A Reflection on Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) 11:28
There is a verdict that no crown can buy, no career can guarantee, and no public opinion can bestow. It is the verdict that only comes at the close of a life — when all the noise has stopped, and what remains is simply the quality of how a person walked, and whether they finished what they were called to finish.
Peter denied. Paul persecuted. The thief stole. Every one of them looked, at some point in their story, like a definitive failure. Every one of them became, by the end of their story, a monument to the grace of God. This is the logic of Sirach 11:28 — and it is the logic that should make you refuse to give up on yourself or on anyone else.
You are not in your final chapter yet. That is the most important sentence you will read today. Whatever the present chapter looks like — whether it reads like triumph or disaster, abundance or loss — the Author has not yet set down His pen. And the Author of your life has a long history of writing extraordinary endings.
Wake-Up Call No. 92 of 2026
Summary of the blog post
Title:
“Before You Call Anyone Happy — Wait for the End”
A striking and thought-provoking title—direct, bold, and compelling without slipping into clickbait. It immediately invites reflection on the deeper meaning of life’s outcomes.
Holy Week Framing:
The reflection gains rich spiritual depth by situating the verse within Holy Week. With Good Friday (3 April 2026) as its backdrop, the message draws a powerful parallel: the disciples’ despair at the Cross appeared to be the end—yet it was only a hidden beginning. This framing transforms the verse into a meditation on the danger of premature judgments and the mystery of divine timing.
Scriptural Insight:
The core message of Sirach 11:28—not to judge a person’s happiness before the end—resonates as both wisdom teaching and spiritual caution. It challenges readers to adopt a long-view perspective shaped by faith rather than fleeting appearances.
Video Integration:
A YouTube link is thoughtfully included as a clean, clickable hyperlink, offering readers an additional layer of engagement without interrupting the reflective flow.
The Prayer:
The prayer is crafted in short, broken lines, creating a gentle rhythm that supports slow, meditative reading. Its structure encourages interior silence and personal encounter with the message.
Canonical Note:
The reflection responsibly acknowledges Sirach as a deuterocanonical book received by the Catholic Church, reinforcing theological credibility and appealing to a well-informed Christian audience. A deeper scholarly companion has also been prepared for Good Friday.
Overall Impression
This Wake-Up Call stands out for its spiritual timeliness, theological grounding, and reflective depth. By weaving together Scripture, liturgical context, and contemplative prayer, it offers not just insight—but a moment of grace-filled reflection during Holy Week.
Before You Call Anyone Happy — Wait for the End
A Wake-Up Call on the Only Verdict That Truly Counts
“Call no one happy before his death; by how he ends, a person becomes known.”
Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) 11:28
Watch: Verse for Today (3 April 2026)
A Question That Has Haunted Every Age
The ancient sage Ben Sirach did not write for the faint-hearted. He wrote for people like you and me — people who live in a world that rushes to pronounce winners and losers, heroes and failures, the blessed and the cursed, often long before the final chapter has been written. And he had one blunt, bracing word of caution: Wait.
Do not call anyone happy yet. Do not close the book on anyone’s life — not even your own — until you see how it ends.
This verse from the Book of Ecclesiasticus, also known as Sirach, belongs to the deuterocanonical Scriptures — books received by the Catholic Church as part of the inspired canon, treasured through centuries of prayer and wisdom. Ben Sirach wrote it roughly 180 years before Christ, but it reads like a word written for this morning.
The World Counts Differently From God
We live in a culture that is obsessed with the scoreboard — wealth accumulated, titles earned, followers counted, applause received. When a person rises to power, we call them blessed. When they are photographed at the height of their success, we call them an inspiration. When their face appears on the cover, we pronounce them happy.
Sirach says: not so fast.
He had watched enough of human life to know that a person who appears glorious at midday can collapse by evening. He had seen the powerful stripped of everything they owned. He had watched men and women who were envied by thousands end their lives in bitterness, betrayal, or disgrace. And conversely, he had seen those who suffered quietly and faithfully through long years of obscurity die in a peace so deep and a dignity so unmistakable that everyone who stood at their graveside understood: this was a life well-lived.
