Wisdom of Solomon (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture)
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About this ebook
Written from a standpoint of faith in the Holy Spirit's inspiration of Scripture, CCSS Old Testament commentaries are designed for preaching, teaching, and applying Scripture to Christian life today. Accessibly written yet substantive, they include quotes from church documents, church fathers, and saints and are packed with features that make them particularly useful to those doing ministry in Catholic parishes.
General editors for the series are Mary Healy (Sacred Heart Major Seminary), Mark Giszczak (Augustine Institute), and Peter S. Williamson (Sacred Heart Major Seminary).
Mark Giszczak
Mark Giszczak (PhD, Catholic University of America) is professor of Sacred Scripture at the Augustine Institute in Greenwood Village, Colorado. He is the author of Bible Translation and the Making of the ESV Catholic Edition and Light on the Dark Passages of Scripture. He has also contributed to the Augustine Institute's Bible-in-a-Year and the Ignatius Catholic Study Bible.
Read more from Mark Giszczak
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Wisdom of Solomon (Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture) - Mark Giszczak
Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture
SERIES EDITORS
Mary Healy
Mark Giszczak
Peter S. Williamson
CONSULTING EDITORS
Gary Anderson, University of Notre Dame
John Bergsma, Franciscan University of Steubenville
Michael Byrnes, Archbishop of Agaña
Nuria Calduch-Benages, Secretary of the Pontifical Biblical Commission
Scott Hahn, Franciscan University of Steubenville
Michael Kolarcik, SJ, Pontifical Biblical Institute
Jan Liesen, Bishop of Breda
Gregory Polan, OSB, Abbot Primate of the Benedictine Confederation
Stephen D. Ryan, OP, Dominican House of Studies
Gregory Vall, Notre Dame Seminary
© 2024 by Mark Giszczak
Published by Baker Academic
a division of Baker Publishing Group
www.bakeracademic.com
Ebook edition created 2024
All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, stored in a retrieval system, or transmitted in any form or by any means—for example, electronic, photocopy, recording—without the prior written permission of the publisher. The only exception is brief quotations in printed reviews.
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data is on file at the Library of Congress, Washington, DC.
ISBN 978-1-4934-4428-1
Nihil Obstat:
Father Michael Rapp, S.S.L.
Censor Librorum
March 10, 2023
Imprimatur:
Most Reverend Samuel J. Aquila, S.T.L.
Archbishop of Denver
Denver, Colorado, USA
March 10, 2023
Unless indicated otherwise, Scripture quotations are from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible—Second Catholic Edition (Ignatius Edition) Copyright © 2006 National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Scripture quotations labeled ESV-CE are from The ESV Catholic Edition with Deuterocanonical Books, copyright © 2017 by Crossway, a publishing ministry of Good News Publishers. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations labeled NABRE are from the New American Bible, revised edition © 2010, 1991, 1986, 1970 Confraternity of Christian Doctrine, Washington, DC, and are used by permission of the copyright owner. All rights reserved. No part of the New American Bible may be reproduced in any form without permission in writing from the copyright owner.
Scripture quotations labeled NETS are from A New English Translation of the Septuagint, © 2007 by the International Organization for Septuagint and Cognate Studies, Inc. Used by permission of Oxford University Press. All rights reserved.
Scripture quotations labeled RSV are from the Revised Standard Version of the Bible, copyright 1946, 1952 [2nd edition, 1971] National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Baker Publishing Group publications use paper produced from sustainable forestry practices and post-consumer waste whenever possible.
