Proverbs 23:35
They have stricken me, shalt thou say, and I was not sick; they have beaten me, and I felt it not: when shall I awake? I will seek it yet again.
Original Language Analysis
Cross References
Historical Context
Alcoholism isn't modern—ancients recognized addiction's power. Proverbs 23:29-35 describes it clinically: woe, sorrow, wounds, redness of eyes (verse 29), impaired judgment (verse 33), disorientation (verse 34), numbness to injury (verse 35a), and compulsive drinking despite consequences (verse 35b). The description matches modern addiction patterns. Ancient Near Eastern cultures struggled with drunkenness. Babylon's fall came during drunken feast (Daniel 5:1-4). Persian kings made foolish decisions while drunk (Esther 1:10-11). Greek symposia celebrated intoxication. Roman banquets often became drunken orgies. Early Christians lived in cultures where drunkenness was normalized, making Paul's commands countercultural. Church history records both alcoholism among Christians (requiring discipline) and temperance movements (sometimes legalistic). The biblical pattern is clear: drunkenness enslaves and destroys; sobriety liberates and honors God.
Questions for Reflection
- Do you see addictive patterns in your life—alcohol, substances, behaviors—where you return despite negative consequences?
- How does recognizing addiction as slavery (not merely weakness) change your approach to breaking free?
- What role can Christian community play in helping you overcome enslaving habits?
Related Resources
Explore related topics, people, and study resources to deepen your understanding of this passage.
Analysis & Commentary
This verse concludes the drunkenness warning with tragic irony. The drunk speaks: 'They have stricken me... and I was not sick; they have beaten me, and I felt it not' (הִכּוּנִי בַל־חָלִיתִי הֲלָמוּנִי בַּל־יָדָעְתִּי/hikkuni val-chaliti halamuni val-yada'ti, they struck me—I didn't become ill; they beat me—I didn't know it) describes alcohol's numbing effect. Physical harm goes unfelt due to intoxication. This seems advantageous but is actually dangerous—pain signals injury requiring attention. The drunk's final words reveal addiction: 'when shall I awake? I will seek it yet again' (מָתַי אָקִיץ אוֹסִיף אֲבַקְשֶׁנּוּ עוֹד/matay aqitz osif avaqshennu od, when will I wake up? I will add—I will seek it again). Despite misery, injury, and consequences, the drunk plans to drink again. This depicts addiction's enslaving power. Paul warns: 'be not drunk with wine, wherein is excess' (Ephesians 5:18). The Greek ἀσωτία (asotia, excess/debauchery) indicates ruinous wastefulness.