Proverbs 24:22
ContextNET © | for suddenly their destruction will overtake them, 1 and who knows the ruinous judgment both the Lord and the king can bring? 2 |
NIV © | for those two will send sudden destruction upon them, and who knows what calamities they can bring? |
NASB © | For their calamity will rise suddenly, And who knows the ruin that comes from both of them? |
NLT © | For you will go down with them to sudden disaster. Who knows where the punishment from the LORD and the king will end? |
MSG © | Without warning your life can turn upside-down, and who knows how or when it might happen? |
BBE © | For their downfall will come suddenly; and who has knowledge of the destruction of those in high positions? |
NRSV © | for disaster comes from them suddenly, and who knows the ruin that both can bring? |
NKJV © | For their calamity will rise suddenly, And who knows the ruin those two can bring? |
KJV | |
NASB © | |
HEBREW | |
LXXM | |
NET © [draft] ITL | |
NET © | for suddenly their destruction will overtake them, 1 and who knows the ruinous judgment both the Lord and the king can bring? 2 |
NET © Notes |
1 tn Heb “will rise” (so NASB). 2 tn Heb “the ruin of the two of them.” Judgment is sent on the rebels both by God and the king. The term פִּיד (pid, “ruin; disaster”) is a metonymy of effect, the cause being the sentence of judgment (= “ruinous judgment” in the translation; cf. NLT “punishment”). The word “two of them” is a subjective genitive – they two bring the disaster on the rebels. The referents (the sn The reward for living in peace under God in this world is that those who do will escape the calamities that will fall on the rebellious. Verse 21a is used in 1 Peter 2:17, and v. 22 is used in Romans 13:1-7 (v. 4). This is the thirtieth and last of this collection. |