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Garth Heckman

The David Alliance

TDAgiantSlayer@Gmail.com 

 

 

 

Like vinegar to the teeth and smoke to the eyes, so is the lazy one to those who send him.”** – Proverbs 10:26 (NASB)

 

When Laziness Becomes a Liability***

 

 

Most of us have experienced irritation that lingers:

– Smoke burning your eyes

– Sour vinegar shocking your teeth

 

Solomon compares laziness to these two deeply uncomfortable sensations. This is not mild annoyance. This is painful frustration.

 

God is showing us that laziness doesn’t just hurt the lazy person — **it hurts everyone connected to them.

The lazy Dad hurts his wife, his kids, his boss and his own psyche… 

 

 

Laziness is not a personal weakness — it is a communal burden.

 

1. The Cultural Meaning of Vinegar and Smoke**

 

Vinegar to the Teeth

 

In the ancient world, vinegar was cheap, acidic wine. If you expected refreshing grape juice and received sour vinegar instead, your mouth would recoil.

 

It shocks.

It irritates.

It disappoints.

 

Smoke to the Eyes

 

Smoke was a daily irritation in ancient homes. Cooking fires filled small houses, burning eyes, blurring vision, causing tears and coughing.

 

Smoke disorients.

Smoke blinds.

Smoke frustrates.

 

together, these metaphors paint a picture:

 

Laziness creates irritation, disappointment, confusion, and emotional strain.

 

 

 

2. The Problem Isn’t Slowness — It’s Unfaithfulness**

 

The proverb says:

 

“So is the lazy one **to those who send him.”

 

This isn’t about personal motivation.

This is about assignment, responsibility, and trust.

 

The lazy person:

 

* Was sent with a purpose

* Was trusted with a task

* Was expected to deliver

 

But instead:

 

* They delay

* They deflect

* They disappoint

They act drained… but its only those around them that are truly drained due to their behavior. 

 

 

Biblical Insight:

 

Laziness is not neutral.

It is unfaithfulness with delegated authority. - ITS DOING NOTHING AT ALL THE WHILE GIVEN THE POWER AND THE PRIVILEGE TO DO IT. 

 

Jesus echoed this principle in **Matthew 25 (Parable of the Talents)** — the servant who buried his responsibility was not rebuked for inability, but for slothfulness and fear.