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Monday, July 21st, 2025
the Week of Proper 11 / Ordinary 16
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Read the Bible

Myles Coverdale Bible

Isaiah 32:5

Then shal the nygarde be no more called gentle, ner the churle lyberall.

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Church;   Hypocrisy;   Wicked (People);   The Topic Concordance - Government;   Jesus Christ;  

Dictionaries:

- American Tract Society Bible Dictionary - Isaiah;   Easton Bible Dictionary - Churl;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Isaiah;   Remnant;   Hastings' Dictionary of the Bible - Isaiah, Book of;   The Hawker's Poor Man's Concordance And Dictionary - Rain;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Bountifulness;   Churl;   Fool;   Grace;   Hezekiah (2);   Isaiah;   Liberal;   Noble;   Person;   Salvation;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
A fool will no longer be called a noble,nor a scoundrel said to be important.
Hebrew Names Version
The fool shall be no more called noble, nor the scoundrel be highly respected.
King James Version
The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said to be bountiful.
English Standard Version
The fool will no more be called noble, nor the scoundrel said to be honorable.
New American Standard Bible
No longer will the fool be called noble, Or the rogue be spoken of as generous.
New Century Version
Fools will not be called great, and people will not respect the wicked.
Amplified Bible
The fool (the good-for-nothing) will no longer be called noble, Nor the rogue said to be generous.
World English Bible
The fool shall be no more called noble, nor the scoundrel be highly respected.
Geneva Bible (1587)
A nigard shall no more be called liberall, nor the churle riche.
Legacy Standard Bible
No longer will the wicked fool be called noble,Or the rogue be spoken of as generous.
Berean Standard Bible
No longer will a fool be called noble, nor a scoundrel said to be important.
Contemporary English Version
Fools will no longer be highly respected, and crooks won't be given positions of honor.
Complete Jewish Bible
The mean person will no longer be called generous, or the miserly said to be noble;
Darby Translation
The vile man shall be no more called noble, nor the churl said to be bountiful:
Easy-to-Read Version
Fools would not be called great men. People would not respect men who make secret plans.
George Lamsa Translation
The fool shall be no more called ruler, nor shall the vain man be called a saviour.
Good News Translation
No one will think that a fool is honorable or say that a scoundrel is honest.
Lexham English Bible
A fool will no longer be called noble, and a scoundrel will not be said to be eminent.
Literal Translation
The fool shall no more be called noble, and a miser will not be said to be generous.
American Standard Version
The fool shall be no more called noble, nor the churl said to be bountiful.
Bible in Basic English
The foolish man will no longer be named noble, and they will not say of the false man that he is a man of honour.
JPS Old Testament (1917)
The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said to be noble.
King James Version (1611)
The vile person shall be no more called liberall, nor the churle sayd to be bountifull.
Bishop's Bible (1568)
Then shall the foolishe nigarde be no more called gentle, nor the churle liberall.
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
And they shall no more at all tell a fool to rule, and thy servants shall no more at all say, Be silent.
English Revised Version
The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said to be bountiful.
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
He that is vnwijs, schal no more be clepid prince, and a gileful man schal not be clepid the grettere.
Update Bible Version
The fool shall no more be called noble, nor the churl said to be bountiful.
Webster's Bible Translation
The vile person shall be no more called liberal, nor the churl said [to be] bountiful.
New English Translation
A fool will no longer be called honorable; a deceiver will no longer be called principled.
New King James Version
The foolish person will no longer be called generous, Nor the miser said to be bountiful;
New Living Translation
In that day ungodly fools will not be heroes. Scoundrels will not be respected.
New Life Bible
The fool will no more be called great. The bad man will no more be called a man of honor.
New Revised Standard
A fool will no longer be called noble, nor a villain said to be honorable.
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
A base man, shall no longer be called, noble, - Nor, knave, be named, liberal;
Douay-Rheims Bible
The fool shall no more be called prince: neither shall the deceitful be called great:
Revised Standard Version
The fool will no more be called noble, nor the knave said to be honorable.
Young's Literal Translation
A fool is no more called `noble,' And to a miser it is not said, `rich;'
New American Standard Bible (1995)
No longer will the fool be called noble, Or the rogue be spoken of as generous.

Contextual Overview

1 Beholde, the kinge shal gouerne after ye rule of rightuousnes, and ye princes shal rule acordinge to the balaunce of equite. 2 He shalbe vnto me, as a defence for the wynde, and as a refuge for the tempest, like as a ryuer of water in a thurstie place, and ye schadowe of a greate rock in a drie lode. 3 The eyes of the seinge shall not be dymme, and the eares of them that heare, shal take diliget hede. 4 The hert of the vnwise, shal attayne to knowlege, and the vnparfite tuge shal speake planely and distinctly. 5 Then shal the nygarde be no more called gentle, ner the churle lyberall. 6 But the churle wil be churlishly mynded, and his hert wil worke euell and playe the ypocrite, and ymagyn abhominacios agaynst God, to make the hungrie leane, and to withholde drinke from the thurstie: 7 These are the perlous weapons of the cuvetous, these be his shameful councels: that he maye begyle the poore with disceatful workes, yee euen there as he shulde geue sentence with the poore. 8 But the liberall person ymagineth honest thinges, and commeth vp with honesty.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

vile: Isaiah 5:20, Psalms 15:4, Malachi 3:18

nor: 1 Samuel 25:3-8, Proverbs 23:6-8

Reciprocal: 1 Samuel 25:10 - Who is David Proverbs 12:2 - a man Jeremiah 15:19 - take Daniel 11:21 - a vile person Romans 12:8 - giveth 2 Corinthians 8:2 - the riches 2 Corinthians 9:7 - not

