The image above isn’t just design — it’s prophecy in picture form.
On the left: the harlot church, dressed like an Egyptian queen — symbolic of bondage, flesh, and apostasy — holding her golden cup, seated high on stone, with the serpent coiled behind her.
On the right: the true Bride, clothed in white, holding the Word and bathed in light from above. Behind her, the heavenly city — the New Jerusalem — descending in glory.
Between them stands a fiery sword — dividing darkness from light, deception from truth.
What if the Book of Proverbs is not just a book of wisdom… but a prophetic scroll — encrypted with symbols — foretelling the battle between the harlot and the bride? What if Solomon, in all his God-given wisdom, left behind a riddle that could only be solved by the remnant in the last days?
“The proverbs of Solomon the son of David, king of Israel: To know wisdom and instruction, to perceive the words of understanding…”
— Proverbs 1:1-2
This isn’t just poetry. It’s a divine blueprint. A warning. A mirror. And at the center of it all — a riddle. Two women walk through its pages: one is seductive, lawless, and loud. The other is faithful, discerning, and clothed in strength and honor.
Who are they? Why do they appear again and again, speaking to the simple and the wise alike? Could it be that these women represent the two churches at the end of the age — the apostate harlot and the pure remnant Bride?
And how does it all end? With a wedding. With the woman of valor — the Bride of Christ — rising up in the final chapter as the crown of her husband. But to understand it, you must first receive what Solomon asked for:
“Give your servant an understanding heart to judge Your people, that I may discern between good and evil…”
— 1 Kings 3:9
Proverbs is more than wisdom. It is prophecy. A divine riddle. A battle cry. A love letter. And those who have ears to hear… will understand the mystery.
🔥 SECTION 1: The Book of Proverbs Is a Prophecy
Solomon, the wisest man who ever lived, did not merely write a book of moral instruction. He inscribed a riddle for the end-times remnant — a mystery cloaked in poetry, contrast, and metaphor.
“To understand a proverb and a figure, the words of the wise and their riddles.”
— Proverbs 1:6 NASB
This is not merely wisdom for daily life. It is a spiritual blueprint, spanning from the fall of the apostate church to the final revelation of the Bride.
🪞 Two Women. Two Paths. One Destiny.
Throughout Proverbs, we encounter two symbolic women:
- 💋 The Adulteress — representing the harlot church, seducing, flattering, and leading astray. She is unfaithful, unrepentant, obsessed with appearances but void of covenant.
- 👑 The Wise Woman — the remnant Bride, hidden, refined through fire, crowned with wisdom. She is faithful, diligent, pure, and deeply rooted in the fear of the Lord.
This is the prophetic journey mapped out in Proverbs:
Lust → Discipline → Refinement → Mark of God → Wisdom → Remnant Bride
The harlot church begins with enticing words and flattery — just as Eve was seduced in the garden — but the wise woman begins with the fear of the Lord, a hatred of evil, and a heart bowed in obedience.
And how does this ancient riddle end?
“An excellent wife, who can find? For her worth is far above jewels.”
— Proverbs 31:10 NASB
It ends not with the harlot, but with the Bride.
This is no ordinary book of sayings.
This is the hidden prophecy of the Bride of Christ.
🌿 SECTION 2: Shalom, Shlomo, and the Shulamite — The Mystery of Peace Revealed
There is a divine riddle hidden in plain sight — a prophetic thread woven through the names Shalom, Shlomo, and Shulamite.
Shalom (שָׁלוֹם) means peace — not just the absence of war, but wholeness, restoration, and divine harmony; completeness.
Shlomo (שְׁלֹמֹה) is the Hebrew name for Solomon, the son of David — the king who ruled during Israel’s most peaceful era. His name in Hebrew means “peace” or “peaceful” and “complete.”
Shulamite (שׁוּלַמִּית) is the mysterious woman of Song of Songs — her name meaning “the perfect” and “the peaceful woman” or “woman of Shalom.”
These three names are prophetically connected. The peaceful Bride (Shulamite) is a mirror of the peaceful King (Shlomo), both rooted in Shalom — the divine peace that only comes from God.
The Song of Songs is not just a romantic poem. It is a prophetic love song, chronicling the journey of the Bride — from yearning, to purification, to union with her King.
“My beloved is mine, and I am his…”
— Song of Songs 2:16
This is the story of the Remnant Bride — the one who comes out of the wilderness leaning on her Beloved, cleansed, consecrated, and made whole through divine fire.
🕊️ From Fragmented to Whole
Just as Shalom means wholeness, the journey of the Shulamite Bride is one of restoration. She is brought out of spiritual Babylon — out of confusion and compromise — and made pure through love and truth. She is the one who hears the Shepherd’s voice and follows Him, even when others remain in their beds.
She is the wise woman of Proverbs 31 — but she didn’t start there.
