🔊 LISTEN TO CHAPTER

In the Narrow Canon of the Ethiopian Orthodox Church, the Wisdom of Solomon is an unquestionably canonical book, listed among the five 'Books of Solomon', alongside Proverbs (divided into Messale and Täagsas), Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs. In the Catholic and Eastern Orthodox traditions, it is considered deuterocanonical, while in Protestantism it is classified as apocryphal.

Wisdom of Solomon

Chapter 18

1

But for your holy ones there was very great light. Their enemies heard their voices but did not see their forms, and counted them happy for not having suffered,

2

and were thankful that your holy ones, though previously wronged, were doing them no injury; and they begged their pardon for having been at variance with them.

3

Therefore you provided a flaming pillar of fire as a guide for your people's unknown journey and a harmless sun for their glorious wandering.

4

For their enemies deserved to be deprived of light and imprisoned in darkness, those who had kept your children imprisoned, through whom the imperishable light of the law was to be given to the world.

5

When they had resolved to kill the infants of your holy ones, one child, having been abandoned and saved, to convict them, you took away the multitude of their children and destroyed them all together in a mighty flood.

6

That night was made known beforehand to our ancestors, so that they might rejoice in sure knowledge of the oaths in which they trusted.

7

The deliverance of the righteous and the destruction of their enemies were expected by your people.

8

For by the same means with which you punished our enemies you called us to yourself and glorified us.

9

For in secret the holy children of good people offered sacrifices and agreed to the divine law, so that the saints would share alike the same things, both blessings and dangers, and already they were singing the praises of the ancestors.

10

But the discordant cry of their enemies echoed back, and their piteous lament for their children was spread abroad.

11

The slave was punished with the same penalty as the master, and the commoner suffered the same as the king.

12

All of them together, by one form of death, had countless dead; the living were not sufficient even to bury them, since in one instant their most valued children had been destroyed.

13

For though they had disbelieved everything because of their magic arts, yet, when their firstborn were destroyed, they acknowledged your people to be children of God.

14

For while gentle silence enveloped all things and night in its swift course was half gone,

15

your all-powerful word leaped from heaven, from the royal throne, into the midst of the land that was under a solemn curse, a stern warrior

16

carrying the sharp sword of your authentic command, and stood and filled all things with death, and while standing on the earth touched heaven.

17

Then at once apparitions in dreadful dreams greatly troubled them, and unexpected fears assailed them;

18

and one here and another there, hurled down half dead, made known why they were dying;

19

for the dreams that disturbed them had forewarned them of this, so that they might not perish without knowing why they suffered.

20

The experience of death touched also the righteous, and a plague came upon the multitude in the wilderness, but the wrath did not long continue.

21

For a blameless man was quick to act as their champion; he brought forward the shield of his ministry, prayer and propitiation by incense; he withstood the anger and put an end to the disaster, showing that he was your servant.

22

He conquered the wrath not by strength of body, not by force of arms, but by his word he subdued the punisher, appealing to the oaths and covenants given to our ancestors.

23

For when the dead had already fallen on one another in heaps, he intervened and held back the wrath and cut off its way to the living.

24

For on his long robe the whole world was depicted, and the glories of the ancestors were engraved on the four rows of stones, and your majesty was on the diadem upon his head.

25

To these the destroyer yielded, these he feared, for merely to test the wrath was enough.

18 / 19
Sabedoria de Salomão em Português — Bíblia Etíope | Kanon.Bible