Cross-References

Genesis 31:16
Therfore hath God withdrawe or fathers riches from him vnto vs & oure children. What so euer now God hath sayde vnto the, that do.
Genesis 33:8
And he sayde: What meanest thou wt all the droue that I met? He answered: that I might fynde grace in the sight of my lorde,
Genesis 33:11
Take this present in good worth, that I haue brought ye, for God hath geuen it me, & I haue ynough of all thinges. So he compelled him to take it.
Genesis 33:15
Esau sayde: Yet wil I leaue some of my people with the. He answered: What nede is it? Let me but onely fynde grace in the sight of my lorde.
Genesis 47:25
They sayde: Let vs but lyue, & fynde grace before the oure lorde, we wyl gladly be Pharaos seruauntes:
Ruth 2:2
And Ruth the Moabitisse saide vnto Naemi: Let me go in to ye felde, & gather eares of corne, after him, in whose sight I shal finde fauor. She sayde vnto her: Go yi waie my doughter.
1 Samuel 1:18
She sayde: Let thy handmayden fynde fauoure in thy sighte. So the woman wente hir waye and ate, and loked nomore so soroufully:
2 Samuel 16:4
The kynge saide vnto Siba: Beholde, all that Mephiboseth hath, shalbe thine. Siba sayde with reuerence, Let me finde grace in thy sight my lorde O kynge.
Job 6:22
Dyd I desyre you, to come hyther? Or, to geue me eny off youre substaunce?

Gill's Notes on the Bible

The vile person shall be no more called liberal,.... Or "Nabal" (a fool) "shall no more be called Nadib" e (a prince); or have this name put upon him, or be advanced to honour and dignity, or be flattered with such a title, so unbecoming him. The sense seems to be, that, in Gospel times, such who are fools as to the knowledge of spiritual things, that have no spiritual and experimental knowledge of the truths of the Gospel, but are quite ignorant of them, shall not be made princes, or spiritual rulers, and governors in the house of God;

nor the churl said [to be] bountiful; or called a lord, as Jarchi interprets the word; which, he says, is used of such an one, because all men look to him, and respect him f; but now a covetous and tenacious man, that withholds more than is meet, that keeps, all he has to himself, without communicating to others, and scarcely allows himself the necessaries of life, being so sordidly avaricious, such an one shall not be a pastor, or ruler, in the church of God; such were the Scribes and Pharisees among the Jews in Christ's time, and therefore rejected, Matthew 23:14 folly and covetousness are both bad things in a minister of the word, and greatly disqualify a man for that work and office: or else the sense of the whole is, that there should be such a discerning of men in Gospel times, and such faithfulness used towards them, that a wicked man should not be taken for a good man, nor in a flattering way be called one; but the precious and the vile should be distinguished, and called by their right names. The Targum is,

"the wicked man shall be no more called just, and they that transgress his word shall not be called mighty.''

e לא יקרא עוד לנבל נדיב "Nabal non vocabitur Nadib", Gataker. f Kimchi makes it to be the same with ותרן, a "prodigal person"; and so Ben Melech; but Elias, in his Tishbi, p. 93, 95. says there is a difference between them; ותרן, he says, is one that squanders his money in eating and drinking, and the like, which is a bad custom; but שוע is an honourable person, who gives his money to good purposes, and more than is meet, which is a good custom; and he is more praiseworthy than the liberal man.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

The vile person - Hebrew, ‘Fool.’ But the connection requires us to understand this as the opposite of liberal; and it means a person who is close, miserly, narrow-minded, covetous. This person is designated, very appropriately, as a fool.

Shall be no more called liberal - It is probable that under the reign of former princes, when all views of right and wrong had been perverted, people of unprincipled character had been the subjects of flattery, and names of virtue had been attributed to them by their friends and admirers. But it would not be so under the virtuous reign of the prince here celebrated. Things would be called by their right names, and flattery would not be allowed to attribute to people, qualities which they did not possess.

Nor the churl - The word ‘churl’ means properly a rude, surly, ill-bred man; then a miser, a niggard. The Hebrew word means properly a deceiver, a fraudulent man (Gesenius). The word avaricious, however, seems to suit the connection. Lowth renders it, ‘Niggard.’ Noyes, ‘Crafty.’

Bountiful - Flattery shall no more ascribe to a miserly man a character which does not belong to him.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

Verse Isaiah 32:5. The vile person shall no more be called liberal — The different epithets here employed require minute explanation.

The vile person - נבל nabal, the pampered, fattened, brainless fellow, who eats to live, and lives to eat; who will scarcely part with any thing, and that which he does give he gives with an evil eye and a grudging heart.

Liberal - נדיב nadib; the generous, openhearted, princely man, who writes on all his possessions, For myself and mankind, and lives only to get and to do good.

The churl - כילי kilai, the avaricious man; he who starves himself amidst his plenty, and will not take the necessaries of life for fear of lessening his stock.

Thus he differs from נבל nabal, who feeds himself to the full, and regards no one else; like the rich man in the Gospel. The avaricious man is called כילי kilai, from כי ki, for, לי li, myself; or contracted from כל col, all, and לי li, to myself: all is mine; all I have is my own; and all I can get is for myself: and yet this man enjoys nothing; he withholds

From back and belly too their proper fare:-

O cursed lust of gold, when for thy sake

The wretch throws up his interest in both worlds,

First starved in this, then damned in that to come!


Bountiful - שוע shoa, he who is abundantly rich; who rejoices in his plenty, and deals out to the distressed with a liberal hand.


 
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