She was once the one crying in the streets, longing for wisdom. But she answered the call. And in the end, she becomes the crown of her King.
📜 SECTION 3: The Mark Upon the Heart — A Hidden Covenant Revealed in Proverbs 3
“Do not forget My teaching, But let your heart keep My commandments; For length of days and years of life And peace they will add to you.”
— Proverbs 3:1–2 NASB
At first glance, Proverbs Chapter 3 reads like parental advice — but look deeper, and you’ll uncover a divine blueprint for spiritual identity, covenant, and eternal consequence. It presents a prophetic contrast between two marks: the internal mark of God written on the heart, and the counterfeit mark of the beast etched into the fallen nature of man.
This is not about microchips or visible signs. This is about unseen ownership — whose voice we follow, whose law we obey, and whose image we reflect.
“Do not let kindness and truth leave you; Bind them around your neck, Write them on the tablet of your heart.”
— Proverbs 3:3
🖋️ The Tablet of the Heart — The True Place of the Mark
Here, the heart is described as a tablet — echoing the stone tablets of the Ten Commandments, but now internalized. The Hebrew word for “write” is kathab, meaning to engrave, inscribe, or record permanently. God desires His Word to be etched into our innermost being — this is His true mark. A covenant not written with ink, nor carved into flesh, but sealed by the Holy Spirit upon a willing and surrendered heart.
By contrast, the beast offers a false mark — a charagma in Greek — a stamp, engraving, or etching. But this is not a literal brand. It’s a prophetic symbol of a hardened heart and a defiled conscience — one enslaved to the systems of this world, ruled by pride and rebellion. While God inscribes His covenant within, the beast lays claim to the outer nature: the mind conformed to the world, and the hand acting in defiance to God.
One mark is spiritual. The other is carnal. One leads to life. The other to delusion and destruction.
⚖️ Two Paths, Two Marks
Proverbs 3 outlines two spiritual trajectories — not unlike the narrow and wide gates Jesus described:
- “Favor and a good name in the sight of God and man” (v.4)
- “Healing to your body and refreshment to your bones” (v.8)
- “Your barns will be filled with plenty” (v.10)
- “The Lord will be your confidence” (v.26)
But for those who reject wisdom and despise correction:
- “The Lord scoffs at the scoffers” (v.34)
- “The curse of the Lord is on the house of the wicked” (v.33)
- “Shame will be the promotion of fools” (v.35)
🕊️ The Mark of Covenant vs. the Mark of the Flesh
Verse 32 reveals the heart of this distinction:
“For the devious are an abomination to the Lord; But He is intimate with the upright.”
The word “intimate” refers to secret counsel — the hidden revelation of covenant. Psalm 25:14 says, “The secret of the Lord is with those who fear Him, and He will make them know His covenant.” Those marked by God will walk in truth and receive understanding. Those marked by the beast will fall under strong delusion (2 Thessalonians 2:11–12).
As Paul later teaches, “He is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is that of the heart, in the Spirit, not the letter” (Romans 2:29). Proverbs 3 is a prophetic foreshadowing of this same truth. The righteous are those whose hearts are engraved by the Word — not merely hearers, but transformed covenant bearers.
🔥 The Fire of Discipline or the Fire of Judgment?
Verse 12 reveals another layer:
“For whom the Lord loves He disciplines, Just as a father disciplines the son in whom he delights.”
To be marked by God means to be purified by love. Discipline is not punishment — it is proof of belonging. But to reject His correction is to choose another fire: judgment. The harlot church avoids the refining flame, but the remnant endures it — and emerges as gold (Malachi 3:3).
🪔 The Covenant Blessing at the End
Proverbs 3 closes with a prophetic summary:
“The wise will inherit honor, But fools display dishonor.”
— Proverbs 3:35
This mirrors the promise of Revelation 21. The wise — those marked by God — inherit the New Jerusalem. The fools — those marked by the beast — are left outside the gates. What began as parental advice is revealed to be a map of eternal destiny. The choice is clear: the mark of the covenant, or the mark of corruption. The heart of wisdom, or the hand of rebellion. One leads home. The other, to exile.
🌒 SECTION 4: Two Women, Two Spirits — Wisdom vs. the Harlot
From the first chapters of Proverbs, we are introduced to two women. One stands at the gates calling the simple to turn and live. The other lurks in the shadows, seductive and loud, leading souls to death.
These women are not merely characters — they are prophetic symbols of two spiritual forces. Two churches. Two covenants. Two destinies.
“For the lips of the adulterous woman drip honey, and her speech is smoother than oil; but in the end she is bitter as gall, sharp as a double-edged sword.”
— Proverbs 5:3–4
⚖️ Wisdom: The Spirit of Truth
The woman called Wisdom represents the Holy Spirit — crying out in the streets, calling the simple, offering truth and life. She is a type of the faithful Bride — the one who fears the Lord, walks in righteousness, and prepares herself for the coming King.
