1 ① Wisdom gave success to their actions through a holy prophet; 2they crossed an uninhabited wilderness and pitched camp in inaccessible places.
3They stood up to their enemies and fought off the hostile. 4When they were thirsty they called on you and you gave them water from hard flint, from a rocky cliff, a welcome relief for the parched.
5The same creatures you used to punish their enemies were of benefit to them in their trouble. 6For their enemies an ever-flowing source of river water was polluted with blood – 7a stern response to the decree ordering the slaughter of infants. But, against all hope, you gave your people water in abundance, 8showing them by the thirst they suffered, how you had punished their enemies. 9Their trials were no more than merciful reproofs. Through them, your people learned how severely the wicked were judged and punished.
10You tested them as does a father, while you examined their enemies like a stern king.
11Their enemies suffered at the time and also later. 12When they remembered the past, theirs was a double grief and groaning. 13They came to see that it was the work of the Lord when they realized that their punishment had benefited the others.
14Long before, they had exposed Moses; they had rejected him in derision; but now they admired him because of what had happened, and after they had suffered a thirst far different from that of the righteous.
15Their wickedness and foolish ideas led them astray, even to worshiping snakes and other repugnant animals; this is why you sent them hordes of similar creatures, 16teaching them that punishment takes the same form as the sin.
17In fact, your almighty power that created the world from formless matter did not lack means to unleash upon them bears and savage lions, 18or monsters freshly created, unknown and full of fury, breathing fire or noisily spitting smoke or flashing fearful sparks from their eyes, 19creatures not only capable of destroying them at a single blow but whose mere appearance could make them die of fright.
How God corrects his children
20 ② Even without this, they could have dropped dead at a single breath if pursued by your justice, or dispersed by the breath of your might; but you ordered all with measure, number and weight.
21You are able to show your power at any moment and who can resist the strength of your arm? 22For the entire world lies before you, just enough to tip the scales, a drop of morning dew falling on the ground.
23But because you are almighty, you are merciful to all; you overlook sins and give your children time to repent. 24You love everything that exists and hate nothing that you have made; had you hated anything, you would not have formed it.
25How could anything endure if you did not will it? And how could anything last that you had not willed? 26You have compassion on all because all is yours, O Lord, lover of life.
- Wis 11,1 God's love for his people reveals itself when the very forces of nature serve to punish the Egyptians and save the Hebrews. This is shown with seven illustrations: animals, locusts and snakes, hail and manna, darkness and light, the firstborn, the sea (v. 16-19). All this is amplified beyond measure and is not the part of the book that touches us most. The same creatures you used to punish their enemies were of benefit to them in their trouble. This can be a lesson concerning the forces ruling our world today. Organization, speed, technology, science, emancipation: all these are instrumental in the liberation of humankind if used with wisdom. All this can turn against us, when it is used without considering the goal God established for the world. Wis 11,20 You ordered all with measure, number and weight. Because God's power is absolute, it is never a manifestation of violence: beauty, harmony and goodness are never lacking in all that comes from God. The passage from 11:5 to 15:19 is a long parenthesis contrasting God's ways, as a friend and master of humans with the foolishness in the worship of idols.
- Wis 11,1 God's love for his people reveals itself when the very forces of nature serve to punish the Egyptians and save the Hebrews. This is shown with seven illustrations: animals, locusts and snakes, hail and manna, darkness and light, the firstborn, the sea (v. 16-19). All this is amplified beyond measure and is not the part of the book that touches us most. The same creatures you used to punish their enemies were of benefit to them in their trouble. This can be a lesson concerning the forces ruling our world today. Organization, speed, technology, science, emancipation: all these are instrumental in the liberation of humankind if used with wisdom. All this can turn against us, when it is used without considering the goal God established for the world. Wis 11,20 You ordered all with measure, number and weight. Because God's power is absolute, it is never a manifestation of violence: beauty, harmony and goodness are never lacking in all that comes from God. The passage from 11:5 to 15:19 is a long parenthesis contrasting God's ways, as a friend and master of humans with the foolishness in the worship of idols.