To my mother
Rebecca C. Giszczak
Wisdom 7:11–12
Contents
Half Title Page 1
Series Page 2
Title Page 3
Copyright Page 4
Dedication 5
Illustrations 9
Editors’ Preface 11
Abbreviations 15
Introduction to Wisdom of Solomon 17
Part 1: Life and Death (1:1–6:21) 31
Love Righteousness (1:1–15) 33
Ungodly Reasoning (1:16–2:24) 40
The Just and the Unjust (3:1–4:20) 50
The Judgment of the Ungodly and the Reward of the Righteous (5:1–23) 64
Honor Wisdom (6:1–21) 71
Part 2: Solomon’s Pursuit of Wisdom (6:22–9:18) 79
Solomon’s Quest for Wisdom (6:22–8:1) 81
Solomon’s Love for Wisdom (8:2–21) 93
Solomon’s Prayer for Wisdom (9:1–18) 100
Part 3: Book of History (10:1–19:22) 107
Prologue: Wisdom from Adam to Moses (10:1–21) 109
Water from the Rock versus River of Blood (11:1–14) 117
Excursus: God’s Mercy toward Egyptians and Canaanites (11:15–12:27) 122
Excursus: Against Idol Worship (13:1–15:19) 136
Unappetizing Animals versus Delicious Quail (16:1–4) 156
Lethal Creatures versus Saving Bronze Serpent (16:5–14) 158
Storms of Wrath versus Manna from Heaven (16:15–29) 163
Plague of Darkness versus Pillar of Light (17:1–18:4) 169
Death of the Firstborn versus Israel’s Deliverance from Death (18:5–25) 178
Drowning in the Sea versus Being Saved by the Sea (19:1–9) 185
Epilogue: Summary and Doxology (19:10–22) 189
Suggested Resources 197
Glossary 199
Index of Pastoral Topics 201
Index of Sidebars 203
Back Cover 204
Illustrations
Figure 1. Alexander the Great 20
Figure 2. Map of Alexandria 21
Figure 3. Marble bust of Serapis 23
Figure 4. Pillar of Pompey in Alexandria 24
Figure 5. Figure of Isis-Aphrodite 98
Figure 6. Aphrodite stone at Paphos 141
Figure 7. A lararium 142
Figure 8. Great Lighthouse of Alexandria 143
Figure 9. Alexandrian ship 144
Figure 10. Great Library of Alexandria 193
Editors’ Preface
The Church has always venerated the divine Scriptures just as she venerates the body of the Lord. . . . All the preaching of the Church should be nourished and governed by Sacred Scripture. For in the sacred books, the Father who is in heaven meets His children with great love and speaks with them; and the power and goodness in the word of God is so great that it stands as the support and energy of the Church, the strength of faith for her sons and daughters, the food of the soul, a pure and perennial fountain of spiritual life.
Second Vatican Council, Dei Verbum 21
Did not our hearts burn within us while he talked to us on the road, while he opened to us the Scriptures?
Luke 24:32
The Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture Old Testament series aims to serve the ministry of the Word of God in the life and mission of the Church. Since the Second Vatican Council, Catholics have demonstrated an increasing hunger to study Scripture in depth and in a way that reveals its relationship to liturgy, evangelization, catechesis, theology, and personal and communal life. This series responds to that desire by providing accessible yet substantive commentary on the books of the Old Testament, drawn from the best of contemporary biblical scholarship as well as the rich treasury of the Church’s tradition. These volumes seek to offer scholarship illumined by faith, in the conviction that the ultimate aim of biblical interpretation is to discover what God has revealed and is still speaking through the sacred text. Central to our approach are the principles taught by Vatican II: first, the use of historical and literary methods to discern what the biblical authors intended to express; second, prayerful theological reflection to understand the sacred text in accord with the same Spirit by whom it was written
—that is, in light of the content and unity of the whole Scripture, the living tradition of the Church, and the analogy of faith (Dei Verbum 12).
The Catholic Commentary on Sacred Scripture is written for those engaged in or training for pastoral ministry and others interested in studying Scripture to understand their faith more deeply, to nourish their spiritual life, or to share the good news with others. With this in mind, the authors focus on the meaning of the text for faith and life rather than on the technical questions that occupy scholars, and they explain the Bible in ordinary language that does not require translation
for preaching and catechesis. Although this series is written from the perspective of Catholic faith, its authors draw on the interpretation of Protestant and Orthodox scholars and hope these volumes will serve Christians of other traditions as well.
A variety of features are designed to make the commentary as useful as possible. Each volume includes the biblical text of the Revised Standard Version, Second Catholic Edition (RSV-2CE). This translation follows in the English Bible tradition largely embodied in the King James Version and conforms to Vatican guidelines given in Liturgiam authenticam (2001). Each unit of the biblical text is followed by a list of references to relevant Scripture passages, Catechism sections, and uses in the Roman Lectionary. The exegesis that follows aims to explain in a clear and engaging way the meaning of the text in its original historical context as well as its perennial meaning for Christians. Reflection and Application
sections help readers apply Scripture to Christian life today by responding to questions that the text raises, offering spiritual interpretations drawn from Christian tradition or providing suggestions for the use of the biblical text in catechesis, preaching, or other forms of pastoral ministry. In the Light of Christ
sections illustrate how certain passages prefigure, prophesy, or point forward to Christ and the new covenant.
Interspersed throughout the commentary are Biblical Background sidebars that present historical, literary, or theological information and Living Tradition sidebars that offer pertinent material from the postbiblical Christian tradition, including quotations from Church documents and from the writings of saints and Church Fathers. The Biblical Background sidebars are indicated by a photo of urns that were excavated in Jerusalem, signifying the importance of historical study in understanding the sacred text. The Living Tradition sidebars are indicated by an image of Eadwine, a twelfth-century monk and scribe, signifying the growth in the Church’s understanding that comes by the grace of the Holy Spirit as believers study and ponder the word of God in their hearts (see Dei Verbum 8).
