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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 11:17

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 11:17

The merciful man doeth good to his own soul: but [he that is] cruel troubleth his own flesh.

Pro 11:17

The merciful man doeth good to his own soul

The merciful man

Our God is a God of mercy.

Since He is full of mercy Himself, He is well pleased when He sees us exercise the same towards our fellow-creatures. The wise man here does not speak of tenderness towards others. The merciful man he here represents is a self-interested individual. He doeth good to his own soul. The merciful is he who is alive to his eternal interests, who is seeking the good of that treasure which is committed to him–his own soul. How may you promote this most desirable of all objects?

1. He who would do good to his own soul must carefully avoid all manner of sin, whether in thought, word, or deed. The thoughts must be watched. We are to be careful of the words which we utter, so that we may not make our tongues the instruments of evil-speaking, lying, and slandering. And careful also of our conduct and action.

2. Another mark of the object being kept in view, is the habitual study of the Word of God. The Scriptures testify of Christ, and point Him out as the way, the truth, and the life.

3. Attention to the means of grace.

4. He endeavours to realise an interest in the merits and atonement of the Lord Jesus Christ.

5. The merciful man, who does good to his own soul, does so only by placing his entire dependence upon the Lord Jesus Christ. (D. Slyman, B.A.)

The generous and the ungenerous


I.
A generous disposition is a blessing to its possessor.

1. A merciful man doeth good to his intellectual faculties. It is a psychological fact that the intellect can only see clearly, move freely, and progress vigorously as it is surrounded by the atmosphere of disinterested affection. Selfishness blinds, cripples, enervates the intellect.

2. A merciful man doeth good to his moral sentiments. Conscience approves only of the actions that spring from love.


II.
An ungenerous disposition is a curse to its possessor. Unmercifulness of disposition breeds the fiends of envy, jealousy, malice, remorse, fear, suspicion, pride, that torment the soul. (Homilist.)

Mercy to sufferers and to offenders

Mercy to sufferers is the disposition to relieve; mercy to offenders is the disposition to forgive. The two are infinitely united in God. Under His government all sufferers are offenders. It is only as offenders that they are sufferers, and when He pardons the offence He cancels the sentence to suffering. And in every good man the two are united. They should, indeed, be regarded as one principle, operating in different departments. The merciful man, whether considered in the one light or in the other–in exercising forgiveness or in relieving distress–doeth good to his own soul; he effectually consults his own interests. In the exercise of the generous and kindly affections there is a genuine and exquisite happiness. (R. Wardlaw.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 17. The merciful man doeth good to his own soul] Every gracious disposition is increased while a man is exercised in showing mercy. No man can show an act of disinterested mercy without benefiting his own soul, by improving his moral feeling.

But he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh.] We seldom see a peevish, fretful, vindictive man either in good health, or good plight of body. I have often heard it observed of such, “He frets his flesh off his bones.”

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

To his own soul, i.e. to himself, because his liberality shall turn to his own infinite advantage, both in this life and in the next. Cruel; hard-hearted and uncharitable to others.

His own flesh; either,

1. His own children or kindred, who are commonly expressed by this very word, for whose sakes he is thus covetous and uncharitable, that he may hoard it up for them; but they, saith the wise man, shall have nothing but trouble and vexation, and Gods curse with it. Or,

2. Himself, denominated here from his flesh or body, as in the former branch from his soul. But he may seem to mention his flesh rather than his soul, to intimate that the mischiefs of his covetousness shall not only fall upon his soul, which he despiseth, but upon his flesh or outward man, which is the only thing that he feareth.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

17. mercifulkind to others;opposed to cruel. Such benefit themselves by doing good to others(compare Pr 24:5), while thecruel injure themselves as well as others.

fleshthat is, hisbody, by penuriousness (Col 2:23).

