Proverbs 30
Chapter 30 presents the words of Agur son of Jakeh, described as an oracle, and features a series of numerical sayings that catalog various human behaviors and natural phenomena, offering a unique voice that emphasizes epistemological humility and wonder at creation. The chapter opens with Agur confessing his own ignorance and perhaps questioning whether he has knowledge and understanding of the holy, an unusual moment of genuine doubt and intellectual honesty that contrasts with the confident voice of most of Proverbs. The chapter then presents a series of "Four things" sayings: the way of an eagle in the sky, of a serpent on a rock, of a ship on the sea, and of a man with a virgin (their ways are unknowable); four things the earth finds unbearable—a slave who becomes king, a fool who is sated with food, a hated woman who is married, and a servant girl who succeeds her mistress; four things that are small but exceedingly wise. Memorable images include the ants that have no leader yet prepare food in summer; the badgers that are small yet make their home in the rocks; and the stately things—the lion, the war-horse, the he-goat, and the king. The chapter concludes with a numerical saying about the leech and the cry of "give, give" and a meditation on things insatiable and restless. Chapter 30 stands apart from the rest of Proverbs in its tone of wonder and confession, offering wisdom that acknowledges its own limits and celebrates the inscrutability of creation's ways.