Scrutatio

Sabato, 11 maggio 2024 - San Fabio e compagni ( Letture di oggi)

Sirach 20


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NEW AMERICAN BIBLESTUTTGARTENSIA-DELITZSCH
1 An admonition can be inopportune, and a man may be wise to hold his peace.
2 It is much better to admonish than to lose one's temper, for one who admits his fault will be kept from disgrace.
3 Like a eunuch lusting for intimacy with a maiden is he who does right under compulsion.
4 One man is silent and is thought wise, another is talkative and is disliked.
5 One man is silent because he has nothing to say; another is silent, biding his time.
6 A wise man is silent till the right time comes, but a boasting fool ignores the proper time.
7 He who talks too much is detested; he who pretends to authority is hated.
8 Some misfortunes bring success; some things gained are a man's loss.
9 Some gifts do one no good, and some must be paid back double.
10 Humiliation can follow fame, while from obscurity a man can lift up his head.
11 A man may buy much for little, but pay for it seven times over.
12 A wise man makes himself popular by a few words, but fools pour forth their blandishments in vain.
13 A gift from a rogue will do you no good, for in his eyes his one gift is equal to seven.
14 He gives little and criticizes often, and like a crier he shouts aloud. He lends today, he asks it back tomorrow; hateful indeed is such a man.
15 A fool has no friends, nor thanks for his generosity;
16 Those who eat his bread have an evil tongue. How many times they laugh him to scorn!
17 A fall to the ground is less sudden than a slip of the tongue; that is why the downfall of the wicked comes so quickly.
18 Insipid food is the untimely tale; the unruly are always ready to offer it.
19 A proverb when spoken by a fool is unwelcome, for he does not utter it at the proper time.
20 A man through want may be unable to sin, yet in this tranquility he cannot rest.
21 One may lose his life through shame, and perish through a fool's intimidation.
22 A man makes a promise to a friend out of shame, and has him for his enemy needlessly.
23 A lie is a foul blot in a man, yet it is constantly on the lips of the unruly.
24 Better a thief than an inveterate liar, yet both will suffer disgrace;
25 A liar's way leads to dishonor, his shame remains ever with him.
26 A wise man advances himself by his words, a prudent man pleases the great.
27 He who works his land has abundant crops, he who pleases the great is pardoned his faults.
28 Favors and gifts blind the eyes; like a muzzle over the mouth they silence reproof.
29 Hidden wisdom and unseen treasure-- of what value is either?
30 Better the man who hides his folly than the one who hides his wisdom.