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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 24:1

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 24:1

Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them.

1. Be not thou envious ] Comp. Pro 23:17.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

A lesson given before, now combined with another. True followers after wisdom will admit neither envy of evil on the one hand, nor admiration or fellowship with it on the other.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Pro 24:1

Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them.

Evil men not to be envied

The first verse of this chapter is very naturally connected with the close of the chapter preceding. There is little room for envy of rich characters as the one there so graphically depicted, and of all men on earth they will be the last whose company will be desired by the wise and good. But the counsel before us may be taken more generally. Far be it that evil men of any stamp should be envied–either for their boasted freedom or their apparent prosperity. Their freedom is but the semblance of the blessing. It is the reality of bondage. They promise liberty, and are themselves the slaves of corruption. And their prosperity! Oh, deem it not a mark of Gods favour! It is all deceitful. It ends in ruin. Desire not to be with them. How oft-repeated is this counsel! How often is the warning enforced by similar reasons! For their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief. Their designs of evil fully matured find utterance. They communicate their projects to others like-minded with themselves–projects of fraud, peculation, robbery; or if on such matters there be a sense of social honour, and an adherence to the conventional morality of the world, there may be projects of impurity–of lewdness and seduction, of drunken frolic and revel, of the snares of temptation for some simple but sober youth, whom it will be so excellent a joke to induce to join them in sin. All this, under what palliative epithets soever it may pass in the world, is mischief and destruction. (R. Wardlaw, D.D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

CHAPTER XXIV

Do not be envious. Of the house wisely built. Counsel necessary

in war. Save life when thou canst. Of honey and the honey-comb.

Of the just that falleth seven times. We should not rejoice at

the misfortune of others. Ruin of the wicked. Fear God and the

king. Prepare thy work. The field of the sluggard, and the

vineyard of the foolish, described.

NOTES ON CHAP. XXIV

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

Their company or manner of life.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

1, 2. (Compare Pro 23:3;Pro 23:17; Psa 37:1).

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

Be not thou envious against evil men,…. Or, “men of evil” b. Such who are addicted to evil, and given up to it, whose principles and practices are bad; such as are before described in the preceding chapter; gluttons and drunkards, men given to women and wine: envy not their present prosperity, or seeming pleasure they have in the gratification of their sensual appetites; since woe and sorrow, wounds and strife, now attend them, and poverty and want will follow them; as well as everlasting ruin and destruction will be their portion hereafter; [See comments on Pr 23:17]; and compare with this

Pr 24:21;

neither desire to be with them; to be in their company; to have any conversation and fellowship with them, which is very infectious, dangerous, and pernicious; nor even to be in the same state, condition, and circumstances they are in; much less to do as they do, and imitate them in their sinful courses; as you would not choose to be with them in hell hereafter, do not desire to be with them here.

b “viros mali”, Baynus, Michaelis.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

After this divergence (in Pro 23:29-35) from the usual form of the proverb, there is now a return to the tetrastich:

1 Envy not evil men,

And desire not to have intercourse with them.

2 For their heart thinketh of violence,

And their lips speak mischief.

The warning, not to envy the godless, is also found at Pro 3:31; Pro 23:17; Pro 24:19, but is differently constructed in each of these passages. Regarding with Pathach, vid., at Pro 23:3. (cf. , Pro 28:5) are the wicked, i.e., such as cleave to evil, and to whom evil clings. The warning is grounded in this, that whoever have intercourse with such men, make themselves partners in greater sins and evil: for their heart broodeth (write , Munach Dech) violence, i.e., robbery, plunder, destruction, murder, and the like. With (in the Mishle only here and at Pro 21:7, cf. , Pro 19:26) connects itself elsewhere , here (cf. Hab 1:3) , labor, molestia , viz., those who prepare it for others by means of slanderous, crafty, uncharitable talk.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

      1 Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them.   2 For their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief.

      Here, 1. The caution given is much the same with that which we had before (ch. xxiii. 17), not to envy sinners, not to think them happy, nor to wish ourselves in their condition, though they prosper ever so much in this world, and are ever so marry and ever so secure. “Let not such a thought ever come into thy mind, O that I could shake off the restraints of religion and conscience, and take as great a liberty to indulge the sensual appetite, as I see such and such do! No; desire not to be with them, to do as they do and fare as they fare, and to cast in thy lot among them.” 2. Here is another reason given for this caution: “Be not envious against them, not only because their end will be had, but because their way is so, v. 2. Do not think with them, for their heart studies destruction to others, but it will prove destruction to themselves. Do not speak like them, for their lips talk of their mischief. All they say has an ill tendency, to dishonour God, reproach religion, or wrong their neighbour; but it will be mischief to themselves at last. It is therefore thy wisdom to have nothing to do with them. Nor hast thou any reason to look upon them with envy, but with pity rather, or a just indignation at their wicked practices.”

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

BEWARE OF ENVYING THE WICKED

(Proverbs 24)

Verses 1-2 are discussed in comment on Vs 19-20.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.

Pro. 24:5. A man of knowledge, rather a man of understanding, increaseth strength, literally maketh power strong. Miller translates the entire verse thus:A strong man, if wise, is as a power indeed; and a man of knowledge makes strength really strong.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Pro. 24:1-6

HOUSE BUILDING

I. An undertaking founded upon wickedness lacks the first element of stability. A house built upon a sandy foundation, we all know, does not possess the first requisite of safety. It is useless to erect any building for fine weather purposes onlyif it is not able to stand a storm all the labour expended upon it is lost. Those places are very few where the tempest does not come sometimes, and even if we could find so favoured a spot, a sandy foundation would not be a permanent one. The ordinary play of the elements and the changes of the seasons would be ever at work upon the loose and shifting soil, and in time the house must fall. So it is with any work undertaken with an evil purpose or from wicked motives. There are laws at work in Gods universe which will forbid such a building to remain long in existence. It is very easy work to lay the stones in the sandmuch more easy than to hew out a place for them in the solid rockand the apparently rapid success of evil men and evil deeds tempts many an unwise builder to work after their method. But the experience of the Psalmist is repeated in every age and must be to the end of time: I have seen the wicked in great power, and spreading himself like a green bay tree. Yet he passed away, and, lo, he was not; yea, I sought him, but he could not be found. (Psa. 37:35-36.)

II. True wisdom consists in patient continuance in well-doing. In this passage, as throughout the entire Book of Proverbs, wisdom is set up as the rival of evil, and sin is accounted as the height of folly. The wise man accounts everything foolishness which is against the moral law of the universe, and the good man is in his estimation the only wise man. That this is a just and true estimate is apparent to all who look a little beneath the surface of thingsto all who realise that it is one thing to seem and another thing to be. The mansion upon the sand-bank appears to be a more desirable dwelling place than the cottage upon the rock, but time will prove which is the safer of the two. But permanence or safety are not the only recommendations to the house of wisdom. There is a satisfaction and a positive joy to be found in doing the right to which the evil-doer is a stranger. To be on the side of the good is to be on the side of God and of conscience, to know from experience that all the moral powers of the soul grow stronger with use, and such experimental knowledge fills the chambers of the soul with all precious and pleasant riches (Pro. 24:4). These considerations ought to make it easy to obey Solomons precept: Be not envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them. The mariner on even a stormy sea would not envy the dweller in the lighthouse if he knew that the waves were rapidly undermining its foundation and rendering its speedy fall certain, and to envy a man a short-lived prosperity which must have a sad end is as contrary to the dictates of reason and self-love. A consideration of their end (Psa. 73:17) is a good preservative against such an envy, and has been tried by many men since the days of Asaph with the same success. But without bringing the future into the present, envy of the wicked may be effectually prevented if we can realise their present loss. The inhabitant of the dwelling filled with materials to satisfy his bodily and mental appetites and wants does not envy him whose house is destitute of such comforts. Yet that would be more reasonable than for him who has the opportunity of rearing for himself a well-furnished house of wisdomof building a character which shall be in itself a source of satisfaction and joy to his better natureto desire the empty and unsatisfying portion of evil doers.

For Homiletics on Pro. 24:6 considered by itself see on chap. Pro. 11:14, page 214, and on chap. Pro. 20:18, page 590.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

Pro. 24:1. Sin is like sound, and it finds the moral nature of fallen man, like the atmosphere, a good conducting medium. The word or deed of evil does not terminate where it is produced. It radiates all round; and beside the direct propagation from a centre by diverging lines, it further reduplicates itself by rebounding like an echo from every object upon which it falls. Human beings may well stand in awe when they consider the self-propagating power of sin, and the facilities which their own corruption affords it. Different persons are affected in different ways. One is shaken by the example of wickedness in its first out-go, another by its rebounding blow, One is carried away in the stream, another hurts himself by his violent efforts to resist it. Some imitate the sin. Others fret against the sinner, Both classes do evil and suffer injury, Whether you be impatiently envious against evil men, or weakly desirous to be with them, you have sustained damage by the contact.Arnot.

To be envious against evil men is plainly to confess ourselves to be worse than they are. For, as St. Gregory speaketh, we cannot envy except it be those whom we think to be better than ourselves. Indeed, to envy against evil men is to make wickedness to be goodness, and to show no goodness to be in his heart that is so envious. Whosoever thou be that envieth evil men, I cannot tell who should envy thee, except the devil, because thou strivest to be more wicked than he is. For they are only the godly that he is envious against.Jermin.

Pro. 24:4. The last virtue here spoken of is knowledge, whereby the inward rooms of the house are filled with all precious substance; unto the providing and treasuring up of food, of money, and all things necessary and comfortable, the knowledge of times, the prices of things, and of the means whereby commodities may be obtained, is requisite. It is not to be marvelled at that many young married folk and householders in these days have nothing in their families but want of necessaries and bare walls, seeing they want both wisdom and understanding, and knowledge.Muffett.

Riches imply

(1) plenty of that which is precious and pleasant.
(2) Propriety. They must be that which is their own; and hereunto economical prudence much conduceth. God bestoweth abundance on the wicked ex largitate, only out of a general providence; but upon his people that are good husbands ex promisso, by virtue of this and the like promises.Trapp.

Pro. 24:5. A strong man. (See Millers rendering in the Critical Notes.) A common man, a better sort of man, a strong man, a mortal or weak man, are the four words for man in the Bible. This is a strong man. It means strong in a worldly sense. That man, if wise, is as a power indeed. The meaning is that a strong man, if not wise, is not strong at all; that piety is itself strength; that the stronger a man without it, the weaker he is; that a strong man who is pious, not only becomes strong in that, but strong really by his worldly strength; because piety gives realness to every gift.Miller.

I. Intelligence apart from piety is power. A man who has great intelligence, and knows how to use it, possesses a power superior to any physical force. II. Piety apart from intelligence is a higher kind of power. It is the patience of love, endurance, patience, compassion; it is a power which will touch mens hearts, move the very arm of Omnipotence, take hold upon the strength of God. III. Piety associated with intelligence is the highest creature power. What power on earth is equal to that possessed by the man of vast intelligence and consecrated affections, the man of sunny intellect and Heaven-inspired sympathies and aims?Dr. David Thomas.

A wise man is not only strong in having wisdom, but in getting strength also. For by wisdom knowing well the want and need of strength, he is careful and diligent to procure it; whereas many times strength, being presumptuous upon its own might, seeks not for wisdom to support it, and falls for want of having it.Jermin.

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

CHAPTER 24
TEXT
Pro. 24:1-12

1.

Be not thou envious against evil men;

Neither desire to be with them:

2.

For their heart studieth oppression,

And their lips talk of mischief.

3.

Through wisdom is a house builded;

And by understanding it is established;

4.

And by knowledge are the chambers filled

With all precious and pleasant riches.

5.

A wise man is strong;

Yes, a man of knowledge increaseth might.

6.

For by wise guidance thou shalt make thy war;

And in the multitude of counsellors there is safety.

7.

Wisdom is too high for a fool:

He openeth not his mouth in the gate.

8.

He that deviseth to do evil,

Men shall call him a mischief-maker.

9.

The thought of foolishness is sin;

And the scoffer is an abomination to men.

10.

If thou faint in the day of adversity,

Thy strength is small.

11.

Deliver them that are carried away unto death,

And those that are ready to be slain see that thou hold back.

12.

If thou sayest, Behold, we knew not this;

Doth not he that weigheth the hearts consider it?
And he that keepeth thy soul, doth not he know it?
And shall not he render to every man according to his work?

STUDY QUESTIONS OVER 24:1-12

1.

Paraphrase the two statements in Pro. 24:1.

2.

What kind of evil men is Pro. 24:2 talking about?

3.

What is meant by house here (Pro. 24:3)?

4.

Comment upon the two adjectives in Pro. 24:4.

5.

According to Pro. 24:5 wisdom is ………….. .

6.

What kind of counselors did ancient kings rely upon (Pro. 24:6)?

7.

Where did a fool not belong (Pro. 24:7)?

8.

Pro. 24:8 might remind one of people calling a spade a ……………

9.

What is meant by the thought of foolishness in Pro. 24:9?

10.

What percentage of people faint when adversity comes (Pro. 24:10)?

11.

What is meant by see that thou hold back in Pro. 24:11?

12.

What is the implication of the statement in Pro. 24:12 that we knew not this?

PARAPHRASE OF 24:1-12

1, 2.

Dont envy godless men; dont even enjoy their company. For they spend their days plotting violence and cheating.

3, 4.

Any enterprise is built by wise planning, becomes strong through common sense, and profits wonderfully by keeping abreast of the facts.

5.

A wise man is mightier than a strong man. Wisdom is mightier than strength.

6.

Dont go to war without wise guidance; there is safety in many counselors.

7.

Wisdom is too much for a rebel. Hell not be chosen as a counselor!

8.

To plan evil is as wrong as doing it.

9.

The rebels schemes are sinful, and the mocker is the scourge of all mankind.

10.

You are a poor specimen if you cant stand the pressure of adversity.

11, 12.

Rescue those who are unjustly sentenced to death; dont stand back and let them die. Dont try to disclaim responsibility by saying you didnt know about it. For God, who knows all hearts, knows yours, and He knows you knew! And he will reward everyone according to his deeds.

COMMENTS ON 24:1-12

Pro. 24:1. Two prohibitions: dont desire to be like evil men and dont desire to run with them. If one doesnt envy them, he wont run with them, and if one doesnt run with them, he will not become like them. Other passages about not envying such: Pro. 24:19; Psa. 37:1; Psa. 73:3; Pro. 3:31; Pro. 23:17. Another passage about not desiring to be with evil people: Pro. 1:15.

Pro. 24:2. In Proverbs the expression evil woman usually is referring to an adulterous woman and a evil man to oppressors (as in this verse). These evil men have their heart involved in their sin, and they study how to be successful in their wickedness. 2Ti. 2:15 shows that the righteous should study to show themselves approved unto God.

Pro. 24:3. After two verses on the destructive way of the wicked, it is refreshing to come to two verses on building a house through wisdom, honesty, and diligence (Pro. 24:3-4). Notice that wisdom is with the builder, not the destroyer. Oppressors who take the sword will perish by the sword (Mat. 26:52), not living out half of their days (Psa. 55:23). While these will be cut off, the righteous will live on in the earth (Psa. 37:9),

Pro. 24:4. There is really a close relationship between wisdom, understanding, and knowledge. Pro. 24:5 says the first two build and establish the house while this verse says the last mentioned fills its chambers with riches. It is obvious that these verses are dealing with the house of the wealthy. Notice the two adjectives describing riches: precious and pleasant. This is godly wealth, gained in the proper way and not by oppression. This makes such wealth precious to the possessor and pleasant also.

Pro. 24:5. The thought of wisdom is continued in this verse, this time stating that its possession makes one a strong man. Grammatically the verse is Hebrew parallelism in which the second statement is a restatement of the first. Other passages on the might of wisdom: Pro. 21:22; Ecc. 9:16. The section in which the last mentioned verse is found tells, There was a little city, and few men within it; and there came a great king against it, and besieged it, and built great bulwarks against it. Now there was found in it a poor wise man, and he by his wisdom delivered the city (Ecc. 9:14-15).

Pro. 24:6. The strength referred to in Pro. 24:5 was evidently military strength as this verse shows. The first statement of this verse is found in Pro. 20:18, and its last statement is found in Pro. 11:14. Pro. 15:22 is similar to the last statement. Kings kept courts of wise men to counsel them in time of war. David (and later Absalom) had Ahithophel (2Sa. 16:23), and Ahab had his prophets (1Ki. 22:6).

Pro. 24:7. A fool does not have wisdom, or he would not be a fool, for the two are considered opposites (Pro. 11:29; Pro. 14:16; Pro. 17:24; Pro. 29:11). The gate was the place of official and legal business where wise men presided (Pro. 31:23). Because he does not have wisdom, the fool will not be one of the elders of his city.

Pro. 24:8 The evil and wickedness that are in the world stem from the devil, but he works through human beings to bring them about; thus, there are those who devise evil. Such a one shall soon be known, and his persistence in such behavior will give him a reputation. Others may be slow in recognizing worth in an individual or in praising him, but they will not fail to notice his evil and in telling others about it. He will not fool them: Men shall call him a mischief-maker.

Pro. 24:9. We know that the act of foolishness is sin (2Sa. 24:10); here we are told that even the thought (whether expressed in act or not) is likewise sin. By thoughts adultery is committed in the heart (Mat. 5:27-28). By Thoughts one who hates is guilty of murder before God (1Jn. 3:15). A scoffer is one who not only rejects that which he should believe but who laughs at, makes fun at, that which he should believe and at those who do believe. He is also called a mocker, which he is: In the last days mockers shall come…saying, Where is the promise of his coming? (2Pe. 3:3). Such will not only lose out with God, but they have already lost out with them (The scoffer is an abomination to men).

Pro. 24:10. Adversity (Opposition, trials, reverses) test ones strength (faith, courage, emotional composure). Some can stand more adversity than others. We should all strive to be strong in the Lord, and in the strength of his might (Eph. 6:10). No man should be content to remain weak, yet there are those who faint (lose heart, fall apart, give up) when hardships come. Such lack depth: He hath not root in himself…when tribulation or persecution ariseth because of the word, straightway he stumbleth (Mat. 13:21). Here is where determination and depth of character are important. One cannot be an overcomer without them. The world is divided into two classes: the overcomers and the overcome.

Pro. 24:11. These are people who need delivering and who are evidently worthy. Those addressed also have the power to deliver them. Ability with opportunity represent responsibility to do so. Hold back those who would otherwise be slain. Sometimes people fail to save others for fear of getting themselves into troubles. But Christians will do their duty even if it involves laying down their lives (Gal. 6:2; Heb. 13:3; 1Jn. 3:16). Other passages to consult: Psa. 82:4; Isa. 58:6-7.

Pro. 24:12. People sometimes try to cover the reality of their failures (to deliver people as in Pro. 24:11) by excusing themselves as if ignorant of the need. But this lie but adds another sin to the great sin of irresponsibility already committed. God knows the truth; He knows (weighs) the heart (Pro. 21:2). And He will someday punish a person for his neglect of duty. Other passages; Job. 34:11; Psa. 62:12; Jer. 32:19; Rom. 2:6; Rev. 2:23; Rev. 22:12.

TEST QUESTIONS OVER 24:1-12

1.

What two prohibitions are contained in Pro. 24:1?

2.

The expression evil men usually refers to what kind of men in Proverbs (Pro. 24:1)?

3.

What three words in Pro. 24:3-4 are closely related to each other?

4.

What two things do Pro. 24:3-4 say will be accomplished by the informed person?

5.

What quality is extolled in Pro. 24:5?

6.

According to Pro. 24:6 where in is safety?

7.

What about a fool and the gate (Pro. 24:7)?

8.

What name is given to the one devising evil (Pro. 24:8)?

9.

Show how thoughts and sin go together (Pro. 24:9).

10.

What does the Bible say about us if we faint amid trials (Pro. 24:10)?

11.

What class of people are we to help (Pro. 24:11)?

12.

Suppose that helping others would endanger ourselves (Pro. 24:11).

13.

Instead of saying, I have sinned, what do more people say about their failures (Pro. 24:12)?

Fuente: College Press Bible Study Textbook Series

1, 2. Be not thou envious , ( tekanne,) jealous, angry, or excited.

The radical idea is heat. See Pro 24:19; also Pro 28:5; Pro 23:17; Pro 23:3; Pro 23:6; Psa 37:1; Psa 73:3. On Pro 24:2 comp. Psa 10:7. The good things of this life health, wealth, station, honours, etc., are desirable. Wicked men often enjoy them, and good men often lack them. This has always been a source of perplexity and temptation to the righteous. Why should the ungodly prosper while the godly suffer? Thoughts like these arise, as they did in the mind of the psalmist. (Psa 73:3.) Hence the frequent admonition, not to envy the prosperity of the wicked, as though they were happier in their sins and riches than the righteous are in their piety and poverty. The Judge of all the earth will do right. It is ours to believe and wait.

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

A Collection Of Solomon’s Proverbs ( Pro 10:1 to Pro 29:27 ).

Solomon’s presentation of The Book of Proverbs has followed the pattern of much Wisdom literature. This commenced with the initial heading detailing the details of the author and his purpose in writing (Pro 1:1-7), continued with a Prologue which laid the foundation for what was to follow (Pro 1:8 to Pro 9:18), and was then followed by the body of the work introduced by one or more subheadings. In Solomon’s case this main body comprises Pro 10:1 to Pro 29:27. It is usually divided up into four parts:

1) Proverbs of Solomon (Pro 10:1 to Pro 22:16), introduced by a subheading ‘The Proverbs Of Solomon’. This may possibly be divided into two sections, Pro 10:1 to Pro 15:21, and Pro 15:22 to Pro 22:16.

2) Words of the Wise (Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22), introduced by an exhortation to hear the words of the wise. This is in a form comparable with exhortations in the Prologue, but there is no subheading in the text as we have it. It may rather therefore be seen as a third section of The Proverbs of Solomon, but with unusual characteristics.

3) Further Sayings of the Wise (Pro 24:23-34), introduced by the subheading, ‘these also are of the wise’.

4) Proverbs of Solomon copied out by the ‘Men of Hezekiah, King of Judah’ (Pro 25:1 to Pro 29:27), introduced by a specific heading.

The inclusion of the words of the wise within two sets of proverbs of Solomon, the first time without a subheading, suggests that we are to see the words of the wise and the sayings of the wise as also from Solomon, but based in each case more specifically on collections of Wisdom sayings known to him, which he himself, or his Scribes, had taken and altered up in order to conform them to his requirements thus making them finally his work. That does not necessarily mean that his proverbs in section 1 (Pro 10:1 to Pro 22:16) were not based on other material. He would have obtained his material from many sources. But once again we are to see them as presented after alteration by his hand.

We should note, for example, the continual references to YHWH that occur throughout the text. Whatever material Solomon may have appropriated, he refashioned it in order to make it the wisdom of the God of Israel, of YHWH their covenant God. This approach of taking what was written by others and refashioning it, while at the same time introducing further ideas of his own, may be seen as following the pattern of modern scholars, each of whom takes the works of others, and then reinterprets them in his own words, whilst adding to them on the basis of his own thinking. The final product is then seen as their own thinking, aided by others. The only difference is that Solomon would have been far more willing to copy down word for word what others had said and written without giving acknowledgement.

Having said that we must not assume that Solomon simply copied them down unthinkingly. As the Prologue has made clear, he did not see himself as presenting some general form of Wisdom teaching. He saw what he wrote down as given by YHWH, and as being in the words of YHWH (Pro 2:6). And he saw it as based on YHWH’s eternal wisdom, His wisdom which had also been involved in the creation of heaven and earth (Pro 3:19-20; Pro 8:22-31). Thus he wants us to recognise that what now follows is not a series of general wisdom statements, but is a miscellany revealing the wisdom of YHWH, the wisdom that leads men into the paths of life.

Fuente: Commentary Series on the Bible by Peter Pett

Eighteenth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 23:26-28 forms a single proverbial thought using four lines, which is called a tetrastitch. This proverb warns us not to envy the evil man because he is a man of mischief and destruction. We have just been warned against envying the sinner in Pro 23:17-18. We also find an example of this proverb in Psalms 73, a psalm of Asaph, of how he envied the wicked until he went into the sanctuary of God and his mind became clear enough to reflect upon their end.

Psa 73:3, “For I was envious at the foolish, when I saw the prosperity of the wicked.”

Illustration – David also warned against this type of envy in Psalms 37 and of how the evildoer will soon be cut off.

Psa 37:1-2, “Fret not thyself because of evildoers, neither be thou envious against the workers of iniquity. For they shall soon be cut down like the grass, and wither as the green herb.”

Pro 24:1  Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them.

Pro 24:2  For their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief.

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

Justification: The Journey to a Place of Rest ( Pro 10:1 to Pro 29:27 ) In Proverbs 10-29 we find a new emphasis regarding our spiritual journey in life. We have heard the call of wisdom in the first nine chapters. Now we have to make the choice to follow the path of wisdom, or the path of the fool. It is our decision to pursue wisdom that will justify us before God. Thus, the underlying theme of Proverbs 10-29 is our justification before God the Father, while the final chapter brings us to a place of rest, which is the destination for man’s spiritual journey in life.

Throughout Proverbs 10-29 we encounter hundreds of individual proverbs that appear to have no organized arrangement in which they are presented us. This is because in the journey of life, our encounters with the wise man and the fool appear to come in the same random order. However, God has placed all things in His divine order. When we read individual proverbs, they appear to be randomly assembled, but if we will step back and look at them as a whole or in groups, we can see an order. These proverbs are clearly grouped together by themes, such as a pure heart, the tongue, a long life, and wealth. In the same way, the circumstances that we face in our daily lives appear to have no particular order. We see very little of God’s hand in our lives in a single day, but when we step back and look as our lives over the months or years, we very clearly see God’s sovereign hand at working in our lives. We recognize that He is divinely orchestrating His purpose and plan for our lives. This is the way that the verses in the book of Proverbs are arranged.

We have seen that Proverbs 1-9, about one third of the book, is man’s call to follow the path of wisdom. Thus, about one third of the book of Proverbs is an introduction, or a preparation, for the rest of this book. Why is that so? We know that Solomon was chosen to be the successor to the throne at his birth. Therefore, he received many years of training under King David for this great task. Even today, we spent the first twenty years of our lives going to school and training for a profession, which is about one third of our lives. We spend the next two thirds of our lives building upon these twenty years of preparation. In our lives, we spend the first twenty years in preparation, the next twenty years sowing, and the last twenty years reaping what we have sown. This is why these years seem to be turning points in many people’s lives. This was the pattern in King Solomon’s life of preparation and growing in wisdom, and this is the pattern found in the book of Proverbs. It is important to note that a season of preparation is something that God has designed and instituted in the human life. He created every human being with the capacity to be shaped and molded through a training process. We often use the term “brainwashing” in a negative sense to refer to a person who has been programmed to think in a negative way; but proper training also reprograms the mind and prepares an individual for the tasks of life. Our human make-up of the spirit, soul, and body were designed to receive training before practical application and abundant living can be achieved.

Although we will study these proverbs, we will find ourselves falling short of fulfilling them in our everyday lives. None of us has walked flawlessly in obedience to any single proverb. Therefore, each individual proverb reveals God’s standard of righteousness, pointing us to Jesus, who alone fulfilled this divine standard in our behalf. In this sense, this collection of proverbs is a collection of redemptive proverbs, revealing our need for a Redeemer, who alone fulfilled every proverb.

Outline Here is a proposed outline:

1. Justification: Solomon’s First Collection Pro 10:1 to Pro 22:16

2. Divine Service: Sayings of the Wise Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:34

3. Perseverance: Solomon’s Second Collection by Hezekiah Pro 25:1 to Pro 29:27

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

Divine Service: The Words of the Wise (Two Collections) In Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:34 we have a collection of sayings that is often called “The Words of the Wise.” Scholars give it this title because there are indications from Pro 22:21 that King Solomon sent young men to seek out the wisdom of Egypt and of the East. There are two collections of sayings in this section. The first collection is made up of thirty sayings (Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22) and the second collection is short, consisting of only four sayings (Pro 24:23-34). We know that Solomon identified two sources of wisdom outside of Israel, which were the East and Egypt; for we read in 1Ki 4:30, “And Solomon’s wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt.” We know that the first collection of sayings has similarities with ancient Egyptian wisdom. Thus, it most likely originated from Egypt. We can then suggest that the second, but shorter, collection of sayings (Pro 24:23-34) either came from Egypt as miscellaneous wisdom, or it may have been that wisdom which Solomon collected from the East.

