Add parallel Print Page Options

15     for righteousness is immortal.[a]

Wisdom or the Meaning of Our Destiny as Human Beings[b]

The Covenant with Death

Born by Chance and Destined for Oblivion?[c]

16 But the godless by their words and deeds summoned death,
    regarded it as a friend, and longed for it.
They made a covenant with it
    since they deserve to be in its company.[d]

Read full chapter

Footnotes

  1. Wisdom 1:15 The one who is righteous is assured of immortality. The Latin version adds: “but injustice acquires death.”
  2. Wisdom 1:16 In the terminology of the ancients, to speak of Wisdom is to seek to individualize the real destiny of human beings. Everyone desires to live and be happy; life and civilization offer possibilities and attractions, but so do illusion, error, and perversion. This first part of the Book (1:16—5:23) enables the Old Testament to advance in the reflection on the human condition, opening perspectives on eternity.
  3. Wisdom 1:16 The stage is now given to the blasphemer who sings the praises of nothingness. In order to avoid the responsibility of being a human being, he strives to prove the absurd, to destroy the value of life and sully the mystery of existence so that he will no longer have to be astounded and perhaps have to acknowledge a God who takes an interest in the destiny of human beings.
  4. Wisdom 1:16 Deserve to be in its company: literally, “deserve to belong to its portion.” In other words, the godless belong to death as Israel belongs to God (see Deut 32:9; 2 Mac 1:26; Zec 2:16) and as God belongs to those who are faithful to him (see Pss 16:5; 73:26; 142:6).