The heaven for height, and the earth for depth, and the heart of kings is unsearchable.
The heavens stretch up endlessly, the earth goes down to great depths, and no one can fully understand what a king is thinking in his heart.
This verse is saying that just as the sky and earth are too vast to measure, a king's thoughts and motivations are impossible for others to fully know or understand.
📚 Historical Context
Proverbs 25 is part of a collection of wise sayings traditionally attributed to King Solomon but compiled by scribes during the reign of King Hezekiah of Judah in the 8th century BC, reflecting the wisdom literature of ancient Israel. This verse uses poetic comparisons to emphasize the inscrutable nature of a king's thoughts, much like the vastness of the heavens and the depth of the earth, which were seen as beyond human measurement in that culture. In the context of ancient Near Eastern societies, kings were viewed as divinely appointed figures whose motives required great wisdom to discern.
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