We see in one verse in this section (Pro 22:21) that serves as a possible reference to the fact that Solomon sent a delegation of men to seek out wise men of other nations. The YLT reads, “To cause thee to know the certainty of sayings of truth, To return sayings of truth to those sending thee .” (Pro 22:21) It implies that Solomon sent a delegate to a faraway city in his search for wisdom; for we read in Ecc 12:9 that Solomon “sought out” proverbs.

Ecc 12:9, “And moreover, because the preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge; yea, he gave good heed, and sought out, and set in order many proverbs.”

In other words, some of the young men that were trained in his court were selected, or called out, to go to other nations and seek divine wisdom. These would have been men who had learned Solomon’s proverbs well and applied them to their lives. In addition, these men may have carried a collection of Solomon’s proverbs as a gift to these wise men of Egypt and the East.

The wise men of this place may have compiled thirty of their most important proverbs and sent them back to King Solomon with a cover letter using the words found in Pro 22:17-21, which also serves as a prologue to these sayings. They gave Solomon’s delegate a collection of sayings of truth for those who sent him. It appears that King Solomon honored these proverbs by keeping them with his other collection of proverbs. This is how they were placed within the Proverbs of Solomon. However, we must assume that King Solomon would not have sought something from lesser kings without offering to them a greater gift, perhaps his collection of divine sayings. Thus, those who were sent out probably took the message of the God of Israel with them to evangelize the civilized world as a part of their calling.

Regarding its application to our spiritual journey, we see how God will pick a point in time when He finds us faithful to entrust to us a greater calling. In Pro 22:21 we see how Solomon chose one or more of his faithful servants and sent them to gather divine wisdom outside of his kingdom. It is a time when God calls us and anoints us for a particular task. For example, Paul was called to the nations in Act 9:15 when Ananias prophesied that, “he is a chosen vessel unto me, to bear my name before the Gentiles, and kings, and the children of Israel.” But it was many years later when Paul was sent out with Barnabas and anointed in the office of an apostle to the Gentiles in Act 13:1-4. If we will be faithful and continue in what God has given to us, we, too, will find a greater calling and anointing to serve. This is a place of maturity that God is trying to get each of us to obtain.

The number “thirty” symbolized manhood and maturity in ancient times. Thus, these thirty sayings of the wise may serve to symbolize a Christian’s spiritual maturity; for it is only those mature in Christ who are appointed to Christian service; so, the thirty sayings contained within this passage of Scripture may represent our journey towards maturity. In other words, when we adopt these thirty sayings to our life, we will have developed a mature behaviour and be ready for our assignment and calling in Christian service.

This section of proverbs is characteristics by having lengthy sayings of two or more verses, which build upon a theme. The training becomes more intensive as we apply ourselves to learning the ways of wisdom. Therefore, we must apply more contemplation in order to understand these truths. However, as in our secular education, our past learning will serve as a foundation to understanding the more difficult issues of life. These sayings can be divided into two groups.

Outline Here is a proposed outline:

1. First Collection (Thirty Sayings of the Wise) Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22

2. Second Collection (Four Sayings) Pro 24:23-34

Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22 The Words of the Wise: First Collection (Thirty Sayings) Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:22 begins a new section of collections, often called The Words of the Wise. It is possible that these sayings were collected by Solomon from outside his kingdom. We know that Solomon identified two sources of wisdom outside of Israel, which were the East and Egypt; for we read in 1Ki 4:30, “And Solomon’s wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt.”

We know that the first collection of sayings has similarities with ancient Egyptian wisdom. Thus, it most likely originated from Egypt. We can then suggest that the second, but shorter, collection of sayings (Pro 24:23-34) either came from Egypt as miscellaneous wisdom, or it may have been that wisdom which Solomon collected from the East.

This first collection of “Sayings of the Wise” is characterized by individual truths that come in groups of two or more verses. The training becomes more intensive as we apply ourselves to learning the ways of wisdom. Therefore, we must apply more contemplation in order to understand these truths. As in our secular education, our past learning will serve as a foundation to understanding the more difficult issues of life.

The signposts found in the sayings of the wise (Pro 22:17 to Pro 24:34) and in Solomon’s second collection (25-29) tell us to continue in the fear of the Lord, to honor those in authority over us, and this will bring happiness into our lives as we continue on this journey. Note:

Pro 23:17, “Let not thine heart envy sinners: but be thou in the fear of the LORD all the day long.”

Pro 24:21, “My son, fear thou the LORD and the king: and meddle not with them that are given to change:”

Pro 28:14, “Happy is the man that feareth alway : but he that hardeneth his heart shall fall into mischief.”

Here is a proposed outline:

a) Prologue (Ode or Decastitch) Pro 22:17-21

b) First Saying( Tetrastitch) Pro 22:22-23

c) Second Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 22:24-25

d) Third Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 22:26-27

e) Fourth Saying (Distitch) Pro 22:28

f) Fifth Saying (Tristitch) Pro 22:29

g) Sixth Saying (Hexastitch) Pro 23:1-3

h) Seventh Saying (Pentastitch) Pro 23:4-5

i) Eighth Saying (Heptastitch) Pro 23:6-8

j) Ninth Saying (Distitch) Pro 23:9

k) Tenth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 23:10-11

l) Eleventh Saying (Hexastitch) Pro 23:12-14

m) Twelfth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 23:15-16

n) Thirteenth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 23:17-18

o) Fourteenth Saying (Hexastitch) Pro 23:19-21

p) Fifteenth Saying (Octastitch) Pro 23:22-25

q) Sixteenth Saying (Hexastitch) Pro 23:26-28

r) Seventeenth Saying (An Ode) Pro 23:29-35

s) Eighteenth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:1-2

t) Nineteenth Saying (Tristitch) Pro 24:3-4

u) Twentieth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:5-6

v) Twenty-First Saying (Distitch) Pro 24:7

w) Twenty-Second Saying (Distitch) Pro 24:8

x) Twenty-Third Saying (Distitch) Pro 24:9

y) Twenty-Fourth Saying (Distitch) Pro 24:10

z) Twenty-Fifth Saying (Hexastitch) Pro 24:11-12

aa) Twenty-Sixth Saying (Pentastitch) Pro 24:13-14

bb) Twenty-Seventh Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:15-16

cc) Twenty-Eighth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:17-18

dd) Twenty-Ninth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:19-20

ee) Thirtieth Saying (Tetrastitch) Pro 24:21-22

The Thirty Sayings – Some scholars translate Pro 22:20 to read “thirty sayings” instead of “excellent things,” and it is easy to find thirty individual proverbs in this section of literature.

BBE, “Have I not put in writing for you thirty sayings, with wise suggestions and knowledge,” (Pro 22:20)

It is possible that Solomon gathered these sayings outside the nation of Israel, perhaps in Egypt. When we compare some of these sayings with an Egyptian writing entitled The Instruction of Amenemope, written about 1200 to 1300 B.C. and made up of thirty chapters, we find that this ancient writing has a few proverbs that are similar to the proverbs in this passage of Scripture. [121]

[121] Miriam Lichtheim, The Instruction of Amenemope, in Ancient Egyptian literature: Volume II: The New Kingdom (Berkeley: University of California Press, 1973-[80]), in Libronix Digital Library System, v. 2.1c [CD-ROM] (Bellingham, WA: Libronix Corp., 2000-2004).

Example One:

Pro 22:17-18 a, “Direct your ear and hear wise words. Set your heart to know them. For it is pleasant if you keep them in your inmost self.”

Amenemope Pro 3:10, “Give your ears and hear what is said, give your mind over to their interpretation: It is profitable to put them in your heart.

Example Two:

Pro 22:20, “Have I not written for you thirty counsels and teachings to teach you what is right and true?”

Amenemope Pro 27:7, “Mark for your self these thirty chapters: They please, they instruct, they are the foremost of all books.”

Example Three:

Pro 22:24, “Do not make friends with people prone to anger. With the hotheaded person do not associate.”

Amenemope Pro 11:12, “Do not fraternize with the hot-tempered man, nor approach him to converse.”

Example Four:

Pro 23:1-2, “When you sit down to eat with a ruler, observe what is before you. Put a knife to your throat if you have a big appetite.”

Amenemope Pro 23:16, “Look at the cup in front of you, and let it suffice your need.”

Thus, it was possible that Solomon was exposed to other ancient literature, and actually read this ancient piece of wisdom literature. One verse in the Scriptures that refers to this exposure is found in 1Ki 4:30. It mentions that there were wise men in the east and in Egypt.

1Ki 4:30, “And Solomon’s wisdom excelled the wisdom of all the children of the east country, and all the wisdom of Egypt.”

We see in Ecc 12:9 that Solomon sought out wisdom, which meant that he could have looked far and wise for wisdom literature.

Ecc 12:9, “And moreover, because the preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge; yea, he gave good heed, and sought out , and set in order many proverbs.”

We see a possible reference to the fact that Solomon sent a delegation of men to seek out wise men of other nations in Pro 22:21. Thus, a group of Egyptian wise men many have compile a collection of thirty sayings that were most popular among themselves.

Pro 22:21, “That I might make thee know the certainty of the words of truth; that thou mightest answer the words of truth to them that send unto thee? ”

This, however, does not take away from the inspiration of the Scriptures, because divine wisdom is universal, being found in many other people besides the Israelites. Job is an example of this.

The theme of universal wisdom given from God to mankind is found in the book of Romans:

Rom 1:19-20, “Because that which may be known of God is manifest in them; for God hath shewed it unto them. For the invisible things of him from the creation of the world are clearly seen, being understood by the things that are made, even his eternal power and Godhead; so that they are without excuse:”

Rom 2:14-15, “For when the Gentiles, which have not the law, do by nature the things contained in the law, these, having not the law, are a law unto themselves: Which shew the work of the law written in their hearts, their conscience also bearing witness, and their thoughts the mean while accusing or else excusing one another;)”

The Significance of the Number “Thirty” We ponder the question of why there were thirty sayings. We have seen that an ancient Egyptian piece of wisdom literature entitle The Instruction of Amenemope was made up of thirty chapters. In this ancient document, there is also a reference to the “council of the thirty.” [122] The importance of the number thirty can be found in other parts of Egyptian antiquity. It shows up in an ancient board game named “Senet,” which was “the best known and most widely popularized board game from ancient Egypt. Based upon a 3×10 board of thirty squares, it consisted of a race game played with knucklebones that could be engaged between two players or, as some temple drawings suggest, by a single player.” “The game itself symbolized the path of the dead through the underworld. ‘I must enter the Hall of the thirty and I become God at the 31,’ says one papyrus.” [123]

[122] Mirian Lichtheim, Ancient Egyptian Literature: vol. II: The New Kingdom (Berkeley, California: University of California Press, 1973), chapter 19, in Libronix Digital Library System, v. 2.1c [CD-ROM] (Bellingham, WA: Libronix Corp., 2000-2004).

[123] Ricardo Calvo, “Chapter 2: Mystical numerology in Egypt and Mesopotamia,” in The Origins of Chess: Mystical Numerology in Egypt and Mesopotamia, [on-line]; accessed on 7 June 2009; available from http://www.goddesschess.com/chessays/calvonumerology.html; Internet; see also Wolfgang Decker, Sports and Games of Ancient Egypt (London: Yale University Press, 1992), 124.

Even within the Hebrew culture, the age of thirty was significant in that it marked the maturity of adulthood. We find Joseph being appointed to lead the nation of Egypt at the age of thirty (Gen 41:46). Ezekiel and Jesus Christ were both called into their ministries at the age of thirty (Eze 1:1, Luk 3:23).

Gen 41:46, “And Joseph was thirty years old when he stood before Pharaoh king of Egypt. And Joseph went out from the presence of Pharaoh, and went throughout all the land of Egypt.”

Eze 1:1, “Now it came to pass in the thirtieth year, in the fourth month, in the fifth day of the month, as I was among the captives by the river of Chebar, that the heavens were opened, and I saw visions of God.”

Luk 3:23, “And Jesus himself began to be about thirty years of age, being (as was supposed) the son of Joseph, which was the son of Heli,”

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

v. 1. Be not thou envious against evil men, desiring their company on account of their apparent prosperity and good fortune, neither desire to be with them, to be one of their number, to he accepted into their ranks. cf Pro 23:17.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

EXPOSITION

Pro 24:1

We return here to the more usual form, the tetrastich. Be not thou envious against evil men (see on Pro 23:17, where a similar warning is given, and comp. Pro 23:19 below). “Men of wickedness,” wholly given over to evil. Neither desire to be with them. Their company is pollution, and association with them makes you a partner in their sinful doings. The Septuagint prefaces the paragraph with the personal address, “son.”

Pro 24:2

For their heart studieth destruction. The grounds of the warning arc here given, as in Pro 1:15. “Destruction” (shod); Vulgate, rapinas, “violence” of all kinds, e.g. robbery, murder. Their lips talk of mischief; utter lies and slanders which may injure other people or bring themselves profit. Admiration of such men and intercourse with them must be repugnant to every religious soul. The LXX. refers the verse to evil imaginations issuing in evil talk; “For their heart meditates falsehoods, and their lips speak mischiefs ().”

Pro 24:3, Pro 24:4

In contrast with the conversation of the evil, wisdom is commended.

Pro 24:3

Through wisdom is an house builded (see on Pro 14:1). By prudence, probity, and the fear of God a family is supported and blessed, maintained and prospered. Established (see on Pro 3:19); Septuagint,

Pro 24:4

(Comp. Pro 1:13 and note Pro 3:10.) With all precious and pleasant (Pro 22:18) riches. Material prosperity, copious store of necessaries, and wealth, follow on wisdom; how much more do spiritual blessings attend the fear of God!

Pro 24:5, Pro 24:6

Wisdom is beneficial in peace and war.

Pro 24:5

A wise man is strong. , “in strength,” full of strength, because, however feeble in body, he is wise in counsel, firm in purpose, brave in conduct, thoroughly to be depended upon, and supported by his perfect trust in God (comp. Pro 21:22). The Septuagint, with which agree the Syriac and Chaldee, reading differently, renders, “A wise man is better than a strong man”a sentiment which Lesetre compares to Cicoro’s “cedant arma togae.” A man of knowledge increaseth strength; literally, strengtheneth power; shows greater, superior power, as Amo 2:14. The Septuagint, from some corruption of the text, renders, “And a man having prudence (is better) than a large estate ( );” i.e. wisdom will bring a man more worldly advantages than the possession of extensive farms. The gnome is proved by what follows.

Pro 24:6

Thy war; war for thyself, for thy profit, equivalent to “successful war” (comp. Exo 14:14). The clause is an echo of Pro 20:18 (where see note). The last line is a repetition of Pro 11:14 (comp. also Pro 15:22). Septuagint, “War is made with generalship (), and help with a heart that counsels.”

Pro 24:7-10

Some distichs now follow, concerned with wisdom and its opposite.

Pro 24:7

Wisdom is too high for a fool. It is beyond his reach, he cannot follow its lead, and has nothing to say when his counsel is asked, and no ability to judge of any question presented to him. “Wisdom” (chochmoth) is in the plural number, intimating the various attributes connoted by it, or the different aspects in which it may be regarded (see note on Pro 1:20). “Too high” (, ramoth) is also plural; and Delitzsch and Nowack take it to mean, not so much “high things” as “precious things,” such as pearls or precious stones, in accordance with Job 28:18, “No mention shall be made of coral or of crystal; yea,. the price of wisdom is above rubies.” In this sense Delitzsch translates, “Wisdom seems to the fool to be an ornamental commodity,” a costly and unnecessary appendage, which is not worth the sacrifices entailed by its pursuit. Whichever way we take it, the point is the rarity and inaccessibility of wisdom, and the repugnance of fools to make any exertion in order to obtain it. St. Augustine thus sums up the steps by which wisdom is reached: fear of God, piety, knowledge, fortitude, mercifulness, sincerity (‘De Doctr. Christ.,’ 2.7). He openeth not him month in the gate. When men gather in the usual place of assembly (Pro 8:3; Pro 22:2), to take counsel on public matters, he has nothing to say; he listens fatuously, and is silent. Septuagint, “Wisdom and good thought are in the gates of the wise; the wise turn not aside from the mouth of the Lord, but reason in assemblies.”

Pro 24:8

He that deviseth to do evil. He who shows a certain kind of misapplied cleverness (in contrast to the true wisdom) in planning and pursuing evil schemes. Shall be called. Defined and explained, as Pro 16:21 (comp. Pro 21:24). A mischievous person; literally, lord of mischief; i.e. owner, possessor of mischief. One must not be led by such a man’s apparent astuteness to attribute; to him wisdom; he is an impostor, a mere intriguer, who is sure to be exposed ere long. Septuagint, “Death befalls the undisciplined.”

Pro 24:9

The thought of foolishness is sin. “Sin” is the subject in this clause as “the scorner” is in the next; and what it says is that sin is the exeogitation, the contriving of folly. The stoner is the real fool, m that he does not pursue his proper end, prepares misery for himself, is blind to his best interests. The connection between sin and folly, as between wisdom and righteousness, is continually enforced throughout the book. The scorner is an abomination to men. The man who scoffs at religion and every high aim is an object of abomination to the pious, and is also a cause of evil to others, leading them to thoughts and acts which are hateful in the eyes of God. Septuagint, “The fool dieth in sins (Joh 8:24), and uncleanness belongeth to a pestilent man.” The text here followed, as in other passages of this chapter, is quite different from the received one.

Pro 24:10

If thou faint in the day of adversity, thy strength is small. The gnome seems to be unconnected with the preceding. There is a paronomasia between (tsarah), “adversity,” and (tsar), “small,” narrow, which is retained by Fleischer: “Si segnis fueris die angustiae, angustae sunt vires tuae.” So we may say in English, “If thou faint in time of straitness, straitened is thy strength.” If you fail, and succumb to anxiety or danger, instead of rising to meet the emergency, then you are but a weakling or a coward, and the strength which you seemed to possess and of which you boasted, perhaps, is nothing worth. Such a man hearkens not to the Sibyl’s counsel (Virgil, ‘AEneid,’ 6.95)

Tu ne cede malis, sed contra audentior ito,

Quam tua te fortuna sinet.”

The LXX. again varies from the received text, “He shall be polluted in an evil day, and in a day of affliction, until he fail,” or “die” ().

Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12

A hexastich, inculcating humanity on the ground of God’s omniscience.

Pro 24:11

If thou forbear to deliver them that are drawn unto death. The sentence is not conditional, in the second line being equivalent to , utinam, “oh that!” “would that!” So the first hemistich should be rendered, “Deliver them that are haled to death,” and the second, “And those that are tottering to slaughter, oh, hold them back!” The sentence is somewhat obscure, but Cheyne well explains it thus: “Some victims of a miscarriage of justice are about to be dragged away to execution, and the disciple of wisdom is exhorted to use his endeavours to deliver them” (‘Job and Solomon’). In the case supposed a moral obligation lies on the pious and well-informed to save a human life unjustly imperilled. At the same time, there is nothing in the passage which absolutely, shows that the punishment of the guiltless is here deprecated; it looks rather as if Wisdom had no pleasure in the death of men, innocent or not, and that the victims of an extreme sentence claimed pity at her hands, whatever might be the circumstances of the verdict. Septuagint, “Deliver those that are being led away to death, and redeem () those that are appointed to be slain; spare not (to help them)” (comp. Psa 82:3, Psa 82:4).

Pro 24:12

If thou sayest, Behold, we knew it not. The disciple of Wisdom may excuse himself from making any effort for the prisoners’ release, by saying he had not heard of the case. St. Jerome makes the excuse to be inability, vires non suppetunt. The LXX. makes it a personal matter, ignoring the plural form of the previous paragraph. “I know him not, he is no friend of mine; why should I trouble myself about him?” Such a selfish person, like the priest and Levite in the parable, would “pass by on the other side.” Doth not he that pondereth the heart consider it? God knows the truthknows that the excuse is vain; for he is the Weigher and Searcher of hearts (Pro 16:2; Pro 21:2). Cain’s plea, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” is unavailable; the law of love is limited by no circumstances. He that keepeth thy soul, doth not he know it? The expression, “keeping the soul,” may be equivalent to “preserving the life;” but it more probably means watching, observing, the inmost secrets of the nature (Job 7:20). The verb used is (natsar), which has both significations. The sense of “forming.” which some give it, seems not allowable. (For “heart” (leb) and “soul” (nephesh), see note on Pro 2:10.) Shall not he render to every man according to his works? Knowing the heart and the motive, God deals out retributive justice (Pro 12:14; Psa 62:12; Rom 2:6). Septuagint, “But if thou say, I know not this man, know that the Lord knoweth the hearts of air; and he who formed () breath for all, himself knoweth all things, who rendereth to every man according to his works.”

Pro 24:13, Pro 24:14

An exhortation to the study of wisdom, with an analogy.

Pro 24:13

Eat thou honey, because it is good. Honey entered largely into the diet of the Oriental, and was regarded not only as pleasant to the taste and nutritious, but also as possessed of healing powers. It was especially used for children’s food (Isa 7:15), and thus becomes an emblem of the purest wisdom. “I have eaten my honeycomb with my honey,” says the lover in So Pro 5:1; and the psalmist says that the ordinances of the Lord are “sweeter than honey and the honeycomb” (Psa 19:10; see on Pro 25:16). Palestine was a land flowing with milk and honey (Exo 3:8); hence is derived the continual reference to this article of diet in the Bible.

Pro 24:14

So shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto thy soul; better, know, apprehend wisdom to be such for thy soulto be as pleasant and nourishing and profitable to thy soul, as honey is to thy taste and thy body. The moralist would have his disciple feel the same relish for wisdom that he has for sweet food, recognize it not simply as.useful, but as delightful and enjoyable. When thou hast found it. To find wisdom is to get possession of it and use it (comp. Pro 3:13, and note there). Then there shall be a reward. The apodosis begins here. We have had the same assurance in Pro 23:18 (where see note). The word is literally future. One who has obtained wisdom has a glorious hope before him; habebis in novissimis spem, Vulgate; but his hope is better than thatit goes with him, not in his last hour only, but all his life long. Septuagint, “Then shalt thou perceive wisdom in thy soul; for if thou find it, fair shall be thine end, and hope shall not fail thee.”

Pro 24:15, Pro 24:16

A warning against plotting for the ruin of a good man’s house, with a view doubtless of profiting by the disaster.

Pro 24:15

Lay not wait, O wicked man, against the dwelling of the righteous. (rasha) is vocative (comp. Eze 33:8); taken appositionally, as in Revised Version margin, “as a wicked man,” it is senseless; for how could he lay wait in any other character? Spoil not his resting-place. “Spoil,” as Pro 19:26 (where see note). Drive him not from his house by violence and chicanery. Vulgate, “Seek not impiety in the house of the righteous;” do not attempt to cloak your insidious designs by detecting some evil in the good man, and making yourself the instrument of retribution, as if you were doing God service in afflicting him (Joh 16:2). Septuagint, “Bring not an ungodly man into the pasture () of the righteous, neither be thou deceived by the feasting of the belly.”

Pro 24:16

A just man falleth seven times, and riseth up again. The fall may be taken of sin or of calamity. Preachers, ancient and modern, have made much use of this text in the first sense, expatiating how a good man may fall into venial or more serious sins, but he never loses his love of God, and rises from his fall by repentance on every occasion. We also often find the words in die, “a day,” added, which indeed occur in some manuscripts, but are not in the original. But the verb naphal seems not to be used in the sense of “falling” morally; and the meaning here is that the just man frequently falls into trouble,he is not secure against worldly cares and losses, or the insidious attacks of the man mentioned in Pro 24:15; but he never loses his trust in God or offends by fretfulness and impatience, and always God’s providence watches over him and delivers him out of all his afflictions. “Seven times” means merely often, that number being used to express plurality or completeness (see on Pro 6:31; Pro 26:16; and comp. Gen 4:24; Job 5:19 (which is like our passage); and Mat 18:22). The expectation which the sinner conceived when he saw the good man distressed, that he might seize the opportunity and use it to his own benefit, is woefully disappointed. In contrast with the recovery and reestablishment of the righteous, when the wicked suffer calamity there is no recuperation for them. The wicked shall fall into mischief; Revised Version better, are overthrown by calamity (comp. Pro 14:32, and note there). Septuagint,” But the ungodly shall be weak in evils.”

Pro 24:17, Pro 24:18

A warning against vindictiveness, nearly approaching the great Christian maxim, “Love your enemies” (Mat 5:44).

Pro 24:17

Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth. “Thou shalt love thy neighbour” was a Mosaic precept (Le Pro 19:18); the addition, “and hate thine enemy,” was a Pharisaic gloss, arising from a misconception concerning the extermination of the Canaanites, which, indeed, had a special cause and purpose, and was not a precedent for the treatment of all aliens (see Pro 25:21, Pro 25:22). When he stumbleth; rather, when he is overthrown. The maxim refers to private enemies. The overthrow of public enemies was often celebrated with festal rejoicing. Thus we have the triumph of Moses at the defeat of the Amalekites, and over Pharaoh’s host at the Red Sea; of Deborah and Barak over Sisera (Exo 15:1-27; Exo 17:15; Jdg 5:1-31); and the psalmist, exulting over the destruction of his country’s foes, could say, “The righteous shall rejoice when he seeth the vengeance; he shall wash his feet in the blood of the wicked” (Psa 58:10). But private revenge and vindictiveness are warmly censured and repudiated. So Cato, ‘Distich.’ 4.46

Morte repentina noli gaudere malorum;

Felicesobeunt quorum sine crimine vita est.”

Of very different tone is the Italian proverb, “Revenge is a morsel for God;” and “Wait time and place to act thy revenge, for it is never well done in a hurry” (Trench).

Pro 24:18

Lest the Lord see it, and it displease him. This malignant pleasure at others’ misfortunes (which Aristotle, ‘Eth. Nic.,’ 2.7. 15, calls ) is a sin in the eyes of God, and calls for punishment. And he turn away his wrath from him; and, as is implied, direct it upon thee. But it seems a mean motive to adduce, if the maxim is taken baldly to mean, “Do not rejoice at your enemy’s calamity, lest God relieve him from the evil:” for true charity would wish for such a result. Bode considers “his wrath” to be the enemy’s ill will against thee, which God by his grace changes to love, and thou art thus covered with confusion and shame for thy former vindictiveness. But the point is not so much the removal of God’s displeasure from the enemy as the punishment of tile malignant man, either mentally or materially. To a malignant mind no severer blow could be given than to see a foe recover God’s favor and rise from his fall. The moralist then warns the disciple against giving way to this lest he prepare for himself bitter mortification by having to witness the restoration of the hated one, or by being himself made to suffer that evil which he had rejoiced to see his neighbour experience (comp. Pro 17:5, and note there).

Pro 24:19, Pro 24:20

A warning against envying the prosperity of the wicked.

Pro 24:19

Fret not thyself because of evil men (comp. Pro 24:1 and Psa 37:1). The verb (charah) means “to burn,” “to be angry;” so here we may render, “Be not enraged on account of evil doers.” The anger would arise on account of the apparent inequitable distribution of blessings. St. Jerome has, Ne contendas cum pessimis; Septuagint, “Rejoice not over () evildoers.” Neither be thou envious at the wicked; i.e. do not fancy that their prosperity is to be desired, nor be led to imitate their doings in order to secure like success. The new verse shows the solemn reason for this warning.

Pro 24:20

For there shall be no reward to the evil man. He has no happy “future” to expect, as Pro 24:14; Pro 22:18 (where see note). The candle, etc. (see Pro 13:9, where the clause appears). Septuagint, “For the evil man shall have no posterity, and the torch of the wicked shall be quenched.”

Pro 24:21, Pro 24:22

An injunction urging loyalty to God and the king.

