🔁 Synonymous Parallelism — “Restate”
The second line repeats or reinforces the first idea with fresh wording. Think of it as a double-tap for clarity.
“The LORD detests lying lips,
but he delights in people who are trustworthy.” — Prov 12:22
Restates the moral focus on truthful speech.
“A gentle answer turns away wrath,
but a harsh word stirs up anger.” — Prov 15:1
Same topic, two angles — the contrast here still serves a reinforcing restatement of the principle.
Reading tip: Underline key synonyms; you’ll see the poet’s emphasis pop.
⚖️ Antithetic Parallelism — “Contrast”
The second line gives the foil/opposite. It highlights the two paths (wise vs. fool; righteous vs. wicked).
“The wise in heart accept commands,
but a chattering fool comes to ruin.” — Prov 10:8
“Hatred stirs up conflict,
but love covers all wrongs.” — Prov 10:12
Reading tip: Make a two-column jot list: left = traits/outcomes of the wise; right = the fool. Patterns emerge fast.
⛓️ Synthetic (Constructive) Parallelism — “Advance”
The second line adds a step — cause→effect, condition→result, action→outcome.
“In all your ways acknowledge him,
and he will make your paths straight.” — Prov 3:6
“Commit to the LORD whatever you do,
and he will establish your plans.” — Prov 16:3
Reading tip: Look for verbs: the first line tells you what to do; the second shows what God does. (Look for two sided coins like: one side is your job/what you do; the other side is what God will do.)
🧪 Putting It Together — Compare Proverbs
Sometimes two adjacent proverbs push you to discern the moment:
“Do not answer a fool according to his folly… ” — Prov 26:4
“Answer a fool according to his folly… ” — Prov 26:5
The pairing is intentional: sometimes silence is wise; sometimes a corrective word is necessary. Remember: Proverbs is not a mechanical vending machine. You can't put your coin in, select a number, & out pops the result you want. The purpose of Proverbs or any parallel poetry is to train your mind to think and act appropriately for this particular situation!
Practice: Pick any 3–5 proverbs. Label each pair S = synonymous, A = antithetic, or Y = synthetic. Note how meaning deepens as you compare lines.
📚 References
For genre background, compare Psalms (e.g., Ps 1; Ps 19) where parallelism is also prominent.
Comments