Proverbs 13
Chapter 13 explores themes of work, wealth, desire, and the slow but steady consequences that flow from different choices, using vivid imagery of poverty and riches, satisfaction and craving, to illustrate the Proverbian vision of moral cause and effect. The famous opening couplet—"A wise child accepts parental discipline; a scoffer does not listen to rebuke"—again emphasizes that wisdom begins in receptiveness and obedience, while folly manifests as resistance to instruction and contempt for correction. The chapter addresses the danger of unchecked desire: the righteous eat to satisfy their appetite while the belly of the wicked craves more, suggesting that the righteous experience genuine contentment through discipline while the wicked are enslaved to perpetual wanting. Memorable images include the tree of life as the fruit of righteousness, poverty as the shame that comes from ignoring instruction, and wealth hastily gathered as unblessed while wealth gathered little by little increases. The chapter also offers concrete wisdom about speech: the righteous speak words of life while violence comes from the wicked's mouth; guarding one's lips guards life while careless speech leads to ruin. Chapter 13 emphasizes that wisdom is a matter of patient accumulation—of righteousness, of resources, of friendships, of knowledge—and that get-rich-quick schemes and unbridled desires are the fool's path to destruction, offering timeless counsel about the slow virtues of diligence, temperance, and humility.