Pro 24:21

Fear thou the Lord and the king. The king is God’s vicegerent and representative, and therefore to be honoured and obeyed (see Ecc 8:2; Ecc 10:20; 1Pe 2:17). Meddle not with them that are given to change. There is some doubt about the intepretation of the last word (shonim), which may mean those who change, innovators (in which transitive sense the verb does not elsewhere occur), or those who think differently, dissidents, who respect neither God nor the king. The verb signifies transitively “to repeat,” and intransitively “to be changed;” so it may be most accurately translated here, with Delitzsch, “those who are otherwise disposed,” who have not the proper sentiments of fear and honour for God and the king. St. Jerome has, Et cum detractoribus non commiscearis, by which word he probably means what we call revolutionists, persons who disparage and despise all authority. Septuagint, “Fear God and the king, and disobey neither of them.” The verse has been largely used as a text by preachers who desired to recommend loyalty and to censure disaffection and rebellion. It has been a favourite motto for discourses on the Gunpowder Treason and the execution of Charles I.

Pro 24:22

For their calamity shall rise suddenly. Though these dissidents seem to succeed for a time, yet retribution shall fall suddenly upon them. And who knoweth the ruin of them both? This seems to mean the two classes, those who dishonour God and those who dishonour the king; but no such distinction is made in the previous verse; the rebels are classed under one category. Wordsworth renders, “the stroke of vengeance from them both,” i.e. from God and the king. Otherwise, we must give another signification to , and, with the Syriac and many modern commentators, take it in the sense of “years,” which will bear, as Job 36:11, and translate, “The destruction [equivalent to ‘end’] of their years, who knoweth?” No one can tell when the crisis of their fate shall come; but it will arrive some day, and then the time of their prosperity will be at an end. Septuagint, “For they (God and the king) will suddenly punish the ungodly; and who shall know the vengeance of both ( )?” After this the LXX. inserts three proverbs not found now in the Hebrew, which, however, Ewald considers to have been translated from a Hebrew original: “A son that keepeth the commandment shall be safe from destruction (Pro 29:27, Vulgate), and he hath fully received it (the word). Let no lie be spoken by the tongue of the king; and no he shall proceed from his tongue. The king’s tongue is a sword, and not of flesh; and whosoever shall be delivered unto it shall be destroyed; for if his anger be inflamed, he consumes men with their nerves, and devours men’s bones, and burns them up as a flame, so that they are not food for the young eagles.” The allusion at the end is to animals killed by lightning. Here follows the series of proverbs (Pro 30:1-14) called in the Hebrew, “The words of Agur.” The second part of “the words of Agur,” and “the words of Lemuel” (Pr 30:15-31:9) follow in the Greek after Pro 24:34 of the Hebrew. Delitzsch explains the matter thus: In the copy from which the Alexandrines translated, the appendix (Pr 30-31:9) was divided into two parts, half of it standing after “the words of the wise” (Pr 22:17-24:22), and half after the supplement containing further sayings of wise men (Pro 24:23-34).

Pro 24:23-34

Part V. A SECOND COLLECTION, forming a second supplement to the first Solomonic book, and containing further “words of the wise.”

Pro 24:23-25

Partiality and impartiality a hexastich.

Pro 24:23

These things also belong to the wise; are the sayings of wise men. The following proverbs, as well as the preceding, are derived from wise men. Mistaking this superscription, the LXX. makes it a personal address: “This I say to you who are wise, so that ye may learn.” The first line is not a proverb, but the introduction to the ensuing collection. It is not good to have respect of persons in judgment (see Pro 18:5, and note there; and Pro 28:21, where the expression is the same as here). To regard one person before another is to be partial and unjust. To say this error is “not good” is a meiosis, the meaning being that it is very evil and sinful (comp. Pro 20:23). The statement is developed and confirmed in the next two verses, which show the results of partiality and its opposite.

Pro 24:24

He that saith unto the wicked, Thou art righteous. The judge is supposed to be acquitting a guilty person. Him shall the people curse. The Hebrew is “peoples,” as Septuagint and Vulgate, maledicient eis populi. Nations shall abhor him. Not individuals, nor families only, but the whole community, wherever such an iniquitous ruler is found, shall execrate and hate him. The voice of the people is universally against him; no one is so blind and degraded as openly to applaud his nets. The verb nakab, “to curse,” means primarily “to bore or pierce;” hence some have translated it here, “him shall the peoples stab.” But the word is used in the sense of distinguishing by a mark or brand, and thence passes into the sense of cursing, as at Pro 11:26; Le Pro 24:11; Job 3:8. In Pro 17:15 the unjust judge is called an abomination to the Lord. In this case the vox populi is vox Dei.

Pro 24:25

But to them that rebuke him shall be delight (see on Pro 2:10). They who punish the wicked, with them it is well; they are approved by God and applauded by the people. Vulgate, Qui aruunt cum laudabuntur, They who convict him shall be praised.” And a good blessing shall come upon them; literally, a blessing of goodone that has in it all good things, the happy contrast to the curses which meet the unjust judge. Septuagint, “But they that convict them (the guilty) shall appear more excellent, and upon them shall come blessing.”

Pro 24:26

A distich connected with the subject of the preceding paragraph. Every man shall kiss his lips that giveth a right answer; or better, he kisseth the lips who giveth a right answer. An answer that is fair and suitable to the circumstances is as pleasant and assuring to the bearers as a kiss on the lips. Such a salutation would be a natural sign of sympathy and affection. Thus Absalom won the hearts of the people by kissing those who came to court with their suits (2Sa 15:5). In Gen 41:40, where the Authorized Version has, “According to thy word shall all my people be ruled,” the Hebrew runs, “Thy mouth shall all my people kiss,” i.e. they shall do homage to thee, which is another signification of this action. This, however, would not be suitable here, as the kiss is supposed to be given by the speaker, though the LXX. mistakenly translates, “But men will kiss lips that answer good words.”

Pro 24:27

Prepare thy work without. The proverb enjoins a man to look well to his resources before he undertakes to build a house or to establish a family. “Without” (chuts) (Pro 7:12; Pro 8:26); in the fields. Put in due order all immediate work in thy farm. And make it fit for thyself in the field; and get ready for what has to come next. That is, in short, steadily and with due foresight cultivate your land; provide abundant means of subsistence before you attempt to build up your house. A suitor had, as it were, to purchase his bride from her relations by making considerable presents; it was therefore necessary to provide a certain amount of wealth before contemplating matrimony. And afterwards build thy house. This is, indeed, the meaning of the passage; but the Hebrew makes a difficulty, as it is literally, “afterwards and thou shalt build.” Some have supposed that some words have dropped out of the text (Cheyne, ‘Job and Solomon’). But vav in , coming after a date or notification of time, as here after (comp. Gen 3:5), “has the future signification of a perfect consecutive” (Delitzsch), equivalent to “after that, then, thou mayest build.” Septuagint, “Prepare thy works for thy going forth ( , ), and get ready for the field, and come after me, and thou shalt build up thine house.” In a spiritual sense, the heart must be first cleared of thorns, and opened to genial influences, before the man can build up the fabric of virtuous habits, and thus arrive at the virtuous character.

Pro 24:28

Be not a witness against thy neighbour without cause (chinnam); gratuitously (Pro 3:30; Pro 23:29; Pro 26:2), when you are not obliged in the performance of a plain duty. Persons are not to put themselves forward to give testimony to a neighbour’s discredit, either officiously as busybodies, or maliciously as slanderers. The maxim is expressed in general terms and is not to be confined to one category, as the Syriac and Septuagint render, “Be not a false witness against thy fellow citizen.” And deceive not with thy lips. The Hebrew is really interrogative, “And wouldest thou deceive with thy lips?” (Psa 78:36). The deceit is not so much intentional falsehood as misrepresentation arising from haste and inconsiderateness consequent on this unnecessary eagerness to push forward testimony unsought. Septuagint, “Neither exaggerate () with thy lips.”

Pro 24:29

The subject is still continued, as if the moralist would say, “Though a man has done you an injury by gratuitously testifying against you, do not you retaliate in the same way.” Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me (see Pro 20:22, and note there). The lex talionis should not be applied to private wrongs. The high morality of the Christian code is here anticipated, the Holy Spirit guiding both.

Pro 24:30-34

A mashal ode concerning the sluggard (for similar odes, comp. Pro 7:1-27 :41-23; Job 5:3-5; Psa 37:35, etc.; Isa 5:1-6).

Pro 24:30

The field the vineyard; the two chief objects of the farmer’s care, which need constant labour if they are to prove productive. Moralizing on this passage, St. Gregory (‘Moral.,’ 20.54) says, “To pass by the field of the slothful, and by the vineyard of the man void of understanding, is to look into the life of any careless liver, and to take a view of his deeds.”

Pro 24:31

Thorns. Kimmashon is the word here used, but the plant has not been certainly identified (comp. Isa 34:13). Nettles (charul). The stinging nettle is quite common in Palestine, but the plant here meant is probably the prickly acanthus, which quickly covers any spot left uncultivated (Job 30:7). Revised Version margin suggests wild vetches. Ovid, ‘Trist.,’ 5.12. 21

Adde, quod ingenium louga rubigine laesum

Torpet, et est multo, quam fuitante, minus.
Fertilis, assiduo si non renovetur aratro,
Nil, nisicum spinis gramen, habebit ager
.”

So spiritual writers have used this apologue as teaching a lesson concerning the soul and the life of man, how that spiritual sloth allows the growth of evil habits, and the carelessness which maintains not the defence of law and prayer, but admits the enemy, and the result is the loss of the true riches and the perishing of the heavenly life. The two verses are thus rendered, or morally applied, in the Septuagint: “A foolish man is as a farm. and a man wanting in sense is as a vineyard; if you leave him, he will be barren, and will be altogether covered with weeds, and he will become deserted, and his fences of stone are broken down.”

Pro 24:32

Then I saw, and considered it well (Pro 22:17). I looked in this sight, and let it sink into my mind. I looked upon it, and received instruction (Pro 8:10). I learned a lesson from what I saw.

Pro 24:33, Pro 24:34

These verses are a repetition, with very slight variations, of Pro 6:10, Pro 6:11 (where see notes), and possibly have been introduced here by a later editor. Pro 6:33 seems to be the sluggard’s own words; Pro 6:34 shows the result of his sloth. There are numberless proverbs dedicated to this subject in all languages; e.g. “No sweat, no sweet;” “No pains, no gains; . He that wad eat the kernel maun crack the nut;” “A punadas entran las buenas hadas,” “Good luck enters by dint of cuffs” (Spanish); “Nihil agendo male agere discimus; . The dog in the kennel,” say the Chinese. “barks at his fleas; the dog that hunts does not feel them” (Kelly). “Sloth and much sleep,” say the Arabs, “remove from God and bring on poverty.” The LXX. is somewhat dramatic in its rendering: “Afterwards I repented (), I looked that I might receive instruction. ‘I slumber a little, I sleep a little, for a little I clasp () my hands across my breast.’ But if thou do this, thy poverty will come advancing, and thy want like a good runner ( )” The word occurs in Pro 6:10, but nowhere else in the Septuagint. It is used by St. Mark. It has been thought that the original mashal ended with Verse 32, the following passage being added by a scribe as illustrative in a marginal note, which afterwards crept into the text.

HOMILETICS

Pro 24:9

Sin and folly

However these words are read, they point to an association of sin and folly. This may be regarded from two points of view, according as we start with the thought of the sin or with that of the folly.

I. SIN IMPLIES FOLLY.

1. It chooses the worse of two courses. Thus it blunders into self-injury. Evil is not only culpable in the sight of God; it is hurtful to the evil doer. Its path is dark, degraded, disappointing. It is foolish to turn from the way of light and honour and satisfaction to such a course.

2. It is short-sighted. In choosing a way one should look to the end of it. It is madness for the belated traveller to turn aside to the grassy path when the rough, stony road would take him home, and he knows not whither the pleasanter way will lead him. “The wages of sin is death;” it is, then, nothing but folly to work for the master without considering his direful payment.

3. It perverts the thoughts. Sin involves folly, and it also leads to greater folly. Many sins directly poison and paralyze the intellectual faculties. All sins confuse the lines of right and truth. Thus the man who lives in sin is minding his eyes to the greatest facts. To know of the doctrine we must do the commandment (Joh 7:17). The wilful sinner obscures the doctrine by breaking the commandment.

II. FOLLY ISSUES IN SIN. We now look at the conjunction from the opposite point of view. We start with the folly. This is to be regarded as a seed of sin. It is true that sin is primarily concerned with the moral nature. A man cannot really sin altogether in ignorance, because if he does not know that he is doing a wrong thing, to him the thing is not wrong. But, on the other hand, there is a culpable ignorance, arising from carelessness, disregard for truth, moral obliquity. Now, as sin is at the root of that ignorance, so the ignorance may, in such a case, serve as a link m the miserable chain of consequences that drags new sins into existence. These facts should lead us to certain practical conclusions.

1. It is our duty to seek the light that we may avoid sin. Truth is not merely given as a luxury, it is, first of an, a beacon light. It is to guide us over the wilderness in the right way.

2. The teaching of children is a moral and religious duty. The advantages of education are usually discussed from a utilitarian standpoint. But the chief advantage is that it should open the eyes of children to the wisdom of doing right and to the folly of wickedness. Many poor children grow up among scenes of vice and crime without having an opportunity of knowing of a better way. The Christian Church is called to be a light in the world, leading from sin, not forcibly, but by showing the clear wisdom of goodness, as well as its moral obligation.

Pro 24:10

Fainting in the day of adversity

I. STRENGTH IS TESTED BY THE DAY OF ADVERSITY.

1. The day of adversity will come. All have not an equally painful lot. It is only the pessimist who refuses to admit that God sends a happy life to some; and if the lines have fallen in pleasant places, nothing but ingratitude or sentimentality will deny the fact. Nevertheless, the dark day of adversity will rise on every soul of man. It cannot be eluded, though in youth and health the spirit refuses to anticipate it. It is well to be prepared to meet it.

2. Strength is wanted for the day of adversity. This will be a time of assault, strain, pressure. The soul will then be besieged, buffeted, and in danger of being crushed. Therefore there is need of sufficient strength, not only for prosperous times, but for this harder occasion. The lighthouse must not only be strong enough to stand in calm weather; it should be able to resist the battering rams of the tempest. The ship must be built for the storm. The army that can look smart in a review is useless if it goes to pieces on the field of battle. The model navy is an extravagant ornament if it will not serve us in action. The lamp is useless if it goes out in the hour of darkness. Religion is for the time of trial and temptation. The spiritual life needs to be strong enough to hold on through terror, temptation, and trouble; or it is a delusion.

3. Faulty strength will fail in the day of adversity. Trouble is trial. The season of affliction will assuredly be severe enough to prove our strength. It is vain for any one to live on empty beasts and idle pretences. The hollowness of such folly will be exposed at the fatal moment. The soft-metal sword will certainly double up in the battle and bring disaster on its unhappy owner.

II. FAITH AND COURAGE WILL GIVE STRENGTH IN THE DAY OF ADVERSITY.

1. To faint in the day of adversity is to make ones strength small. Such a collapse will undermine one’s energy. The coward is always weak. To fear is to fail. But courage inspires strength, and he who is able to keep up a brave heart in the day of adversity is most likely to conquer. Few men have been called upon to endure such hardships and to face such perils as Livingstone, alone in the heart of Africa. Now, Livingstone was characterized by a wonderful buoyancy of temperament, by high spirits and unfailing cheerfulness. Nelson is said not to have known fear. Gordon was as ready to face death as to go to his daily duty. No doubt such heroic courage is largely due to the natural greatness of the men who possessed it But it is not independent of moral qualities. For:

2. The secret of the highest courage is faith. He who trusts God is armed with the might of God. This is higher than natural strength, because “even the youths shall faint and be weary, and the young men shall utterly fall: but they that wait upon the Lord shall renew their strength; they shall mount up with wings as eagles; they shall run, and not be weary; and they shall walk, and not faint” (Isa 40:30, Isa 40:31). Thus there is a strength that is perfected in weakness (2Co 12:9).

3. Therefore we have no excuse to faint in the day of adversity. With such stores of strength for the weakest, failure is culpable, Note: We are not to blame for meeting with adversitywe cannot escape it; nor for suffering under itthis is natural; but only for fainting, i.e. for collapse and despair. Yet even this may not mean utter failure. We may still have some strength, though it be sickly and fast ebbing away. Like Gideon’s heroes, we may be “faint, yet pursuing” (Jdg 8:4).

Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12

Culpable negligence

Following the Revised Version and the now generally accepted rendering of these verses, we will read the first as an exhortation to deliver men from death, and the second as a warning against neglecting this duty.

I. THE EXHORTATION. “Deliver them that are carried away unto death, and those that are ready to be slain see that thou hold back.” Note first the grounds, and then the application, of this exhortation.

1. The grounds of it.

(1) It springs from human need. Men are in danger in war, famine, poverty, disease, sin. The world cannot go on without mutual assistance. The selfish policy of sauve qui peut would be fatal to society.

(2) It is based on human brotherhood. God has made all men of one blood (Act 17:26). Our fellow creatures of the animal world have claims upon us; for, like us, they are sensitive, and God made both us and them. Much more are our fellow men in our care.

(3) It is urged by Divine commands. The Bible teaches duty to man as well as to God, on Divine authority. The mainly negative requirements of the ten commandments do not cover all our duty. We are called upon to love our neighbours as ourselves.

(4) It is confirmed by the example of God. He has given us our lives, spared them when forfeited by sin, and saved them from many dangers. He has given his Son in death to save us from ruin. Such redeeming mercy makes churlish negligence on our part doubly culpable.

2. The application of it.

(1) There should be mercy in war. It is heathenish to refuse quarter. The Christian soldier will dress the wounds of his enemy.

(2) We should render assistance in cases of accident and danger. It is horrible to read in the newspapers of men who would watch a child drown because they were not officers of the Royal Humane Society, because it was not their business to save life, and even because they had good clothes which they did not wish to soil. Selfish people will see a man half murdered in a street quarrel without interfering.

(3) We should help the poor. This applies to our own poor first, then to those of our neighbourhood, but the obligation extends as far as a China famine.

(4) Hospitals deserve support, for ministrations to the sick directly tend to preserve life.

(5) Social reforms demand Christian assistance.

(6) It is our supreme duty to spread the gospel throughout the world. This is a “Word of life” (Php 2:16). To let men perish for lack of the bread of life is culpable negligence. The lepers of Samaria rebuke such conduct (2Ki 7:9).

I. THE WARNING.

1. Ignorance is no excuse. “Behold, we knew it” (or “him”) “not.” Of course, this does not apply to unavoidable ignorance. But the rich should know the condition of the poor. It is the duty of the West End to investigate the condition of the East End. While this duty is neglected the comfortable complacency of ignorance is unpardonable. Further, if the attempted excuse be that the sufferer is personally unknown to us, this must not be admitted. He is still our brother. The parable of the good Samaritan shows that the perfect stranger has claims upon us.

2. God observes this negligence. He “pondereth the heart.” He reads our secret thoughts and weighs our motives. Thus he knows whether we are kept back by unavoidable ignorance or inability to help, or whether the negligence is wilful. With this awful fact before us, that there is One who “pondereth the heart,” all flimsy excuses must shrivel up and leave the negligence of the needy in its naked guilt.

3. God will treat us according to our treatment of our fellow men. “With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again” (Mat 7:2). Moreover, in regard to the duty now before us, it is to be observed that God takes note of omissions as well as of transgressions. The “eternal fire” is not spoken of by our Lord for thieves, murderers, etc; but for those who failed to help the hungry, the thirsty, the needy (Mat 25:41-46).

Pro 24:16

The fall of a good man

I. IT IS POSSIBLE FOR A GOOD MAN TO FALL.

1. Here is a warning against presumption. “Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall” (lCo Pro 10:12). No one is so perfect as to be impeccable. Peter, who little expected it, failed in the moment of trial.

2. He is a warning against wrong judgments. If a good man stumbles it is commonly thought that he proves himself to have been a hypocrite from the first. No notion could be more unwarrantable. It is possible that the former life was honest and true and up to its pretension, but that a sudden change for the worse has occurred through yielding to overpowering temptation. The citadel was honestly guarded; but in an unwary moment, when the custodian was sleeping, or careless, or weak, it fell before the assaults of the everwatchful foe. This may even be. repeated many times. We can scarcely think of a really good man lapsing utterly from the right way as many as seven times and as often returning to it. But some measure of sin is committed many times. There is not a Christian who does not fall into numerous sins.

II. IF A GOOD MAN FALLS HE IS LIKELY TO RISE UP AGAIN. We need not now discuss the thorny doctrine of “final perseverance.” Without retreating into the tangled thicket of a priori dogmatics, we may discover certain plain and practical. considerations which will encourage us to believe in the recovery of the lapsed.

1. The bent of a good mans life is towards goodness. He is a just man. Righteousness is characteristic of him. It is his habit. His fall is an event, his righteousness is his life. He is not the less guilty in his sin. He cannot shake it off and disown it, fortifying himself against the charge of it under the guise of his habitual righteousness. A long career of goodness is no excuse for a single wrong deed. Nevertheless, beneath and behind the sin into which the man has been surprised are the general tone and temper of his life. This will make his fall an agony. One look from Christ, and the shamefaced disciple goes out to weep bitterly (Mat 26:75). The Christian who has been surprised in an hour of weakness will be in the greatest distress afterwards. He can have no rest till he is forgiven and restored. Hence there is a hope for him which we cannot cherish on behalf of the bad man who has had no experience of the better way and who has no inclination to follow it.

2. A good man may return. There is danger in despair. The miserable penitent fears that he may have committed the unpardonable sin, forgetting that his very grief is a proof that that dark eternity of guilt has not yet been reached. God is long-suffering and merciful. Seven times the poor man falls; seven times he is forgiven and restored by his compassionate Lord.

3. The grace of God assists recovery. Indeed, without this it were impossible. But with it who shall despair? On the other hand, alter a sicked man has indulged in sin he refuses to open his heart to Divine grace. “The one means by which he might climb up out of his deep ruin is rejected by him.

In conclusion, we may gather from a consideration of this subject that the first essential is the character of a man’s life, rather than that of isolated and perhaps exceptional deeds. God notes every deed, and not one can go unavenged. But the fundamental question isHow does a man live in the main? is the set of his life towards goodness? does he habitually face the light or the darkness? Though with many stumbles and shameful bruises, is he, on the whole, going up, not down? If so, he is one of God’s sons.

Pro 24:19

A needless trouble

I. THERE IS TEMPTATION TO BE DISTRESSED AT THE PROSPERITY OF BAD MEN.

1. It is unjust. This was an ancient source of perplexity and trouble of mind. While good men often suffer, bad men are often exceptionally free from the world’s ills. This pains us as a frightful discord in the psalm of life. It raises doubts as to the presence, or the power, or the justice of God. If the just Lord is in our midst and is almighty to rule, why does he permit such condition of society?

2. It is hurtful. Prosperity confers power. Thus great resources are at the disposal of bad men, who are able to expend them in extensive schemes of wickedness. A successful Napoleon can deluge a continent with blood, and bring misery into thousands of households. The triumph of bad men not only enables them to inflict suffering to a frightful extent; it gives them exceptional opportunities for spreading the infectious malaria of their sin. When a bad man prospers he contaminates his trade, lowers the character of business generally, and tempts his employes to do wrong on a scale that is proportionate to his enterprises.

3. It seems to be enviable. Sin looks like a short cut to success. It is hard for a good man who resists temptations to be rewarded with distresses which he would have escaped if he had yielded.

II. IT IS FOOLISH TO BE DISTRESSED AT THE PROSPERITY OF BAD MEN.

1. Prosperity is infinitely inferior to character. The great question is not as to what a man has, but as to what he is. It is far more important to be upright and holy in life than to be rich, successful, and happy in one’s circumstances. Surely he who values true goodness will feel that it is a pearl of great pricethe cost of which would not be compensated for by all the wealth of the Indies. Therefore to envy the prosperity of the wicked is to turn aside from the higher possession which may be enjoyed in poverty and adversity.

2. The prosperity of the wicked is delusive and unsatisfactory. It professes to give pleasure, but it cannot afford real happiness, for it has nothing in it to respond to the deeper cravings of the soul. He who feasts upon it is like a man who would fill himself with chaff and sawdust. In his very satiety he is miserably hungry. Full, he yet starves. Or worse, he is like one who drinks madly of salt water, and is plunged into an agony of thirst in consequence. If, as may happen, however, he feels a measure of satisfaction, this can only be by deadening his higher nature. Such a state is delusive and more terrible than open complaining.

3. This prosperity is short-lived. “The candle of the wicked shall be put out” (Pro 24:20). The psalmist who was alarmed at the prosperity of the wicked saw another picture when he came to consider their end. He who would share the purple and fine linen of Dives on earth must also share his bed of fire after death. It is only the short-sighted, earthly minded man who will much envy the prosperity of the wicked. A deeper thinking man will dread it, and be well satisfied if he has the true blessedness of life eternal.

Pro 24:29

Rendering evil for evil

It is interesting to note that this conduct is not only rebuked by Jesus Christ, but also forbidden in the Old Testament, and even in the Book of Proverbs, which is thought to deal too much in temporal and self-regarding motives. So utterly is it foreign to right mindedness. Yet it is most common, and apparently most natural.

I. LET US CONSIDER HOW IT SEEMS NATURAL TO RENDER EVIL FOR EVIL.

1. It appears to be just. There is a natural fitness m things, and this seems to be satisfied by the lex talionis, “An eye for an eye, and a tooth for a tooth.”

2. It offers to check evil. It appears to be a natural form of punishment. Indeed, it was sanctioned in rough, primitive times, though subject to judicial inquiry (Exo 21:24).

3. It satisfies the craving for revenge. This is the reason which encourages it far more than considerations of abstract justice or anxiety about the public weal. “Revenge is sweet,” and to restrain the impulse to strike an offender in return for his blow is hard and painful.

4. It agrees with prevalent customs. It is “after the manner of man” to avenge a wrong, and apparently the habit springs from innate instincts. At all events, it works without reflection. Therefore it appears to be a part of the economy of nature. To refuse it is like denying a natural appetite.

II. LET US LEARN WHY IT IS WRONG TO RENDER EVIL FOR EVIL.

1. The sense of revenge lies in our lower nature. It is shared by the brute creation, like hunger and. lust. But it is aggravated by the sin of hatred and by selfishness. There is nothing noble or elevating in it. On the contrary, it drags us down. Long-suffering braces the moral fibres of the soul; revenge relaxes them.

2. We are not called upon to execute sentence on our fellow men. If there is to be a requital, this must come from God, to whom belongs just vengeance (Rom 12:19). We are usurping the rights of God when we impatiently take it into our own hands. Moreover, we are the worst possible judges of our own rights. When deeply wounded, or irritated by insults, or blinded. by passion, we are not in a fit condition to exercise judicial functions. Yet it is just on such occasions that we are most tempted to wreak vengeance on the head of an offender.

3. It is our duty to forgive and save our fellow man. Even if punishment be due to him, vengeance from us is not owing. Our business is to seek to reclaim by “heaping coals of fire” on our wrong doer. Instead of doing to him as he has done to as, our Christian motto is to do to him as we would that he should do to us.

4. Revenge is un-Christlike. Christians are called to follow in the footsteps of the patient and brave Jesus, who was patient under provocation, even praying for his enemies.

5. Revenge is unseemly in those who need forgiveness. We are dependent on the mercy of God. He has not taken vengeance on us. But if we forgive not men their trespasses, neither will our heavenly Father forgive us our trespasses. Thus Portia rightly says to Shylock

“Consider this
That in the course of justice, none of us
Should see salvation: we do pray for mercy;
And that same prayer cloth teach us all to render
The deeds of mercy.”

Pro 24:30-34

The field of the slothful

Nothing is more characteristic of the Book of Proverbs than its scorn of slothfulness and its strenuous inculcation of industry. To doubt these subjects were especially important in view of the perennial indolence of Orientals. But slothfulness is not unknown in the West, and in the fierce competition of modern life a smaller indulgence in idleness will bring sure disasters. Men often blame their circumstances, the injustice of fate, etc; when they should accuse their own lack of energy. The difference between the successful and those who fail to attain anything in life is more often than not just that between hard work and self-indulgent, easy living. Moreover, many men who are diligent in business are most slothful in spiritual matters. Hence applications of the parable in the present day.

I. THE STATE OF THE FIELD.

1. This is visible to the casual wayfarer. The writer simply “went by” it; yet he took in enough at a glance to understand its condition. A man’s character is impressed upon his work. A slovenly man will have a slovenly hand. The neglected field and the ill-kept vineyard reveal the idle and foolish nature of their owner.

