Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 12:15
The way of a fool [is] right in his own eyes: but he that hearkeneth unto counsel [is] wise.
15. he that hearkeneth is wise ] Rather, he that is wise hearkeneth unto counsel, R.V. ( , LXX.; qui autem sapiens est audit consilia, Vulg.), in contrast to the fool, who thinks his own way must be right.
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
The way of a fool, the counsel and course which his own mind suggests to him in ordering of his affairs,
is right in his own eyes; highly pleaseth him, so that he neglects and despiseth the opinions and advices of others.
He that hearkeneth unto counsel; that distrusteth his own judgment, and seeketh counsel from others.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
15. The way . . . eyesThefool is self-conceited (compare Pro 12:1;Pro 1:32; Pro 10:17;Jas 3:17).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
The way of a fool [is] right in his own eyes,…. Whether it be the way of open profaneness, or self-righteousness, it appears to him to be the right way; it seems to him a very plain one, and he finds it pleasant; and, trusting to carnal sense, corrupt reason, and a false judgment, and having a high opinion of himself and his own knowledge, never asks after the right way, nor takes the advice of others;
but he that hearkeneth unto counsel [is] wise; that asks advice and takes it of such who are men of age and experience, men of longer standing, and are wiser than himself; who consults the word of God about the right way of walk, worship, and salvation, and makes the testimonies of God the men of his counsel, which are able to make him wise unto salvation; who hearkens to the counsel of Gospel ministers, and obeys it; and especially to Jesus Christ the wonderful Counsellor, and to the advice he gives, Re 3:18; and who not only hears his words, but does them; such an one is a wise man, Mt 7:24.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
15 The way of the fool is right in his own eyes,
But the wise listeneth to counsel.
Other proverbs, like Pro 16:2, say that generally the judgment of a man regarding his character does not go beyond a narrow subjectivity; but there are objective criteria according to which a man can prove whether the way in which he walks is right; but the fool knows not other standard than his own opinion, and however clearly and truly one may warn him that the way which he has chosen is the wrong way and leads to a false end, yet he obstinately persists;
(Note: Vid., kindred proverbs by Carl Schulze, Die bibl. Sprichwrter der deutschen Sprache (1860), p. 50, and M. C. Wahl’s Das Sprichwort in der heb.-aram. Literatur, u.s.w. (1871), p. 31.)
while a wise man is not so wise in his own eyes (Pro 3:7) as not to be willing to listen to well-meant counsel, because, however careful he may be regarding his conduct, yet he does not regard his own judgment so unerring as not to be inclined ever anew to try it and let it stand the test. Ewald has falsely construed: yet whoever hears counsel is wise. In consequence of the contrast, and are the subject ideas, and with is brought forward that which is in contrast to the self-complacency of the fool, the conduct of the wise man.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
15 The way of a fool is right in his own eyes: but he that hearkeneth unto counsel is wise.
See here, 1. What it is that keeps a fool from being wise: His way is right in his own eyes; he thinks he is in the right in every thing he does, and therefore asks no advice, because he does not apprehend he needs it; he is confident he knows the way, and cannot miss it, and therefore never enquires the way. The rule he goes by is to do that which is right in his own eyes, to walk in the way of his heart. Quicquid libet, licet–He makes his will his law. He is a fool that is governed by his eye, and not by his conscience. 2. What it is that keeps a wise man from being a fool; he is willing to be advised, desires to have counsel given him, and hearkens to counsel, being diffident of his own judgment and having a value for the direction of those that are wise and good. He is wise (it is a sign he is so, and he is likely to continue so) whose ear is always open to good advice.
Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary
Mr. Always Right
Verse 15 identifies the person who is always right as a fool. A wise person will consider the counsel of others, Pro 11:14; Pro 15:22; Pro 24:6.
Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary
CRITICAL NOTES.
Pro. 12:16. Presently, literally in that very day, i.e. at once. Covereth shame, or hides his offence.
