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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 17:4

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 17:4

A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips; [and] a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue.

4. false ] Rather, wicked, R.V., in a wider sense.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

The two clauses describe two phases of the mutual affinities of evil. The evil-doer delights in lies, the liar in bad words.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Pro 17:4

A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips; and a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue.

The conversational likings of bad men

Mens characters may be known by the conversations they most relish. The text enables us to see the kind of conversation that bad men like.


I.
They like flattery. A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips. The flatterer is a man of false lips. The more corrupt men are, the more blindly credulous to everything that makes them appear better than they are. He who compliments them palliates their offences, gives them credit for virtues they possess not, is their favourite companion, and they ever give heed to his lips. One of the best things recorded of George


III.
is, that one of his first acts after his ascension to the throne was to issue an order prohibiting any of the clergy who should be called to preach before him from paying him any compliment in their discourses. His Majesty was led to this from the fulsome adulation which Dr. Thomas Wilson, Prebendary of Westminster, thought proper to deliver in the Chapel Royal, and for which, instead of thanks, he received from his royal auditor a pointed reprimand, his Majesty observing that he came to chapel to hear the praise of God, not his own.


II.
They like calumny. The liar is also the wicked doer. The naughty tongue, whilst it speaks flatteries and falsehoods of all kinds, speaks calumnies also. And the worse the man is the more welcome to his depraved heart are the reports of bad things concerning others.

1. Calumny gratifies the pride of evil men. It helps them to cherish the thought that they are not worse than others, perhaps better.

2. Calumny gratifies the malignity of evil men. The worse a man is the more malevolence he has in him; the more gratified he is at hearing bad things concerning other men. If, said Bishop Hall, I cannot stop other mens mouths from speaking ill, I will either open my mouth to reprove it or else I will stop mine ears from hearing it, and let him see in my face that he hath no room in my heart. (D. Thomas, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 4. A wicked doer giveth heed] An evil heart is disposed and ever ready to receive evil; and liars delight in lies.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

A wicked doer, or, a malicious or mischievous man, whose practice and delight it is to bring trouble to others,

giveth heed to false lips, Heb. to lips of iniquity, to any wicked counsels or speeches, to false accusations and calumnies, which give him occasion and encouragement to do mischief.

A liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue; he who accustometh himself to false and wicked speaking delighteth in the like speeches of other men. This proverb contains a comparison between an evil-doer and an evil-speaker, and showeth their agreement in the same sinful practice of being greedy to hear false and wicked speeches.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

4. Wicked doers and speakersalike delight in calumny.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips,…. A man of an ill spirit, of a mischievous disposition, that delights in doing wickedness; he carefully attends to such as speak falsehood; he listens to lies and calumnies, loves to hear ill reports of persons, and takes pleasure in spreading them to the hurt of their characters; and men of bad hearts and lives give heed to seducing spirits, to false teachers, to inch as speak lies in hypocrisy, who sooth and harden them in their wickedness;

[and] a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue: or, “to a tongue of destruction” a; a culumniating, backbiting tongue, which destroys the good name and reputation of men; and he that is given to lying is made up of lying, or is a lie itself, as the word signifies; who roves and makes a lie, as antichrist and his followers; such an one hearkens diligently to everything that may detract from the character of those especially he bears an ill will to: or it may be better rendered, “he that hearkens to a lie [gives heed] to a naughty tongue” b; for a lying tongue is a naughty one, evil in itself, pernicious in its effects and consequences.

a “perniciosae linguae”, Tigurine version; “linguae confractionum calamitatum, injuriarum”, Vatablus; “ad linguam exiliorum”, Michaelis. b So Michaelis.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

      4 A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips; and a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue.