“Wisdom cries aloud in the street, in the markets she raises her voice…”
— Proverbs 1:20
🦂 The Harlot: The Spirit of Apostasy
The strange woman — the harlot — is the spirit of false religion. She flatters with words, but her path leads to Sheol. She is loud, rebellious, and knows no rest. She is the apostate church, the Beast’s bride — and many follow her.
“Do not let your heart turn aside to her ways… Her house is the way to Sheol, going down to the chambers of death.”
— Proverbs 7:25, 27
In the end, only one woman is lifted up as the glory of her husband. The other is cast down, exposed for her seduction and rebellion. Proverbs is not just moral instruction — it is a prophetic mirror reflecting the final separation of light and darkness, truth and deception, Bride and harlot.
🪞 SECTION 5: The Mirror of the Heart — Who Will You Become?
Every chapter of Proverbs is a mirror. It does not just teach — it reveals. What you pursue, what you love, what you hate… it reflects the true condition of your heart. Will you be conformed into the image of the Bride — or deceived by the flattery of the harlot?
Both women call out. Both are clothed in words. Both wait at the door. But only one leads to life.
“There is a way that seems right to a man, but its end is the way to death.”
— Proverbs 14:12
Proverbs forces you to choose. It strips away excuses. You can’t walk both paths. You can’t love both voices. You are becoming one or the other.
🔔 The Call to Discernment
This is not just about behavior. It is about identity. Who are you becoming? The Bride is made ready through refinement. The harlot is adorned with deception. One loves truth. The other loves power. One humbles herself before the King. The other exalts herself like a queen who will never mourn.
“Charm is deceitful and beauty is vain, but a woman who fears the Lord, she shall be praised.”
— Proverbs 31:30
This is the final hour. The mirror is in front of you. Look closely… and ask the Holy Spirit to show you who you truly are becoming.
🧱 SECTION 6: The House She Builds — Wisdom or Ruin?
Throughout Proverbs, both women — the harlot and the wise bride — are described as builders. Each constructs a house. Each prepares a place for others to dwell. But the foundations are not the same.
“The wise woman builds her house, but the foolish pulls it down with her hands.”
— Proverbs 14:1
The harlot builds with seduction, flattery, and pride. Her house is full of stolen water and secret sin. It may look inviting — even spiritual — but it leads to spiritual death.
The wise woman, on the other hand, builds with truth, humility, and fear of the Lord. Her house becomes a refuge. Her words are life. Her hands work in diligence. She prepares her household for winter and watches over her vineyard. This is not about gender — this is about the spiritual identity of the remnant Bride.
🏚️ Two Houses — One Will Stand
Jesus echoed this very wisdom at the end of the Sermon on the Mount:
“Everyone who hears these words of Mine and does them will be like a wise man who built his house on the rock… but everyone who hears these words and does not do them will be like a foolish man who built his house on the sand.”
— Matthew 7:24–27
The entire book of Proverbs is a divine architectural blueprint. A test. A choice. What are you building? What are you feeding your household? What foundation are you laying for those who follow you?
In the end, only one house remains — the house of the Bride, prepared like a city set on a hill, whose builder and maker is God.
🪞 SECTION 7: Her Children Rise and Call Her Blessed — The Fruit of the Remnant
How does the Book of Proverbs end? After all the warnings, contrasts, and riddles — we don’t find a conclusion about the harlot. She vanishes. Her end is destruction. But the wise woman?
She is revealed. Not just as a good wife — but as a radiant, multi-dimensional portrait of the end-time Bride.
“Her children rise up and call her blessed; her husband also, and he praises her.”
— Proverbs 31:28
This woman is clothed in strength and dignity. She speaks with wisdom. Her lamp does not go out. She plants vineyards. She laughs at the future — not because life is easy, but because her peace is established.
She is the picture of what the Church is supposed to be — fruitful, prepared, disciplined, and honorable in the eyes of her Bridegroom. And how do we know she is the remnant?
Because her children rise — a resurrection word — and bless her. And her husband, the Lord Jesus, praises her. This is not just domestic poetry. This is prophecy. This is the remnant glorified at the end.
The false church cannot bear fruit. The harlot has no true children. But the remnant Bride will be honored — not by man — but by God Himself.
And what will the Lord say to her in the end?
“Well done, good and faithful servant… enter into the joy of your Lord.”
— Matthew 25:23
Her story ends not with seduction… but with honor, glory, and everlasting peace.
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TV Show Host, Live Zoom Bible Study Teacher, Video Creator, Biblical Researcher & Truth Teller. Be sure and check out all her videos on her channel, https://youtube.com/lynleahz. You can email Lyn Leahz at Info@TruthHuntersShow.Com
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