The final chapter is the one that counts.
This Is Not Pessimism — It Is Wisdom
Someone might object: is this not a gloomy view of life? Should we not celebrate goodness when we see it? Should we not rejoice in the blessings of today?
Of course, we should. Sirach himself is full of gratitude for the gifts of creation, friendship, family, and faith. He is not telling us to be suspicious of joy or to walk through life with a permanently furrowed brow. He is telling us something far more liberating than that.
He is telling us that life cannot be judged by any single moment, any single season, any single success or failure. He is releasing us from the tyranny of the snapshot and calling us into the long, faithful arc of a life lived before God.
This is not pessimism. This is the deepest kind of hope — the hope that holds on through the valley because it knows the valley is not the final word.
The Witness of the Saints
Look at the lives of the saints and you will see exactly what Sirach means. Saint Peter denied Christ three times on the night of the Passion. If you had judged him at that moment — cowering in a courtyard, swearing he had never known the man — you would have written him off entirely. But you would have been wrong. The story was not over.
Saint Paul stood by approvingly as Stephen was stoned to death. He breathed fire against the early Church. If you had called his account settled in those years, you would have missed the most astonishing conversion in the history of Christianity.
And then there is the thief on the cross beside Jesus — a man whose entire visible life was a chronicle of crime and failure — who in his last moments turned to the Lord and received the most direct promise of Paradise in all of Scripture: “Today you will be with me in Paradise” (Luke 23:43). The world had written him off decades before he died. God had not.
By how he ends, a person becomes known.
The Danger of Crowning Yourself Too Early
There is also a warning here that cuts closer to home. Not just about how we judge others, but about how we judge ourselves.
Beware the temptation to declare yourself arrived. Beware the comfort of thinking that because things have gone well so far, they will continue to do so — that because you have not fallen, you are beyond the reach of falling. Pride, as Scripture reminds us again and again, goes before a crash. The moment we stop running the race with urgency is the moment we become vulnerable.
Saint Paul, who had experienced visions of paradise and carried the gospel across three continents, still wrote: “I discipline my body and keep it under control, lest after preaching to others I myself should be disqualified” (1 Corinthians 9:27). If Paul felt that urgency, how much more should you and I?
Do not count yourself happy too soon. Keep running. Keep rising. The race is not finished.
And Yet — There Is Mercy at Every Mile
Here is the grace that Sirach does not undermine and that the Gospel amplifies beyond anything the ancient sage could fully see: the ending can be redeemed.
No life is so far gone that God cannot reclaim it. No fall is so final that the God of resurrection cannot bring a person back to their feet. Every single day you are alive is a day that the ending has not yet been written. Every morning you wake up is another page of your story still open, still possible, still being composed by the hand of a God who specialises in making something beautiful out of what the world has long since discarded.
This is the other side of Sirach’s wisdom: if the ending is what matters most, and if the ending has not yet come, then there is still time. There is still grace. There is still a chance to turn the final chapter of your life into something that will silence every accusation and vindicate every hope.
A Word for Today
On this Friday morning, as we step further into Holy Week and draw closer to the cross and to the empty tomb, this verse speaks with particular force. We are in the days when everything looked lost. We are in the days when the disciples had scattered, when the sky had darkened, when the stone had been rolled against the door.
But Sunday is coming.
The story was not over. It never is, until God says it is.
So today, refuse to judge yourself or anyone else by a partial story. Refuse to crown the comfortable or write off the suffering. Fix your eyes on the One who is the Author and Finisher of faith (Hebrews 12:2) — and trust that the ending He is writing for your life is far greater than anything the middle chapters have yet suggested.
A Prayer to Carry With You
Lord, You alone see the whole story of my life from beginning to end. Keep me faithful when I am tempted to settle. Keep me humble when things go well. Keep me hopeful when they do not. And when my final hour comes, let it be said that I finished well — not because I was great, but because You were faithful. Amen.