      Note, 1. Those that design to do ill support themselves by falsehood and lying: A wicked doer gives ear, with a great deal of pleasure, to false lips, that will justify him in the ill he does, to those that aim to make public disturbances, catch greedily at libels, and false stories, that defame the government and the administration. 2. Those that take the liberty to tell lies take a pleasure in hearing them told: A liar gives heed to a malicious backbiting tongue, that he may have something to graft his lies upon, and with which to give them some colour of truth and so to support them. Sinners will strengthen one another’s hands; and those show that they are bad themselves who court the acquaintance and need the assistance of those that are bad.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Evil Speaker and Speakee Guilty

Verse 4 suggests that wicked words, whether lies, gossip or other evil, avail not, except there be a receptive ear. Evil speaking is much reproved in the Scriptures, but the listener is not without guilt, Pro 13:3; Pro 21:23; Jas 3:6; Jas 4:11.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.

Pro. 17:4. A liar. literally, a lie, falsehood.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF Pro. 17:4

THE EVIL SPEAKER AND THE LISTENER

I. That which men give heed to reveals their character. If a man will listen to another whom he knows to be falseif he permits him to be continually pouring into his ear that which he knows to be untruehe is a liar himself. He could not make himself a receiver of lies if he were not of a kindred spirit with the liar. We classify animals according to the food which they eat, and we can classify men when we know upon what mental and moral food they love to feed. He who gives heed to falsehood and lying lips is a false man himself.

II. Delight in wicked speech leads to wicked actions. Those who use ungodly language never stop there. There is but a step between wicked words and wicked deeds. Neither do those who begin by giving heed to men whose speech is prompted by him who is the father of lies (Joh. 8:44) stop with the mere listening. The listening, as we have seen, implies a certain degree of sympathy with the listener; this sympathy leads to imitation, and he who gives heed to false lips not only becomes himself a man of wicked speech but a wicked doer.

III. The liar and he who listens to him divide the responsibility of the sin between them. These two characters help to increase each others guilt by strengthening each other in their ungodliness. The liar is encouraged to go on in his lying by those who give heed to his lies; if there were none willing to listen to him he would soon cease to sin in this direction. So that the receiver of falsehood will have to share the punishment of him who propagates it. Then the liar increases the wickedness of the wicked doer by his false words, which help to make his heart yet more ungodly and his doings yet more wicked. Thus ungodly men exert a reciprocal influence upon each other for evil.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

Wicked men have a great treasure of evil in their hearts, and yet have not enough to satisfy their own corrupt dispositions. They are like covetous men, in whom their large possessions only increase their lust of having, and therefore they carry on a trade with other wicked men, who are able to add to their store of iniquity, by flattering and counselling them in sin.Lawson.

A liar is of essential use to the evil-doer. He can suborn him. He can get him to bear witness in his favourto perjure himself to get him off, when in danger of being convicted. Such characters, too, it may be noticed, are fond of the lies of false teachers. They keep their ear greedily open to these. They are soothed, and flattered, and encouraged by them in their evil courses. They cannot but like the doctrine that allays their fears; that palliates sin; that makes light of future punishment; that tells them of a God all mercy; that assures them of ultimate universal salvation. Thus it was of old; and thus it is still (Isa. 30:9-11). Wardlaw.

A man most mischievous himself yields most mischievously to the mischief of other sinners. A lie is the most weakly credulous. This is often noticed among the earthly. The biter is often most bitten, the tyrant most tortured. The cunning is often most caught, and what is singularly the fact, the sceptic is often the most believing. It is not a complete proverb, though, for earth, because it is not universal. It is spiritually, as with all these other texts, that the truth has no exception. The greatest harm-doer is Satan, and so the greatest harm is done to Satan. He is the father of lies, and has been the most lied to. He was more deceived in Eden than his victim, and on Calvary than the men who crucified our Lord. And all his followers take from the world equal mischief with that which they inflict upon it.Miller.