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

The merciful man doeth good to his own soul,…. Or “to himself”: a man of mercy or grace, a liberal bountiful man, he comfortably enjoys what God has given him, Ec 5:18; and he does good to others with it, and thereby does good to himself also; as well as he is solicitous in a spiritual sense for the good and welfare of his immortal soul;

but [he that is] cruel troubleth his own flesh; a sordid avaricious man withholds from himself that which is meet, will not allow himself the necessaries of life, nor will he provide that which is fit and convenient for his family; he hides himself from his own flesh, and will not communicate to the wants of his nearest friends and relations, and shuts up his bowels of compassion against his own brother; all which may be called a troubling his own flesh; see Isa 58:7. R. Levi Ben Gersom interprets this of such who place religion in afflicting and macerating the body by fasting, which the law does not require; and it may fitly be applied to the Papists, who do this by penances and fastings, and whippings and scourgings; and which the apostle calls a neglecting of the body, not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh, Col 2:23.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

Three proverbs regarding benevolence:

17 The benevolent man doeth good to his own soul,

And the violent man brings trouble on his own flesh.

Many interpreters reverse the relation of subject and predicate (Targ. only in 17b, after the phrase , for which the Syr. has only ): qui sibi ipsi benefacit, is quidem erga alios quoque benignus praesumitur, quum caritas ordinata a se ipsa incipiat; qui vero carnem suam male habet, est crudelis erga alios (Michaelis). But this cannot be established; for certainly it occurs that whoever does good to himself does good also to others, and that whoever is hard against himself also judges and treats others harshly; but in by far the greatest number of cases the fact is this, that he who does not deny anything to himself is in relation to others an egoist, and this is not a “benevolent man;” and, on the contrary, that he who denies to himself lawful enjoyments is in relation to others capable of self-denial and self-sacrifice, and thus is the contrast of a “violent man.” The word of Sirach, 14:5, , to which Bertheau appeals, alludes to the niggard, and it is true indeed that this , but not every , is a niggard. Thus the “benevolent man” and the “violent man” will be the two subject conceptions, and as it is said of the benevolent ( as e.g., Hos 6:6, of a more restricted sense, as Isa 57:1) that he does good ( , viz., , Pro 31:12), so of the violent (unmerciful) ( as Pro 12:20; Jer 6:23; Jer 50:42) that he brings evil on his own flesh (lxx ); for as a parallel word to (cf. p. 141) signifies not blood-relations (Symm., Jerome, Luther, and Grotius), but it has here, as at Mic 3:2, its nearest signification, from which it then comes to signify those who are of our flesh and blood. But for that reason the meaning of the poet cannot be that given by Elster: “he who exercises benevolence toward others creates within himself a determination which penetrates his whole being with generous and fruitful warmth, as on the other hand the feeling of hatred deprives the heart of him who cherishes it of the true fountain of life.” If this were meant, then soul and spirit, not soul and flesh, would stand in parallelism. The weal and woe refers thus to the divine retribution which requites the conduct of a man toward his neighbours, according to its character, with reward or punishment (Hitzig, Zckler).

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

      17 The merciful man doeth good to his own soul: but he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh.

      It is a common principle, Every one for himself. Proximus egomet mihi–None so near to me as myself. Now, if this be rightly understood, it will be a reason for the cherishing of gracious dispositions in ourselves and the crucifying of corrupt ones. We are friends or enemies to ourselves, even in respect of present comfort, according as we are or are not governed by religious principles. 1. A merciful, tender, good humoured man, does good to his own soul, makes and keeps himself easy. He has the pleasure of doing his duty, and contributing to the comfort of those that are to him as his own soul; for we are members one of another. He that waters others with his temporal good things shall find that God will water him with his spiritual blessings, which will do the best good to his own soul. See Isa. lviii. 7, c. If thou hide not thy eyes from thy own flesh, but do good to others, as to thyself, if thou do good with thy own soul and draw that out to the hungry, thou wilt do good to thy own soul for the Lord shall satisfy thy soul and make fat thy bones. Some make it part of the character of a merciful man, that he will make much of himself; that disposition which inclines him to be charitable to others will oblige him to allow himself also that which is convenient and to enjoy the good of all his labour. We may by the soul understand the inward man, as the apostle calls it, and then it teaches us that the first and great act of mercy is to provide well for our own souls the necessary supports of the spiritual life. 2. A cruel, froward, ill-natured man, troubles his own flesh, and so his sin becomes his punishment; he starves and dies for want of what he has, because he has not a heart to use it either for the good of others of for his own. He is vexatious to his nearest relations, that are, and should be, to him as his own flesh, Eph. v. 29. Envy, and malice, and greediness of the world, are the rottenness of the bones and the consumption of the flesh.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Reaping What Is Sown