ANOTHER STEP IN THE WAKE-UP CALL JOURNEY
For those who found today’s Wake-Up Call Reflection on Sirach 11:28 (“Before You Call Anyone Happy — Wait for the End”) stirring, a deeper scholarly companion has been prepared for Good Friday.
“Humility, Enemies, and the Long View of God” explores Sirach 3 (humility), Sirach 12 (discernment toward enemies), and Sirach 28 (forgiveness) in conversation with the Paschal Mystery — the humility of the foot-washing and the Cross, the forgiveness pronounced from Calvary, and the vindication of Easter.
Drawing on the original Hebrew and Greek texts, patristic voices, and the Church’s liturgical tradition, this companion illuminates how Ben Sira’s ancient wisdom prepared the way for the humility and mercy revealed in Christ.
Read the full Scholarly Companion below and let these timeless truths shape your Holy Week journey.
May the One who humbled Himself to the Cross and rose in glory write a faithful ending to each of our stories.
Companion to: “Before You Call Anyone Happy — Wait for the End” | Ecclesiasticus 11:28
Humility, Enemies, and the Long View of God:
A Scholarly Companion on Sirach 3, 12, and 28 in the Light of Holy Week and Easter
Good Friday, 3 April 2026 |
Abstract. This companion study expands the biblical and theological framework of Wake-Up Call No. 92 (Ecclesiasticus 11:28) by examining two further wisdom passages from the Book of Sirach: the discourse on humility in Sirach 3:17-20 and 28-29, and the paired teachings on caution toward enemies and forgiveness in Sirach 12:4-11 and 28:1-7. Drawing on the Hebrew Vorlage, the Septuagint text, patristic commentary, and the Roman Catholic liturgical tradition, the study traces how these deuterocanonical passages prepare the theological soil for the central mysteries of Holy Week — the kenosis of Christ, the foot-washing, the Passion, and the Resurrection — and how they speak with particular force to Easter 2026. Numbered footnotes appear in the Scholarly Notes section at the end of the document.
I. Introduction: The Wisdom Architecture of Sirach
The Book of Sirach — known also as Ecclesiasticus, or the Wisdom of Ben Sira — occupies a unique position in the biblical canon. Accepted by the Catholic and Orthodox traditions as deuterocanonical Scripture and cited with authority by the early Church Fathers, it represents the fullest flowering of Second Temple Jewish wisdom literature before the New Testament era. Its author, Jesus ben Eleazar ben Sira of Jerusalem (fl. c. 180 BCE), was a professional sage and teacher who synthesised the wisdom tradition of Proverbs and Qohelet with the covenantal theology of Torah, the prophetic literature, and the lived realities of Jewish public life under Hellenistic influence.
Three thematic pillars run through the entire book and give it architectural coherence: the fear of the Lord as the ground of wisdom; the long view of human life as the proper frame for moral judgement; and the insistence that wisdom is not abstract but embodied in the daily choices of speech, friendship, wealth, humility, and conflict. The verse anchoring Wake-Up Call No. 92 — “Call no one happy before his death; by how he ends, a person becomes known” (Sirach 11:28) — belongs to this third pillar. The two sets of passages examined here belong equally to it.1
Sirach 3:17-20 and 28-29 address humility — the posture that makes a long and faithful life possible, and that alone can prepare a person for the exaltation that God, not human applause, bestows. Sirach 12:4-11 and 28:1-7 address the twin disciplines of discernment toward enemies and forgiveness as eschatological wisdom — the practices by which a person, aware of their own mortality and sinfulness, chooses mercy over vengeance and thereby opens their soul to the mercy of God. Together, these passages form a coherent moral programme whose deepest expression is the Paschal Mystery itself.
