Proverbs 13:25 — Bible Verse (KJV)

“The righteous eateth to the satisfying of his soul: but the belly of the wicked shall want.”

Proverbs 13:25 — King James Version (KJV), 1611

Proverbs 13:25 in 6 Bible Translations

Read Proverbs 13:25 in the King James Version (KJV) and 5 other free, public-domain translations side by side.

Proverbs 13:25 WEB — World English Bible (2000)

“The righteous one eats to the satisfying of his soul, but the belly of the wicked goes hungry.”

Proverbs 13:25 — World English Bible

Proverbs 13:25 ASV — American Standard Version (1901)

“The righteous eateth to the satisfying of his soul; But the belly of the wicked shall want.”

Proverbs 13:25 — American Standard Version

Proverbs 13:25 YLT — Young's Literal Translation (1862)

“The righteous is eating to the satiety of his soul, And the belly of the wicked lacketh!”

Proverbs 13:25 — Young's Literal Translation

Proverbs 13:25 DBY — Darby Translation (1890)

“The righteous eateth to the satisfying of his soul; but the belly of the wicked shall want.”

Proverbs 13:25 — Darby Translation

Proverbs 13:25 GEN — Geneva Bible (1599)

“The righteous eateth to the contentation of his minde: but the belly of the wicked shall want.”

Proverbs 13:25 — Geneva Bible

Proverbs 13:25 in Context — Proverbs 13

23 En el barbecho de los pobres [hay] mucho pan: mas piérdese por falta de juicio.

24 El que detiene el castigo, á su hijo aborrece: mas el que lo ama, madruga á castigarlo.

25 El justo come hasta saciar su alma: mas el vientre de los impíos tendrá necesidad.

Read the full chapter: Proverbs 13 →

What Does Proverbs 13:25 Mean?

Proverbs 13:25 is a verse from the Book of Proverbs, part of the Old Testament. It appears in Proverbs chapter 13. Use The Living Sword's word-by-word study mode to explore every word in the original Hebrew and Aramaic.

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