(Pro 11:17-19)

Verse 17 emphasizes that the actions of life affect first of all the doer. The man who shows mercy or kindness is himself blessed, Luk 6:38; Job 42:10; Isa 58:10-11; but he that is cruel reaps serious trouble for himself, Pro 15:6; Jas 2:13; 1Sa 15:33; Jos 7:25-26; 1Ki 18:17-18.

Verse 18 declares that the wicked earn deceitful wages (RV) (See Job 4:8; Hos 10:13); but he that soweth righteousness will receive a sure reward, Gen 6:22; Gen 7:1; Hos 10:12; Heb 6:13-15.

Verse 19 states that righteousness tendeth to life; but evil leads to death, Gen 2:17; Eze 18:4; Rom 5:12; Rom 6:23; Rev 21:8. Righteousness embraces both the imputed righteousness of Christ which assures eternal life, and the upright conduct of God’s children which insures blessings in this life, Gen 15:6; Isa 54:14-17; Joh 11:26; Rom 4:3-8; Psa 1:1-3; Php_4:19.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.

Pro. 11:17. Or He who doeth good to himself is a merciful man, but he who troubleth his own flesh is cruel. So Stuart and Miller, Zckler and Delitzsch read as the authorised version.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF Pro. 11:17

MERCY AND CRUELTY

I. A blessed human characterA merciful man. The blessedness of any human existence depends upon the amount of mercifulness found in it. It will be blessed in itself, and a blessing to others in proportion as this Divine characteristic is found in the spirit. God, as a God of power, would be a wonderful and awe-inspiring Being, but He would not be the the blessed God (1Ti. 1:11) if this were His only attribute. So far as men are concerned, He would only be a Person who added to the mysteries and miseries of human life. There is plenty of power in the world, but power is not the one thing needful for fallen and sorrowful humanity. A complex and mighty machine may, and does, excite our wonder and even our admiration, but it has no sympathy. God would be no more to us if He were not The Lord God, merciful and gracious. He could otherwise add nothing of blessedness to our existenceyea, His very existence would be a calamity for sinful men. So, no man is a real blessing to his fellow-creatures if he is not merciful. He may be a great genius, he may be a great intellectual power, he may be possessed of great influence from one source or another; but none of these things alone, or all of them put together, will add anything to the sum of human happiness if he is not merciful. He is simply a hard machine, and will never make any wilderness heart rejoice or any moral waste blossom as the rose. But mercy is a moral force, which works as subtilly and as certainly upon human hearts to bless them as do the mysterious influences of the spring-time upon the barren earth. The absence of mercifulness makes hell the barren world that it is, and fills heaven with moral light and joy. On earth, mercifulness is felt to be most needful. The scum of humanity are not insensible to its blessed influence, and there is no man, however exalted above his fellow-men, who does not sometimes stand in need of its exercise.

II. The region which is first blest by the exercise of mercy. The merciful mans own soul. There are things which by the constitution of the material universe cannot be separated. Where there is flame, there is certain to be heat; where the suns rays come, there must be light. So mercifulness of disposition must bless a mans own soul. The exercise of kindliness is in harmony with the law of self-love. A man is but obeying this law when he exercises mercy. Thou shalt love thy neighbour as thyself, implies that a man is to love himself. Loving his neighbour is the surest waythe only wayof truly doing good to himself. God has ordained that all exercise of loving kindness shall have a reward in the doing and for the doing. He that watereth others shall be watered himself (Pro. 11:25).

