He that loveth pleasure [shall be] a poor man Or "sport"
FOOTNOTES:
F3 and pastime, music and dancing, cards and dice, hunting and hawking, and other sensual gratifications; a man that indulges himself in these things, and spends his time and his money in such a way, is very likely to be a poor man, and generally is so in the issue; he that loveth wine and oil shall not be rich; that is, that loves them immoderately; otherwise in moderation they may be both loved and used; "wine" and "oil" are put for high living, luxurious feasts, costly entertainments; which being so, and continually made, will not suffer a man to be rich. The sense is, that an epicure, one that makes a god of his belly, that is both a winebibber and a glutton, that indulges to rich eating and drinking, in course lessens his substance, and leaves little for his heir: and this holds good with respect to spiritual as to temporal things; such persons are poor, and not rich in spiritual things, that indulge to carnal pleasure, and the gratification of their sensual appetite. F3 (hxmv) "laetitiam", Pagninus, Montanus, Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Mercerus, Cocceius, Schultens.
15
Good people celebrate when justice triumphs, but for the workers of evil it's a bad day.
16
Whoever wanders off the straight and narrow ends up in a congregation of ghosts.
17
You're addicted to thrills? What an empty life! The pursuit of pleasure is never satisfied.
18
What a bad person plots against the good, boomerangs; the plotter gets it in the end.
19
Better to live in a tent in the wild than with a cross and petulant spouse.
Published by permission. Originally published by NavPress in English as THE MESSAGE: The Bible in Contemporary Language copyright 2002 by Eugene Peterson. All rights reserved.