A glossary is located in the back of each volume for easy reference. The glossary explains key terms from the biblical text as well as theological or exegetical terms, which are marked in the commentary with a cross (†). A list of suggested resources, an index of pastoral topics, and an index of sidebars are included to enhance the usefulness of these volumes. Further resources can be found at the series website, www.CatholicScriptureCommentary.com.
It is our desire and prayer that these volumes be of service so that more and more the word of the Lord may speed on and triumph
(2 Thess 3:1) in the Church and throughout the world.
Mary Healy
Mark Giszczak
Peter S. Williamson
Abbreviations
Books of the Old Testament
Books of the New Testament
Introduction to Wisdom of Solomon
The Wisdom of Solomon is an invitation to a pursuit of God that involves both the mind and the heart. Because it was the last book of the Old Testament to be written, Wisdom serves as a bridge from the Old Testament to the New. In a unique way, this book integrates faith and reason in its approach to God, bringing together the insights of both Greek philosophy and God’s revelation to Israel. It encourages us to seek †wisdom, which is to seek God. If we respond to the invitation, we are promised royal authority, glory, and †immortality. The book also previews the experience of God’s judgment after †death, promising the reward of immortality to the righteous and punishment to the wicked. It explains that wisdom is not merely practical knowledge but a gift from God that brings us to know him. Using examples from biblical history—primarily from the exodus—Wisdom shows how God teaches us through cause and effect to choose righteousness and reject wickedness.
The Wisdom of Solomon belongs to the wisdom literature
of the Old Testament, a collection of books devoted to the practical application of God’s principles for human life (Proverbs, Sirach) and to considering the puzzling questions posed by it (Job, Ecclesiastes). While these books collect everyday advice on self-discipline, daily work, and personal relationships, they are fundamentally oriented toward God. The path of wisdom begins with fear of the LORD
(Prov 9:10) and ultimately leads upward to life
(Prov 15:24). Wisdom itself is hard to define. A nonbiblical Jewish text that is contemporaneous with Wisdom of Solomon, 4 Maccabees, offers the following: Wisdom, I submit, is knowledge of things divine and human, and of their causes.
1 Similarly, St. Thomas Aquinas will name wisdom as the highest of intellectual virtues because wisdom considers the Supreme Cause, which is God.
2 In its essence, wisdom has three distinct yet related meanings: (1) God’s perfect knowledge, (2) the knowledge of causes that human beings can come to possess, and (3) the habitual seeking of knowledge with integrity of heart. The Wisdom of Solomon proposes a way of knowing God that begins with honest seeking after truth, leads to embracing what is found on this path, and eventually arrives at union with wisdom itself in God.
Because of this overlap between divinity and wisdom, the statements about wisdom’s identity in relation to God can be confusing in this book. On the one hand, wisdom is the path to God: readers are invited to embrace the most sincere desire for instruction
(Wis 6:17). On the other hand, wisdom is the destination: a holy and disciplined spirit
(1:5), who knows and understands all things
(9:11). As in other Old Testament texts, wisdom is personified as a woman. While wisdom is not explicitly identified with God, she is close at his side (9:9), is given by God (9:17), and carries out his saving will (10:1–21).
The book of Wisdom is philosophical in that it invites its audience to love wisdom, and it is historical in that it reflects on the past. It is a call to leave behind the false reasoning of the ungodly and seek true wisdom from above. It invites readers to understand biblical events from God’s perspective, to reflect on his wonderful deeds and draw insight from how he has dealt with his people. If we seek wisdom and learn the lessons that God teaches through salvation history, we will one day obtain glory and immortality in union with him.
Title and Canonical Status
The Wisdom of Solomon is sometimes called The Book of Wisdom,
or simply Wisdom.
Since the book was extant only in Greek, it was included in the †Septuagint but never in the Hebrew Bible. St. Paul might allude to the book, which would seem to indicate his approval of its content (compare, e.g., Rom 9:21 and Wis 15:7). While it enjoyed some authority in early Judaism, it was included only in the Christian canon. It is thus grouped with the other deuterocanonical books of the Old Testament, which are regarded as canonical by the Catholic and Orthodox Churches but excluded from the canon by Protestants. While Origen (ca. 185–254) and St. Jerome (ca. 347–420) express some doubt about its canonicity, it is included in the Muratorian Canon (ca. 170–200) and enthusiastically approved by St. Augustine (354–430). Its canonicity is recognized by the Council of Hippo (393) and the Council of Carthage (397), and definitively affirmed by the Council of Trent (1545–63). It appears in the Lectionary eight times in the three-year Sunday cycle and eight times in the two-year weekday cycle.
Who Wrote Wisdom?
