The following table shows the Hebrew text[4][5] of Proverbs 24 with vowels alongside an English translation based upon the JPS 1917 translation (now in the public domain).
If thou sayest: ‘Behold, we knew not this’, Doth not He that weigheth the hearts consider it? And He that keepeth thy soul, doth not He know it? And shall not He render to every man according to his works?
Verses 1–22 is a part of the third collection in the book of Proverbs (comprising Proverbs 22:17–24:22), which consists of seven instructions of various lengths:[8]
1st instruction (22:17–23:11)
2nd instruction (23:12–18)
3rd instruction (23:19–21)
4th instruction (23:22–25)
5th instruction (23:26–24:12)
6th instruction (24:13–20) and
7th instruction (24:21–22)
The sayings are predominantly in the form of synonymous parallelism, preceded by a general superscription of the entire collection in 22:17a: "The words of the wise" (or "Sayings of the Wise").[8] This collection consists of an introduction that the youths should be instructed and exhorted to listen to and obey their "teachers" (parents), followed by a series of admonitions and prohibitions coupled with a variety of clauses,[8] primarily presented in short parental instructions (cf. 23:15, 22; 24:13, 21).[9]
The remaining verses of this chapter (24:23–34) form the fourth collection in the book, introduced by a superscription "These also are sayings of the wise" (24:23a).[10]
Sayings of the Wise (24:1–22)
This section concludes a collection titled "Sayings of the Wise" (22:17), with 3 sets of instruction, one as a continuation from Proverbs 23:16.until 24:12, followed by 24:13–20 and 24:21–22.[8] The instructions are likely given by a teacher in the context of a royal school during the monarchical period.[11] The Greek Septuagint version contains five additional verses after verse 22, mainly on 'the wrath of
the king'.[12]
The 'building of the house' in verses 3-4 parallels to the building of the house by woman Wisdom in Proverbs 9:1, here stating that wisdom is 'the key to the prosperity of the family', as well as 'the key to healthy and harmonious family relationships'.[9]
"For": is translated from the Hebrew clause כִּי, ki, which position at the beginning of the sentence could be interpreted as 'temporal, conditional, or emphatic'; that is 'the righteous keep getting up and going again'[15]
Further sayings of the Wise (24:23–34)
The whole section is the fourth collection in the book of Proverbs, consisting of:[10]
a superscription (24:23a; "These also are sayings of the wise")
a discourse on judgment (24:23b-26, 28–29), and
an autobiographical discourse on household labor (24:27, 30–34).[10]
The first part of the collection (verses 23–29) contains warnings against partiality when judging (verses 23–25) or false testimony when being a witness (verse 28; cf. 18:5; 28:21).[12] The second part (verses 30–34) provides an example story of being lazy and its consequences (cf. 7:6–23) reinforcing the lesson of the dilligent ant in 6:10-11. The instruction is given as such so it can be perceived 'through the eye as well as the ear' ('saw... considered... received instruction', verse 32).[12]
Verse 28
Be not a witness against your neighbor without cause, and do not deceive with your lips.[16]
"Without cause": this expression could mean 'without necessity' (mischievously) or 'without grounds' (falsely), either of them amounts to perjury (verse 28b).[12]