2. The field is seen to be in a miserable condition.

(1) It is overgrown with thorns and nettles. It is not left empty if it is untilled. Weeds grow on the neglected land. If we fail to do our duty, positive mischief will follow. If we neglect the field of the world, briars of ignorance, folly, and sin will spring up; if we fail to train the vineyard of our own family, nettles of evil will appear in the minds of our children, to sting us for our indolence. Thus was it with Eli, who failed to rebuke his sons. If we do not cultivate the gardens of our own souls, rank weeds of sin will certainly grow up there and bear their poisonous fruits.

(2) Its defences are broken down. The indolent man lets his walls fall into dilapidation. Thus his property lies open to the robber and the destroyer. The wild boar from the wood will root up his vine. If we are not watchful and careful, evil will come in from without and spoil our work, our home, our souls. It needs care to guard against aggression.

II. THE CONDUCT OF THE OWNER.

1. It is slothful.

(1) His evil is negative. He commits no offence. Yet he is ruined. We may be undone by simple omission without any transgression.

(2) His evil is in delaying to do his duty. He does not mean to forego it. He only postpones fulfilment. Yet he is ruined and disgraced. We owe duties to time. We do wrong by not accomplishing our work promptly, though we intend to accomplish it ultimately. We have not unlimited time before us. Today’s neglected task cannot be performed tomorrow without hindering tomorrow’s work. The foolish virgins failed by being too late.

2. It is self-indulgent. The sluggard enjoys his sleep. Selfishness is the root of idleness. But this, in turn, is stupefying. One does not note how the fresh morning glides away while he lies with his eyes closed in sinful sleep. So also the slumber of the soul that neglects the call to its highest duty is a selfish sleep.

3. It is foolish. The sleep is a poor compensation for poverty and shame.

III. THE CERTAIN CONSEQUENCES.

1. Ruin follows. Poverty comes on the slothful man of business as a natural punishment. Poverty of soul, emptiness, fruitlessness, and finally death follow spiritual sloth.

2. This may be unsuspected. “Like a highwayman.”

3. It will be irresistible. The want will come “as an armed man.”

CONCLUSION. Sloth is peculiarly liable to creep into one’s habits without being noticed, Therefore the need of Verse 32.

HOMILIES BY E. JOHNSON

Pro 24:1, Pro 24:2

Warning against evil company

I. THE LOVE OF SOCIETY IS A NATURAL INSTINCT.

II. EVIL COMPANY IS OFTEN MOST FASCINATING.

III. THE ASSOCIATIONS THAT ARE FOUNDED UPON MERE FELLOWSHIP IN PLEASURE ABE SELDOM SATISFACTORY, OFTEN CORRUPTING.

IV. THE BAD MAN‘S COMPANY IS MORE TO BE SHUNNED THAN THAT OF ONE SUFFERING FROM A CONTAGIOUS DISEASE. “Wicked companions,” said a man of the world, the novelist Fielding, “invite us to hell.” “They are like to be short graces when the devil plays the host,” said another.J.

Pro 24:3-6

Wisdom edifies and invigorates

How fine a word is “edification,” building up, in its moral and Christian uses! Here the image of the house is directly introduced, and may be variously applied.

I. WISDOM THE FOUNDATION OF DOMESTIC STABILITY AND HAPPINESS. (Pro 24:3, Pro 24:4.) The same great principles apply in the least as well as the most important things. Every day brings humble occasions for the practice of the grandest laws, no less in the house, the farm, or the shop, than in the council chamber or on the battle field. “Method is as efficient in the packing of firewood in a shed, or the harvesting of fruits in a cellar, as in Peninsular campaigns or the files of a department of state.” Let a man keep the Law, and his way will be strewn with satisfactions. There is more difference in the quality of our pleasures than in the amount. Comfort and abundance in the home are the certain signs of prudence and sense and action constantly applied.

II. WISDOM THE SOURCE OF MANLY STRENGTH. (Pro 24:5, Pro 24:6.) It was a great man who said, “Knowledge is power.” It is not the force of brute strength, but that of spiritual energy, which in the long run rules the world. The illustration of the text is aptly selected from war, where, if anywhere, brute force might be supposed to prevail. Experience shows that it is not so. The complete failures of men like Hannibal and Napoleon show it in one way. Recent wars have illustrated the truth that it is the deliberate and matured designs of the strategist and far-seeing statesman which command success, rather than the “great battalions” on the side of which Providence was said to be. And in another application, sheer force of intellect is often surpassed and outdone by the steady and constant employment of humbler powers. Strength in any form without prudence is like a giant without eyes. Violence and craft may seem the readiest way to wealth; yet experience shows that prudence and piety lead most surely to desirable prosperity.J.

Pro 24:7-10

Some traits of folly and sin

I. THE GROVELLING MIND. (Pro 24:7.) Wisdom is too high for the indolent to climb to, for the sensual and earthly to admire and love. They are like Muck-rake, in Bunyan’s parable. From such no good counsel ever comes. They are dumb “in the gate,” on every important occasion, when help, light, sympathy, are needed. The base prudence which inspires many popular proverbsthe prudence “which adores the rule of three, which never subscribes, never gives, seldom lends, and asks but one question of any project, ‘Will it bake bread?'”is indeed folly. “Self’s the man,” says a Dutch proverb. But those who would gain all for self end by losing self and all.

II. THE MALICIOUS TEMPER. (Pro 24:8.) There are degrees in vice as in virtue. It is a short step from grovelling egotism to active malice. Extract the root of self-seeking out of any dispute, private or public, in Church or state, and the other differences may soon be adjusted. To make mischief is a diabolic instinct, and it certainly springs up in the mind void of healthy occupation and of interest for the true, beautiful, and good; for the mind’s principle is motion, and it cannot cease to act.

III. SIN IN THE THOUGHT AND THE MOOD. (Pro 24:9.) When busy invention and meditation are at work in the mind of the wicked and the fool, nothing good is produced. Still more is it the case with the scoffer. In him the ripened and practised powers of the mind are brought into alliance with evil desire. Such a habit of mind, once detected, excites the utmost odium and abhorrence. The man who can sneer at goodness, or hold what is by common consent good and beautiful in contempt, is already an outcast from his kind, and need not complain if he is treated as such.

IV. COWARDLY FAINT HEARTEDNESS. (Pro 24:10.) The pressure of circumstances should rouse in us the God-given strength. The man who makes duty his polar star, and trusts in God, can actually do more when things seem to be against him than widen all is in his favour. Moral cowardice is closely connected with the root sin of unbelief. Indulgence in it impoverishes and weakens the soul, so that the man ends by being actually unable to do what once he only fancied himself unable to do. Here is an illustration of Christ’s saying, “To him that hath shall be given, and from him that hath not shall be taken that which he hath.”J.

Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12

Compassion for the wronged

I. THE HEART AND HAND SHOULD EVER BE READY AT THE CALL OF DISTRESS. (Pro 24:11.) The picture seems to be placed before us of one arriving at the place of judgment, seeing an innocent sufferer yet, like the priest and the Levite in the parable, passing by “on the other side.”

“To see and sights moves more than hear them told;
For then the eye interprets to the ear
The heavy motion that it doth behold.”

To respond to these mute appeals from any of God’s creatures is to obey a law immediately known within our breast; to resist them is to sin against him and against our own souls.

II. NEGLECT OF DUTY CANNOT ESCAPE PUNISHMENT. (Pro 24:12.)

1. Human nature is fertile in excuses. For the burden of blame and of conscious guilt is the heaviest we can bear. But searching is the truth of the proverb, “Whoso excuses, accuses himself,” Ignorance of duty needs no excuses; but excuses for neglect can never be valid.

2. Excuses may avail with man, but not with God. With fallible men they may and often do pass for truth. At all events, they must often be accepted by those who need in turn to make them. But God knows the truth of every heart, and in every case; and to him excuses are either needless or worse.

3. Judgment will be executed in spite of our excuses. For God is the Vindicator of the wronged, and the Recompenser of all according to their deeds. Scripture is very impressive on the sin of neglect of kindly duties to others, in regard to which the conscience is so often dull (Luk 14:18, etc.). Men content themselves with the reflection that they have not done others positive harma negative position. But the other negative position, that we have not done the good we had a call to do, on this the teaching of Christ fixes a deeper guilt. Noble as it is to save a life from bodily death, still more glorious in its consequences is it to save a soul from death and hide a multitude of sins.J.

Pro 24:13, Pro 24:14

Zeal in the pursuit of wisdom

I. THE SWEETNESS OF WISDOM. (Pro 24:13.) Not without deep meaning is the sense of knowing the truth compared to the sensuous relish of the palate for sweet food. Here is, indeed, a

“Perpetual feast of nectared sweets,
Where no crude surfeit reigns.”

(Cf. Psa 19:11.)

II. ENCOURAGEMENT IN ITS PURSUIT. (Pro 24:14.) It brings a true satisfaction both during the pursuit and at its end, which can be said of few other objects of eager ambition in this world. The seeker for truth may be compared to the maiden of the parable, who timely fills her lamp with oil, and “hope that reaps not shame.” The pursuit of wisdom, or of truth as understood and taught in this book, is no chase of dreams or abstractions; it is the affair of all. Truth is all that touches and convinces man, whether as an individual, or as a member of society, or the citizen of a nation. It is that which tells him that he is not isolated in the midst of unknown beings; but that beyond his individual life he partakes in a life that is universal. All that in the past, whether facts, thoughts, or sentiments, are in question, that makes us contemporary with the facts, fellow heirs with humanity in great thoughts, sympathetic with great sentiments, is truth.J.

Pro 24:15-18

Violence and shameful joy defeated

I. THE ATTITUDE OF THE MAN OF FRAUD AND VIOLENCE DEPICTED. (Pro 24:15.) He is like the prowling wild beast, seeking whom he may devour. God the Creator has not armed us with tooth or tusk or other means of defence, like the wild beasts which are formed for making war on others. We are strongly furnished for defence, not for attack. Ferocity is distinctly an unnatural vice in us.

II. HIS ACTIVITY IS DEVASTATING. Here, again, he resembles the wild beast in his blind fury, the boar that uproots and overturns in the cultivated garden.

III. THE SELFRECOVERY OF THE RIGHTEOUS. (Pro 24:16.) To fall into sin and to fall into trouble are two different things. Avoid the former, and God will not forsake thee in the latter. Seven falls stand for manyan indefinite number of falls. There is an elasticity in rectitude like that of the young sapling; bent to the earth, it rebounds with strong upspring. “It may calm the apprehension of calamity to see how quiet a bound nature has set to the utmost infliction of malice. We rapidly approach a brink over which no enemy can follow us.” But evil, being purely negative, a zero, the absence of internal power and virtue, has but an illusory existence, and quickly passes sway.

IV. BASE JOY TURNED INTO SHAME. (Pro 24:17, Pro 24:19.) He who rejoices in the trouble of another, his own trouble stands behind the door. Why should he fear who takes his post with Omnipotence at his back?

“Souls that of God’s own good life partake
He loves as his own self: dear as his eye
They are to him; he’ll never them forsake.
When they shall die, then God himself shall die;
They livethey live in blest eternity.”

The tyrant and his victim are made to change sides. The “wrath” which seems expressed in the calamities of the latter is transformed into the revelation of an “everlasting kindness,” while terror strikes the heart of him who sought to infuse it into his foe (compare R. Browning’s striking poem, ‘Instans Tyrannus’).J.

Pro 24:19-22

Religion fortifies the heart against envy

I. THE TEMPTATION TO ENVY THE PROSPERITY OF THE WICKED. It is very marked in the Old Testament. It is a common temptation. For we look at the outside of man’s condition, and are deceived by illusions. A pirate’s venal in the distance, a mansion built and inhabited by infamy, are beautiful objects of aesthetic contemplation. So it is that the show and bravery of success master our senses.

II. THE ANTIDOTE TO THESE FEELINGS. (Pro 24:20.) “Consider the end”darkness and the blackness of darkness. The wicked have no future. When this is once clearly seen, the charm on the surface fades away, and the edifice of proud but godless prosperity sinks almost into a smoking ruin.

III. RELIGION AND MORALITY THE ONLY FOUNDATION OF SECURITY AND BLESSEDNESS. (Pro 24:21, Pro 24:22.) The one comprehensive word for religion is the “fear of Jehovah,” reverence for God, and for all that, being true, is of the very nature of God. And obedience to the king includes all those civil and social duties which we incur as members of an ordered commonwealth. Religion and loyalty go together; and the best way to make good subjects to the queen is to make men good servants of God. They will not make conscience of civil duties who make none of Divine.J.

Pro 24:23-25

Partiality and equality in judgment

I. RESPECT OF PERSONS. The literal translation is, “To distinguish persons in judgment is not good.” The judge should be impartial as the pair of scales, the emblem of his office, and blind to the persons who appear before him, that is, to their rank and position, as the symbolical figure of Justice is represented to be. “One foul sentence doth more hurt than many foul examples; these do but corrupt the stream, the other corrupteth the fountain.”

II. THE WILFUL PERVERSION OF RIGHT. (Pro 24:24.) When the just man is suffered to fail in his cause before his adversary, the very nerve of public right is unstrung. It strikes a direct blow at the common weal, and hence brings down the curses of peoples and the enmity of states.

III. EQUAL AND JUST JUDGMENT. (Pro 24:25.) “A judge ought to prepare his way to a just sentence, as God useth to prepare his way, by raising valleys and taking down hills; so when there appeareth on either side a high hand, violent persecution, cunning advantages taken, combination, power, great counsel, then is the virtue of a judge seen to make inequality equal; that he may plant his judgment as upon an even ground” (Bacon). In the present text the glance is towards a proper and due severity, which will not allow the wicked to escape. “Odium may equally be incurred by him who winks at crime and by him who has no regard to mercy. For in causes of life and death, judges ought, as far as the law permits, in justice to remember mercy, and to cast a severe eye upon the example, but a merciful eye upon the person” (Bacon). The purity of the judicial bench is one of the greatest of public blessings. Let us be thankful that we enjoy it in our country, and pray that it may ever continue.J.

Pro 24:26-29

Just conduct to our neighbour

I. TRUE WITNESS. (Pro 24:26.) He who gives true and faithful answersespecially in courts of justicedelights, even as the sweetest kiss upon the mouth delights. The poet alludes to the effect upon the ear. The understanding can no more be delighted with a lie than the will can choose an apparent evil. “Strange as it may seem,” says one playfully, “the human mind loses truth.” We may add, “when passion does not blind the intellect to its beauty.” In the court of justice, all but the guilty and those interested in his fate see the beauty of truth, and prize it above all things. Hence to speak the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, is the solemn oath of witnesses.

II. FALSE AND UNCALLEDFOR WITNESS. (Pro 24:28.) To bear false witness strikes at the very root of conscience and moral obligation. But criminal, though in a less degree, is the volunteering of evidence without cause against another; i.e. when no object but private hatred and revenge is to be served. Compare the case of Doeg (1Sa 22:9, 1Sa 22:10); the Pharisees with the wretched sinner in Joh 8:1-59; the words of the Lord in Joh 15:25. Speak evil of no man, not only that evil which is altogether false and groundless, but that which is true, when speaking of it will do more harm than good (Matthew Henry).

III. DELIBERATE DECEPTION. About a court of justice, which represents truth, there gathers a dark shade of roguery and falsehood; “persons that are full of sinister tricks and shifts, whereby they pervert the plain and direct courses of courts, and bring justice into oblique lines and labyrinths.”

IV. BLIND INDULGENCE OF VINDICTIVE TEMPER. (Verse 29; comp. Pro 20:22.) Nothing is more deeply impressed in the Bible than the truth of compensation or retribution. But men must not take the law into their own hands. “Vengeance is mine, I will repay, saith Jehovah.” “Revenge is a kind of wild justice, which the more man’s nature runs to, the more ought law to weed it out. In taking revenge a man is but even with his enemy; but in passing it over he is superior. It is the glory of a man to pass by an offence. The man who studies revenge keeps his own wounds green, which otherwise would heal and do well” (Bacon).J.

Pro 24:27

The prudence and policy of industry

I. ALL LABOUR IS ROOTED IN THE TILLAGE OF THE EARTH. ‘Tis thus that bread was first wrung from herby universal field labour. Our ancestors were all agricultural labourers. All other industry must be fruitless and stop without the action of this spring. It is therefore the part of all prudent and good men to encourage cultivation, to improve the condition of the labourer and the farmer. All honour to the great statesmen of our time who have wrought in this cause. It is edifying to recollect that God has made Mother Earth the eternal mediator and minister to us of material blessings which lie at the foundation of all our life.

II. DOMESTIC COMFORT AND INDEPENDENCE REST UPON LABOUR. It is the “prudence of a higher strain” than that which begins and ends with mere sensual comfort that is taught in this book. It is attention to law, it is unbelief in luck, which constitutes its principle. Self-command, unslothful habits, constant exertion, put the bread a man eats at his own disposal, so that he stands not in bitter and False relations to other men.J.

Pro 24:30-34

The sluggard’s vineyard: a parable of sloth

I. A PICTURE OF INDOLENCE. (Pro 24:30, Pro 24:31.) The vineyard in the East corresponds to the garden, orchard, or small farm in the West. In the parable it is overgrown with nettles and thorns. The stone fence is crumbling for want of repair. We may contrast the picture in Isa 5:1, sqq; of what a vineyard ought to be. The way in which God tilled the chosen people is the way in which he would have each of us attend to the garden of the soul.

II. THE SIGHT CARRIES A LESSON AND A WARNING. (Verses 32-34) Let us attend to the parables of Nature. The eye is the great critical organ, and we never want lessons if we use it. The lesson here isthe effect has a causethe wildness of Nature betrays the sin of man. Neglect marks itself on her truthful face. The sluggard’s soul is revealed in her aspect not less than in the unkempt hair and squalid face of the human being. Here is the “vile sin of self-neglect,” which involves all other neglect, clearly mirrored. In such spectacles and in the gloomier ones of malarious swamps, once smiling fields, God writes his judgment on the broad earth’s face against the crime of sloth. The warning is against poverty and want, which stride on with noiseless footsteps, rushing in at last with sudden surprise upon dreaming self-indulgence, like an armed robber. Sudden seeming woes are long preparing, and no curse “causeless comes.”

III. THE MORAL APPLICATION.

1. The analogy of Nature and the human spirit. Both are of God. Both contain principles of life, beauty, and use. Both need cultivation in order to their perfection. In both sloth and neglect are punished by loss and ruin.

2. The personal moral duty. To “awake from sleep,” to “stir up the gift within us,” to “work out our salvation,” to be good husbandmen, good and faithful servants in this garden of the Lordthe soul. If not faithful here, how can it be expected that we shall be faithful in spheres more remote?J.

HOMILIES BY W. CLARKSON

Pro 24:1

(See homily on Pro 23:17, Pro 23:18.)C.

Pro 24:3-6

Building with wisdom

God is the Divine Builder. “He that built all things is God” (Heb 3:4). Man, also, is a great builder. The whole scenery of the earth is not a little changed by the houses and temples, by the bridges and factories, by the manifold structures of every size and shape, that he has built. But these are not the most serious and important of his works. We look at

I. THE HOUSES WE ARE BUILDING. Of these, three are the most deserving of attention.

1. Our estate. The position and provision we secure for ourselves and our family; an honourable place we take among men, as neighbours and fellow citizens. Every man has to set this before him as a thing to be patiently pursued and ultimately attained. Some men think of little else or nothing else, therein making a fatal mistake; but it is the manifest duty as well as the clear interest of us all, to build up a house of this kind.

2. Our character. This is “a house” of the first importance. We are here for this express purposethat we may be daily and hourly building up a noble and estimable character; such a character as God will himself approve; such as man will admire, and will do well to copy; such as will command the commendation of our own conscience; such as will stand firm and strong against all the perils by which it is beset; such as will contain many virtues and graces in its various “chambers” (Pro 24:4). “Precious and pleasant rubies,” indeed, are these.

3. Some cause of Christian usefulness. We should all be diligently occupied in raising or sustaining some “work” of holy usefulness, by which the seeds of truth may be scattered, hearts may be comforted, lives may be brightened, souls may be won to righteousness and wisdom, Christ may be honored, and his kingdom advanced.

II. THE INDISPENSABLE MATERIALS. The wisdom which is from above. “Through wisdom is a house built, and by understanding it is established” (Pro 24:3). For wisdom includes or secures:

1. The fear and therefore the favor of God. (See Pro 1:7; Pro 9:10.)

(1) To walk and to work in the fear of God is to do all things uprightly and honourably, truly and faithfully, heartily and thoroughly; and this is the way to build up any one of these three “houses.”

(2) To enjoy the favour of God is to have behind us that energizing and sustaining power without which all labour is vain (Psa 127:1); it is to possess the protecting care which will shield us from the storms that might otherwise overthrow us (Psa 121:1-8.).

2. The various orders of strength which we need for good building (Pro 24:5).

(1) It tends to physical health and strength.

(2) It conduces to mental strength and the increase of knowledge; it supplies us with good judgment, with tact, with prudence, with patience, with the very implements of successful labour.

(3) It ministers to moral and spiritual strength; for it brings us into communion with God and to the study of his Word.

3. The power of resistance and attack. By “wise counsel we make war” (Pro 24:6). It is a very great matter, in all spheres of activity, to know when to make peace and when to show a fearless front of opposition. And when the latter course has to be taken, there is much true wisdom needed in order that our house, our stronghold, may not be carried and dismantled. We need courage, decision, watchfulness, energy, self-command, readiness to make terms at the right moment. To attain to the wisdom which will thus build up our house, we need to

(1) yield our hearts fully to the only wise God and Saviour;

(2) open our minds daily to receive his heavenly wisdom;

(3) ask of him who “giveth to all men liberally, upbraiding not.”C.

Pro 24:9

The thought of foolishness.

It will be well to be on our guard against a possible mistake here; for next in importance to our knowledge of what things are wrong and hurtful, is our freedom from imaginary fears and morbid anxieties respecting those things which are perfectly innocent and pure. We look, then, at

I. THOUGHTS WHICH MAY SEEM TO BE, BUT ARE NOT, CONDEMNED BY THESE WORDS.

1. The serious but not taken thoughts of childhood or of uneducated manhood. It is not every thought which cannot be characterized as wisdom that must be condemned as “foolishness.” The honest attempts of artless simplicity to solve problems or to execute commands may be honourable and even commendable failures; they are the conditions of growth.

2. The lighter thoughts of the cultured and mature, thoughts of merriment and frolicsomeness, moving to honest laughter, are far from being sinful. They are clearly in accordance with the will of the Divine Father of our spirits, who is the Author of our nature, with its faculties and tendencies; they are often found to be a necessary relief under the otherwise intolerable strain of oppressive care and burdensome toil. One of the most serious and one of the most kind-hearted and successful servants of our race (Abraham Lincoln) was only saved from complete mental derangement during the terrible time of the civil war by finding occasional refuge in humour. But what are

II. THE THOUGHTS WHICH ARE HERE CONDEMNED? The thoughts of foolishness.

1. Our responsibility for our thoughts. Impalpable and fugitive as they are, our thoughts are a very real part of ourselves, and they constitute a serious part of our responsibility to God. That they do so is clear; for:

(1) On them everything in human life and action ultimately depends. Action depends on will, will on feeling, and feeling on thought. It is what we think and how we think that determines what we do and what we are. “As a man thinketh in his heart, so is he.” Thought is the very foundation of character.

(2) Thought is free. We may be compelled to speak or to act in certain prescribed ways; but we are masters of our own minds, and we can think as we like. How we think depends on our own volition.

(3) We either choose deliberately the subject of our thoughts (by selecting our friends, our books and papers, our topics of conversation), or we are led to think as we do by the mental and moral character which we have been deliberate]y forming; we are responsible for the stream because we are responsible for the spring.

2. The sinful character of foolish thoughts. Foolish thoughts may be

(1) irreverent, and all irreverence is sin; or they may be

(2) selfish, and all selfishness is sin; or

(3) impure, and all impurity is sin; or

(4) unkind and inconsiderate, unloving or vindictive, and all unkindness is sin; or

(5) short-sighted and worldly, and all worldliness is sin (1Jn 2:15-17). The conclusion of the whole matter is that if we would be right with God, “harmless and blameless,” we must be right in our “inward thought” (see Heb 4:12); and that if we would be right there, in those central depths or our nature, we must

(a) place our whole nature under the direct rule of the Holy One himself;

(b) seek daily fop the cleansing influences of his Holy Spirit, the continual renewal of our mind by his inspiration;

(c) “keep our hearts beyond all keeping” (Pro 2:1-22 :23), especially by welcoming, with eagerness and delight, all the wisdom of God that we can gather from his Word.C.

Pro 24:10, Pro 24:15

The test of adversity

We have all of us to expect

I. THE TESTING TIME THAT COMES TO ALL MEN. It is true that prosperity has its own perils, and makes its own demands on the human spirit. But when the sky is clear above us, when loving friends stand round us with protecting care, when privileges abound on every side, it is comparatively easy to maintain an equable and obedient mind. We can all row with the stream and sail with the favouring wind. But the hour must come to us that comes to all in time, when we have to face difficulty, or to bear obloquy, or to sustain heavy loss, or to go on our way with a lonely heart, or to suffer some keen and all but crusading disappointment. When we are moved to say with Jacob, “All these things are against me;” with Elijah, “Lord, take away my life;” we faint and fall in the day of adversity.

II. THE RESOURCES THAT SHOULD BE AT OUR COMMAND. When that hour comes to us, as it certainly will, we should be prepared to bear ourselves bravely and well; for there are many sources of strength with which we should be supplied. There is:

1. Ordinary human fortitude. Such manliness and strength of will as have enabled many thousands of soulseven without any aid from religionto confront danger or death, or to show an undisturbed equanimity of mind. in the midst of severe sorrows. But beyond this there is for us:

2. Christian resignation. The willingness to leave the whole disposal of our lives to the wisdom and the love of God; readiness to endure the holy will of a Divine Father, of our best Friend.

3. Christian faith. The assurance that God is dealing with us in perfect wisdom and parental love at those times when we can least understand his way.

4. Christian hope. The confidence that “unto the upright there will arise light in the darkness;” that God will grant a happy issue out of all our afflictions; that though the just man fall seven times, he will rise again (see Pro 24:15); that though weeping may endure even for a long and stormy night, joy will come in the morning (Psa 30:5).

5. Communion with God. To the distressed human spirit there remains that most precious refuge, the leaning of the heart on God, the appeal of the soul to him in earnest, believing prayer.

III. THE INFERENCE WE ARE OBLIGED TO DRAW. If, with all these resources at our command, we “faint;”

(1) if we indulge a rebellious spirit, repining at our lot and thinking ourselves hardly used; or

(2) if we yield ourselves to misery and melancholy, showing ourselves unequal to the duties that devolve upon us, resigning the useful activities in which we have been engaged;then we must conclude that “our strength is small;” we have failed to enrich our souls with that spiritual power of which we might and should have become possessed. Bat that we may not have to deplore our weakness in the day of adversity, and that we may not give a sorry illustration of Christian life as it ought not to be seen, let us learn what is

IV. OUR WISDOM AT THE PRESENT TIME. And that is to be gaining strength, to be continually becoming “strong in the Lord, and in the power of his might.” This is an imperative duty (Eph 6:10; 2Ti 2:1; 2Pe 3:18). And we are not without the necessary means. If, in the days of sunshine and prosperity, we are daily nourishing our faith, our love, our hope, our prayerfulness, by constant exercise in devotion and in sacred duty, by using the privileges so amply supplied to us, by cultivating and cherishing our onion with Jesus Christ our Lord, we shall be strong, and we shall not faint.C.

Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12

Inexcusable indifference

The principles contained in this passage are these

I. THAT ALL HUMAN NEED IS A CLAIM FOR HELP. God has so “fashioned our hearts alike,” and has so bound together our lives and our interests, that we are under serious obligation to one another. No man is at liberty to live an isolated life; he owes too much to those that have gone before him, and is too closely related to those who are around him, to allow of such a course. To wish it is unnatural, to attempt it is immoral “We are members one of another;” we are brethren and sisters one of another. And whenever any one about uswhoever or whatever he or she may beis in any kind of difficulty or distress, is in need of sympathy and succour, there is an imperative demand, as clear as if it came from an angel’s trumpet or straight out of the heavens above us, that we should stop, should inquire, should help as best we can (see 1Jn 3:17, 1Jn 3:18).