MAIN HOMILETICS OF Pro. 12:15-16
TWO EXAMPLES OF FOOLISHNESS AND WISDOM
I. The man who guides his life by his own self-conceitrejecting the advice of others. No finite creature possesses sufficient wisdom within himself to direct his path through life. The largest and deepest rivers are dependent upon small streams to sustain their volume of water, and each little stream again must be fed from a source outside itself, and the springs which feed the streams have their origin in the oceans fulness. So the very greatest minds are in some things dependent upon minds which in many things are their inferior, and it is a mark of wisdom to acknowledge this, and to be willing to take advice of anyone who is able to give it upon matters in which they are better informed. Thus men are led to exercise a mutual dependence on each other, and all to depend upon Him whose wisdom is the parent of all finite counsel that is of any value.
(1) A man who will not acknowledge and act upon this principle is a fool, because he practically shuts his eyes to a self-evident fact, and denies that he is a member of a race, the members of which are evidently intended to supply each others lack in such a manner as to form a mutually dependent body. It is in human society as it is in the individual human bodythe eye cannot say unto the hand, I have no need of thee: nor again the head to the feet, I have no need of you (1Co. 12:21), or if they do say so they only proclaim their great want of wisdom.
(2) He is a fool because he declines to profit by the experience of men in the past. To recur to the simile of the human body, it is intended to live upon material outside itself, and a man is counted insane who refuses to take food. So we are intended to profit by the experience of men who have lived before us, and it is quite as foolish to set it aside as useless to us as it is to refuse to eat in order to live. It is indeed like expecting to keep in health and strength by consuming ones own flesh. No man does actually and in all cases refuse to profit by the wisdom and experience of others, but he is foolish in proportion as he does so.
(3) He is a fool because he is so declared by the highest authority. God by His offers of guidance, by the very existence of the Bible, declares that men need counsel. (See upon this subject Homiletics on chap. Pro. 3:7-8, page 34.) The human soul is like a blind Samson, because of the blinding nature of sin relative and sin personal, and all its endeavours to find a right way without hearkening to Divine counsel only result in stumbles and wounds, and finally, if persisted in, in moral ruin. All a mans endeavours only increase his misery, until he take the counsel offered him by God. He is like a shipwrecked mariner suffering from raging thirst from having drunk of the briny water, every draught only increases the disease, and nothing can save him but drinking of pure water.
(4) This man is his own destroyer. It is bad to be ruined by the temptations of others, but there is this advantage, we can fall back upon the excuse of our first parents: The woman gave me of the tree and I did eat, or the serpent beguiled me (Gen. 3:12-13). But when a mans rejection of counsel ruins him, he finds himself in a blind alley, from which there is not even the outlet of an excuse.
II. The passionate man. This is often the companion of self-conceit and is indeed a proof of it. If a man is unable to hold a restive horse well in hand, it proves that he has not taken lessons in horsemanship. If a man cannot steer a vessel in ordinary circumstances without running her upon the rocks, it shows that he has not learned the art of navigation. A man who cannot keep his anger from over-mastering himwho cannot keep a firm hold of the rudder of his own spiritproclaims that he has not subjected himself to moral discipline, that he has disdained to learn the art of moral rulership. Such a man is a fool, because a man in a passion is always despised by others, he often utters words which he would afterwards give much to recall, and generally ends by losing his own self-respect.
III. In contrast to this character stands the man who is in all respects the oppositehim whose character is sketched in the first clauses of these verses, who loveth instruction (Pro. 12:1) who acknowledges that he is a stranger in the earth and needs Divine guidance (Psa. 119:19), that the way of man is not himself; it is not in man that walketh to direct his step (Jer. 10:23.See Homiletics on chap. Pro. 10:8, page 151). Such a man is willing to listen to the advice of any who are capable of giving it, and his prudence in this matter is generally accompanied by an ability to cover shameto take a reproof or an insult in silence. He has learned to take George Herberts advice
Command thyself in chief. He lifes war knows
Whom all his passions follow as he goes.
OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS
Pro. 12:15. All through our lost nature the truth of this proverb is visible. A man may be on the road to hell, but think that he is fair for heaven. A man may build by rapine, but think that he is the pink of fair dealing. A man is not a judge about himself. A Christian, therefore, will feel this, and while the impenitent is hard as to his own right, the Christian will be humble, and will be glad, in reasonable ways, to leave his duties to be advised upon by others.Miller.
We have one great Counsellor Messiah, who is made unto us wisdom (Isa. 9:6; 1Co. 1:30). Let us hearken unto Him (chap. Pro. 1:33). Fausset.
And such a fool is every natural man (Job. 11:12); wise enough, haply in his generationso is the fox toowise with such wisdom as, like the ostrichs wings, makes him outrun others upon earth, but helps him never a whit towards heaven.Trapp.
The worse any man is, or doth, the less he seeth his evil. They that commit the most sins have hope that they stand guilty of fewest; they that fall into the greatest transgressions, imagine that their faults be the smallest; they that sink into the deepest dangers do dream of greatest safety; they that have longest continued in rebellion against God, of all others, for the most part are slowest to repentance. St. Paul testifieth that when he was in the worst case, he knew nothing but that he had been in the best.Dod.
Every mans way is, and must be, in some degree, acceptable to himself, otherwise he would never have chosen it. But, nevertheless, whoever is wise, will be apt to suspect and be diffident of himself. Let mens abilities be ever so great, and their knowledge ever so extensive, still they ought not, and without great danger and inconvenience cannot, trust wholly and entirely to themselves. For those abilities and that knowledge easily may be, and often are, rendered useless by the prejudices and prepossessions of mens own minds. Nothing is more common than for mens appetites and affections to bribe their judgments, and seduce them into erroneous ways of thinking and acting. They are often entangled and set fast, not through the want of light and knowledge, not through any defect of their heads, but through the deceitfulness of their hearts. In many cases where they could easily direct other men, they suffer themselves to be misled, and are driven into the snare by the strength of inclination, or by the force of habit. This acquired darkness, this voluntary incapacity, as well as the want of counsel thereby occasioned, nowhere appears more frequently, or more remarkably, than in the transaction of our spiritual concerns, and what relates to the discharge of our duty. The way of man, says our royal author, is right in his own eyes, though the end thereof be the ways of death. When we have wandered out of the road, and almost lost ourselves in bye-paths, we can make ourselves believe that we have continued all the while in the highway to truth and happiness. But, however lightly we may esteem the helps and directions of men, shall we not attend to the counsels of Our Heavenly Father, and the admonitions of the Most High? Can we have more regard to what is right in our own eyes than to what is right in His?Balguy.
Pro. 12:16. Covereth, with the mantle of patience and charity, instead of exasperating himself, and losing self-control by dwelling on the indignity of the word or deed, and the worthlessness of the injurer. He does not publish the act to the discredit of the other, but consults for the reputation of the other, lest he should add sin to the injury suffered.Fausset.
Truly is wrath called shame. For is it not a shame that unruly passions should, as it were, trample reason under foot, disfigure even the countenance, and subjugate the whole man to a temporary madness? (Dan. 3:19.)Bridges.
A fool hath no power over his passions. Like tow, he is soon kindled; like a pot, he soon boils; and like a candle whose tallow is mixed with brine, as soon as lighted he spits up and down the room. A fool uttereth all his mind (Chap. Pro. 29:11). The Septuagint renders it all his anger. For, as the Hebrews well note in a proverb they have, A mans mind is soonest known in his purse, in his drink, and in his anger. But A wise man covereth shame by concealing his wrath, or rather by suppressing it when it would break forth to his disgrace, or the just grief of another. This was Sauls wisdom (1Sa. 10:27); and Jonathans (1Sa. 20:35); and Ahasueruss, when, in a rage against Haman, he walked into the garden. The philosopher wished Augustine, when angry, to say over the Greek alphabet.Trapp.