II. Sirach on Humility: Sirach 3:17-20 and 28-29
A. The Text
My child, conduct your affairs with humility, and you will be loved more than a giver of gifts. Humble yourself the more, the greater you are, and you will find favour in the sight of God. For great is the might of the Lord; by the humble he is glorified. What is too sublime for you, do not seek; do not reach into things that are hidden from you. What is committed to you, attend to; for what is hidden is not your concern. — Sirach 3:17-20 (NABRE)
The mind of the wise appreciates proverbs, and an attentive ear is the joy of the wise. Water quenches a flaming fire, and alms atone for sins. — Sirach 3:28-29 (NABRE)
B. Lexical Analysis
The Greek Septuagint text of Sirach 3:17 uses the verb tapeinoo(to humble, to bring low) and the noun praotes (gentleness, meekness) in close proximity — a pairing that recurs in Jesus’s self-description in Matthew 11:29. The Hebrew Vorlage, recoverable from the Cairo Geniza manuscripts and partially from Masada, reads anah nafshekha — literally “bring your soul low” — suggesting not a social performance of deference but an interior spiritual descent of the whole self before God.2
| Term | Language | Gloss | Exegetical Note |
| tapeinoo | Greek (LXX) | to humble, bring low | Used in LXX for the Servant’s self-abasement; same root as tapeinos in Matthew 11:29 and Philippians 2:8 |
| praotes | Greek (LXX) | gentleness, meekness | The quality of the Beatitude: “Blessed are the meek” (Matthew 5:5); not weakness but disciplined strength |
| anah nafshekha | Hebrew Vorlage | bring the soul low | Interior moral descent; related to the fasting/affliction language of Yom Kippur (Leviticus 16:29) |
| kenoo | Greek (NT) | to empty, pour out | Philippians 2:7; Christ’s self-emptying directly echoes the LXX tapeinoo tradition of Sirach |
| tsedaqah | Hebrew | alms / righteousness | Sirach 3:30: almsgiving atones for sin — righteousness in action; echoed in the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 6:1-4) |
C. Exegetical Commentary
The structural logic of Sirach 3:17-20 is paradoxical by design. The greater a person’s success, position, or influence, the more urgently they must humble themselves. This directly inverts the honour-shame logic of the Hellenistic Mediterranean world in which Ben Sira was writing, where elevated status was expected to be publicly performed and defended.3
Ben Sira’s argument has three distinct movements. First, humility generates authentic love — more reliably than gifts or largesse, because it communicates genuine regard for the other rather than a claim on their gratitude. Second, humility opens the channel to divine mercy: God is glorified by the humble, and the humble alone are positioned to receive what God desires to give. Third, humility involves an epistemic discipline: do not reach into things beyond your understanding, do not busy yourself beyond your proper task. This is not intellectual timidity; it is the wisdom to know the limits of creaturely knowledge before the infinite God.
Verses 28-29 add a practical coda. Wisdom must be paired with attentiveness — the wise person listens, ponders, and learns. The atonement clause of verse 29 (alms quench sin as water quenches fire) grounds humility in active generosity: the humble person does not merely think low thoughts about themselves but acts outwardly in service to others.4
D. Patristic Reception
Ambrose of Milan declared humility “the mother of all virtues” (mater omnium bonorum), drawing directly on this Sirach tradition.5
Augustine’s entire critique of the City of Man in De Civitate Deiturns on the contrast between the pride (superbia) that builds human empire and the humility that builds the City of God. John Chrysostom’s homily on John 13 treats the foot-washing as the living enacted sermon on Sirach 3:17: the Lord and Teacher performing the work of the lowest household slave. Thomas Aquinas in the Summa Theologiae(II-II, Q.161) treats humility as the foundational moral virtue because it correctly positions the soul in relation to God, making all other virtues possible.
E. Connection to the Paschal Mystery
The Christological trajectory of Sirach 3:17-20 is explicit in Philippians 2:5-11, the great kenosis hymn that anchors Holy Week liturgy. Paul describes Christ who, “though he was in the form of God… humbled himself and became obedient to the point of death — even death on a cross” (Philippians 2:6-8). The Greek etapeinosen heauton (he humbled himself) in verse 8 is the exact Septuagintal formulation of Sirach’s imperative.6
The Holy Week liturgy dramatises this movement across five days. Palm Sunday presents the humble King — entering not on a war-horse but on a donkey (Zechariah 9:9), welcomed by the poor and the children. Holy Thursday presents the foot-washing: the Lord of creation on his knees before his disciples, saying “I have given you an example, that you also should do as I have done to you” (John 13:15). Good Friday presents the cost: the humiliation is total — mockery, stripping, execution as a criminal. Yet Sirach’s promise holds: “by the humble he is glorified.” The Cross, read through this lens, is not the failure of the humble path but its supreme vindication.