The Wisdom of Solomon does not disclose the name of its author. While part of it is clearly written in Solomon’s voice (6:22–9:18; perhaps also 1:1–15), Solomon is certainly not the author of the book. Solomon’s voice appears prominently in first-person statements that refer to elements of his biography known from 1 Kings 2–11, such as his prayer for wisdom (Wis 9:1–18) and the command to build the temple (9:8). This book was written in the Greek language during the †Hellenistic era (dated from the death of Alexander the Great in 323 BC to the rise of the Roman Empire in the late first century BC). Written nine centuries after Solomon, the book is pseudonymous, attributed to the great king yet obviously not written by him. This customary practice of writing books and attributing them to renowned individuals was a way of honoring them and invoking their authority. Here Solomon’s voice invites the reader to join him on the great quest for wisdom.
The author was a philosophically inclined, law-observant Jew (Wis 12:21–22). This learned teacher of both Hebrew and Greek traditions likely lived in the largest Jewish community at the time. That community dwelt in Alexandria in Egypt and produced a considerable amount of literature, including the Greek Septuagint translation of the Old Testament, 3 and 4 Maccabees, and the Letter of Aristeas. In addition, we have fragments from the second-century BC Jewish philosopher Aristobulus, who lived in Alexandria (see the sidebar Aristobulus,
p. 103). Likewise, the many works of the prolific first-century AD Jewish writer †Philo (ca. 20 BC–50 AD) come from this city. This robust Jewish literary culture in Alexandria, the writer’s evident familiarity with Greek philosophy, and the extensive references to Egypt and Egyptian worship (chaps. 11–19)—perhaps even to Roman emperor worship (14:16–22)—combine to place the Wisdom of Solomon in late Hellenistic Alexandria. While some scholars have suggested the possibility that Aristobulus or Philo might be the author of the book, it is best to admit that his name remains unknown.
Alexandria
Alexandria in Egypt was the greatest city of Hellenistic civilization. Though Alexander the Great (356–323 BC) founded it in 331 BC, the bulk of the city was built after his death. Filled with Greek colonists who arrived at its Mediterranean harbor, the city soon became the most populous city of its time. Its great lighthouse was one of the Seven Wonders of the Ancient World. Alexandria was adopted as the capital of the Ptolemaic kingdom, whose rulers, along with a community of scholars, gathered and maintained the largest collection of scrolls in the world at the Museum and Great Library of Alexandria. Under the patronage of Ptolemy II Philadelphus (308–246 BC), among other rulers, Alexandria became the premier center of Greek culture, learning, and literary production in the Hellenistic period (323–30 BC).
fig020Figure 1. Detail of Alexander the Great (356–323 BC) from Pompeii. Alexander founded the city of Alexandria and named it after himself. [Photo: Andreas Wolochow / Shutterstock.com]
The city also contained the largest Jewish community in the world, which organized itself into a semiautonomous politeuma (self-governing community) that consisted of many synagogues, including a great basilica-synagogue of legendary proportions.3 Though the Jews enjoyed the peace, privilege, and education that the Hellenistic world offered, they were not totally assimilated into the Greek citizenry. When the Ptolemaic kingdom was incorporated into the Roman Empire (30 BC), the emperor Augustus (63 BC–AD 14) imposed a poll tax (laographia) that divided the inhabitants of Alexandria into two groups: those who were exempt from the tax and those who had to pay it.4 The Greek citizens were exempt, while the Egyptians, as second-class citizens, were forced to pay. However, the Jews, who had previously enjoyed a certain equality with the Greeks, were now reduced in status and forced to pay the tax. By law, they were regarded as beneath the Greeks and on par with the Egyptians. The Jews objected to this degradation of their status, while the Greeks supported it. The conflict later developed into a full-scale persecution against the Jews of Alexandria in AD 38, which prompted a Jewish delegation that included the famous Philo to visit the emperor Caligula (reigned AD 37–41) in Rome to plead their case.5 These concerns over the status of the Jews form the background for Wisdom’s emphatic distinction between the righteous and unrighteous, the wise and the foolish, the Hebrews and the Egyptians.
fig021Figure 2. Map of Alexandria. [© Baker Publishing Group]
Purpose and Audience
The purpose of the Wisdom of Solomon depends on the audience it was written for. Since it is addressed to kings and rulers (1:1; 6:1) in the voice of King Solomon, commentators have sometimes argued that the book is directed to Gentile readers, perhaps even Gentile rulers. Its balance of universal concern (18:4) and a particular focus on the Jewish people is similar to Philo’s insistence to Gentile readers that Jewish religion is compatible with a more universal perspective—that the high priest, indeed, makes offerings for all humanity, not just the Jews.6
The pluralistic environment of a big city like Alexandria presented many temptations for young Jewish people to lose their faith and assimilate. Since the book’s