Proverbs — Wisdom from the King
God's Own Manual for Living Wisely
A verse-by-verse exposition of all 31 chapters. King James Bible only.
“Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths.”
— Proverbs 3:5–6 KJV
Free Education
What Is the Book of Proverbs?
God's Wisdom Manual
The book of Proverbs is not a collection of inspirational sayings. It is the living God's own manual for navigating a world that has gone mad for foolishness. Here are tested truths — breathed out by the Spirit of God and made plain for every believer who dares to hear.
Who It's For
Proverbs 1:4–5 names the target: the simple, the young man, and even the wise man who is still learning. No entry requirements. No minimum IQ. God's school has one door, and it opens wide for anyone who will come in.
Why the King James Bible
Every word in this exposition comes from the Authorized King James Bible of 1611. Not a paraphrase. Not a modern version. The KJV has served the church for over four hundred years, and the language of the KJV carries a weight and precision that modern translations cannot match.
Free Resources
Three Free Downloads — No Catch
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31 Verses, 31 Days
One power verse from each of the 31 chapters of Proverbs — a complete daily reading plan on a single printable page.
The Fear of the LORD
A one-page deep dive into the foundational theme of the entire book: what the fear of the LORD actually means, and why it changes everything.
The Wisdom Checklist
A printable checklist of 30+ practical wisdom principles from Proverbs, organized by life category: speech, money, work, family, pride, and the heart.
The Story Behind the Book
The Wisest Man Who Ever Fell
Solomon was the wisest man who ever lived — and he did not get that way by accident. When God told him to ask for anything he wanted, Solomon asked for wisdom to lead God's people. God was so pleased with that request that He gave the wisdom and threw in the riches and honor Solomon never asked for. Kings and queens traveled from the ends of the earth just to hear him speak.
But Solomon also fell. Hard. Later in life he chased everything this world offers — and it wrecked him for a season. So when Solomon warns you in Proverbs about the path that looks good and ends in death, he is not guessing. He walked it. God, in His mercy, used a man with scars to write the book on avoiding them.
The book of Proverbs is Solomon's letter to his sons — and through the inspiration of the Holy Spirit, it became God's letter to every generation that followed.
“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom: and knowledge of the holy is understanding.”
— Proverbs 9:10 KJV
Sample Content
A Look Inside Five Chapters
Every chapter in the book follows this pattern — open the verse, trace it through Scripture, bring it home.
Chapter 1 — Where Wisdom Begins
The fear of the LORD as the foundation of all knowledge
“The fear of the LORD is the beginning of knowledge: but fools despise wisdom and instruction.”
— Proverbs 1:7 KJV
A proverb is wisdom packed down small so you can carry it. Think of it like a protein bar — a full meal pressed into something that fits in your pocket. A proverb takes a truth big enough to fill a book and compresses it into one line you can memorize in the truck, on the job site, or walking to class — and it expands back to full size exactly when you need it.
If Proverbs were a building, verse 7 is the foundation poured under all thirty-one chapters. “The fear of the LORD” — this is not the fear of a kid flinching from an angry father. It is reverence: the settled, sober recognition that God is high and holy and you are not. Awe of what God is, and love for what God has done — those two together are the gravity that keeps a life in orbit. Lose them, and you drift.
Chapter 3 — Trust, Money, and the Father's Hand
Leaning your full weight on God, not on your own understanding
“Trust in the LORD with all thine heart; and lean not unto thine own understanding. In all thy ways acknowledge him, and he shall direct thy paths.”
— Proverbs 3:5–6 KJV
Look at the verbs. Trust, in this verse, is a whole-body word — leaning your full weight on something, the way you lean on a ladder you've decided is sound. Not a hand resting on it while your feet stay planted somewhere else. All your weight. With all thine heart — because a divided trust is no trust at all.
“And lean not unto thine own understanding.” Here is the oldest sin in the world wearing modern clothes. Self-reliance is the one religion our culture preaches without embarrassment. Solomon says the opposite — use your understanding; just don't lean on it. It is a fine instrument and a terrible foundation. Your own thinking has incomplete data, a built-in bias toward what you want, and zero visibility past the next hour.
Chapter 8 — Wisdom Speaks for Herself
Wisdom crying out at noon from the highest ground in the city
“For wisdom is better than rubies; and all the things that may be desired are not to be compared to it.”
— Proverbs 8:11 KJV
Chapter 7 ended in the dark — a whisper at a corner, a hidden house, a door going down to the chambers of death. Chapter 8 opens at sunrise on the opposite picture: another woman's voice, but this one shouting — in broad daylight, from the highest ground in the city, at the gates where everyone passes. The strange woman whispered to one boy at midnight. Wisdom cries out to the whole human race at noon.
Wisdom's price point: above silver, above choice gold, above rubies, above all the things that may be desired. Here is the old illustration: shipwrecked settlers land on a fertile island with seed in their hands and one season to plant — and discover a gold mine. They dig all spring and summer. And when the famine comes, they die of want in the middle of their treasure. Every man spends his one planting season on something. A fortune in the wrong commodity is just a heavier thing to starve next to.
Chapter 22 — A Good Name, a Trained Child
Character worth more than riches, and training that prints on the soul
“Train up a child in the way he should go: and when he is old, he will not depart from it.”
— Proverbs 22:6 KJV
“A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favour rather than silver and gold.” Set your priorities by this verse and you will never be poor. A good name — a character men can trust — is worth more than great riches, and being genuinely loved is worth more than silver and gold.
“Train” is more than teach — there can be teaching without training, but never training without teaching; training is what gets printed on the soul, the way a young fruit tree is patiently nailed to the wall until its branches grow the right direction. Begin sooner than you think you can: if the child is too young to be taught to read, he is not too young to be taught to obey. And the one thing that wrecks it all is inconsistency — bring the child bread with one hand and poison with the other, beckoning him toward heaven with your words while your life quietly leads him the other way.
Chapter 31 — A Mother's Counsel and a Woman of God
The book's final answer: what wisdom looks like when it is actually lived
“Favour is deceitful, and beauty is vain: but a woman that feareth the LORD, she shall be praised.”
— Proverbs 31:30 KJV
We have come to the end. Thirty chapters of hard wisdom on the tongue, the heart, the family, money, anger, and the fear of the LORD — and now the book closes with a chapter unlike any other. There is a mother speaking to a king. And then there is a portrait of a woman whose life is the answer to the whole book's question: what does wisdom look like when it is actually lived?
Lemuel's mother does what the courtiers will not — she names the danger plainly and calls her son to a higher standard than appetite. If you had a praying mother, you already know what this verse means. And if you had a mother who planted the Word of God in you when you were small — whether she is still living or long gone — you are carrying something that kings needed.
“Where there is no vision, the people perish: but he that keepeth the law, happy is he.”
— Proverbs 29:18 KJV
All 31 Chapters
The Full Sweep of Proverbs
Every chapter in the book carries an original illustration. Hover to pause.
“A good name is rather to be chosen than great riches, and loving favour rather than silver and gold.”
— Proverbs 22:1 KJV
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