Proverbs Chapter 12 verse 28 Holy Bible

ASV Proverbs 12:28

In the way of righteousness is life; And in the pathway thereof there is no death.
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BBE Proverbs 12:28

In the road of righteousness is life, but the way of the evil-doer goes to death.
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DARBY Proverbs 12:28

In the path of righteousness is life, and in the pathway thereof there is no death.
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KJV Proverbs 12:28

In the way of righteousness is life: and in the pathway thereof there is no death.
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WBT Proverbs 12:28


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WEB Proverbs 12:28

In the way of righteousness is life; In its path there is no death.
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YLT Proverbs 12:28

In the path of righteousness `is' life, And in the way of `that' path `is' no death!
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 28. - In the way of righteousness is life (comp. Proverbs 10:2). For the promise of temporal prosperity which the Jew saw in such passages as these we substitute a better hope. And in the pathway thereof - of righteousness - there is no death. Many combine the two words thus: "no death," i.e. immortality; but examples of such combination are not forthcoming, and the anomaly is not necessitated by the failure of the usual rendering to afford an adequate sense. The Greek and Latin versions are noteworthy. Septuagint, "The ways of the revengeful (μνησικάκων) are unto (אֶל, not אַל) death." St. Chrysostom refers ('Hom. 16 in Ephesians') to this rendering: "He here speaks of vindictiveness; for on the spur of the moment he allows the sufferer to act in order to cheek the aggressor; but further to bear a grudge he permits not; because the act then is no longer one of passion, nor of boiling rage, but of malice premeditated. Now, God forgives those who may be carried away, perhaps upon a sense of outrage, and rush out to resent it. Hence he says, 'eye for eye;' and yet again 'The ways of the revengeful lead to death." Vulgate, "A devious path leads to death" - a path, that is, which turns aside from the right direction, a life and conversation which are alien from justice and piety. But both the Septuagint and the Vulgate have missed the right meaning of the words in question; derek nethibah, "pathway." Many see in this verse a plain evidence that the writer believed in the immortality of the soul. We have reason to suppose that such was his faith, but it cannot be proved from this passage, though we may consider that he was guided to speak in terms to which later knowledge would affix a deeper interpretation (see Proverbs 14:32, and note there). It is Jesus Christ "who hath brought life and immortality (ἀφθαρσίαν) to light through the gospel" (2 Timothy 1:10). Writers in Solomon's time could speak only darkly about this sublime and comforting hope, though later, as in the Book of Wisdom and throughout most of the Apocryphal books, it formed a common topic, and was used as a reason for patience and resignation.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(28) In the way of righteousness is life.--Comp. above on Proverbs 10:2, "Righteousness delivereth from death."