II. THAT THE EXTREMITY OF HUMAN NEED IS A MOST POWERFUL PLEA. If any sufferer on life’s highway is a man to be pitied and relieved, how much more are they who are “drawn unto death,” who are “ready to be slain”! To see our brother or our sistermade like ourselves, and capable as we are of intense suffering, holding life as precious as we ourselves regard itin circumstances of keen distress or of utmost danger, and to withhold our pity and our aid,this is condemned of God. Whether we “pass by on the other side (Luk 10:31), so as to hide our cruel indifference as well as we can from our own sight; or whether we pass close by, clearly recognizing our duty, but cynically and heartlessly declining to do it; or whether we stand awhile and pity, but conclude that help will be too costly, and so pass on without helping;we are guilty, we are unbrotherly, inhuman, altogether unlike our Lord.

III. THAT EXCUSES WILL NOT AVAIL US. If we want to escape from our plain duty we seldom refuse it point blank. We do not say to our Lord or to ourselves, “We will not;” we say, “We would if,” or “We will when.” When our brother is in difficulty or in sorrow, and urgently needs the extricating hand, the sympathizing word, we may plead, to ourselves or to our neighbours, our ignorance of the sufferer, our imperfect acquaintance with the circumstances, our want of time, our incapacity for assisting in that kind of trouble, our multitudinous and pressing duties and claims, etc. These may succeed with men, but they will not avail with God. God knows the hollowness of these poor pleas; to his eye they are only thin veils that do not hide our cruel selfishness; he judges that nothing justifies us in abandoning the perishing to their fate, and he condemns us.

IV. THAT GOD IS GRIEVED WITH US FOR OUR OWN SAKE. He “that keepeth our soul” knows it. And because God does “keep our soul,” he is grieved to see us take up an attitude towards our brother which

(1) proves us to be unbrotherly, and

(2) helps to fix us in our cold-heartedness. For every act and instance of selfishness hardens our heart and makes it more capable of cruel indifference than before.

V. THAT CRUELTY AND KINDNESS MOVE TO THEIR REWARD. “Shall he not render,” etc.? Cruelty and kindness must be cursed or blessed by the immediate effects they leave in the soul of the agent. But they also move toward a day of award, Then will a selfish indifference hear its strong, Divine condemnation (Mat 25:41-45) Then, also, will a generous kindness listen to its warm, Divine commendation (Mat 25:34-40).C.

Pro 24:17, Pro 24:18, Pro 24:29

The ignobler and the nobler spirit

(See homily on Pro 20:22.) There can be no question at all, for the testimony of human history is everywhere and at all times the same, as to

I. OUR DISPOSITION UNDER SIN, IN VIEW OF OUR ENEMIES. These two passages indicate it. It is both passive and active.

1. A disposition to rejoice at their discomfiture; to exult in the secret places of the soul when we hear of their failure, of their defeat, or even of their suffering.

2. A disposition to inflict some injury on them by our own effort. The impulse of the man who is struck is to strike again; that of the man who is cheated is to take the next opportunity of overreaching the treacherous neighbour; the prevalent feeling, under the long reign and malignant influence of sin, is to compass, in some way or other, the humiliation, or the loss, or the anger of the man who has injured us. We rejoice when our enemy falls; we do more and worse than thatwe do our best, we use our ingenuity and put forth even our patient labour, to bring about his overthrow. So common, so universal, is this sentiment of revenge and retaliation, that no one is in a position so speak severely of his neighbour or to condemn him harshly. Yet we understand now

II. ITS UNWORTHINESS OF OUR NATURE. It was not to cherish such thoughts as these, nor was it to act in such a way as this, that our Divine Father called us into being, and gave to us our powers.

1. We were made to love and to pity; and for us to harbour in our souls a feeling of positive delight when we witness the misery or misfortune of a brother or a sister is really inhuman; it is a perversion, under the malign power of sin, of the end and purpose of our being.

2. We were made to help and bless; and for us to expend the powers with which we are endowed to injure, to inflict suffering and loss, to send as far as we can on the downward road a human heart or human life,this is wholly unworthy of ourselves, it is a sad departure from the intention of our Creator. We see clearly

III. ITS OFFENSIVENESS TO GOD. “Lest the Lord see it, and it displease him.”

1. God has told us fully what is his mind respecting it (Mat 5:43-48; Rom 12:14, Rom 12:20).

2. It is altogether unlike his own action; for he is daily and momently blessing with life and health and innumerable bounties those who have forgotten or disregarded or even denied him.

3. There are two aspects in which it must be obnoxious to him.

(1) He is the Father of our spirits, and how can he look with anything but sorrow on antagonism and hatred between his children?

(2) He is the Holy and the Loving One, and how can he see with anything but displeasure the hearts of men filled with the feelings of malevolence, the hands of men occupied in dealing bitter blows against one another? What, however, is the way by which this deep-rooted disposition can be expelled, and another and nobler spirit be planted in our souls? What is the way to

IV. THE WORTHIER AND NOBLER SPIRIT. The one way to rise above vindictiveness and retaliation and to enter into the loftier and purer air of forgiveness and magnanimity is to connect ourselves most closely with our Lord Jesus Christ.

1. To surrender ourselves wholly to him, and thus to receive his Divine Spirit into our hearts (Joh 7:38, Joh 7:39; Joh 15:4; Joh 17:23).

2. To have our hearts filled with that transforming love to our Father and our Saviour which will make us to become, unconsciously and gradually, like him in spirit and behaviour.

3. To let our minds be filled with the knowledge of his will, by patient and prayerful study of his Word and of his life.C.

Pro 24:30-34

The neglected garden

The whole scene is before us. The sluggard is asleep while everything is going wrong; instead of the flower is the thorn; the ground is coloured with the green weeds; the wall is breaking down; where should be beauty is unsightliness; where should be fruitfulness is barrenness or wilderness; ruin is written, on everything, everywhere. So is it with the farmer, with the tradesman, with the merchant or manufacturer, of the sluggard order. Consider it well. Negligence, dilatoriness, half-heartedness, in any department means decay, breakdown, ruin. Poverty is on its way, and will certainly be knocking at the door; want will present itself with a force that cannot be resisted.

1. We have all of us a garden, an estate of our own, Which God has given us to cultivatethat which is of more value than many thousands of acres of fertile soil, that which no riches can buyour own true self, our own human spirit. God has solemnly charged us to cultivate that, to weed it of error and prejudice, of folly and of passion; to plant truth there, his own living, abiding truth; to plant righteousness there, purity of heart, integrity of soul; to plant love there, such as fills his own gracious Spirit; to build there walls of wise, strong, protecting habits, which will fence and guard the soul from intruding enemies.

2. There are all too many who treat this garden, this estate, with careless negligence; they throw their energy and force into everything elsebusiness, love, politics, art, pleasure, society; but themselves, their own spirit, their own character, they leave to fare as best it may without care and without culture.

3. Very sad indeed are the results of this foolish and guilty negligence. This picture of the sluggard’s garden will tell us what they are.

I. UNSIGHTLINESS. What a dreary pictureweeds, thistles, thorns, a broken wall! The eye turns from it with repugnance. And the neglected garden of the soul? Instead of the beautiful flowers of Christian reverence and love, and the lair fruits of holiness and zeal, and the strong walls of a noble character, there are seen by God and man the unsightly weeds of transgression, of selfishness, of untruthfulnessperhaps the thorns of intemperance and impurity and profanity.

II. WASTE. African travellers tell us that passing over uncultivated regions they have to make their way through all kinds of rank growth, grass, or shrub which is high, strong, or thorny, covering many miles at a stretch. What waste is there! What corn, what fruit, would not that land produce? Alas! for the pitiful waste of an uncultured human soul! What beauties might not be seen there, what fruits might not be grown there, what graces and virtues might not be produced there, if only the truth of Christ were received into the mind and welcomed to the heart!

III. MISCHIEF. These weeds will not be confined to the sluggard’s garden; their seeds will be carried by the winds into his neighbour’s, and do mischief enough them.

A neglected soul is a mischief-working soul. It cannot confine its influence to itself or its own life. Those influences cross the wall and get into the neighbour’s ground. And the seeds of sin are hurtful, poisonous things, spreading error, falsehood, delusion, into the minds of men. If we are not blessing our neighbours by the lives we live, we are an injury and an evil to them.

IV. RUIN. The man who neglects his estate is really, steadily, ruining himself. He may not see it until it is too late. Poverty has been travelling toward him, but only at the last bend of the road does it come in sight. Want suddenly appears “as an armed man,” strong, irresistible; there is no way of escape; bankruptcy is before him. The soul that is neglected is being ruined; day by day it is being enfeebled, enslaved, deteriorated; the good that was there is lessening and disappearing; the hard crust of selfishness and worldliness is thickening. The soul is being lost; it is perishing. “I considered it well””set my heart up in it” (marginal reading) This is, indeed, a thing to be well considered, to “set the heart upon,” for the issues of it are those of life or death. There is time to restore it; but a little more negligence, and the hour of “ruin” will have struck.C.

Fuente: The Complete Pulpit Commentary

d) Warning against intercourse with wicked and foolish men

Pro 24:1-22

1Be not envious of evil men,

and desire not to be with them,

2for their heart studieth violence,

and their lips talk of mischief.

3By wisdom is the house builded,

and by understanding is it established;

4by knowledge shall the chambers be filled

with all treasure that is precious and pleasant.

5The wise man is full of strength,

and the man of understanding increaseth strength,;

6for with wise counsel shalt thou mate war,

and victory is in abundance of counsellors.-

7Wisdom is too high for the fool;

he openeth not his mouth in the gate.

8He that deviseth to do evil

shall be called a mischievous person.

9The device of folly is sin,

and the scorner is an abomination to men.

10If thou faint in the day of adversity

thy strength is small.

11Deliver them that are taken to death,

and them that totter toward destruction, oh rescue them!

12If thou sayest, Lo, we knew it not!

He that weigheth hearts will He not mark it ?
He that watcheth over thy soul, will He not know it ?
and He requiteth man according to his work.

13My son, eat honey because it is good,

and honey comb which is sweet to thy taste;

14so acquaint thyself with wisdom for thy soul;

when thou hast found it and the end cometh
thy hope also shall not be cut off.

15Plot not as a wicked man against the dwelling of the righteous,

assault not his dwelling-place;

16for seven times doth the righteous fall and riseth again,

but the wicked shall plunge into destruction.

17When thine enemy falleth rejoice not,

and if he stumbleth let not thine heart be glad;

18lest Jehovah see it, and it be evil in His eyes,

and He turn away His anger from him.

19Be not enraged at evil doers,

envy not the wicked.

20For no future shall there be to the evil;

the light of the wicked shall be put out.

21My son, fear thou Jehovah and the King,

and go not with those who are given to change;

22for suddenly shall their calamity rise,

and the destruction of them both, who knoweth it ?

GRAMMATICAL AND CRITICAL

Pro 24:6. a dativus commodi [ for thyself, thy advantage or interest]; comp. , Pro 23:20.

Pro 24:7. , scriptio plena, as in 1Ch 6:58; Zec 14:10. [Comp. Greek, 156, 3, etc.).

Pro 24:8. For the construction of with comp. 16:21.

Pro 24:11. stands here for , utinam, as in Psa 81:9; Psa 139:19; it is not to be regarded (as the LXX, Vulg., Umbreit, etc., take it) as a negative particle of adjuration, in the sense of , ja nicht, by no means. [See also Fuerst, sub v. For the time implied in the Part. , comp. rem. on 22:15; such, as have been taken and are now in that condition. For the full form comp. Crit. Notes on 22:7, 8.A.].

Pro 24:13. an apparent fem., construed here as masc. See Btt. 648, b, and n. 1.A.].

Pro 24:14. or as the best MSS. read, ( is an Imper. from instead of the usual form . [Comp. Btt. 396, 956, c, 960, a; and Green, 97, 1, b, 148, 3.A.].

Pro 24:17. [For the form instead of the fuller Niphal form, see Btt. 990, 1, b, 1036, 2; and Green, 91, b, 231, 5, a.A.].

EXEGETICAL

1. Pro 24:1-2. Warning against intercourse with results wicked men (lit. men of evil, comp. 28:5;) comp. Pro 24:19; Pro 23:17; with. Pro 24:1, a, comp.also 23:3, 6; with 2 a comp. 15:28.

2. Pro 24:3-6. Praise of wisdom and its salutary results.By wisdom is the house builded. Comp. 14:1, where it is specifically the wisdom of woman that is commended as builder of the house, for the expression in 3, b, comp. 3:19; for Pro 24:4 comp. also 3:10; 8:21.

Pro 24:5. The wise man is full of strength, lit., is in strength, i.e, furnished with strength, powerful; comp. the corresponding phrase in Psa 29:4. The LXX, Syr., Chald., read , i.e., more than, better than strength; comp. 16:32. But the Masoretic reading plainly gives us a simpler and more pertinent meaning.And the man of understanding (lit. man of knowledge) increaseth strength, lit., maketh power strong, (comp. 2:14) he develops mighty strength (comp. the phrase in Job 9:19), he makes it available as a quality of his own.

Pro 24:6. For with wise counsel must thou make war, lit. must thou carry on war for thyself, i.e., must thou bring thy war to an end, carry it through. [So M., Wordsw., K., etc.]. Comp. 20:18, and for clause b, 11:14; 15:22.

3. Pro 24:7-10. Four separate proverbs, directed against folly, intrigue, scoffing and faint-heartedness.Wisdom is too high for the fool. is strictly heights (excelsa, Vulg.), i.e., unattainably distant things, objects which are altogether too high; comp. Psa 10:5; Isa 30:18. Hitzig conjectures a double meaning, so far forth as the word in the form before us could have meant at the same time also corals, costly ornaments (in accordance with Job 28:18).He openeth not his mouth in the gate; i.e., in judicial consultations and transactions of his fellow-citizens (comp. 22:22) he can bring forward nothing. [He wore two fools if he should, says Trapp, for while he holds his tongue he is held wise].

Pro 24:8. Shall be called (him they call) a mischievous persona master or lord of mischief (an expression equivalent to that in Pro 12:2, a man of wicked devices). [This is his property and ownership, mischief and wrong. Wordsw.]

Pro 24:9. The device (meditation) of folly is sin;i.e., there also where folly (or the fool, abstr. pro concr.) acts with consideration, and goes to work with a reflective prudence (, a similar term to that in Pro 24:8), it still brings to pass nothing good, but always only evil. It is indeed even worse with the scoffer, who, according to clause b, is an abhorrence and abomination to all men, because he, with his evil plans and counsels, unites furthermore great shrewdness, subtle wit, refined speculationin general the exact opposite of folly.

Pro 24:10. If thou hast shown thyself faint in the day of adversity (anxiety, distress), thy strength is small;i.e., thou art a coward and weakling, whose courage is feeble, and whose moral power and capacity for resistance is, as it were, crippled. Less appropriately Umbreit, Elster, etc (following the Vulg., Targum, etc.) then sinketh thy strength also (imminuetur fortitudo tua). But Hitzigs emendation is also needless, , thy courage, for , thy strength,as is also his marvellous reproduction of the paronomasia () by: am Tageder Klemmeklamm ist dein Muth [in the day of straitsstraight is thy courage]. Bertheau connects the verse closely with the two following: Hast thou shown thyself faint in the day of trouble, was thy strength fearful, oh deliver, etc. (?). At all points Ewald has the right view, and in general Luther, also: He is not strong who is not firm in need. [The principle is familiar enough that courage and hopefulness are half of mans strength.A.]

4. Pro 24:11-12. An admonition to a sympathizing and compassionate demeanor toward such as are in their innocency condemned to death, and are being borne to the place of execution. Comp. L. Mosheim: Commentatio ad loc. Pro 24:11-12; Helmstadt. 4to. [Kamph. suggests an easy and natural transition to this exhortation from the preceding. That had reference to courage in time of ones own need, this to quick and sympathizing helpfulness in others extremity.A.]Deliver them that are taken to death (the participle here used has the same meaning as the forms of the verb found in Isa 57:13; Psa 49:16). That this appeal is made specifically to a judge (Umbreit), is, according to Pro 24:12 a, very improbable. He who is addressed seems rather to be one who is accidentally passing by in the vicinity of the place of execution, who is on the point of going on after the manner of the priest and the Levite in Luk 10:30 sq., with no sympathy, and without lifting a helping hand. That the author of the proverb, notwithstanding the singular which is immediately employed, still has in his eye a plurality, a whole host of such passers by, appears from the Lo, we know it not, which in Pro 24:12, a, he. supposes to be the answer to his appeal. Hitzigs assumption is arbitrary, that the hard-hearted judges are Persians, and those who are in their innocence condemned to death, Jews, or Syrians, Samaritans, or some other Persian subjects of the period next succeeding the exile, possibly of the time of Ezra (9:9). The same is! true likewise of Bertheaus opinion that there is no reference whatever to a judicial execution, but to a bloody battle, during which one ought courageously to protect those assailed by the foe, and not timidly to leave them to the threatening destruction. [Hardly any two of our English expositors agree as to the structure of this sentence, although they are nearly or quite unanimous in explaining its general meaning. N. and M. agree with the E. V. in making the first verb an Infinitive (which is possible) depending on the final verb of the sentence; E. V.: if thou forbear to deliver, etc.; N.: to deliver, etc., spare thyself not; M.: dost thou forbear to deliver, etc. H., S. and Wordsw. agree with our author in making it an Imper., although H. and W. make the last clause conditional, like 12, a. The explanation of Z., S., Kamph., etc., is probably to be preferred which makes the a particle of wishing, and the verb transitive rather than reflexive or neuter.A.].Lo! we knew it not!Hitzig, in agreement with the LXX, Lo, we know him not! But in verse 11 there is plainly enough mention made of a number who are dragged to death. [As Kamph. suggests, the time when a plea of ignorance could fitly be put in, as well as the nature of the plea itself, tells against this personal interpretation. And it is also to be observed how idle the plea of ignorance becomes when it is God rather than man to whom ones omissions are to be justified.A.] And he will requite man according to his work.The interrogative of the second clause plainly has no further influence on this general sentence which concludes (comp. Ps. 62:13; Job 34:11; Rom 2:6).

5. Pro 24:13-14. Admonition to a diligent striving after wisdom.My son, eat thou honey because it is good, etc.A figurative injunction of a preparatory sort, serving as a basis for the admonition to strive after wisdom, contained in Pro 24:14. For this figure of honey and the honey-comb as the designation of something especially lovely and agreeable, comp. Psa 19:11.

Pro 24:14. So acquaint thyself with wisdom also for thy soul;lit., know wisdom for thy soul, appropriate it to thyself, recognized as precious and exceedingly palatable ! [The E. V., following the Vulg., takes the peculiar form of the Imperf. for a peculiar form of the noun knowledge, and supplies the substantive verb. H. and M. are in the same error.A.]When thou hast found it, and the end Cometh.This last clause is still part of the conditional protasis, corresponding to the common use of , to introduce a conditional clause; comp. Gen 23:8; Gen 24:49; Jdg 6:36, etc. For making it a transition to the apodosis (then cometh an endthen a future remainethHitzig, following the LXX, Vulg., Luther, etc. [so K.; E. V.: then there shall be a reward; so also H., N., M., W., while S. takes our authors view.A.]), not a single supporting case can be cited, in which introduces the apodosis, in the sense then or so will be (comp. Bertheau on this passage). For the general sentiment compare furthermore 23:18.

6. Pro 24:15-18. Warning against malicious violence and delight in mischief.Lie not in wait as a wicked man (that is, with wicked and mischievous intent) against the dwelling of the righteous; assault not (verb as in 29:26) his resting place.Hitzig changes the verb in clause a to and the noun to , and thus obtains the meaning: Bring not alarm near to the dwelling of the righteous, etc. (?).

Pro 24:16. For seven times doth the righteous fall and riseth again;i.e., many a misfortune overtakes him in life, yet he gives way before none, but always comes up again (Hitzig). Comp. Ps. 87:24; Jer 8:4; and with reference to the symbolical number seven, particularly Job 5:19.But the wicked shall plunge into destructionlit., stumble, are brought to a downfall by calamity; comp. Pro 4:19.

Pro 24:17-18 are closely connected with both the verses preceding, not merely by the recurrence of the ideas fall and plunge (stumble), but also by the substance of the thought; for delight in injury is the twin sister to a plotting intrigue and violence.Lest Jehovah see it and it displease himlit., and it be evil in his eyes.And He turn away His anger from himi.e., from the enemy ( referring back to Pro 24:16, thine enemy), to turn it upon thee thyself instead of him.

7. Pro 24:19-22. Warning against intercourse with wicked and seditious personsBe not thou enraged at evil doers,i.e., be not excited, envious (, burn not, here equivalent to the envy not of Pro 24:1) with regard to the undeserved prosperity of ungodly men, which perhaps might only stimulate to the imitation of their wicked conduct; comp. Psa 37:8; Psa 73:2-3; also Pro 1:11 sq. [Fuerst and some others understand this of excitement, impatience against evil doers, which cannot wait for Gods recompenses. This explanation, we think, is to be preferred here, although the other is clearly and frequently enough an injunction of the Scriptures.A.]

Pro 24:20. For no future hall there be to the wicked. hero in a different sense from that found in Pro 24:14 and in 23:18. [The two ideas most frequently conveyed by this noun, which is literally an after, something subsequent to the present, are a future, and an end or issue, i.e., to present relations. It is this last idea that Z. finds in Pro 24:14; Pro 23:18, the first in Pro 24:20. In the first two passages the end of the present suggests by implication and contrast a blessed future; this our verse denies to the wicked, not by implication, but by express assertion. It does not assert that he shall reach no end to his present relations, nor that he shall have no future whatever, but no future blessing. Some commentators are less exact in these discriminations, finding one general meaning in all the passages.A.] With the general sentiment compare Job 20:5; Psa 37:2; Psa 37:9; Psa 37:38. With b in particular comp. Pro 13:9; Pro 21:4.

Pro 24:21. With a comp. Ecc 8:2 sq.; 10:20; 1Pe 2:17.Go not with those who are given to change. [cognate with , two], those otherwise disposed, wishing otherwise, i.e., opposing [the present order], seditious, revolutionary (Vulg., detractores). Go not with them, lit., mingle thyself not, as in 20:19.

Pro 24:22. And the destruction of them bothviz., of those who rebel against God and of those who rebel against the king. Others (Umbreit, Bertheau, etc. [De W., N., S., M., Wordsw., the genitive being treated as-a genitive of source, the ruin proceeding from them both ]; and the penalty, the retribution of them both, i.e., the punishment that goes forth from both, God and the king; Hitzig (in accordance with the Targ. and Syr.), and the end of their years (comp. Job 36:11). Our interpretation, as the simplest, is supported by the Vulg., Luther, Ewald, Elster [Kamph.]Who knoweth it ?i.e., who knows the time of their ruin; who knows how soon it will be precipitated? Comp. 16:14.

[The LXX, etc., introduce here several verses for which there is no authority in the present Hebrew texts. A son that keeps the fathers commandment shall escape destruction; for such a one has fully received it. Let no falsehood be spoken by the king from the tongue; yea, let no falsehood proceed from his tongue. The kings tongue is a sword, and not one of flesh; and whosoever shall be given up to it shall be destroyed; for if his wrath should be provoked, he destroys men with cords, and devours mens bones, and burns them up as a flame, so that they are not even fit to be eaten by the young eagles. My son, reverence my words, and receive them, and repent. Some of the editions also introduce at this point Pro 30:1-14.A.]

DOCTRINAL, ETHICAL, HOMILETIC AND PRACTICAL

To refer the ideas of this section, which are very various in their substance and their applications, to the one fundamental category of a Warning against intercourse with wicked and foolish men, would not indeed answer in all respects and at all points; and yet the introductory and the concluding verses at least (Pro 24:1-2; Pro 24:19-22) do relate to this subject; and besides, the eulogiums upon wisdom which are interspersed (Pro 24:3-7; Pro 24:13-14), and the counsels against malicious intrigue, mockery, trickery and delight in mischief (Pro 24:8-9; Pro 24:15 sq., 17 sq.), may without any peculiar violence be brought under the same classification. There remains isolated, therefore, only the censuring criticism on an unmanly, faint-hearted bearing in hours of peril (Pro 24:10), and the warning against a heartless indifference to those who are innocently suffering (Pro 24:11-12). The latter passage in particular deserves attentive consideration, and a careful estimate of its practical bearings, for it belongs among those prefigurations and precursors of the distinctively Christian ethics, which occur somewhat rarely in the stage of revelation reached in the law of the Old Testament, and, in general, in any specific form in the literature of wisdom which centres in the name of Solomon. For even in a higher degree than the warning contained in Pro 24:17-18 of our chapter, against delight in injury, in ones attitude towards his enemies,and, if one is so disposed to view it, even in a higher degree than the demand of love to ones enemies in Pro 25:21 sq.,does this powerful enforcement of the duty of a courageous protection and deliverance of the innocent who are doomed to death, correspond with the culmination of ethical justice, and the perfect fulfilling of the law, which Christ exhibits for the members of the New Covenant, in the narrative of the good Samaritan (Luk 10:30 sq.), in His admonition to visit those in prison, and to the loving sacrifice of life itself in imitation of His own example, etc. (Mat 25:36 sq.; Joh 12:25; Joh 15:12-14). [Only a few of the exegetical and practical interpreters of our book have so well brought out this important point. Lawson suggests it when he says: The wise man represents this piece of charity as a duty which we owe to our neighbors without exception; and with him agrees our Lord in the parable of the good Samaritan. We are not the disciples of Solomon or of Christ if we show love to those only, etc. Arnot puts the principle with more characteristic vigor: Under God as Supreme ruler, and by His law, we owe every human being love; and if we fail to render it, we are cast into prison with other less reputable debtors. Nor will any thing be received in payment but the genuine coin of the kingdom; it must be love with a living soul in it and a substantial body on it.A.]

In the homiletic treatment of the whole passage one might take just this demand that is contained in Pro 24:11-12, of a compassionate love of ones neighbor, that will not shun even deadly perils, as the highest exemplification of wisdom, to the attainment and preservation of which all the counselling and dissuasory suggestions of the section summon us; the topic might then be announced: Mercy the highest wisdom, or again: The contrast between the wise man and the fool reaches its climax in the timid selfishness of the latter, and the formers self-sacrificing love for his neighbor.Comp. Stcker: On patience and sociability. In what the virtue consists (Pro 24:1-12), and how one is to practise it (Pro 24:13 sq).Calwer Handb.: Shun evil, choose wisdom.

Pro 24:1 sq. Tbingen Bible (on Pro 24:1-2): It is one element in the prudence of the righteous to have no fellowship with the ungodly and to avoid their society.Luther (marg. comment on Pro 24:3 sq.): When all is well ordered in a house it avails more than great labor; as, e.g., when one gives, where, to whom, and as one ought, etc.Geier (on Pro 24:3 sq.): A household, if it is to be blessed, must not merely be wisely organized, but also prudently regulated and constructed.Filling the chambers with temporal good is accounted great prosperity; but much more beautiful is it when the hearts chamber is filled with the treasures of heavenly wisdom and virtue.(On Pro 24:5-6): Strength of body without wisdom and prudence of heart, is like a giant who is robbed of the sight of his eyes.

Pro 24:7-10. Zeltner (on Pro 24:8-9): As true piety has its degrees, so has ungodliness. But they are followed by righteous retribution and punishment.Starke (on Pro 24:10): Want and trouble is a genuine touchstone, with which one may determine how strong or how weak one is in faith and reliance on God.Von Gerlach (same verse): In times of adversity the man whose strength stands fast in God has more power than usual. It is the fault of ones own indolence if this is not the case, though his strength be scanty and restricted.[Bp. Hopkins: That thy patience may be perfect, it must, be strong, as well as lasting. It must have nerves and sinews in it, to bear weighty burdens.]

