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Chapter 4

Better is childlessness with virtue;
    for immortal is the memory of virtue,
    acknowledged both by God and human beings.(A)
When it is present people imitate it,
    and they long for it when it is gone;
Forever it marches crowned in triumph,
    victorious in unsullied deeds of valor.
But the numerous progeny of the wicked shall be of no avail;
    their spurious offshoots shall not strike deep root
    nor take firm hold.(B)
For even though their branches flourish for a time,
    they are unsteady and shall be rocked by the wind
    and, by the violence of the winds, uprooted;(C)
Their twigs shall be broken off untimely,
    their fruit useless, unripe for eating,
    fit for nothing.
For children born of lawless unions
    give evidence of the wickedness of their parents, when they are examined.

C. On Early Death[a]

But the righteous one, though he die early, shall be at rest.(D)
For the age that is honorable comes not with the passing of time,(E)
    nor can it be measured in terms of years.
Rather, understanding passes for gray hair,
    and an unsullied life is the attainment of old age.
10 [b]The one who pleased God was loved,(F)
    living among sinners, was transported—
11 Snatched away, lest wickedness pervert his mind
    or deceit beguile his soul;(G)
12 For the witchery of paltry things obscures what is right
    and the whirl of desire transforms the innocent mind.(H)
13 Having become perfect in a short while,
    he reached the fullness of a long career;
14     for his soul was pleasing to the Lord,
    therefore he sped him out of the midst of wickedness.(I)
But the people saw and did not understand,
    nor did they take that consideration into account.[c]

16 Yes, the righteous one who has died will condemn
    the sinful who live;
And youth, swiftly completed, will condemn
    the many years of the unrighteous who have grown old.(J)
17 For they will see the death of the wise one
    and will not understand what the Lord intended,
    or why he kept him safe.
18 They will see, and hold him in contempt;
    but the Lord will laugh them to scorn.(K)
19 And they shall afterward become dishonored corpses(L)
    and an unceasing mockery among the dead.
For he shall strike them down speechless and prostrate(M)
    and rock them to their foundations;
They shall be utterly laid waste
    and shall be in grief
    and their memory shall perish.

The Judgment of the Wicked

20 Fearful shall they come, at the counting up of their sins,
    and their lawless deeds shall convict them to their face.

Footnotes

  1. 4:7–19 Early death is not a punishment for the righteous because genuine old age is the attainment of perfection and early death is a preservation from corruption. The old age and death of the wicked, however, will not be honorable.
  2. 4:10–11 There are allusions here to Enoch (Gn 5:21–24), who was young by patriarchal standards, and to Lot (Gn 19:10–11; 2 Pt 2:7–8). Cf. also Is 57:1–2.
  3. 4:14 Verse 15 is omitted because it repeats the last two lines of 3:9.