Proverbs 13:1 A wise son hears his father's instruction: but a scorner hears not rebuke. The first part of the sentence has been rendered, "is his father's instruction"; i.e., a wise son embodies his father's instruction. A wise man may point to his son and say, "This is the sum-total of my educational efforts." The proverb is careful to define the quality of the son whose education embodies the purposes of his father. He is to be a "wise son"; one who can make the most of his opportunities, who understands the process through which he is passing. A scorner is profited by nothing; being a satirist himself, he turns everything into satire; he mocks the speaker of good things, he parodies the highest poetry, he resents the most delicate and spiritual approach. We should not be struck by the mere ability of satire; we should remember its moral disadvantages, for it debases and impoverishes whatever it touches that is meant for its good. We speak of the satire that takes the moral purpose out of every appeal, and turns to derision all the efforts that are directed towards the soul's real education. Wisdom gathers everything; scorning gathers nothing. It is for each man to say that he will walk in the one spirit or in the other, but let him distinctly know what the consequences of each spirit must be. (J. Parker, D.D.) Parallel Verses KJV: A wise son heareth his father's instruction: but a scorner heareth not rebuke.WEB: A wise son listens to his father's instruction, but a scoffer doesn't listen to rebuke. |