The meaning of the Holy Ghost is not here to condemn all kinds of anger, for it is one of the powers of the soul which God created as an ornament in men, and godly anger is a part of Gods image in him, and a grace commended in Moses, Elijah, etc., and our Saviour Himself, and he that is always altogether destitute of this doth provoke God to be angry with him, for want of zeal and hatred of sin; but it is a passionate anger that is here reproved, which is not a power of the soul, but an impotency. He that conceiveth the other is an agent, and doth a service to God; but he that is moved with this is a patient, and sin hath in that case prevailed against him.Dod.
Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell
15. Way of a fool A fool is so self-conceited that he takes no advice. A wise man relies not on his own judgment alone in matters of importance. Compare Pro 3:5-7; Job 32:1; Isa 5:21; Luk 18:11.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
v. 15. The way of a fool is right in his own eyes,
Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann
Pro 12:15. The way of a fool, &c. The danger of self-love and self-conceit is here represented; which have ever this effect, that they make men slight, if not reject, good counsel, out of a vain opinion that none can advise them better than themselves; which is, to follow the direction of a fool: for it is as certain a note of folly to rely wholly upon a man’s own judgment, as it is of prudence to hearken to the advice of others.
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Pro 12:15 The way of a fool [is] right in his own eyes: but he that hearkeneth unto counsel [is] wise.
Ver. 15. The way of a fool is right in his own eyes. ] He thinks his own wit best. Consilii satis est in me mihi; a he will not part with his commonwealth of baubles for the Tower of London. And such a fool is every natural man; Job 11:12 wise enough, haply, in his generation – so is the fox too; – wise with such a wisdom as, like the ostrich’s wings, makes him outrun others upon earth, and in earthly things, but helps him never a whit towards heaven – nay, hinders him, and hangs in his light, as it fared with the Pharisees. Mat 21:31 Of such it may be said, as Quintilian said of some conceited, presumptuous, and arrogant of themselves, that they might have proved excellent scholars if they had not been so persuaded already. So might many have been wise if they had not been conceited by their own wisdom, and saved if not too well persuaded of their good estate to Godward. They clasp and hug the barn b of their own brain, with the ape, till they strangle it.
“ At parit ut vivat regnetque beatus.
Cogi posse negat. ” – Hor.,
But he that hearkeneth to counsel is wise.
a Arachne ap. Ovid.
b [Bairn, – child.]
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
fool. Hebrew. ‘evil. See note on Pro 1:7.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Pro 12:15
Pro 12:15
“The way of a fool is right in his own eyes; But he that is wise hearkeneth unto counsel.”
“The way of a fool seems right to him, but a wise man listens to advice.”
Pro 12:15. A fool knows little, actually not enough to know that he might be wrong, actually too little to seek out the advice of one who does know. Both testaments tell us not to be wise in our own eyes (Pro 3:7, Rom 12:16). A wise man can (and will) be warned, but a fool will go on his own way, not seeing his error, and will suffer for it (Pro 22:3; Pro 27:12).
Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary
way: Pro 3:7, Pro 14:16, Pro 16:2, Pro 16:25, Pro 26:12, Pro 26:16, Pro 28:11, Pro 30:12, Luk 18:11, Gal 6:3
but: Pro 1:5, Pro 9:9, Pro 19:20, Ecc 4:13, Jer 38:15-28
Reciprocal: Jdg 17:6 – right 2Ch 10:6 – took counsel Pro 13:10 – with Pro 14:12 – General
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
Pro 12:15. The way of a fool The counsel and course which his own mind suggests to him in ordering his affairs; is right in his own eyes Highly pleases him, so that he neglects and despises the opinions and advices of others; but he that hearkeneth, &c., is wise That distrusts his own judgment, and seeks counsel from others.
Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
12:15 The way of a fool [is] {g} right in his own eyes: but he that hearkeneth to counsel [is] wise.
(g) He stands in his own conceit, and condemns all others in respect to himself.