B.C. when we know from Elephantine that Jews were
interested in literature of a different kind.” |
| IV. |
PURPOSES: |
| |
A. |
To enable the readers to
learn and apply the fear of the Lord to their lives |
| |
B. |
To provide skill for
living (successful living) from the two perimeters of natural
order and God’s word |
| |
C. |
To know wisdom and
instruction (1:2) |
| |
D. |
To receive teaching in
wise dealing, righteousness, justice and equity (1:3) |
| |
E. |
To help the simple gain
prudence and the youth gain knowledge and discretion (1:4) |
| |
F. |
To increase learning and
to acquire skill in understanding (1:5) |
| |
G. |
To understand proverbs,
parables, wise sayings, and riddles (1:6) |
| |
H. |
To learn the fear of the
Lord (1:7) |