Easter Sunday completes the arc. Philippians 2:9-11 immediately follows the kenosis: “Therefore God also highly exalted him and gave him the name that is above every name.” Sirach’s paradox — the greater you are, the more you must descend, and in descending you will be exalted — is not merely a moral aphorism. It is the grammar of the Resurrection. As Pope Francis has written in Gaudete et Exsultate: “Humility can only take root in the heart through humiliations. Without them, there is no humility or holiness.”7
III. Sirach on Enemies and Forgiveness: Sirach 12:4-11 and 28:1-7
A. The Texts
Give to the good, but refuse the sinner; do good to the humble, but give nothing to the ungodly… Never trust your enemies, for their wickedness is like corrosion in bronze. Even though they act deferentially and peaceably toward you, take care to be on your guard against them. — Sirach 12:4-7, 10-11 (NABRE)
The vengeful will face the Lord’s vengeance; indeed he remembers their sins in detail. Forgive your neighbour the wrong done to you; then when you pray, your own sins will be forgiven. Does anyone nourish anger against another and expect healing from the Lord? Should a person refuse mercy to another, yet seek pardon for his own sins?… Remember your last days and set enmity aside; remember death and decay, and cease from sin! Think of the commandments, and do not be angry with your neighbour; remember the Most High’s covenant, and overlook faults. — Sirach 28:1-7 (NABRE)
B. Lexical Analysis
| Term | Language | Gloss | Exegetical Note |
| iosis chalkou | Greek (LXX) | corrosion of bronze | Sirach 12:10; bronze oxidation as metaphor for latent, concealed malice — slowly destructive, invisible until damage is done |
| ekdikeo / ekdikesis | Greek (LXX) | vengeance / justice | Sirach 28:1; reserved for God alone in LXX tradition; same root as Romans 12:19 (“Vengeance is mine, says the Lord”) |
| aphes / aphiemi | Greek (LXX/NT) | forgive, release | Sirach 28:2; identical to the Lord’s Prayer aphiemi (Matthew 6:12) — the lexical bridge between Sirach and Jesus is direct |
| orgizo / mnesikakoumen | Greek (LXX) | anger / nurse a grudge | Sirach 28:3-5; the deliberate retention of anger as spiritual toxin; echoed in Ephesians 4:26 (“do not let the sun go down on your anger”) |
| acharit yamim | Hebrew Vorlage | latter days / the end | Sirach 28:6; structurally parallel to Sirach 11:28 — both invoke the end as the clarifying horizon of present choices |
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C. Exegetical Commentary: On Caution Toward Enemies (Sirach 12)
Sirach 12 is frequently misread as a cold calculus of selective generosity — help your friends, withhold from your enemies. The passage is more nuanced than that. Ben Sira is addressing the question of enabling: to give resources to those who are actively opposed to godly ways is not generosity but complicity. The iosis chalkou image (corrosion of bronze, verse 10-11) is drawn from the material culture of the ancient craftsman’s workshop and carries a precise meaning: the enemy’s hostility is not always visible on the surface. Prosperity and social ease may conceal it temporarily, but the underlying corrosion remains and will eventually compromise the metal entirely.9
This is not a licence for hatred or for the refusal to pray for enemies. It is a call to discernment — the same virtue that appears in the New Testament when Jesus instructs his disciples to be “wise as serpents and innocent as doves” (Matthew 10:16). Sirach’s realism here is often mistaken for cynicism, when in fact it is the wisdom of one who has watched enough of human nature to know that good intentions must be accompanied by prudent judgement.10
D. Exegetical Commentary: On Forgiveness (Sirach 28)
Sirach 28:1-7 represents the most sustained treatment of forgiveness in the deuterocanonical literature. Its argument moves through four distinct steps. First, the theological grounding: God remembers the sins of the vengeful in detail — the one who retains anger against another cannot expect amnesty for their own sins. Second, the practical prescription: forgive your neighbour, and your own prayer will be heard. Third, the reductio ad absurdum: to cherish anger against another while seeking pardon for oneself is a moral incoherence that annuls the very prayer for mercy. Fourth, the eschatological motivation: remember your own death. In the light of that horizon, does this grievance matter enough to die for?11