Pro 24:11-12. Melanchthon: To unrighteous cruelty one should give no impulse; even private individuals ought, according to their strength and calling, to oppose tyrannical injustice without uproar or tumult.Geier: Man never lacks excuses; but many of them are by the Lord found to be too light, Luk 14:18 sq.Starke: To deliver men from bodily death is a great thing; but more glorious is it to aid a soul toward deliverance from spiritual and eternal death, Jam 5:20.

Pro 24:13 sq. Berleburg Bible (on Pro 24:13): Charge it upon thyself that thou have such inward experience of wisdom, that thou shalt relish its sweetness like honey and the honey-comb.Starke (on Pro 24:16): To fall into sin and to fall into calamity are two different things. Beware of the former, and the Lord will not forsake thee in the latter.Cramer: Whosoever rejoices in others adversity, his own calamity stands already outside the door.[T. Adams: Let us beware that we do not slide; if slide, that we do not fall; if fall, that we fall forward, not backward. Behold thy Saviour calling, thy Father blessing, the Spirit assisting, the angels comforting, the Word directing, the glory waiting, good men associating.Flavel: Though repeated spiritual falling shows the foulness it does not always prove the falseness of the heart.Bridges (on Pro 24:17):What has grace done for us, if it has not overcome nature by a holier and happier principle? To rejoice in the fall of an enemy would be to fall deeper than himself; to fall not into trouble, but into sin.Trapp (on Pro 24:18):Think thus with thyself, Either I am like my enemy, or else I am better or worse than he. If like him, why may I not look for the like misery? If better, who made me to differ? If worse, what reason have I then to insult?]

Pro 24:19-22. Starke (on Pro 24:19-20):He that would look on the prosperity of ungodly men without envy and offence need only make a comparison between the brief instant of their joy and the unending eternity of their pain and punishment.Zollikofer (Serm. on Pro 24:19-20):Nullifying the objection against the divine government of the world, which is made on account of the unequal distribution of external prosperity among men, and the earthly well being of the ungodly (therefore a Theodicy).[Arnot:Here it is not the first and direct, but the secondary and circuitous effect of bad example, that is prominently brought into view. Some who are in no danger of falling in love with their neighbors sin, may be chafed by it into a hatred of their neighbor].Melanchthon (on Pro 24:21):God has given to men authority because He would have men hear and know His law, and thereby Himself, and also for this reason, because He would preserve human society from dissolution through endless disquiets and controversies. He has, however, ordained that we hearken to human governors for His sake, and that we must know that He punishes the rebellious.[Bp. Sherlock:The only lasting foundation of civil obedience is the fear of God; and the truest interest of princes is to maintain the honor of religion, by which they secure their own.Arnot:Take away godliness, and your loyalty without being increased in amount, is seriously deteriorated in kind; take away loyalty, and you run great risk of spoiling the purity of the remanent godliness. In the Scriptures the feebler force is made fast to the stronger, and so carried through in trying times. Loyalty is most secure where it has godliness to lean upon].Geier (on Pro 24:22):Certain as death in itself is, although we cannot know the time and manner of it, so surely does Gods punishment follow ungodliness and rebellion, but its time and form remain uncertain.

Fuente: A Commentary on the Holy Scriptures, Critical, Doctrinal, and Homiletical by Lange

Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them. For their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief. Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding it is established: And by knowledge shall the chambers be filled with all precious and pleasant riches. A wise man is strong; yea, a man of knowledge increaseth strength. For by wise counsel thou shalt make thy war: and in multitude of counsellors there is safety. Wisdom is too high for a fool: he openeth not his mouth in the gate. He that deviseth to do evil shall be called a mischievous person. The thought of foolishness is sin: and the scorner is an abomination to men.

If we carry on as undoubtedly we ought, the same idea of wisdom through the whole book of the Proverbs as we began it with, and consider that Christ is the wisdom of God that is spoken of, We shall find some very sweet things concerning Jesus in these verses. It is indeed through Christ, and in Christ; and upon Christ, the house not made with hands, eternal in the heavens, is built. Other foundation can no man lay than that which is laid, and which God the Father himself laid in Zion. Isa 28:16 ; 1Co 3:11 ; 2Co 5:1 . And as the foundation is Christ, so all the chambers of the covenant are his; and in them the believer finds retreat in times of danger, and everything of riches that is precious and pleasant. Isa 26:20 . But as the Proverb here expresseth it, the knowledge and enjoyment of Christ is too high for a fool; the Lord hath not imparted to him this knowledge. Christ is and ever will be to all such while precious to his people, a stone of stumbling and a rock of offence. 1Pe 2:7-8 . I detain the Reader in this place to make a short observation upon the scripture expression of a fool, concerning whom it is said that wisdom is too high for such an one; and I detain the Reader for this purpose, because it may serve not only for the present but for every other occasion, whensoever he meets with the term in God’s word. And the best, indeed the only infallible method of coming to the right knowledge of this, or any other scriptural expressions, is by comparing scripture with scripture. Now by a fool is meant, one that is ignorant of Christ. Hence therefore the wicked and unregenerate are stilled men void of understanding; they have eyes, and see not; ears, and hear not; and the like. So that when the prophet was commissioned to tell the church the final state of such characters, he expresseth himself in those striking words, for it is a people of no understanding, therefore he that made them will not have mercy on them, and he that formed them will shew them no favour. Isa 27:11 . And that there might be no misapprehension upon a point of such infinite consequence, but that everyone might discover the cause of things; and that the folly here and elsewhere spoken of is, not the weakness of intellect, but the ignorance of Christ and the despising of Jesus, the Lord Jehovah’s one ordinance, and the only one for salvation; Job was commissioned no less to shew, in naming in what the contrary to this folly manifested itself. And unto man he said, behold the fear of the Lord that is wisdom, and to depart from evil is understanding. Job 28:28 . Hence therefore, the fools of scripture are the despisers of Christ, the wisdom of God. This is indeed the highest folly: and many, very many such fools it is to be feared, will be found at the last day, among that class of men who pride themselves on great wisdom. I refer the Reader for further light upon this interesting subject to the following scriptures: Rom 1:21 , etc. 1Co 1:18-29 .

Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

Wisdom the Builder

Pro 24:3-4

Men everywhere are engaged in house-building. Some in dreamy castle-building; some in material fortune-building; all in inward character-building, building up, each one of them, the history of a life, the destiny of an eternity.

I. To begin at the bottom of the scale, let us glance at that kind of building which with so many people is the first and chief concern of life the building up of their material fortunes.

While heavenly wisdom will not permit us to make material success, the pursuit of mere fortune, a chief end of life, it is nevertheless true that the possession and practice of this wisdom has much to do, both in the individual life and on a larger scale in society, with the building up of a stable, a durable prosperity. We know very well that for sound, stable, durable prosperity in a country, as in the individual, we must have as a foundation, before all else, character, honesty, probity, reliableness; strict, just, and honourable dealing between man and man.

II. Turn now from this outward building to that which is at first sight its very opposite. But you see how closely they are connected. From the building up of material fortune, I mean, to the inward building up of character.

Every man, by every thought he thinks, by the habits he acquires, the actions he performs, is building up a house for himself, a habitation for his soul, none the less real that he cannot just walk out of it and leave it behind him when he wills. The mind is its own place, and may become to its possessor a palace or a prison. You enter one soul: it is a foul, contracted, base, poison-laden chamber, the inlets through which one might enter into it are choked up. You enter another soul: it is a broad and spacious habitation. There is a lofty and noble outlook, towards heaven and upon earth. And whence this difference? Simply that the one has been building without this heavenly wisdom, and the other has been building with it.

III. Take now another step, and look for a moment at the building up of a house of knowledge and art. It might seem at first as if knowledge, and certainly art, were independent of character, or of the possession of this moral wisdom. But in reality it is not so. The keystone of all true knowledge is found in reverence for God.

IV. In church building also we need the reminder of our text. The more evils abound around us, and the more we think they abound, the more earnestly we should set ourselves to what is specially the duty placed before us by Divine Wisdom Himself, the. work, the task, of building up the kingdom of God in the hearts of men and in the world.

J. Orr, Christian World Pulpit, vol. LXVIII. 1905, p. 134.

References. XXIV. 4. W. Skinner, Christian World Pulpit, vol. lvii. 1900, p. 108. XXIV. 10. J. A. Picton, Pulpit Discourses, p. 3. XXIV. 11, 12. A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture Esther, Job, Proverbs, etc., p. 263. J. Guinness Rogers, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlix. 1896, p. 193. Mark Guy Pearse, Christian World Pulpit, vol. 1. 1896, p. 273. W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth, p. 485.

Pro 24:12

Ruskin says: ‘The plea of ignorance will never take away our responsibilities. It is written, “If thou sayest, Behold we knew it not; doth not He that pondereth the heart consider it? and He that keepeth thy soul, doth not He know it?”‘

References. XXIV. 21. W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth, p. 491. XXIV. 30, 31. A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture Esther, Job, Proverbs, etc., p. 269. XXIV. 30-32. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xxxiv. No. 2027. XXIV. 30-34. W. Gray Elmslie, Expository Lectures and Sermons, p. 178. W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth, p. 498. XXIV. 31. F. B. Cowl, Straight Tracks, p. 50. XXIV. 32. J. Parker, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xlvii. 1895, p. 323. XXV. 1-5. W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth, p. 500. XXV. 2. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. xlix. No. 2838. XXV. 3. J. B. Lightfoot, Ordination Addresses, p. 30. XXV. 11. S. Cox, Expositions, p. 149. XXV. 13, 19. W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven for Life on Earth, p. 505. XXV. 21, 22. Ibid. p. 509. XXV. 23. Ibid. p. 515. XXV. 26. Ibid. p. 519. Spurgeon, Sermons, vol. 1. No. 2866. XXV. 28. W. G. Rutherford, The Key of Knowledge, p. 117. A. L. Lilley, A Lent in London, p. 214. A. Maclaren, Expositions of Holy Scripture Esther, Job, Proverbs, etc., p. 274.

The Legs of the Lame Are Not Equal

Fuente: Expositor’s Dictionary of Text by Robertson

Mischievous Lips, Etc.

Pro 24:1-9

“Evil men” is a very emphatic and inclusive expression. Men may sometimes be said to be bad in parts, and yet to have excellent qualities; but in the case of this verse the men are evil through and through; the whole head and the whole heart, the entire inner nature, will, conscience, fancy, may be said to be steeped in iniquity, saturated with all the qualities that constitute the very devil himself. They may indeed be prosperous outwardly, and may attract great attention by their ostentatious living, and by their loud promises and vain speeches; but they are as insubstantial as the wind, as worthless as an empty cloud. Young souls may be tempted and fascinated by them, because there is so much glittering surface, and there is such an uproar of pretension; but experience will show that the whole castle is founded on the sand, and that everything that is good fights against it, and will certainly overthrow it Evil men never construct any building; their aim is destruction, their talk is of mischief; wherever they can tear down or despoil or blight, they find an appropriate sphere for the exercise of their mischievous talents. After spending an hour with a wicked man, what is the impression left upon the mind but that a great cloud has covered the sky, a great blight has darkened the earth, reputations that were held dear have been for the moment thrown down, and altars that were regarded as sacred have been strewn with ruin? There is no health in evil-mindedness; no bloom of vigour is upon its cheek; no breath from the high heaven comes with it to refresh those who are round about; no word inspired with gospel music ever drops from the lips of evil. What wonder if we are taught to pray, “lead me not into temptation, but deliver me from evil”? There is no rest in the course pursued by iniquity; there are no green places in all the wilderness of evil. Jesus Christ came to redeem the world from this infinite night, this ruin of all light and trust and hope, this intolerable bondage and oppression; he came to seek and to save the lost, and to make the chief of sinners chief of saints.

“Through wisdom is an house: builded; and by understanding it is established: and by knowledge shall the chambers be filled with all precious and pleasant riches. A wise man is strong; yea, a man of knowledge increaseth strength. For by wise counsel thou shalt make thy war: and in multitude of counsellors there is safety.” ( Pro 24:3-6 ).

Here evil is contrasted with wisdom: evil throws down, wisdom builds up; evil brings darkness, wisdom brings light. Understanding is represented as a factor continually engaged in the establishment of goodness, establishing, that is, founding upon a rock, consolidating, making strong at every point, so that wind and wave and great tumult of the elements should not prevail against its security. Wisdom is represented as a builder; one who builds with a plan, not merely putting stone upon stone for the sake of building a high tower without purpose or utility, but building a house, signifying arrangement, commodiousness, security, hospitality: a very home that should have in it the elements of a school, the beginning of a sanctuary, and a hint of heaven itself. Wisdom is represented as strength, and knowledge as power. What we account a modern proverb is, therefore, really an ancient saying. We have proved the philosophy of these words. The fool cannot build; when he rears a few courses of stonework he throws down what he has put up, and rejoices with the laughter of madness over the ruin which he has wrought. True building is not to be hurried. Sometimes the builder rests from his labours, that he may give the wall time to settle, lest by overpowering the foundation he brings the work to destruction. True life-building means that a plan and a specification has been provided, whereby the work as to its scope and purpose is clearly indicated, and the materials with which the work is to be executed are named one by one, as to their quality and their proportions. It is not to be supposed that men go forth into the open field, and begin to build as on the spur of the moment When an excavator puts his spade into the ground he begins to carry out something that is written in detail, and that has been thought out by the carefulness of experience and practical skill. We do not see all that is behind the building. It is supposed that a man begins to build suddenly; whereas if we could know the whole history of the case we should find quiet observation of the site, silent contemplation of possibilities; then we should see the pen or pencil taken out, and a sketch made, suggesting what can be done under the special circumstances of the case; we should see a ground-plan and an elevation and a section. All this time the building is confined to paper, but it is not therefore a mere theory or fancy or dream. Behind every life-building there is a great writing, yea, a writing that is done by the finger of God; every wise builder hears a voice in the ear of his soul saying, “See that thou build according to the pattern that I showed thee in the cloud.” Every building will speak for itself. If the perpendicular has been broken, if the horizontal line is out of course, if doors and windows are out of proportion, even the fool can see how abortive has been the labours of the builder. Where everything expresses thoughtfulness, experience, and skill, the trained eye will approve the figure of the building, and all men will feel that no encroachment has been made upon the propriety of life. Every duly considered and well-built house comes into existence as if by right; it establishes its own claim to abide among the homes of men. So it is with a heart-house, a life-house, a house representing character and action and purpose; there is nothing violent about the building, and when it is set forth in all its proportions it needs no vindication, for its strength is a defence, and its beauty is an explanation.

“Wisdom is too high for a fool: he openeth not his mouth in the gate. He that deviseth to do evil shall be called a mischievous person. The thought of foolishness is sin: and the scorner is an abomination to men” ( Pro 24:7-9 ).

Fix attention upon the distinction which is here made between wisdom and the devices of evil, between the fool and the wise man, and, again, between the wise man and the mischievous person. These are not merely intellectual distinctions and contrasts; such distinctions and contrasts we must always look for in a world constituted as ours. What is pointed out in this connection is that there is no mere foolishness, in the sense of error, mistake, or mischance of judgment; on the contrary, the thought of foolishness is sin, that which we laugh at as a mistake, or condone as a momentary error, may really represent moral corruption and moral obliquity; therefore we are not to dismiss many things as merely foolish, we are to brand them as sinful and abominable. It is not uncommon to speak of men as guilty of indiscretion, but not of positive wrong; in making this distinction it may be charity that errs, not criticism that delivers its solemn judgment. On the other hand, we are not called upon to make sins, to force mere aberrations, negligences, omissions, or mistakes into the rank and quality of positive sin; the man himself will always know whether his foolishness indicates momentary mental imbecility, or whether it expresses some deep and abominable purpose of the heart

Prayer

Almighty God, we have tried to count it all joy when we have fallen into clivers temptations, but we have failed in the attempt. It is hard to count it joy. The temptations are hot, swift, strong, coming without notice, urging themselves upon us without pity: how can we count it all joy when we are in the midst of the tremendous assault? And other temptations come: our house is thrown down, our children are carried away as by a great storm or by a subtle poison in the air, all our business prospects become one great cold cloud, the plans and purposes of our life are thrown into confusion; how, then, can we count it all joy amid the wreck and utter overthrow? Yet we will try to learn the lesson. This is thy purpose concerning us, that we should hold everything with a light hand, saying, The Lord gave, and the Lord may at any moment take away; we are but trustees and stewards: blessed shall we be if we can give a faithful account. Train us to this high-mindedness, this noble reverence, this rational and religious submission. This only can be done at the Cross of Jesus Christ thy Son; there is no other school in which we can learn such wisdom: otherwhere we may become indifferent, callous, hardened, fatalistic; but here only, at the Cross, clinging to the Cross, can we learn to say, Lord, this pain is severe, this loss is great, this burden is heavy; nevertheless, thy will be done; then shall we be thy sons indeed. So we do not ignore the burden, or the difficulty, or the pain, or the distress; we look at each and say, This is hard to bear; nevertheless, even this may be borne by the omnipotence of the grace of God. This is the teaching we have received in the school of Christ the blessed teaching, so deep, so large, so true, and at the last so tender: help us to receive it gratefully, to realise it obediently; then shall men know that we have been with Jesus, and have learned of him. We are here but for a little while. We are going from the place where we say we are even at the moment when we declare we are present in it: behold, one foot is always lifted up in the air in sign of pilgrimage and progress; if we take off our sandals it is but to prepare ourselves for a longer walk to-morrow; if we lay down the staff, it is that we may presently resume it We seek a country; here we have no abiding city. We behold the glory of things, and it fades whilst we look at it, and here there is nothing worth gathering for its own account; it is only worth gathering because of the use which may be made of it. May we be wise arithmeticians, men who can count and reckon correctly, and set down figures, and dare look at them, and say, Their value is thus much, and no more; then shall we know that the days of our years are threescore years and ten, and after that all is speculation, uncertainty, conjecture, doubt, fear, hope, mingled in one strange emotion. Then shall we say, The days of the years of thy servants have been few and evil upon the earth; then shall we know that the grave is next door, and that there is but a step between us and death. Realising all this, we shall become wise, we shall set a right value upon things, and see life in all its right proportions, and conduct ourselves with sobermindedness, and with assurance that the reality is behind and beyond. That we may attain this sublimity of life, Holy Spirit, dwell with us. We are rude, and fleshly, to begin with: but what shall the end be? First that which is natural, afterwards that which is spiritual the winged power, the invisible strength, the very almightiness of God, the perfected refinement, and assimilation with the spirit and thought of the Eternal. It doth not yet appear what we shall be. We shall go no more down into the earth; we are rising upward, climbing to the sun, hailing the light, and saying to it in our struggles, Stop, and help us, and at last take us up into thyself, thou angel of brightness, thou symbol of God. For all these religious aspirations we thank thee: they do the heart good, they lift up the whole life, they bring morning into the soul which has sat in long, cold, bitter night; we bless thee for these desires, these upward looks, these far penetrations into things beyond. We walk by faith, not by sight. At midnight we sing songs in the prison, and make the foundations of the dungeon shake. Behold, thou dost turn our affliction into sacrament, our pain becomes a disguised blessing, and at the last we say, It was good for us that we were afflicted, for the black angel brought us home again, and made us pray even when we had thought to give up the altar. We give one another to thy tender care. Weary life, mysterious life: now a laugh loud and merry, now a groan full of pain and despair; now young, but young only for a day, and to-morrow quite old and grey, and almost taken for the last stage of decrepitude a walk by the graveside, and feast in the presence of death. Yet thou didst make this life: it is thy miracle; it is not beyond thy power, it lies within the palm of thy hand. Guide us, then; help us; love us always; be patient with us: we are dull scholars; at the best we have had but little time for schooling, and the little time we have had we have not always used well: be patient still, merciful evermore, pitiful even unto tears. The Lord send his blessing upon us according to our need, make us glad in the Son of God who died for us and rose again, and give us the joy of pardon, the blessing of peace, the prospect of heaven. Amen.

Fuente: The People’s Bible by Joseph Parker

XXIII

THE PROVERBS OF THE WISE

Pro 22:17-24:34 .

There are two collections of proverbs in this passage, as follows: (1) Pro 22:17-24:22 ; (2) Pro 24:23-34 . The preface, or introduction, to the first collection consists of Pro 22:17-21 .

This short paragraph is at once a conclusion and an introduction, a pause in the continuous teaching of the same Teacher, in which he sums up what has gone before, and opens the way for further instruction. In our present Hebrew text there is no break between Pro 22:16-17 , but there is a slight break, to which however, no special importance can be attached, between Pro 22:21-22 . The Revised Version is so printed as to indicate the commencement of a new section at Pro 22:17 and of a fresh paragraph at Pro 22:22 . Perowne.

The proverbs of this collection are contained sometimes in one, sometimes in two or three verses, sometimes they lapse into a continuous discourse, after the manner of the first nine chapters. In Pro 22:22-27 there are three tetrastichs. The first consists of Pro 22:22-23 ; the second, of Pro 22:24-25 ; the third, of Pro 22:26-27 .

There is a warning relative to the poor here, one relative to an angry man, and one relative to sureties. The warning relative to the poor is not to rob the poor because Jehovah will plead their cause; the one concerning an angry man is to make no friendship with him lest he become a snare; the one concerning sureties is a positive prohibition against becoming surety at all.

There is also here a warning concerning land titles in Pro 22:28 ; Pro 23:10-11 and a black-reference to Deu 19:14 . The ancient landmark must be kept intact. Land grabbing was not permitted even in that early day. A great law is set forth in Pro 22:29 , thus: Seest thou a man diligent in his business? He shall stand before kings; He shall not stand before mean men. Labor yields her rewards: “Labor conquers all things.” Compare 1Ki 10:8 . Faithfulness in service is the basis of promotion.

In Pro 23:1-3 is a warning to watch the appetite, because the favor of the ruler, an Oriental despot, and the luxury that surrounds one under such circumstances, is a dangerous thing.

In Pro 23:4-5 we have another warning, viz: that the desire to become rich may not weary us since riches are very uncertain, as they may take wings and fly away like the eagle. This passage is in line with Paul’s advice to Timothy to charge the rich relative to the uncertainty of riches and what should be the attitude of the rich toward God’s cause. He says to Timothy, “Charge them that are rich in this present world, that they be not highminded, nor have their hope set on the uncertainty of riches, but on God, who giveth us richly all things to enjoy; that they do good, that they be rich in good works, that they be ready to distribute, willing to communicate; laying up in store for themselves a good foundation against the time to come, that they may lay hold on the life which is life indeed” (1Ti 6:17-19 ).

There is a parental admonition in Pro 23:13-14 relative to the chastisement of the child, commending the use of corporal punishment, meaning that this punishment will not necessarily result in death, or that he will not die as a result of his sin if thus corrected. The latter is the more preferable. There is a principle here enunciated, that life issues from obedience to law and one who has never learned the principle of obedience to the authorities, whether parent, government, or God, is not likely to yield himself to the lordship of Jesus Christ without which he can never escape hell.

There are two striking pictures in the section (Pro 22:15-21 ). The first picture is that of a father pleading with his son showing the parental interest in the boy and the happy result of a life in the fear of God. The second picture is that of a man brought to rags by gluttony and drunkenness, which reminds us of the prodigal son.

The admonition given in Pro 22:22 is a very solemn one and suggests the many observations of the author on filial relationships. How beautiful is the reverence for parents when they are old, and how abhorring the disrespect for them often seen in modern times! This is a very wholesome piece of advice.

The characteristics of the drunkard are pictured in Pro 23:29-35 . Here we see him as a man of woe, a man of sorrows, a man of contention, a man of complaint, a man of wounds, a man with redness of eyes, a man with blurred vision, a man of perverse heart, a man tossed about like a vessel at sea, a man with deadened senses, and with all this, a man still drinking whenever he can get it.

In Pro 24:1-22 are many fine proverbs, the teachings in which cover a large range of human experience. It would be a profitable exercise to mark off the stanzas of this wonderful passage and then note the principal teachings found in it. It may be read with great interest.

The section, Pro 24:23-34 is a small collection of the proverbs of the wise and forms a kind of appendix to the preceding collection. There are two distinct parts of it, Pro 24:23-34 . The most remarkable teaching found in Pro 24:23-29 is righteous judgment based on wisdom.

The picture in Pro 24:30-34 is that of a field of the slothful. There are several points of this description, viz: the owner is designated a sluggard, his field is grown up with thorns and nettles, the wall is down and the lesson of it all is the poverty and want of its owner. The last four lines constitute a striking parabolic proverb.

QUESTIONS

1. How many and what collections of proverbs are in these Pro 22:17-24:34 ?

2. What is the preface, or introduction, to the first collection, and what is its double function?

3. What are the characteristics of this section?

4. What kind of stanzas in Pro 22:22-27 ?

5. What is the warning relative to the poor here, what one relative to an angry man, and what one relative to sureties?

6. What is warning concerning land titles in Pro 22:28 ; Pro 23:10-11 ?

7. What great law is set forth in Pro 22:22-29 ?

8. What warning is given in Pro 23:1-3 and why this warning?

9. What warning is in Pro 23:4-5 and how does this teaching compare with the New Testament teaching on the same subject?

10. What parental admonition is in Pro 23:13-14 and how does parental chastisement deliver the child’s soul from hell?

11. What the two pictures are in the section, Pro 22:15-21 ?

12. What do you think of the admonition given in Pro 22:22 ?

13. What are the characteristics of the drunkard as pictured in Pro 23:29-35 ?

14. Mark the stanzas in Pro 24:1-22 , select three of the best proverbs in this group and note the essential teachings in this section.

15. What can you say of the section, Pro 24:23-34 ?

16. What, to you, is the most remarkable teaching found in Pro 24:23-29 ?

17. What is the picture in Pro 24:30-34 and what are the last four lines of this section?

Fuente: B.H. Carroll’s An Interpretation of the English Bible

Pro 24:1 Be not thou envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them.

Ver. 1. Be not thou envious against evil men. ] Heb., Men of evil – such as are set upon sin; as are like Caracalla, qui nihil cogitabat boni, qui id non didicerat; quod ipse fatebatur, saith Dio, Who never thought of any good, &c. Envy not such a one his pomp, any more than we do a dead corpse his flowers and gaiety. See Pro 23:17 .

Neither desire to be with them. ] That is, To be in their estate, so thou mightest be at their stay. This hath been the folly of some of God’s people, as David noteth, Psa 73:10 . For the which they have afterwards befooled and bebeasted themselves, as he did, Psa 73:22 .

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

Proverbs Chapter 24

The value of wisdom is the main topic in chapter 24: 1-9; but here, not as we have already seen, in the fear of Jehovah, but as the strength of the faithful in the midst of evil men given to destruction and mischief. Why should any envy their lot or like their company?

“Be not thou envious of (or, against) evil men, neither desire to be with them; for their heart studieth destruction, and their lips talk of mischief.

“Through wisdom is a house built, and by understanding it is established; and by knowledge are the chambers filled with all precious and pleasant wealth.

“A wise man [is] in strength, and a man of knowledge increaseth strength. For with wise counsels thou shalt make thy war; and in the multitude of counsellors [is] safety (or, victory) .

“Wisdom [is] too high for a fool: he will not open his mouth in a gate. He that deviseth to do evil shall be called a master of intrigues.

“The thought of foolishness [is] sin, and the scorner [is] an abomination to men.”

Men may be clever and interesting; but what of these qualities, if they are “evil”? They may flourish for a while; but they are enemies of God, and just objects of horror, but pity too, and no more to be envied in any respect than their company to be sought. Underneath wit on the surface is their study of destruction, so that their lips cannot conceal the mischief they talk.

It is wholly different with the wisdom that begins with fearing Jehovah, which instead of active mischief builds up a house for family use, and by understanding establishes it. And as He prospered the wise in their projects, so He gave knowledge to furnish richly and pleasantly. For this book contemplates His people on earth, not present suffering with Christ and glory on high. How different Christ’s part here below, and the lot of His faithful ones!

A wise man is strong, we are told. It is moral strength, the reverse of Samson’s physical strength with moral weakness and folly. Hence too a man of knowledge increaseth strength, instead of losing its advantage by heedlessness. As it is prospered in peace, so wise counsel is of the greatest weight in war (v. 6), where, as danger thickens, safety is in multitude of counsellors, not in self-confidence.

How well it is said that “wisdom is too high for a fool!” He is self- satisfied, knows not his emptiness, and asks not of God what he lacks. So far, he does well not to open his mouth where counsel is sought; for what could a fool say?

