Proverbs 26
Chapter 26 focuses extensively on the fool and the scoffer, offering vivid and often humorous portraits of various forms of foolishness and their consequences, along with counsel on how to respond to fools and how to avoid their fate. The chapter opens with the observation that honor is not fitting for a fool just as snow in summer or rain in harvest is unsuitable, establishing the grotesque inappropriateness of foolish persons exercising authority or receiving respect they do not deserve. The chapter devotes sustained attention to the tongue and speech: the fool's lips bring strife and his mouth calls for blows; whoever guards his mouth and tongue keeps his soul from trouble; smooth lips and a deceitful heart make for a scoffer. Memorable images include the fool being like a dog returning to its vomit as a fool returning to his folly; the sluggard turning on his bed as a door on hinges (going round and round without moving forward); and the feet of those quick to run to evil showing an inability to stop. The chapter also addresses how to respond to fools: answering according to his folly lest he think himself wise, or not answering lest the fool be wise in his own conceit, suggesting that there is no simple formula for dealing with fools. Chapter 26 is distinctive in its focus on a single character type, providing extended character analysis that goes beyond brief couplets to present the fool as a recognizable social problem requiring strategic response.