The phrase “remember your last days” (acharit yamim in the Hebrew Vorlage) creates a deliberate structural echo with Sirach 11:28 (“by how he ends, a person becomes known”). In both passages, the reality of death functions as the ultimate clarifying lens. The person who carries anger and grievance to their grave is, by Sirach’s logic, the person whose story ends badly — not because of what was done to them, but because of what they refused to release. Conversely, the person who forgives, even at cost to themselves, finishes well.12
E. Connection to the Paschal Mystery
The journey from Sirach 28 to the Cross is one of the most direct intertextual paths in the entire biblical canon. The Lord’s Prayer employs the exact Septuagintal vocabulary of Sirach 28:2: aphes hemon ta opheilemata hemon, hos kai hemeis aphekamen tois opheiletais hemon (forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors — Matthew 6:12). The structural logic is identical: human forgiveness and divine forgiveness are bound together in a single movement.
Good Friday dramatises the tension at its most extreme. Jesus faces the full weight of human enmity — betrayal by Judas, denial by Peter, abandonment by the Twelve, judicial murder. He meets it not with vengeance but with the prayer that is Sirach 28 enacted at full cost: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they are doing” (Luke 23:34). This is not naive trust in the goodness of his enemies — Sirach’s caution (Sirach 12) is not abandoned but transcended: Jesus is not deceived about what is happening, but he does not return evil for evil.
Easter reveals the fruit of this posture. The Risen Christ does not return to his disciples with a reckoning. He returns with “Peace be with you” (John 20:19-21). His restoration of Peter (John 21:15-19), who had denied him three times, is the most precise enacted commentary on Sirach’s forgiveness theology: the one who sinned most visibly is the one most explicitly sought out and reinstated. Resurrection mercy does not merely cancel debt; it commissions the forgiven into apostolic mission.
IV. The Canonical Arc: How These Passages Hold Together
A. The Long View as Unifying Structure
Read together, Sirach 3, 11, 12, and 28 form a single coherent theology of the long view. Life is not to be judged by its most visible moments — by the peak of achievement (Sirach 11:28) or by the height of humiliation (Sirach 3). Friendship is not to be judged by its pleasant seasons but by its behaviour under pressure (Sirach 6). Enemies are not to be judged by their temporary deference but by what their character reveals when prosperity lifts (Sirach 12). And the self is not to be judged by the grievances it has accumulated but by whether it has released them before the final accounting (Sirach 28).
This is the long view — the view from the end — that Ben Sira consistently invites his readers to adopt. It is a view shaped by the fear of the Lord: the recognition that God sees the whole story, that God’s assessment is the only one that finally matters, and that the whole apparatus of human judgement — social status, public approval, apparent victory or defeat — is provisional and subject to reversal at any moment.
B. The Deuterocanonical Contribution to Easter Faith
A persistent misconception in some Protestant reading traditions holds that the deuterocanonical books are morally inferior or spiritually thin. The passages examined in this study refute that characterisation. Sirach 3, 12, and 28 show a moral and theological depth that not only equals the canonical wisdom books but in several respects anticipates the New Testament more precisely than any other Old Testament source.
The kenosis of Philippians 2 is anticipated by Sirach 3. The Lord’s Prayer is anticipated by Sirach 28. The Resurrection logic of apparent defeat becoming ultimate victory is anticipated by Sirach 11:28. These are not coincidences of vocabulary. They represent the genuine and acknowledged continuity of revelation — the soil in which the seed of the Gospel was planted. The early Church Fathers recognised this continuity and treasured Sirach accordingly.