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

4. Wicked doer giveth heed to false lips He is an evil doer, a bad man, who gives heed to an iniquitous lip corrupt speech; and he is a false man, whatever he feigns, that listens with pleasure to a pestilent tongue. That is, a bad man may be known by the pleasure he takes in the wicked utterances of others. When Murrell, “the land pirate,” wished to test a man whom he casually met, to ascertain whether he would make a suitable tool for his rapacious purposes, his usual course was to tell stories involving shrewd mischief, wickedness, and crime, beginning with the less aggravated. If he found his auditor took evident pleasure in these, he proceeded to tell tales of robbery and murder. If the man showed abhorrence of the wickedness, he dropped him as unsuited to his purpose:

but if he evinced sympathy with the criminal rather than with the victim, he deemed him fit for his use. This was a wicked man’s way of proving the heart, and was temporarily successful: but he was finally caught in his own trap. That prurient taste which revels in police reports, and tales of licentiousness and murder, is a sure mark of a depraved mind, and of a strong bias to evil.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

v. 4. A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips, literally, “Wickedness attends to lips of violence,” for lies, deceit, and violence agree with the sentiments of a wicked heart; and a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue, finding his pleasure in evil talk, which agrees with his own base thoughts and encourages him in his wickedness.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Pro 17:4. And a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue And a hearkener after lies to, &c. Houbigant renders the verse, A wicked man will give ear to false lips, a just man will not hearken to an evil tongue.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Pro 17:4 A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips; [and] a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue.

Ver. 4. A wicked doer giveth heed to false lips. ] It is an ill sign of a vicious nature to be apt to believe scandalous reports of godly men. If men loved not lies, they wonld not listen to them. Some are of the opinion that Solomon having said, “God trieth the hearts,” doth in this and the two next following verses instance some particular sins so accounted by God, which yet pass among men for no sins, or peccadilloes at the utmost, seeing no man seems to receive wrong by them – such as these are, to listen to lying lips, to mock the poor, to rejoice at another man’s calamity, and the like. Lo, they that do thus, though to themselves and others they may seem to have done nothing amiss, yet God that tries the hearts will call them to account for these malicious miscarriages.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

wicked = mischief maker. Hebrew. ra’a’. App-44.

liar. Hebrew “lie”. Text not “corrupt”; but “lie “is put by Figure of speech Metonymy (of Effect), App-6, for the man who habitually lies: i.e. a liar is always ready to believe a lie. Illustrations: Ahab (1Ki 22:6); Jews (Isa 30:9-11. Jer 5:30, Jer 5:31. Mic 2:11).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Pro 17:4

Pro 17:4

“An evil-doer giveth heed to wicked lips; And a liar giveth ear to a mischievous tongue.”

“A bad man hearkens to the tongue of transgressors: but a righteous man attends not to false lips. “Evil people listen to evil ideas, and liars listen to lies. It is obvious that many renditions are paraphrases rather than translations.

Pro 17:4. It is common for perverse people to believe the wrong thing about others. They want to. They get enjoyment from it. They derive satisfaction in thinking the righteous are not really righteous. This verse is a case of Hebrew parallelism in which the second line restates the truth of the first statement. Thus the liar is the evil-doer, giveth ear is the same as giveth heed, and a mischievous tongue is the same as wicked lips The liar will have something more to lie about.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Pro 28:4, 1Sa 22:7-11, 1Ki 22:6-28, Isa 30:10, Jer 5:31, 2Ti 4:3, 2Ti 4:4, 1Jo 4:5, Rev 13:3-8

Reciprocal: Exo 23:1 – shalt not 1Sa 24:9 – General Pro 6:12 – naughty

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Pro 17:4. A wicked doer A malicious and mischievous man, whose practice and delight it is to bring trouble upon others; giveth heed to false lips Hebrew, , the lip of iniquity, to any wicked counsels or speeches; to false accusations and calumnies, which give him occasion and encouragement to do mischief. And a liar giveth ear to a naughty tongue He who accustoms himself to speak what is false and wicked, delights in the like speeches of others. This proverb contains a comparison between an evil-doer and an evil-speaker, and shows their agreement in the same sinful practice of being eager to hear false and wicked speeches.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments