Proverbs 11:2

Proverbs 11:2

When pride cometh, then cometh shame: but with the lowly is wisdom.

King James Version (KJV)

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Context

Among chapter 11's contrasts between the upright and the wicked, this verse sets the trajectory of pride toward shame against the path of humility toward wisdom.

What Does Proverbs 11:2 Mean?

Pride sets a person up for shame, while humility opens the way to wisdom. This proverb traces the path each attitude travels. Pride and shame arrive together -- "when pride cometh, then cometh shame" -- as if the second were the inevitable shadow of the first. Humility, by contrast, keeps company with wisdom.

The Hebrew word for pride here carries the sense of insolent overreaching, the attitude of someone who exalts himself beyond his place. Such pride is dangerous precisely because it blinds. The proud person overestimates himself, ignores counsel, and presses forward where he should pause -- and so walks straight into the disgrace he never saw coming. Shame follows pride not as random misfortune but as its natural result. The second line offers the better way: "with the lowly is wisdom." The lowly are those who hold a modest, honest view of themselves, who know they have more to learn and remain open to correction. This very posture makes them teachable, and teachability is the soil in which wisdom grows. The proverb thus reveals why humility is so valuable: it is not weakness but the condition for becoming wise. The contrast is complete -- pride exalts itself and is brought low, while humility lowers itself and is given understanding.

In the Original Language

"Pride" renders zadon, insolence or presumptuous overreaching. "Lowly" translates tsanua, the modest or humble person -- unassuming and teachable.

Application

Choose humility over self-promotion, staying teachable and open to correction so that wisdom can grow rather than pride leading to a fall.

Keep Studying Proverbs 11

Read the whole chapter in KJV, ASV, or WEB, or go deeper with the chapter study guide and key themes.