C. Practical Application for Easter 2026
Holy Week 2026, on which this companion study falls, presents these three Sirach passages in their most urgent liturgical register. Good Friday (3 April 2026) is the day on which the humility of Sirach 3 was enacted at its absolute extreme; the forgiveness of Sirach 28 was pronounced from the Cross; and the principle of Sirach 11:28 — wait for the end, do not judge by the middle chapters — was given its definitive content.
For the reader of Rise and Inspire, three practical responses suggest themselves. First: practise the humility of Sirach 3 by performing one act of service this week that no one will see or praise, in conscious imitation of the foot-washing. Second: practise the forgiveness of Sirach 28 by naming before God, in prayer, the specific grievance or anger you have been carrying, and choosing to release it — not because the wrong was trivial, but because your own last day is coming and you want to meet it unencumbered. Third: practise the long-view patience of Sirach 11:28 by refusing to write off either yourself or anyone else based on where the story currently stands.
V. Conclusion
Ben Sira was a teacher who had watched many lives unfold. He had seen the proud brought low and the humble exalted. He had seen friendships tested and enemies unmasked. He had seen anger calcify into bitterness that destroyed the one who carried it. And he had seen men and women who practised the small, faithful disciplines of humility and mercy arrive at their endings with a grace that silenced every earlier judgement.
He did not know, writing around 180 BCE, that within two centuries his wisdom would be fulfilled with a completeness that exceeded anything he could have imagined. He did not know that the one who would most perfectly embody Sirach 3 would descend lower than any human being had ever descended. He did not know that the one who would most completely enact Sirach 28 would pronounce forgiveness from a cross. He did not know that Sirach 11:28 would be vindicated on the third day after the darkest ending in human history.
But the early Church knew. And they kept reading Sirach because they knew. This Good Friday, so should we.
Scholarly Notes
1. Patrick W. Skehan and Alexander A. Di Lella, The Wisdom of Ben Sira, Anchor Bible 39 (New York: Doubleday, 1987), 152. The authors note that tapeinophrosyne in the Greek Sirach carries a richer nuance than mere social deference — it denotes the interior orientation of the creature before the Creator.
2. The Hebrew Vorlage of Sirach was substantially recovered from the Cairo Geniza manuscripts (1896 onwards) and from Masada (discovered 1964). For Sirach 3:17-18, the Hebrew reads anah nafshekha — literally “bring your soul low” — a phrase of moral and spiritual descent. See Benjamin G. Wright III, “Sirach,” in the New Oxford Annotated Bible, 5th ed. (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018), 1431.
3. Skehan and Di Lella, Wisdom of Ben Sira, 157: “The paradox that the greater one is, the more one must humble oneself runs counter to every social instinct of the ancient Mediterranean honour-shame culture, and it is this counter-cultural force that makes Ben Sira’s teaching both surprising and enduring.”
4. John G. Snaith, Ecclesiasticus, Cambridge Bible Commentary (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1974), 28. Snaith notes the connection between the almsgiving clause of Sirach 3:29 and the emerging tradition of active charity as embodied righteousness, a tradition that flows directly into the Sermon on the Mount.
5. Ambrose of Milan, De Officiis I.43 (PL 16:97): “Humilitas est mater omnium bonorum.” Augustine treats humility as the foundation of the entire Christian moral edifice in De Civitate Dei XIV.13 (PL 41:420). John Chrysostom, Homily 65 on Matthew, interprets the foot-washing of John 13 as the supreme enacted commentary on Sirach’s principle.
6. The Greek kenoo (to empty) in Philippians 2:7 directly echoes the LXX tapeinoo (to humble, to bring low) used throughout the Greek Sirach for the posture demanded of the wise. This lexical linkage is noted by Gordon Fee, Paul’s Letter to the Philippians, NICNT (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995), 209.
7. Pope Francis, Gaudete et Exsultate (2018), paragraph 71: “Humility can only take root in the heart through humiliations. Without them, there is no humility or holiness.” This magisterial statement stands in direct continuity with Sirach 3:17-20 and the Philippians 2 kenosis hymn.
