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1. Pro 10:25 – “As the whirlwind passeth, so is the wicked no more: but the righteous is an everlasting foundation.”
- As the whirlwind passeth, so is the wicked no more:
- Whirlwind n. – 1. A whirling or rotating wind; an atmospheric eddy or vortex; a body of air moving rapidly in a circular or upward spiral course around a vertical or slightly inclined axis which has also a progressive motion over the surface of land or water.
- Pass v. – 1. a. To go on, move onward, proceed; to make one’s way.
- As a tornado passes and is no more, so it is with the wicked.
- So adv. – II. Placed at the beginning of a clause with continuative force, and freq. preceded by and. Denoting similarity or parallelism in some respect between two facts, actions, etc.
- There is much similarity between whirlwinds and the wicked.
- Consider the similarity between a passing whirlwind (tornado) and the wicked.
- As the time a whirlwind spends in a certain area is relatively short, so is the time of the wicked on earth (Psa 37:10).
- As a whirlwind leaves destruction in its wake (Pro 1:27), so do the wicked (Rom 3:16).
- As a whirlwind is uncontrollable, so are the wicked who are froward (ungovernable) (Pro 2:15).
- As a whirlwind is used by God as a judgment against sinners (Jer 30:23; Nah 1:3), so are the wicked used likewise (Psa 17:13-14; Isa 10:5).
- When the time of the wicked is expired they will be “no more” on this earth and will not be remembered (Psa 37:35-36; Job 24:20, 24; Ecc 8:10).
- but the righteous is an everlasting foundation.
- Like a whirlwind, the wicked only spend a short time on this earth wreaking mayhem, havoc, suffering, and trouble.
- The righteous, conversely, is an everlasting foundation.
- Righteous adj. – 1. a. Of persons: Just, upright, virtuous; guiltless, sinless; conforming to the standard of the divine or the moral law; acting rightly or justly.
- Everlasting adj. – a. Lasting for ever; infinite in future duration; endless; = ETERNAL A. 3.
- Foundation n. – 1. The action of founding or building upon a firm substructure; the state or fact of being founded. 2. fig. The action of establishing, instituting, or constituting on a permanent basis. 6. fig. a. A basis or groundwork on which something (immaterial) is raised or by which it is supported or confirmed; an underlying ground or principle; the basis on which a story, fiction, or the like is founded.
- In other words, just and upright men who conform themselves to God’s law show themselves to be established on a permanent basis, and not built on a sandy foundation like the wicked who do not endure.
- The wicked will be cut off, but the righteous will inherit the earth (Psa 37:9).
- The righteous man’s life is built upon a firm foundation which will endure into eternity (Mat 7:24-25).
- The time the righteous spend on earth may be short, but their works follow them into eternity (Rev 14:13).
- They have everlasting life (Joh 6:47), and an eternal inheritance (Heb 9:15).
- They will be eternally remembered by God (Psa 112:6).