But there is a man more to be dreaded and avoided than the senseless – such as devises evil doings. Hence he earns the character of a master of intrigues. These men are truly mischievous.

To a godly soul another consideration arises still more serious: “the thought of foolishness is sin, and the scorner is an abomination to men.” It is not only the carrying out of mischief, but the thought of foolishness is sin. How sad when the heart allows it, instead of fleeing at once to God against it! But the scorner is odious above all, as one who is not only evil in mind and heart, but he takes pleasure in lowering and maligning the righteous.

Courage is tested in the day of trouble, which gives the occasion to show its worth. But it shines better in delivering those who are in it; and this with integrity before Him who sees, to whom each owes his preservation, and who takes account of man according to his work. He would have one to enjoy the good He gives, but consider wisdom and the issue. A wicked man is warned against lying in wait against the righteous man, who, if he fall, will surely rise, while his enemy stumbles into ruin. Nor does it become one to rejoice at the fall even of an adversary, lest Jehovah see it, and not for nothing.

“[If] thou losest courage in the day of trouble, thy strength [is] small.

“Deliver those taken forth to death, and withdraw not from them that stagger to slaughter.

“If thou sayest, Behold, we knew it not, will not he that weigheth the hearts consider it?

“And he that preserveth thy soul, he knoweth [it]; and he rendereth to man according to his work.

“Eat honey, my son, for [it is] good; and a honeycomb [is] sweet to thy taste.

“So consider wisdom for thy soul; if thou hast found [it], there shall be a result, and thine expectation shall not be cut off.

“Lay not wait, wicked [man], against the dwelling of the righteous; lay not waste his resting place.

“For a righteous man falleth seven times, and riseth up again; but the wicked stumble into disaster.

“Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth, and let not thy heart be glad when he stumbleth;

“Lest Jehovah see [it], and it be evil in his sight, and he turn away his anger from him.” vv. 10-18.

A day of trouble naturally alarms and bewilders one who has not faith and hope in God. Even the believer, distressed after the word of Christ emboldened him to join his Master on the sea, “when he saw the wind boisterous,” was afraid and began to sink. Had he looked off to Jesus, his strength had been great, for there only it lay. Little faith is little strength. Jesus is the same to us whatever the sea or the wind; and Peter apart from looking to Jesus would have sunk equally on the smoothest sea without a puff of wind.

To use strength for ourselves has no worth; but to deliver those who are in peril of death unjustly, from whatever source, public or private, becomes a righteous soul. It is a duty independent of either friendship or neighbourly claim. The Samaritan was the Lord’s answer to the lawyer’s question, Who is my neighbour? Without the least thought of justifying himself, he becomes neighbour to the sufferer who needed his help.

In vain did the priest and the Levite say of the man lying half dead on the opposite side of the road, We knew it not: Jehovah considered it.

The conviction that He preserves one’s soul brings His knowledge of all before the heart, as we may believe it moved the Samaritan to mercy, besides the certainty that He renders to man according to his work.

Honey is a good thing naturally where God made all things good, nor did He begrudge the honeycomb sweet to the taste in a land flowing with milk and honey. He had pleasure in providing good things freely for man, though He knew man would abuse them all.

But what is wisdom to thy soul? The communications of Jehovah are sweeter still, says Psa 19 . If thou hast so found it, “there shall be a result, and thine expectation shall not be cut off.” He that does the will of God abides forever.

The next is a warning to a wicked man to beware of craft or violence against the house of the righteous. Does not Jehovah see?

It is true that the righteous may fall ever so often – “seven times” – yet he riseth again; as the wicked do not stumble into disaster. Look on the one hand at David; at Shimei, Ahithophel, Absalom, and Joab on the other.

How selfish and base to rejoice in the fall of an enemy! It may please the subtle enemy and the flesh too; but let not your heart be glad that he stumbles, else Jehovah will surely see and be displeased, and turn away His anger from him. And to whom? Let your conscience answer.

In order to walk righteously before Jehovah, both faith and hope are very requisite. Present results are no real standard of judgment, and too apt to do harm to our spirits as well as to deceive others. And what does He see fitting?

“Fret not thyself because of evil-doers, be not envious of the wicked;

“For there shall be no future (or, reward) to the evil [man]; the lamp of the wicked shall be put out.

“My son, fear Jehovah and the king; meddle not with those that are given to change;

“For their calamity shall rise suddenly; and who knoweth the destruction of them both (or, of their years)?

“These [things] also [are] of the wise.

“To have respect of persons in judgment is not good.

“He that saith to the wicked, Thou [art] righteous, peoples shall curse him, nations shall abhor him;

“But to those that rebuke [him] shall be delight, and a good blessing cometh upon them.

“He kisseth the lips who giveth a right answer.” vv. 19-26.

It is a great thing for a believer to occupy himself and his lips with the good, especially now that God has revealed Himself in the Son incarnate, that he may not be overcome of evil, but overcome it with good. The Jew was expressly separated from the Gentile, devoted as he was to his gods that were in no sense God. But the Christian who is surrounded by evil men and impostors is called to bear witness to Him who came in grace and truth, a divine Person as truly as He was manifested in flesh, and this that his soul might receive of His fullness. He is thus enabled to pity and seek the blessing of the wicked instead of envying them.

The awful end of rejecting the Saviour to his own ruin is present to one’s own spirit, humbled by the known grace of God who will send the Lord Jesus shortly to execute a judgment which will extinguish the lamp of the wicked.

Therefore all the more does the believer fear God and the king in the form of honouring him who is His representative in earthly things, and to be obeyed in all things save to the dishonour of God and His Word. Even then he is to suffer the consequences, never to resist or rebel like those given to meddling and change. For even here their calamity rises suddenly when they least expect it; and who knows the ruin that impends till it falls far and wide? “Fear God, honour the king,” says 1Pe 2:17 .

In a sort of appendix that follows the opening maxim is the value and duty of impartiality in judgment, which with respect of persons is but a mockery. But this undue favour assumes its worst form when the wicked person is complimented as righteous. Such a reversal of equity provokes whole peoples to curse the perpetrator, and draws out the abhorrence of the nations in hasty likes and dislikes.

Honest rebuke of the wicked, or of any unprincipled favour shown them, as the rule, wins delight and the cordial desire for a blessing upon such. It draws out the strongest mark, not only of respect but affection, when a right answer is given, whereas self curries favour by compromise.

Verses 27-34 counsel practical wisdom in postponing one’s comforts to the providing things honest outwardly, forbid unkindness and deceit in testimony, and denounce paying off old scores of ill feeling, as they portray graphically the issue of the slothful at the close.

“Prepare thy work without, and make it ready for thee in the field, and afterwards build thy house.

“Be not a witness against thy neighbour without cause, neither deceive with thy lips.

“Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me; I will render to the man according to his work.

“I went by the field of the slothful, and by the vineyard of the man void of understanding; and, behold, it was all grown over with thorns: nettles had covered its face, and the stone wall thereof was broken down.

“Then I beheld with set heart; I saw [and] received instruction.

“A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep;

“So shall thy poverty come, [as] a robber; and thy want as a man in armour.”

Consideration of others and personal honesty are entitled to have a place superior to providing personal or family comfort.

How often too the question of a neighbour comes up, and the danger of a prejudice! But the word is distinct: “be not a witness against thy neighbour without cause.” Things might not be as one would desire, but “deceive not with thy lips.” As the Lord put it, “All things whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them; for this is the law and the prophets.” He makes it positive duty, even if the neighbour failed on his side.

Still less should a righteous person venture on retribution. Who is he to assume God’s place, and say, I will do to him as he has done to me? How awful if He only rendered to us what we deserved!

The slothful man is an object of pity as well as censure. He might be estimable this way or that, but his field and his vineyard proclaim the fault, and presage his ruin. Thorns and nettles hold the field where the good grain should wave; and the wall is so broken down as to invite injurious man and beast. Is it not an objective lesson to him that beholds all with the least attention? Certainly it is no example, but a serious warning. The outward discloses the inward. The heedless man lives to sleep his life away: “a little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep.” He may be innocent of strong drink, or of sensual pleasure, or of wasteful company. His laziness ensures his ruin. “So shall thy poverty come as a robber and thy want as a man in armour.”

The true remedy is not industry for self, or activity in the world and the things of the world, but Christ the life eternal and sole propitiation for our sins to God’s glory, the Lord of all, saints or sinners, the fullness of blessing and pattern of service.

Fuente: William Kelly Major Works (New Testament)

Be not thou envious = Do not get excited. Compare Pro 23:17.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Chapter 24

Again, he continues in twenty-four in putting them together in couplets or in phrases.

Be not envious against evil men, neither desire to be with them. For their heart studies destruction, and their lips talk of mischief ( Pro 24:1-2 ).

The next one.

Through wisdom is a house built; and by understanding it is established: and by knowledge shall the chambers be filled with all pleasant riches ( Pro 24:3-4 ).

Wisdom and knowledge, the value of them.

A wise man is strong; yea, a man of knowledge increases strength. For by wise counsel thou shalt make thy war: and in the multitude of counselors there is safety. Wisdom is too high for a fool: he openeth not his mouth in the gate ( Pro 24:5-7 ).

The gate was always the place of judgment.

He that devises to do evil shall be called a mischievous person. The thought of foolishness is sin: and the scorner is an abomination to men ( Pro 24:8-9 ).

Now we have some more that are… no, not yet.

If thou forbear to deliver them that are drawn unto death, and those that are ready to be slain; If you say, Behold, we knew it not ( Pro 24:11-12 );

In other words, if you fail to help someone when you have the capacity to do it, if you do it not, if you say, “Behold, I didn’t know.”

doth not he that pondereth the heart considereth it? and he that keeps the soul, does he not know it? and shall not he render every man according to his works? ( Pro 24:12-13 )

You know, you can’t beg off your responsibility because God knows your heart. God knows what’s in your mind. And you may try to excuse your actions. “Oh, I didn’t know.” But yet God is going to ponder your heart. God knows what’s in your mind. And God will render to every man according to his works.

My son, eat honey, because it’s good; and the honeycomb, which is sweet to your taste: and so shall the knowledge of wisdom be unto your soul: when you have found it, then there shall be a reward, and the expectation shall not be cut off ( Pro 24:13-14 ).

How sweet is a nugget of truth. How sweet it is to get understanding from the Lord on a particular thing. It’s just as sweet as honey into your mouth, there is a sweetness in your soul when you gain knowledge and wisdom.

Lay not wait, O wicked man, against the dwelling of the righteous; spoil not his resting place: For a just man falleth seven times, but he will rise up again: but the wicked will fall into mischief ( Pro 24:15-16 ).

We may fall, but thank God we rise again. I’ve often said there isn’t any great evil in falling unless you just lie there. Everybody stumbles. Everybody falls. None of us are perfect, and God knows that we’re not perfect. He knows our frame, that we’re but dust. We usually expect more out of ourselves than God expects. And we’re usually harder on ourselves than God is. We get so disappointed when we have fallen. We get so disappointed when we have failed. It doesn’t disappoint God at all. He knew all the time we were going to stumble. It was just I was expecting more out of myself than God is. And God doesn’t judge or condemn when you stumble. It’s only when you lie there. God understands. He has great patience with us. Even as you have great patience in teaching your child to walk.

You expect your child to stumble. You expect your child to fall. Oh, of course, you will do your best to keep your child from falling. But there are those times when the child is learning to walk and he falls. Now a wise parent won’t get all excited and scream and run over and say, “Oh, are you all right?” He just says, “Well, get up now. Try again.” If you show all fear and excitement, then the child will get excited and start to cry and get discouraged. But you say, “Well, that was great! You did real well. You took five steps before you stumbled. That’s good.” And you encourage the child to go again.

Now God is teaching us to walk and we stumble. And we get all discouraged. “I tried so hard. Failed again.” And God is saying, “Hey, that was a good try. Let’s go at it again. Now here’s where you made your mistake. You got your eyes off of Me. You got them on the way, that’s when you began to sink.” And the Lord picks us up, dusts us off, and sets us up again. He’s so patient with us. He’s so understanding with us. And if the righteous falls seven times, he’s going to rise again.

Now here’s a hard one:

Rejoice not when your enemy falls, and let not your heart be glad when he stumbles: Lest the LORD see it, and it displease him, and he turns away his wrath from him ( Pro 24:17-18 ).

Now that’s not too good a motivation not to rejoice. If you rejoice, God may take it off. So don’t rejoice and let God just continue to whip him.

Fret not thyself because of evil men ( Pro 24:19 ),

You remember Psa 37:1-40 , it seems like this is probably something that Solomon picked up from his father David. “Fret not thyself,” David said, “for evildoers, for they shall be cut off” ( Psa 37:1-2 ). Now, “Fret not thyself because of evil men.”

neither be thou envious at the wicked; For there shall be no reward to the evil man; the candle of the wicked shall be put out ( Pro 24:19-20 ).

Don’t be envious of them. They’re going to be cut off.

My son, fear thou the LORD and the king: and meddle not with them that are given to change: For their calamity shall rise suddenly; and who knows the ruin of them both? These things also belong to the wise. It is not good to have respect of persons in judgment. He that saith to the wicked, Thou art righteous; him shall the people curse, nations shall abhor him: But to them that rebuke him shall be delight, and a good blessing shall come upon them. Every man shall kiss his lips that gives a right answer. Prepare thy work without, and make it fit for thyself in the field; and afterwards build your house. Now be not a witness against your neighbor without cause; and deceive not with thy lips. Say not, I will do so to him as he has done to me: I will render to the man according to his work ( Pro 24:21-29 ).

Don’t say that. That’s so often. “I’m going to do to him what he did to me. Boy, as we grew up as kids. Always. I just did to him what he did to me, you know.” God said don’t say that. “Vengeance is Mine, saith the Lord, I will repay” ( Rom 12:19 ).

Now from thirty on we have ode to the slothful man.

I went to the field of a slothful, and by the vineyard of the man who is void of understanding; and, lo, it was all grown over with thorns, and nettles had covered the face thereof, and the stone wall was broken down ( Pro 24:30-31 ).

Now you that have been over into the land, you can picture this. All of those stone walls that are around the vineyards and all, and they are set usually in such neat order. But the slothful man, the stone wall is broken down.

Then I saw, and considered it well: I looked upon it, and I received instruction. A little sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands to sleep: And so shall thy poverty come as one that traveleth; and thy want as an armed man ( Pro 24:32-34 ).

A lesson from the slothful. “

Fuente: Through the Bible Commentary

Pro 24:1-2

Pro 24:1-2

“Be not thou envious of evil men; Neither desire to be with them: For their heart studieth oppression, And their lips talk of mischief.”

Another admonition against envy is in Pro 23:17. Envy is not merely destructive of the personality of the envious, but it also provides a motive for many kinds of wickedness. One is foolish indeed to envy wicked people, who, regardless of their earthly status, are doomed to eternal death. There is a strange attractiveness about evil. “Young people, and sometimes older people, are fascinated by the glamour and aura of success and power which sometimes clings to evil men. The wise should look beyond all of that and consider the ultimate fate of all wicked men.

Pro 24:1. Two prohibitions: dont desire to be like evil men and dont desire to run with them. If one doesnt envy them, he wont run with them, and if one doesnt run with them, he will not become like them. Other passages about not envying such: Pro 24:19; Psa 37:1; Psa 73:3; Pro 3:31; Pro 23:17. Another passage about not desiring to be with evil people: Pro 1:15.

Pro 24:2. In Proverbs the expression evil woman usually is referring to an adulterous woman and a evil man to oppressors (as in this verse). These evil men have their heart involved in their sin, and they study how to be successful in their wickedness. 2Ti 2:15 shows that the righteous should study to show themselves approved unto God.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

Warnings are uttered against envy, against the formation of evil companionships, against excess in passion, against all false exhilaration; and perperpetual attention to wisdom and earnest endeavor to help those in peril are urged.

The mind of wisdom is then described. It is a mind full of hope, free of enmity, filled with reverent fear. The counsels close with further teaching concerning the social order. Judgment must be just, and wickedness must not be condoned. In proverbial language, the importance of working before rest is indicated. The need for a house and its use must be justified by wisdom before it is built. True neighborliness consists in refusing to consent to wronging a neighbor, and also in being free of a vengeful spirit. A graphic description of the slothful’s neglect of his field and vineyard serves as a warning against sloth.

Fuente: An Exposition on the Whole Bible

Proverbs 24

This chapter completes the second section of the book of Proverbs. It includes proverbs arranged directly by the wise king and evidently put into circulation before his death.

24:1-2

The first proverb in this chapter is a warning against falling into the snare that distracted the godly Asaph until he went into the sanctuary of the Lord (Psalm 73). See notes on Pro 23:17-18. When Asaph saw the end of the wicked, all his envious yearning vanished. How could a saint of God begrudge the worldly person his fleeting pleasures when judgment, like a dark and gloomy cloud, is lowering over his head!

Nor is that the only thing that makes their lot wretched. Their hearts and lips similarly are occupied in destruction and mischief. Who could be happy when so engaged? Disappointment and grief will always be the reward of those who hope to find happiness through iniquity. Scripture is replete with many instances of the final end of the wicked. For example, see the wretched life of Jehoram, king of Judah (2 Chronicles 21).

24:3-4

Filling the mind and heart with wisdom, knowledge, and understanding is like building a mansion on a solid foundation and filling it with costly treasures. In the same way the life of the wise is beautifully adorned, bringing joy to him and delight to his companions. He who has the wisdom that comes from above will never be poor. See Jam 3:17-18.

24:5-6

See notes on Pro 20:18. There is an intimate connection between these verses and those just preceding. Wisdom makes its possessor strong, however inferior he may be in other respects to his adversaries.

The meaning of the expression “make thy war” (kjv) is evidently “make successful warfare,” or “war to thine advantage.”

24:7

The wise man does not act rashly. As he goes out to meet the enemy, he takes advantage of the counsel and experience of others. He is not an egotist. His safety is in his willingness to hear what others soberly present. Our Lord may have had these words in mind, as also those of verse 27, when He instructed His disciples as to the importance of counting the cost, before beginning to build or going out to a conflict (Luk 14:28-32). See the poor wise man of Ecc 9:14-16.

Unwilling to repent of his evil-doing, the fool is unable to attain wisdom. Therefore he is speechless when the hour of his judgment comes. See the man who ignored the wedding garment (Mat 22:11-13).

What rich grace led Jesus, the eternal wisdom, to be as a lamb, dumb before the shearers, when He stood “in the gate” to take the judgment for His own (Isa 53:7).

24:8-9

Evil thoughts, said our Lord, come from the heart, and indicate a person’s moral pollution. He who allows his mind to indulge in evil desires is full of mischief. His thoughts of folly are sinful, whether put into execution or not; for thoughts as well as deeds will be judged when the secrets of men’s hearts are laid bare. Men will give account for thoughts as well as for words and actions. The scoffer is one who permits the foolishness of his heart to control his lips. He ridicules holy things, as did Pharaoh when he asked, “Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice?” (Exo 5:2)

24:10

The hour of trial demonstrates the spiritual strength one really has. To faint or become disheartened indicates that one has not been truly counting on God for deliverance. The hour of trial and opposition will find the trusting soul more confident still, for he knows the source of all power. Contrast Elijah when threatened by Jezebel with David when the people spoke of stoning him (1Ki 19:2-4; 1Sa 30:6).

24:11-12

These verses seem to refer to a mode of execution once prevalent in Syria and Palestine. Muenscher says, “When a criminal was anciently led to execution, a crier went before, who proclaimed the crime of which he had been convicted, and called upon any one who could say anything in behalf of the condemned culprit, to come forward; in which case, he was led back to the tribunal and the cause was re-heard.” To selfishly withhold information that could save the condemned man’s life, would be to stand with Cain and ask, “Am I my brother’s keeper?” (Gen 4:9) But the great Judge of all who ponders the heart would be witness against the one who acted so perfidiously and would assuredly render judgment.

What can be said of Christians who know millions are passing on to eternal sorrow, yet scarcely ever make known God’s message of justification through the Lord Jesus Christ? Almost nineteen centuries have passed since Jesus said, “Go ye into all the world, and preach the gospel to every creature” (Mar 16:15). How many millions have not heard the gospel message, because we who are so richly blessed have so little heart to carry the word of reconciliation to them?

Even when some have been ready to go, there is amazing lethargy among those who could afford to assist them. Therefore only by great self-denial can these missionaries reach and remain in the needy fields, already white to the harvest.

Let us not forget that we will yet have to answer to God for our insensitivity. He will not ignore the self-seeking, the worldly-mindedness, the positive indifference that has led His people to neglect the carrying of His gospel “into all the world.”

The cry of those ready to be slain rises up to His ear day and night while they wait for a deliverer. Be it ours then, not to say “we knew it not,” but to rise to our privileges and help to spread abroad the saving word in every way we can. See Ezekiel, the watchman to Israel (Eze 33:1-12).

24:13-14

As honey is delightful to the palate, so Wisdom will be to the soul devoted to her. In chapter 5:3 we found the strange woman simulating this; but though her lips “drop as an honeycomb,” they who follow her pernicious ways will have bitterness in the latter end. On the contrary, Wisdom promises an assured reward—an expectation that will not result in disappointment. The one who earnestly seeks understanding will never be put to shame. See the account of Cornelius (Acts 10).

24:15-16

The wicked rejoice in iniquity and are glad at the calamities of the righteous. But though the just man stumbles frequently, he will be lifted up again, for “God is able to make him stand” (Rom 14:4). The sevenfold fall may refer either to what are commonly called misfortunes or to moral lapses brought on through spiritual carelessness; for if the saint of God becomes careless, he is as weak as other men. But where grace has worked in the soul, there will be recovery; while the one who makes an insincere profession will return like a dog to his vomit or like a sow to her wallowing in the mire, thus becoming overwhelmed with evil (2Pe 2:20-22). Contrast Peter with Judas (Mat 26:75; 27:3-5). Compare this proverb with Psa 34:18-22.

24:17-18

Love does not gloat over the sorrows of others, even though their adversities may be richly deserved. Remembering that he is himself a subject of grace, the humble, contrite soul walks softly, having tears, not sneers, for the afflictions of his enemies. The eye of Jehovah will note when the attitude is otherwise; He will see that he who is glad at calamities will not go unpunished. This was what provoked God’s wrath against Edom (Oba 1:12-16) and turned His anger away from Jacob to Esau. See notes on Pro 17:5.

24:19-20

Compare this proverb with 24:1. There is no reason to be either troubled because of evil men or to envy their present estate. They have no power or might, unless for a brief time it is delegated by the God of the righteous; their wealth and prosperity is only for a moment and will soon vanish away forever, leaving them poorer than the poorest. No reward for all their toil on earth awaits them in eternity. Their lamp will go out in darkness as they fall beneath the awful judgment of the God whose holiness they have despised and whose grace they have refused. See the judgment that fell on Herod (Act 12:20-23).

24:21-22

All who know the Lord should be subject to God, and therefore to the earthly powers that are ordained by Him. Those who are rebellious disturb the peace and order of society by plotting against the established government. In the church such men also arise who would overturn all godly order and trouble the minds of the saints. Their capacity for evil will be greatly hindered if they are avoided. In worldly commonwealths, Christians are subjects, not rulers. Therefore we are exhorted to render to Caesar what belongs to him, not joining in with political changes and social upheavals. To fail to obey the word of God in this matter will involve the unwise saint in many a snare; then when the overthrow of the revolutionary leader comes suddenly, the misery of both the rebel and his followers will be great. See the outcome of the insurrections of Theudas and Judas of Galilee (Act 5:36-37).

24:23-26

Verse 23 to the end of the chapter seems to be a kind of appendix to the book as originally written. This is indicated by the introductory sentence “These things also belong to the wise” (23). Four subjects are taken up in this additional section, all of which have been previously treated. The topics are the evil of showing partiality in judgment; counting the cost; prejudiced witness; and slothfulness.

Verses 23-26 treat the first topic. He who defends the wicked brings hatred upon himself. He will draw down on his head the indignation of the upright. But he who condemns the guilty will earn the respect of the people and receive their blessing. All will “kiss his lips” who gives a just sentence. Among Eastern nations, the kiss was a symbolic act denoting affection and esteem.

Solomon himself is perhaps the best illustration in Scripture of the righteous judge until “He shall come whose right it is to reign, and to execute justice throughout the whole earth” (1 Kings 2 and 3:16-28).

24:27

We have already noticed that the discourse of our Lord recorded in Luk 14:28-32 may have had reference to the principle enunciated in Pro 24:6. That proverb was illustrated in His words about the king going out to battle without proper advice. Verse 27 may have also been in our Lord’s mind as it finds its counterpart and fuller explanation in the warning drawn from the account of the man who began to build and was not able to finish. It is wise to count the cost, lest the undertaking be too great and prove but a monument of folly in the end. Such a reminder was the tower of Babel, which overconfident men began sacrilegiously to build, but were unable to complete (Gen 11:1-9).

24:28-29

To testify against one’s neighbor in order to accomplish his ruin and procure revenge, because of real or imagined wrong, is improper for a saint of God. The man of faith need not be concerned about defending his good name; he certainly will not be found falsely accusing his neighbor, however much he has suffered through him. He can quietly leave all his circumstances in the hands of Him who will ever vindicate His faithful servants.

An important point is reached in the experience of a believer when he learns to look beyond all second causes to God Himself. Only then can he say, “I have learned, in whatsoever state I am… to be content” (Php 4:11). The apostle described a mind and soul that is content to know His will is being carried out, despite all efforts of the enemy to thwart it. This attitude elicits a wonderful victory over the natural propensity to see in our circumstances cause for complaint, dissatisfaction, and revenge.

See the remarks as to David’s behavior towards Shimei in the notes on Pro 20:22.

24:30-34

This graphic portrayal of the sluggard’s field was given as by an eyewitness who stood sadly gazing on it and pondering as he viewed its desolation. Thorns and nettles were flourishing, but there was no fruit. The wall was broken down and everything spoke of lack of care and slothful indifference. May we too gaze on it and consider it well!

Verses 33 and 34 are the musings of his heart as he meditated on the unhappy scene. The sluggard was sleeping when he should have been laboring. The hour is approaching when he will be aroused by poverty coming like a man on a journey and want like a soldier in full armor. But the sluggard will be awakened too late to realize that his wasted opportunities have gone beyond recall. See the spiritual lesson of these verses as noted in Pro 6:10-11 and 20:4.

This warning against laziness closes the book as first set forth, unless chapters 30 and 31 attributed to Agur and Lemuel were then part of it. If so, the next section was inserted in its present place by divine guidance when the work was issued in its final complete form.

Fuente: Commentaries on the New Testament and Prophets

Pro 24:10

I. The special object of all the training and discipline through which we pass in life is the increase of strength.

II. Every life has its day of adversity. It is in the day of adversity that a man’s character is tested. Adversity makes or mars a man. A man is either the better or the worse for the trial through which he has passed.

III. Think what it is to faint as a Christian. It is to distrust God. Let us glorify God in loss, in suffering, in waiting.

Parker, City Temple, vol. iii., p. 363.

Reference: Pro 24:11.-E. White, Christian World Pulpit, vol. xxiv., p. 310.

Pro 24:11-12

I. Groundless excuses can be of no avail as made to God, because, in the first place, He is a Being who considers everything. If God considers, if He be a God who searcheth the spirits, a God by whom actions are weighed, then I instantly learn, if there be vanity in an excuse, it must be detected, and if there be falsehood, it must be exposed. There is an overwhelming weight of condemnation in the question, “Doth not He that pondereth the heart consider it?”

II. But Solomon is not content with pointing out to the self-apologist that God considers everything: he goes on to remind him that God knows everything. It is the necessary property of the Divine Being that He should be acquainted with whatsoever was, or is, or is to come, so that to suppose Him ignorant or forgetful of the minutest thing is to charge Him with imperfection; and this, in other words, is to deny the Divinity. Throughout the circuits of immensity there cannot be the motion of a will nor the throb of an affection which escapes God’s observation. His is that omniscience to which there has never been an addition, from which there has never been an abstraction; His is that prodigious mind to which prophecy is history, and to which history is observation, which embraces everything at once, so that it can be said to foreknow or to recollect only in accommodation to our limited faculties, foreknowledge having to do with our future, recollection with our past, but both equally with the interminable present of Him who can describe Himself as “I am that I am.” The question, “Doth not He that pondereth the heart consider it?” is followed with the yet more startling and the yet more overcoming one, “He that keepeth thy soul, doth not He know it?”