8. The Greek orgizo / mnesikakoumen cluster in Sirach 28:1-7 LXX connects directly to the noun orge (wrath, anger) used throughout the Pauline letters as a destructive spiritual force to be mortified (Colossians 3:8; Ephesians 4:31). The link between retained anger and spiritual self-damage is a continuous thread from Sirach through Paul through the monastic tradition; cf. Evagrius Ponticus, Praktikos 11, on anger as the passion most destructive to contemplative prayer.
9. The bronze corrosion image (iosis chalkou) in Sirach 12:10-11 LXX is a vivid metaphor from everyday craft life. Bronze was the dominant metal of the ancient Near East; its green oxidation was well known to be insidious — appearing only after prolonged exposure but weakening the metal silently from within. See Snaith, Ecclesiasticus, 65.
10. Skehan and Di Lella, 240: “Sirach’s realism here is often misread as cynicism. He is not saying enemies are beyond redemption; he is saying that discernment is a virtue, and that love of neighbour does not require abandonment of prudence. The New Testament itself maintains this balance: Jesus sends his disciples ‘as sheep among wolves’ but adds, ‘be wise as serpents and innocent as doves’ (Matthew 10:16).”
11. The eschatological grounding of forgiveness in Sirach 28:6 (“Remember your last days, and cease from enmity; remember death and decay, and cease from sin”) is an early instance of the memento mori tradition in Jewish wisdom literature. It anticipates the Christian ars moriendi and connects structurally to Sirach 11:28. See Dianne Bergant, Israel’s Wisdom Literature: A Liberation-Critical Reading (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1997), 178.
12. The Didache (c. 90-120 AD), one of the earliest Christian manuals of practice, builds on the Jewish wisdom concern present in Sirach 28 for interior integrity in prayer and the impossibility of receiving divine mercy while withholding human mercy. See Didache 8:1-2 and the commentary in Kurt Niederwimmer, The Didache, Hermeneia (Minneapolis: Fortress, 1998), 128.
Select Bibliography
Ambrose of Milan. De Officiis. PL 16. Translated by Ivor J. Davidson. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2001.
Augustine of Hippo. De Civitate Dei. PL 41. Translated by Henry Bettenson. London: Penguin Classics, 1984.
Bergant, Dianne. Israel’s Wisdom Literature: A Liberation-Critical Reading. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1997.
Evagrius Ponticus. Praktikos. Translated by John Eudes Bamberger. Kalamazoo: Cistercian Publications, 1981.
Fee, Gordon D. Paul’s Letter to the Philippians. New International Commentary on the New Testament. Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995.
Francis, Pope. Gaudete et Exsultate: Apostolic Exhortation on the Call to Holiness in Today’s World. Vatican City: Libreria Editrice Vaticana, 2018.
New American Bible, Revised Edition (NABRE). Washington, D.C.: United States Conference of Catholic Bishops, 2011.
Niederwimmer, Kurt. The Didache. Hermeneia. Minneapolis: Fortress, 1998.
Skehan, Patrick W., and Alexander A. Di Lella. The Wisdom of Ben Sira. Anchor Bible 39. New York: Doubleday, 1987.
Snaith, John G. Ecclesiasticus. Cambridge Bible Commentary. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1974.
Thomas Aquinas. Summa Theologiae II-II, Q.161. Translated by the Fathers of the English Dominican Province. London: Burns, Oates & Washbourne, 1920.
Wright, Benjamin G. III. “Sirach.” In The New Oxford Annotated Bible, 5th ed., edited by Michael D. Coogan. Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2018.
These reflections are written inspired by the Verse for Today shared this morning by His Excellency, Rt. Rev. Dr. Selvister Ponnumuthan.
Category: Wake-Up Calls 2026 — Reflection #92 of 2026 | 4 April 2026
Rise & Inspire | Scholarly Companion Series | Wake-Up Call #92 | Ecclesiasticus (Sirach) 11:28 | 3 April 2026
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