Wisdom 19
The wicked were consumed by anger and failed to repent, while the righteous sought them out and mourned their fate. God led the Israelites through the Red Sea and provided for them, but punished the Egyptians for their wickedness. The Egyptians suffered various plagues, including the infestation of frogs and flies, and were ultimately struck with blindness. Despite the chaos, the elements were transformed to aid the Israelites, with fire and water behaving in unusual ways to protect them and their food.
1But the impious, all the way to the very end, were overcome by anger without mercy. Indeed, he knew beforehand even their future2Yet, seeing that they might have repented, so that they would be led by him and be sent forth with great concern, the just sought the impious, while regretting their deeds3For, while the just were still holding grief in their hands and weeping at the tombs of the dead, these others took upon themselves another senseless thought, and they cast out the legislators and pursued them as if they were fugitives4For a fitting necessity was leading them to this end, and they were losing the remembrance of those things which had happened, so that what was lacking in the sufferings of the conflict might be completed by the punishment5and so that your people, indeed, might wonderfully pass through, but these others might find a new death6For every creature according to its kind was fashioned again as from the beginning, diligently serving your teachings, so that your children would be preserved unharmed7For a cloud overshadowed their camp, and where water was before, dry land appeared, and in the Red Sea, a way without hindrance, and out of the great deep, a level field sprung up8through which the whole nation passed, protected by your hand, seeing your miracles and wonders9For they consumed food like horses, and they leapt about like lambs, praising you, O Lord, who had freed them10For they were still mindful of those things which had happened during the time of their sojourn, how, instead of cattle, the earth brought forth flies, and instead of fish, the river cast up a multitude of frogs11And, lastly, they saw a new kind of bird, when, being led by their desire, they demanded a feast of meat12For, to console their loss, the quail came up to them from the sea, and yet troubles overcame the sinners, though they were not without the evidence of what had happened before by the power of lightning, for they suffered justly according to their own wickedness13And indeed, they set up a more detestable inhospitality. Certainly, some have refused to receive unknown foreigners, but these others were drafting good guests into servitude14and not only foreigners, but also those who had been under their care, because they were reluctantly sheltering the outsiders15Yet whoever had sheltered them with gladness, by making use of the very same justice, they afflicted with the most severe sorrow16Yet they were struck with blindness, like someone brought before the gates of justice, so that they were suddenly covered with darkness, and each one was left searching for the threshold of his front door17For the elements in themselves are in the process of being changed, just as when the sound of a musical instrument is being altered in quality, yet each one keeps its own sound, from where it is considered to be and according to its fixed appearance18For the countryside was transformed by water, and things which were swimming, crossed over the land19Fire prevailed in the midst of water, beyond its own power, and the water forgot its quenching nature20On the other hand, the flames did not trouble the bodies of the mortal animals walking around, nor did they melt that good food, which is as easily melted as ice. For in all things, O Lord, you magnified your people, and honored them, and did not despise them, but at every time and in every place, you assisted them
Share this chapter