III. “Shall He not render to every man according to his works?” Man may be unmoved by our declaration of God as a God who considers and knows; but we have exhausted our resources and are forced to regard him as morally invulnerable if we find him unmoved by the startling interrogation, “and shall not He render to every man according to his works?”

H. Melvill, Penny Pulpit, No. 2658.

References: Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12.-W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven, 2nd series, p. 273. Pro 24:13-22.-R. Wardlaw, Lectures on Proverbs, vol. iii., p. 115. Pro 24:16.-F. Tholuck, Hours of Devotion, p. 281. Pro 24:17.-J. Vaughan, Fifty Sermons, 8th series, pp. 266, 272, 279, 286. Pro 24:21.-W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven, 2nd series, p. 282. Pro 24:23-34.-R. Wardlaw, Lectures on Proverbs, vol. iii., p. 129.

Pro 24:30-32

I. The scene shows that if we will not have flowers and fruits, we shall certainly have thorns and nettles.

II. The scene shows that the sluggard and the fool cannot hide the results of their neglect.

III. The scene shows how possible it is to be right in some particulars and to be grievously wrong in others. The legal right of the slothful man to the possession of the field might be undisputed. It is not enough to possess; we must increase.

IV. The scene shows that even the worst abuses may be turned to good account. Keep your eyes open, and you will read moral lessons everywhere. (1) You will see that the finest possessions may be wasted: property, talent, influence, opportunity. (2) You will see that wickedness always moves in the direction of destruction.

Parker, City Temple, vol. ii., p. 108 (see also Pulpit Notes, p. 48).

References: Pro 24:30-34.-S. Cox, Expositor, 2nd series, vol. vi., p. 401; W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven, 2nd series, p. 290.

Pro 24:32

I. When the learner in God’s school goes out to observe mankind, he will think of the manner, and cautions, and rules for turning what he sees to the most beneficial account and of the most instructive points to fix his attention upon. (1) Let not his observing be merely of the nature of speculation, not simply a seeing and judging what men are. (2) Another admonition is against prejudice and arrogance in observing and judging. (3) Another is against taking pleasure in perceiving and ascertaining what is wrong in man. (4) Another grand rule is that our observations on other men should not be directed or suffered to go to the effect of our being better pleased with ourselves, with this exception: that if Divine grace has really wrought a work in us, we may well be delighted with that as such.

II. To such general considerations there might be added a variety of more special observations. (1) Think of the probable difference between our judgments of the persons we look upon and their own judgments of themselves. (2) One of the most conspicuous things to be noticed in looking on mankind is how temptation operates and prevails. (3) A prominent and mournful thing to be seen in looking on mankind will be the great errors, the lapses, of good men. “Let him that thinketh he standeth take heed lest he fall.” (4) In looking on men, observe the effect of situation and circumstances. Look watchfully how men are affected, and who shall dare to say, “I have nothing to fear in a like situation”? (5) Happily there are worthier things here and there: exemplary virtues, graces, wisdom; and it is delightful to turn for instruction to these from the many things that instruct us as being evil. Let these better examples be observed, with attention to understand how they are formed and an earnest effort of imitation.

J. Foster, Lectures, 2nd series, p. 29.

References: Pro 24:33, Pro 24:34.-Spurgeon, Evening by Evening, p. 331. Pro 25:1-5.-W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven, 2nd series, p. 296. Pro 25:1-7.-R. Wardlaw, Lectures on Proverbs, vol. iii., p. 143. Pro 25:2.-Spurgeon, My Sermon Notes: Genesis to Proverbs, p. 187. Pro 25:8-13.-R. Wardlaw, Lectures on Proverbs, vol. iii., p. 152. Pro 25:11.-S. Cox, Expositions, 4th series, p. 149. Pro 25:13, Pro 25:19.-W. Arnot, Laws from Heaven, 2nd series, p. 303. Pro 25:14-20.-R. Wardlaw, Lectures on Proverbs, vol. iii., p. 163. Pro 25:15.-Clergyman’s Magazine, vol. i., p. 224.

Fuente: The Sermon Bible

CHAPTER 24 Instructions Continued

In the final instructions of this chapter we find first a description of the evil men. Their heart studieth destruction; their lips talk mischief. This theme is repeatedly referred to in this chapter. In Pro 24:15 the evil man is addressed not to lay wait for the righteous and not to spoil his resting place. The Lord takes care of the righteous; he may be overcome by misfortunes seven times, yet will he rise again. Different it is with the wicked when he falls into mischief. Yet there must be no rejoicing over the fall of the enemy, nor gladness when he stumbled. This displeaseth the Lord. Still higher is the command of the New Testament, Love your enemies; … recompense no man evil for evil; … overcome evil with good. There is to be no fretting because of evil men nor envy (Pro 24:1 and Pro 24:19). Why should the righteous be envious at the wicked in their prosperity? The Thirty-seventh Psalm enters more fully into this; but here the same answer is given in a terse way. The wicked have no reward; their candle will be put out. Their calamity riseth suddenly, and who knoweth the ruin of them both? which means that the Lord and the king, will deal with the wicked. Another proverb of this chapter we mention: If thou faint in the day of adversity thy strength is small Pro 24:10). The hour of trial is the hour which brings the test. When adversity brings despondency, and even worse, murmuring, it is an evidence that the heart does not fully trust the Lord.

The last section of this chapter is introduced by the statement, These things also belong to the wise, or as it may be rendered, These also are sayings of the wise. The chapter ends with a vivid description of the slothful. His field and vineyard bear witness to his character. They are grown over with thorns and covered with nettles and the stone wall is broken down. And why all this? Yet a little Sleep, a little slumber, a little folding of the hands in sleep. An illustration of this sluggard can be found a thousand times over again in our own land.

Fuente: Gaebelein’s Annotated Bible (Commentary)

not: Pro 24:19, Pro 3:31, Pro 23:17, Psa 37:1, Psa 37:7, Psa 73:3, Gal 5:19-21, Jam 4:5, Jam 4:6

neither: Pro 1:11-15, Pro 13:20, Gen 13:10-13, Gen 19:1-11, Psa 26:9

Reciprocal: Psa 10:5 – thy judgments 1Pe 2:1 – envies

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Pro 24:1-2. Be not thou envious, &c. The proneness of good men, especially while they are weak, and only in the beginnings of their course of piety and virtue, to be dejected at the prosperity of the ungodly, and so to be tempted to imitate them, is the reason that the admonition which we here meet with is so often repeated; neither desire to be with them Desire not their company, nor to imitate their manner of life. For their heart studieth destruction How they may oppress and destroy others, which yet, at last, fails upon their own heads.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Pro 24:1. Be not envious against evil men. Similar thoughts occur in Psa 37:1, Psalms 73. Pro 17:1. Why should we envy the wicked? We are all going to lie in the common dust; their prosperity hastens their exit, while righteousness has the promise of long life, and all good things. By wisdom your house shall be built, and your chambers stored with valuable and pleasant treasures: chap. Pro 15:6.

Pro 24:5. A wise man is strong, for the guidance of his affairs; for the improvement of peace, or the conduct of war. Wisdom, delighting in equity, is crowned with affluence, and victory in defensive war. The LXX read, The wise man is better than the strong, and the prudent man than the stout husbandman.

Pro 24:6. In multitude of counsellors there is safety. The wittegena gemot, among our Saxon ancestors, comprised the heads of houses, the warriors, and the ancient men; for they appeared and debated in arms. The French accounts of the American Indians say the same. I beg leave to translate the following speech from Travels in Louisiana, in 1793 and 1794.

About the year 1766, three days after the Indian chiefs had assembled to consult on the best means of expelling the French from Louisiana, an orator, after saluting his chief, spake as follows.

May the great sun that enlightens us, and whom we adore, shed upon my discourse the enlivening energy and sweetness of his beams; that irradiating our minds with wisdom, he may adequately warm our hearts with the courage essential to our calamitous situation.

Our aged men have long perceived the injuries we have sustained by the neighbourhood of the French; but our young men, seduced by appearances, perceive not the precipice covered with flowers. They look solely at the glare of European merchandize, and are unsuspicious of the poison it contains. Of what use, in fact, is all this seductive merchandise to us? It obviously corrupts our women with the love of luxury, it debauches our daughters, it flatters their idleness and pride, it kills the married men with labour to furnish the factitious wants of their wives, and it relaxes the whole force of public morals. These advantages are no compensation for the dangers to which we are exposed.

But the French have done us the greatest injury by their engaging air, by their endeavours to flatter our passions, and by the art they naturally have to soften our courage, the better to exercise their tyranny. Before they came we were men, we were allied, we ranged at liberty in a country which was our own. We had no enemies but the beasts, which we had the address to subdue. Now, a subtle poison flows in our veins. It benumbs and enfeebles our limbs. We stumble as we walk, and are afraid of the thorns. We have the timidity of slaves, and bow the neck to the yoke of tyranny. Thus the French treat our illustrious Sun. They even threaten to load us with chains, and we hesitate in preferring death to servitude! Let us convince the white men that red men are as free as themselves, and that they know how to resume at pleasure their ancient valour.

Here, while the orator paused, the most irradiated looks of approbation were cast on one another; and then turning to him with countenances expressive of their wish that he should proceed, he thus resumes the subject.

Are we not accounted the most enlightened of all red men? And so, in fact, we are. Who have more courage, and who have more resources than ourselves? What then do we await in the resumption of our ancient liberty?

The orator then delivered a quiver of thirty rods to each chief, with instructions to burn one every day upon the altar. But Braspike, a princess connected with a french officer, wishing to favour her husband, entered the temple by her own right, and stole one of the sticks, which occasioned the Natchez nation to begin the carnage one day earlier than the others. By this means the French were partially saved, being put on their guard.

I heard Mr. Campbell relate his travels in South Africa. When he reached the copper Caffres nine hundred miles north-east of the Cape, the warriors assembled in arms, about five hundred in number. When the question was put, whether they should receive a missionary to teach them the great word, and some useful arts; and in particular, how to get twice as much corn from the land as they then did, they debated for four hours, with great eloquence, and impressive action. The request was granted.

Pro 24:7. A foolopeneth not his mouth in the gate, where the judges and elders sat to decide on public affairs. The fool did not rise to this honour.

Pro 24:11. If thou forbear to deliver. Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, that do ye unto them. This is a golden rule; it is the law of nature, and of nations. Hence, whether we see a neighbour, a stranger, or an enemy in danger, we must forget private circumstances, and risk our own life to save another. Vaillante, an accredited traveller in Caffraria, mentions a Dutchman whose signal efforts deserve to be immortalized. A ship was wrecked near the Cape; the crew were clinging to the shrouds, and no boat would venture to save them. But this brave man, whose horse was accustomed to take the water, rode up to the wreck seven times, and brought off two men, hanging by his stirrup, each time. He ventured the eighth time, when, not considering either that his beast grew weaker, or that the tide encreased, both he and his horse were borne away and drowned. Hence whenever we see human life in peril, let us consult the generous prudence of our first feelings, and we shall avoid the censure which our Lord passed on the priest and the levite, and obtain the applause of the good Samaritan.

Pro 24:14. Then there shall be a reward. See on chap. 23. 18, where the same word is translated an end. The righteous shall have a future life of reward and blessedness. The LXX, Thou shalt have a happy death, and hope shall not forsake thee.

Pro 24:16. A just man falleth seven times into troubles, either by the wicked or by providential afflictions, and rises again; for the Lord, according to his many promises, delivers him out of them all. But the wicked fall into mischief, and rise no more. This is a just remark on the happiness of those who live in communion with God.

Pro 24:17. Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth. The strokes of justice should make all hearts tremble: we have sinned as well as he, therefore both nature and circumstances should teach us sympathy. So Israel, though greatly provoked, mourned when Benjamin perished, that there should lack one tribe in Israel. Hence we should most seriously pray that repentance, and not punishment, may be our enemys portion.

Pro 24:20. There shall be no reward to the evil man. See on Pro 24:14. No happiness in a future state. His candle shall be put out: he shall be driven into outer darkness.

Pro 24:26. Every man shall, kiss his lips that giveth a right answer. This refers to the plaudits in public debates, or to the approbation of the court, when a witness answers well.

Pro 24:28. Be not a witness against thy neighbour without cause. You have to live in the same town; the mischiefs arising from imprudence are many. If your evidence be unfair, or too strong, it will never be forgiven. But if the cause be just, you must not injure innocence to cover guilt.

Pro 24:30. The field of the slothful, and the vineyard of the man void of understanding, conveyed instruction to Solomon. He regarded the sin of idleness with abhorrence. This is a crime which a man commits against his house, against his God, and against his country. But what shall we say of the myriads of hearts which resemble this vineyard and field; full of briars, full of weeds, full of sins. Let us learn wisdom from other mens folly, and industry from their sloth.Here ends the second and last volume of the Proverbs which Solomon delivered to the public.

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

Pro 24:7 a. Lit. Wisdom is corals to the fool. RV involves a change m the text, which gives perhaps the best sense that can be made of an obviously corrupt stanza.

Pro 24:9. thought: the word means plan or device, and is used in both a good and a bad sense in Pr. Here the meaning is that sin is the kind of plan which folly engages in, sin is follys plan.

Pro 24:10. An incomplete aphorism. As it stands its probable meaning is, If thou art slack, thy strength will be narrow (i.e. restricted) in the day of trouble.

Pro 24:11 f. The Heb. is not unambiguous and shows some disorder, but probably the two verses deal with the same subject, and form one aphorism exhorting to the deliverance of those doomed to die. It would appear, therefore, to be addressed to some one in power or official position, and to relate to some time of political oppression such as the Maccabean period.

Pro 24:13 f. In praise of Wisdom. An incomplete quatrain with a line added from Pro 23:18, obviously out of place here.

Pro 24:20. reward is lit. end (cf. Pro 23:18, mg.), perhaps participation in the future Messianic kingdom.

Pro 24:20 b. cf. Pro 13:9, Pro 20:20.

Pro 24:21 f. This quatrain may be interpreted in two ways, according to the sense put on the pronouns in Pro 24:22. (a) Fear God and the king, and do not meddle (lit. mix thyself) with revolutionaries, for their calamity is sudden, etc. (b) Fear God and the king, and do not disobey either of them, for the calamity they inflict is sudden, etc.

Fuente: Peake’s Commentary on the Bible

Previously the writer cited the ruinous end of evil companions as motivation to avoid their company (Pro 23:20-21). Here, it is their essential character that is the basis for the same advice.

Fuente: Expository Notes of Dr. Constable (Old and New Testaments)

CHAPTER 25

FORGIVING

“Be not a witness against thy neighbor without cause, and deceive not with thy lips. Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me; I will render to the man according to his work,”- Pro 24:28-29

“Rejoice not when thine enemy falleth, and let not thy heart be glad when he is overthrown, lest the Lord see it and it displease Him, and He turn away His wrath from him.”- Pro 24:17-18.

“He that is glad at calamity shall not be unpunished.”- Pro 17:5

“If thine enemy be hungry, give him bread to eat, and if he be thirsty give him water to drink; for thou shalt heap coals of fire upon his head, and the Lord shall reward thee.”- Pro 25:21-22

THERE is no subject on which the teaching of the Proverbs more strikingly anticipates the morality of the New Testament than that of forgiveness to our enemies. Our Lord Jesus Christ could take some of these sayings and incorporate them unchanged into the law of His kingdom, for indeed it is not possible to surpass the power and beauty and truth of the command to feed those who have injured us if they are hungry, to give them drink when they are thirsty, and in this Divine way to kindle in them repentance for the injury which they have done. This is the high-water mark of moral excellence. No better state can be desired. When a human spirit is habitually in this tender and forgiving mood, it is already united with the Father of spirits, and lives.

It is almost superfluous to point out that even the saints of the Old Testament fall very far short of the lofty standard which is here set before us. The Psalmist, for example, is thinking of coals of a quite different sort when he exclaims: “As for the head of those that compass me about, let the mischief of their own lips cover them. Let burning coals fall upon them; let them be cast into the fire; into deep pits that they rise not up again.” {Psa 140:9-10} That is the old elemental hate of human nature, the passionate, indignant appeal to a righteous God against those who have been guilty of a wrong or an injury. Even Jeremiah, one of the latest, and certainly not the least holy, of the prophets, could cry out concerning his enemies: “Yet, Lord, Thou knowest all their counsel against me to slay me; forgive not their iniquity, neither blot out their sin from Thy sight; but let them be overthrown before Thee; deal Thou with them in the time of Thine anger.” {Jer 18:23} Words painfully natural, words echoed by many. a persecuted man of God, but yet quite inconsistent with the teaching of the Savior in the Sermon on the Mount, the teaching already foreshadowed in this beautiful proverb.

But it may not be superfluous to notice that the Proverbs themselves, even those which stand at the head of this chapter, do not all touch the high-water mark of Pro 25:21. Thus, for example, the motive which is suggested in Pro 24:18 for not rejoicing in the fall of an enemy is none of the highest. The idea seems to be, if you see your enemy undergoing punishment, if calamity is falling upon him from the Lord, then do not indulge in any insolent exultation, lest the Lord should be offended with you, and, in order to chastise your malignity, should cease to plague and trouble him. In such a view of the question, God is still regarded as a Nemesis that will resent any unseemly rejoicing in the calamity of another; {Pro 17:5 b} in proportion therefore as you wish to see your enemy punished, you must abstain from that joy in his punishment which would lead to its diminution. From a precept of that kind there is a vast moral stride to the simple prohibition of retaliation, announced without any reason given or suggested in Pro 24:29 -“Say not, I will do so to him as he hath done to me, I will render to the man according to his work.” And from this again there is an incalculable stride to the positive spirit of love, which, not content with simply abstaining from vindictiveness, actually turns the tables, and repays good for evil, looking with quiet assurance to the Lord, and the Lord alone, for recognition and reward. Our wonder is occasioned not because all the Proverbs do not reach the moral altitude of this one, but rather that this one should be so high. When an ideal is set up far in advance of the general practice and even of the general thoughts of the time, we can ascribe it only to the promptings of the Holy Spirit.

It needs no proof that forgiveness is better than revenge. We all know that-

“Revenge at first though sweet,

Bitter ere long back on itself recoils.”

We all know that the immediate effect of forgiving our enemy is a sweet flow of tenderness in the soul, which surpasses in delight all the imagined joys of vindictiveness; and that the next effect is to soften and win the foe himself; the scornful look relents, the tears of passion give place to those of penitence, the moved heart is eager to make amends. We all know that nothing more powerfully affects our fellow-men than the exhibition of this placable temper. We all know that in forgiving we share Gods prerogative, and come into harmony with His Spirit.

Yet here is the melancholy fact that notwithstanding this proverbial truth, taken up into the teaching of our Savior, and echoed in the writings of His Apostles, even in a Christian society, forgiveness is almost as rare as it was in the days of King Solomon. Men are not ashamed-even professing Christians are not ashamed-to say about their enemies, “I will do so to him as he has done to me, I will render to the man according to his work.” We even have a lurking admiration for such retaliatory conduct, calling it spirited, and we still are inclined to contemn one who acts on the Christly principle as weak or visionary. Still the old bad delight in seeing evil fall on the head of our enemies glows in our hearts; still the act of vengeance is performed, the bitter retort is given, the abusive letter is written, with the old sense of unhallowed pride and triumph. How is this? Ah, the simple truth is that it is a small matter to get right principles recognized, the whole difficulty lies in getting them practiced. We need a power which can successfully contend against the storm of passion and self-will in those terrible moments when all the calm lights of reason are quenched by the blinding surf of passion, and all the gentle voices of goodness are drowned by its roaring waves.

Sometimes we hear it said that the moral teaching of Christ is not original, but that all His precepts may be found in the words and writings of ancient sages, just as His teaching about forgiveness is anticipated by the proverb. Yes, but His claim does not rest upon His teaching, but upon the Divine and supernatural power which He has at His command to carry out His doctrines in the conduct of His disciples. This is the point which we must realize if this sweet and beautiful ideal is to be worked out in our lives. We have but touched the fringe of the question when we have conned His words, or shaped conceptions of what a life would be passed in conformity to them. The center of Christian doctrine is power, the power of Christ, the fountain of living waters opened in the heart, the grafting of the withering branches upon a living stock, the indwelling of Christ Himself, as the spring and principle of every holy action, and the effectual restraint on all our ungovernable passions.

But before looking more closely at this, we ought to pay some attention to the constant motive which our Lord, even in His teaching, presents for the practice of a forgiving disposition. He always bases the duty of forgiveness on the need which we have of Gods forgiveness; He teaches us to pray, “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us”; and in the moving story of the unmerciful servant, who demanded the full payment from his fellow-servant just when his lord had pitifully remitted his own debt, He tells us that forgiveness of our enemies is an indispensable condition of our being forgiven by God. “His lord was wroth, and delivered him to the tormentors, till he should pay all that was due. So shall also My Heavenly Father do unto you, if ye forgive not everyone his brother from your hearts.” {Mat 18:35} It is not therefore only, as it is sometimes stated, that we ought to be moved to pity by remembering what God has done for us. No, there is a much sterner thought in our Lords mind; it is that if we do not forgive we shall not and cannot be forgiven. The forgiving spirit manifested to our fellow-men is that without which it is vain for us to come near and to ask God for pardon. If we have come, and are just about to offer our prayer, and if we then remember that we have aught against a brother, we must go first and be reconciled to him, before our prayer can be so much as heard.

Here is certainly a motive of a very powerful kind. Which of us would dare to cherish the bitter thought, or proceed with our plan of vengeance, if we remembered and realized that our vindictiveness would make our own pardon at the hands of God impossible? Which of the countless deeds of retaliation that stain with blood the pages of history would have been perpetrated, and which of the perpetrators would not have tremblingly relinquished all thought of reprisals, if they had seen that in those savage acts of vengeance they were not, as they supposed, executing lawful justice, but actually cutting off their own hope of pardon before the throne of God?

If we avenge ourselves, if society is constantly torn by the quarrels and the mutual recriminations of hostile men whose one thought is to give as good as they have got, it can only be because we do not believe, or do not realize, this solemn teaching of the Lord. He seems a faint and doubtful voice compared with the loud tumult of passion within; His authority seems weak and ineffectual compared with the mighty domination of the evil disposition. Powerful, therefore, as the motive is to which He constantly appeals, if He had left us nothing but His teaching on the subject we should not be materially better off than they who listened with attention to the teaching of the wise authors of these ancient Proverbs. What more has He left us?

It is His prerogative to give to those who believe in Him a changed heart. How much is meant by that, which only the changed heart can know! Outwardly we seem much alike; outwardly, there is little sign of an inward transformation; but far as the east is from the west is the unregenerate heart from the regenerate, the Christless heart from one which He has taken in His hands, and by His great redemption created anew. Now without stopping to follow the processes of faith by which this mighty change is effected, let us simply mark the characteristics of the change so far as it affects the matter in hand.

The first and most radical result of the New Birth is that God takes the place which self has occupied. All the thoughts which have clustered about your own being now turn to His Being, as stray fragments of iron turn to the magnet. Consequently, all the emotions and passions which are stimulated by self-love give place to those which are stimulated by the love of God. It is as if the pipes of your aqueduct had been changed at the fountain head, disconnected from the malarious waters of the marsh, and connected with the pure and sparkling water of the hills. Gods ways of regarding men, Gods feelings towards men, His yearning over them, His pity for them, flow into the changed heart, and so preoccupy it that resentment, hatred, and malice are washed out like the sour dregs in a cup which is rinsed in a running stream.

There is the man who did you the wrong-very cruel and unpardonable it was!-but, as all personal elements are quite out of the question, you regard him just as if you were not the injured being. You see him only as God sees him; you trace all the malignant workings of his mind; you know how the fire of his hate is a fire which burns the heart that entertains it. You see clearly how tormenting those revengeful passions are, how the poor soul mastered by them is diseased, how the very action in which it is triumphing now must become one day a source of bitter regret and implacable self-reproach; you soon begin to regard the ill deed as a shocking wound inflicted on the doer of it, and the wells of pity are opened. As if this enemy of yours had been quite innocent of all ill-will, and had been overtaken by some terrible calamity, your one instinctive thought is to help him and relieve him. Out of the fullness of your heart, without any sense of being magnanimous, or any thought of a further end, -simply for the pity of it, -you come to proffer him bread in his hunger and water in his thirst.

Yes, it is in the atmosphere of pity that personal resentment dies away, and it is only by the power of the Son of Man that the heart can be filled with a pity large enough to pardon all the sins of our kind.

It is this thought-though without any definite statement of the means by which it is produced-that finds expression in Whittiers touching lines:-

“My heart was heavy, for its trust had been

Abused, its kindness answered with foul wrong;

So turning gloomily from my fellow-men,

One summer Sabbath day I strolled among

The green mounds of the village burying-place;

Where pondering how all human love and hate

Find one sad level; and how, soon or late,

Wronged and wrongdoer, each with meekened face!

And cold hands folded over a still heart,

Pass the green threshold of a common grave,

Whither all footsteps tend, whence none depart,

Awed for myself, and pitying my race,

Our common sorrow, like a mighty wave,

Swept all my pride away, and, trembling, I forgave.”

Yes, one who is touched by the spirit of the Son of Man finds too much to pity in the great sorrowing world, and in its fleeting and uncertain life, to cherish vengeful feelings. Himself redeemed by the untold love of His Father, by the undeserved and freely offered pardon in Christ Jesus his Lord, he can feel for his enemies nothing but forbearance and love; if they too are Christians, he longs to win them back to the peace and joy from which their evil passion must have driven them; and if they are not, his eyes must fill with tears as he remembers how brief is their apparent triumph, how unsubstantial their gleam of joy. The desire to save them immediately masters the transitory wish to punish them. The pity of men, for the sake of the Son of Man, wins the day.

And now we may just glance at the effect which the Christly conduct has upon the offender, and the reward which God has attached to its exercise.

It is one of the most beautiful traces of Gods likeness, in even bad men, a characteristic to which there is no parallel in the animal creation, that though passion awakes passion, wrath, and vengeance revenge-so that savages pass their whole time in an unbroken series of blood feuds, the hideous retaliation bandied from tribe to tribe and from man to man, generation after generation-the spirit of meekness, proceeding not from cowardice, but from love, disarms passion, soothes wrath, and changes vengeance into reconciliation. The gleam of forgiveness in the eye of the injured is so obviously the light of God that the wrongdoer is cowed and softened before it. It kindles a fire in his spirit, his heart melts, his uplifted hand falls, his angry voice grows tender. When men are so dehumanized as to be insensible to this softening effect, when they interpret the gentleness as weakness, and are moved by the forgiving spirit simply to further injury and more shameless wrong, then we may know that they are possessed, -they are no longer men, -they are passing into the category of the lost spirits, whom the forbearance of God Himself leads not to repentance but only to added sin.

But if you have ever by the sweet spirit of Christ so mastered your natural impulse as to return good for evil lovingly and whole-heartedly, and if you have seen the regenerating effect in the beautiful subjugation of your foe and his transformation into a friend, it is not necessary to say much of the reward which God has in store for you. Do you not already possess it?

Yet the reward is certainly greater than you are able at once to apprehend. For what a secret is this which you possess, the secret of turning even the malignity of foes into the sweetest affection, the secret which lay in the heart of God as the spring and the means of mans redemption. The highest reward that God can give to His creatures is to make them partakers of His nature as He has made them in His own image. When we share in a Divine attribute we enter so far into the Divine bliss; and in proportion as this attribute seems removed from our common human nature, our spirit must exult to find that it has been really appropriated. What further reward, then, can he who avenges not himself desire? The pulse of the Divine heart beats in him; the tides of the Divine life flow through him. He is like God-God who opposes to mans ingratitude the ocean of His pardoning love; he is conscious of that which is the fountain of joy in the Divine Being; surely a man must be satisfied when he awakes in Gods likeness! And that satisfaction comes to everyone who has heaped coals of fire on his enemys head by feeding him in his hunger, and giving him water when athirst. Say not, “I will do so to him as he has done to me, I will render to the man according to his work.” Love your enemies; pray for them which despitefully use you.

Fuente: Expositors Bible Commentary