Proverbs 20:21
An inheritance may be gotten hastily at the beginning; but the end thereof shall not be blessed.
Original Language Analysis
Cross References
Historical Context
In ancient Israel's agrarian economy, inheritance of land represented multi-generational wealth and identity. Normally, sons received their inheritance after their father's death, when they had matured through years of working the land under paternal guidance. The law of the prodigal son (Luke 15:12) shows that demanding early inheritance was culturally shameful—essentially wishing the father dead. The tragic story of Absalom, who seized power prematurely, illustrates this proverb's warning. Ancient Near Eastern wisdom literature consistently counseled patience in wealth-building and warned against schemes to get rich quickly. The book of Proverbs repeatedly contrasts the steady accumulation of wealth through diligence (Proverbs 13:11) with the fleeting gains of shortcuts. This wisdom remains remarkably relevant in modern contexts of lottery winnings, sudden fame, or inherited wealth without corresponding character formation.
Questions for Reflection
- Why does wealth obtained too easily or too early often lead to ruin rather than blessing?
- How does the process of earning wealth develop character qualities necessary for stewarding it wisely?
- What modern equivalents exist to 'hastily gotten inheritance'—ways people seek wealth without corresponding maturity?
- How should parents approach passing wealth to children—what preparation is needed beyond financial resources?
- In what ways might 'slow' wealth be more blessed than 'fast' wealth, even if the amounts are identical?
Analysis & Commentary
An inheritance may be gotten hastily at the beginning; but the end thereof shall not be blessed.
This proverb warns against wealth acquired too quickly or easily at life's start. The Hebrew nachalah (inheritance) typically referred to land or property passed from parents to children, but here describes any wealth obtained without corresponding effort or maturity. The phrase "gotten hastily" (mevorakhat barishonah, literally "hurried/greedy at the first") suggests both speed and improper eagerness—wealth seized prematurely or through questionable means.
The contrast between "beginning" (rishonah) and "end" (acharit) creates temporal tension: what seems fortunate initially proves cursed ultimately. The passive construction "shall not be blessed" (lo tevorakh) indicates divine disapproval—God doesn't bless wealth obtained wrongly or before one is ready to steward it wisely. This reflects the biblical principle that character development must match resource accumulation. Premature wealth—through inheritance, lottery, fraud, or shortcuts—often destroys rather than builds because the recipient lacks the wisdom, discipline, and maturity that normally accompany earned wealth.