Scorners
Pro_1:22; Pro_3:33-34; Pro_13:1; Pro_14:6; Pro_15:12; Pro_19:29; Pro_24:9; Pro_29:8; Isa_28:14-15.
The Reward For Casting Out The Scorner
Pro_22:10.
The Time When A Scorner Is Punished
Pro_19:25; Pro_21:11.
Those That Reprove A Scorner
Pro_9:7-10; Pro_15:12.
Those That Do Not Sit In The Seat Of The Scornful
Psa_1:1-2.
Who The LORD Scorns
Pro_3:33-34.
SCORN.—Of scorn pure and simple there is remarkably little trace in the recorded words and actions of Jesus Christ. Whereas other teachers of lofty morality have usually treated with some contempt those who made no effort to approach their ideals, Christ’s attitude towards the sinner was uniformly one of sympathetic help. He alone recognized the intimate relation which exists between the Creator and the human race, and His knowledge of this relation and of the possibilities of each individual prevented Him from despising man, whom the Father had made in His own image, however much that image might have been defaced. Thus it is that we never find Him using sarcasm, a form of scorn calculated to wound rather than to improve. Even the
3. The scorn of silence.—Of all the occasions of scorn displayed by Jesus, none are more marked than those when He met mere captious questions and criticism either by a definite refusal to answer, or by absolute silence. Such an instance is recorded (Mat 21:23-27) when Jesus met the question of the chief priests and scribes, ‘By what authority doest thou these things?’ with a counter question, and on their refusal to answer declined in turn to reply to their question. Still more impressive was the silent scorn with which He met His accusers at the various stages of His trial, refusing in turn to answer the accusation of false witnesses (Mat 26:60-63, Mar 14:61) and the questions of the chief priests and elders (Mat 27:12, Mar 15:3; Mar 15:5), of Herod (Luk 23:9), and lastly of Pilate himself (Mat 27:14, Joh 19:9).
In comparing these instances, we find no word used simply for the purpose of causing pain. The contemptuous expression used on the occasion of Herod’s threat is, we have seen, amply justified by the character of the man, and destined to hold up to reprobation so paltry a device and so wretched a personality. In the rest His silence is an expression of His own dignity, and of His refusal to give an answer to questions and charges which were not intended to bring the truth to light, but merely to raise unreasonable prejudice; while His severe attacks on the character of those who were too blinded by their imaginary virtues to try to amend their lives, are wonderful instances of a scorn unmarred by ill-nature and untainted with cynicism.
On scorn of which Christ was the object, see artt. Despise, Mockery, Reproach.
T. Allen Moxon.
Further, this state or reaction is not simple but complex. It includes a sense of superiority, resentment, and aversion. This reaction occurs when one is confronted with a person or a proposition that by challenging certain things for itself evokes a vivid sense of one’s own superiority and awakens mingled resentment, repulsion and contempt by the hollowness of its claims and its intrinsic inferiority or worse. Scorn is a hotter, fiercer emotion than disdain or contempt. It is obvious that scorn may - indeed, it not uncommonly does - arise in connection with an not grounded, arrogant sense of self-esteem.
The word, outside of the phrase “laugh to scorn,” is found only in the Old Testament, and then only 4 times (Est 3:6; King James Version, Psa 44:13; Psa 79:4; Hab 1:10), and it represents three different Hebrew words for none of which it is a suitable rendering. The two words “thought scorn” in Est 3:6 represent but one in Hebrew, namely,
As a verb the word is the translation given to
The Revised Version (British and American) always (except Job 12:4; Sirach 6:4; 1 Macc 10:70) retains “laugh to scorn” (2Ki 19:21; 2Ch 30:10; Neh 2:19; Job 22:19; Psa 22:7; Isa 37:22; Eze 16:31; Eze 23:32; 2 Esdras 2:21; Judith 12:12; The Wisdom of Solomon 4:18; Sirach 7:11; 13:7; 20:17; Mat 9:24; Mar 5:40; Luk 8:53). The verb in Apocrypha and the New Testament is usually
Scorner is the translation of the participle of
