Ecclesiasticus, 14

New Jerusalem Bible

1 Blessed is anyone who has not sinned in speech and who needs feel no remorse for sins.

2 Blessed is anyone whose conscience brings no reproach and who has never given up hope.

3 Wealth is not the right thing for the niggardly, and what use are possessions to the covetous?

4 Whoever hoards by stinting himself is hoarding for others, and others will live sumptuously on his riches.

5 If someone is mean to himself, whom does he benefit? he does not even enjoy what is his own.

6 No one is meaner than the person who is mean to himself, this is how his wickedness repays him.

7 If he does any good, he does it unintentionally, and in the end he himself reveals his wickedness.

8 Wicked the person who has an envious eye, averting his face, and careless of others' lives.

9 The eye of the grasping is not content with what he has, greed shrivels up the soul.

10 The miser is grudging of bread, there is famine at his table.

11 My child, treat yourself as well as you can afford, and bring worthy offerings to the Lord.

12 Remember that death will not delay, and that you have never seen Sheol's contract.

13 Be kind to your friend before you die, treat him as generously as you can afford.

14 Do not refuse yourself the good things of today, do not let your share of what is lawfully desired pass you by.

15 Will you not have to leave your fortune to another, and the fruit of your labour to be divided by lot?

16 Give and receive, enjoy yourself -- there are no pleasures to be found in Sheol.

17 Like clothes, every body will wear out, the age -- old law is, 'Everyone must die.'

18 Like foliage growing on a bushy tree, some leaves falling, others growing, so are the generations of flesh and blood: one dies, another is born.

19 Every achievement rots away and perishes, and with it goes its author.

20 Blessed is anyone who meditates on wisdom, and reasons with intelligence,

21 who studies her ways in his heart, and ponders her secrets.

22 He pursues her like a hunter, and lies in wait by her path;

23 he peeps in at her windows, and listens at her doors;

24 he lodges close to her house, and fixes his peg in her walls;

25 he pitches his tent at her side, and lodges in an excellent lodging;

26 he sets his children in her shade, and camps beneath her branches;

27 he is sheltered by her from the heat, and in her glory he makes his home.




Versículos relacionados com Ecclesiasticus, 14:

Ecclesiastical chapter 14 talks about the importance of seeking wisdom and following the right way in life, avoiding temptation and sin. It also highlights the transience of life and the need to prepare for death. Below are five verses related to these themes:

Proverbs 4:7 - "Wisdom is the main thing; because wisdom, it employs everything you have in the acquisition of understanding." This verse highlights the importance of wisdom and knowledge, and reinforces the central idea of ​​ecclesiastical chapter 14.

Psalm 39:4 - "Lord, make me know my end and what is the measure of my days, so that I know how fragile I am." This psalm reflects on the transience of life and the need to prepare for death, topics covered in ecclesiastical 14.

Proverbs 14:12 - "There is a way that man seems right, but his end is the ways of death." This proverb highlights the importance of choosing the right way in life and following wisdom, central ecclesiastical themes 14.

Psalm 90:12 - "Teach us to tell our days in such a way that we reach wise hearts." This psalm talks about the transience of life and the importance of seeking wisdom and understanding during life, topics also addressed in ecclesiastical 14.

Proverbs 16:25 - "There is a way that man seems right, but his end is the ways of death." This proverb emphasizes the importance of choosing the right way in life and following wisdom, and is related to the central theme of Ecclesiastical Chapter 14.


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