Verse explainer
Wisdom isn't earned by the sharpest mind — it's given by God, and the place to receive it is his word.
For the LORD giveth wisdom: out of his mouth cometh knowledge and understanding.
BSBFor the LORD gives wisdom; from His mouth come knowledge and understanding.
The plain meaning
Proverbs 2 opens with a father urging his son to seek wisdom as if hunting for hidden treasure (vv. 1-4). Then v. 5 delivers the destination: you will understand the fear of the LORD and find the knowledge of God. Verse 6 is the reason — the LORD gives wisdom; it comes out of his mouth. The flow matters: the seeker's effort (vv. 1-4) and God's free giving (v. 6) are not in competition. Diligence in searching the word is exactly the channel through which the gift arrives. The word "giveth" is active and ongoing — not a one-time deposit but a continuous source. The phrase "out of his mouth" ties wisdom to speech, to revelation, to what God has actually said. You cannot think your way to it unaided; you receive it from him, through attending to what he has spoken.
The common misreading
What the commentators say
Gill distinguishes natural and spiritual wisdom but insists both are God's gift, not the fruit of human diligence alone. He reads "out of his mouth" as pointing to the full sweep of divine revelation — prophets, Christ himself, Scripture, and Gospel ministers — cautioning anyone who finds wisdom not to credit their own industry but the grace of God, who gives freely and never takes the gift back.
JFB connect the verse directly to James 1:5 — God is ready to give wisdom to those who ask — and read "out of his mouth" as meaning by revelation from him. The point is directional: wisdom has a source outside the human mind, and that source is reliably generous toward those who draw near.
The word behind it
"Wisdom." In Hebrew thought, chokmah is not abstract cleverness but skillful, ordered living rooted in knowing God. Gesenius' Lexicon traces it to a root meaning to be firm or solid — wisdom as something reliable to stand on. The fact that God is its subject here, actively giving it, rules out the idea that chokmah is something a person manufactures through effort alone. It is granted, not generated.
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