1. His own spirit will be filled with a sense of blessedness.
2. His character will be daily growing more and more like God.

3. He will have mercy extended to him when he stands in need of it. Blessed are the merciful, for they shall obtain mercy. For with what measure you mete, it shall be measured unto you again (Mat. 5:7; Mat. 7:2). And so it is that mercy

Is twice blessd;

It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes.

We have now to consider the opposite character:

III. A curse to human kind. A cruel man. He is an inflicter of pain upon others from a malicious disposition. Pain is the common lot of men. In the present constitution of things in this world it is a necessity, and will remain so while sin remains in human nature. Sometimes pain has to be inflicted upon human beings from the purest motives, and by the most benevolent of beings. The kindest physician in the world is obliged constantly to inflict severe physical pain. The moral teacherthe loving parent or mastermust often be the means of inflicting mental pain. But in these cases the motive is not ill-will, but good-will. The pain is contrary to the disposition of the person who inflicts it. He would not give the pain if the end could be obtained without it. He intends by present pain to give future pleasure. But a cruel man inflicts pain from choice, for the purpose of making men miserable. His cruelty is the outcome of his malicious nature. Hence he is a curse to his race. To the unavoidable and necessary pain of the world he adds that which is worse than needless. He would often inflict more than he does, if he had the power. Did not experience teach the contrary, we should not believe it possible that there could be such monsters in the garb of men. They are, indeed, of their father the devil (Joh. 8:44), who finds his only delight in the misery of others.

IV. That, in the end, the cruel man will inflict the most pain upon himself.

1. He will trouble his own flesh, or his whole being in the present. He will be tormented by his conscience which now and again will rise from its deathlike slumber and avenge the miseries of those upon whose rights he has trampledwhose lives he has taken, or worse, whose souls he has ruined. While he is still pursuing his course of cruelty he will have the sting of the serpent remorse poisoning the life-blood of his spirita prophecy of future retribution possibly in this world, certainly in the next.
2. He is laying up trouble for himself in the future. Men may return his cruelty with compound interest,(see comments and illustrations on Pro. 11:10), whether they do or not God certainly will. The Divine decree has gone forth, He shall have judgment without mercy, that hath showed no mercy. (Jas. 2:13). His experience will be that of the cruel tyrant of Bezek. As I have done so God hath requited me, (Jdg. 1:6-7), or that of Shakesperes Richard

3.

O coward conscience, how thou dost afflict me!
The lights burn blue.It is now dead midnight.
Cold fearful drops stand on my trembling flesh.
What; do I fear myself? theres none else by:
Richard loves Richard; that is, I am I.
Is there a murderer here? No;yes, I am:
Then fly,What, from myself? Great reason, why?
Lest I revenge. What? myself on myself?
I love myself. Wherefore? for any good
That I myself have done unto myself?
O no; alas, I rather hate myself,
For hateful deeds committed by myself.
My conscience hath a thousand several tongues,
And every tongue brings in a several tale.
And every tale convicts me for a villain
All several sins, all used in each degree,
Throng to the bar, crying all,Guilty! guilty!
I shall despair.There is no creature loves me:
And, if I die, no soul will pity me:
Nay, wherefore should they, since that I myself
Find in myself no pity to myself.

ILLUSTRATIONS OF THE LATTER CLAUSE OF THE VERSE

Buchanan, the Scotch historian, relates that John Cameron, Bishop of Glasgow, was so given to extortion and oppression, especially upon his tenants and vassals, that he would scarcely afford them bread to eat, or clothes to wear. But one Christmas eve, as he lay in his bed in his house at Lockwood, he heard a voice summoning him to appear before the tribunal of Christ, and give an account of his actions. Being terrified with this notice, and the pangs of a guilty conscience, he called up his servants, and commanded them to stay in the room with him. He himself took a book in his hand, and began to read; but the voice, being heard a second time, struck all the servants with horror. The same voice repeating the summons a third time, and with a louder and more dreadful accent, the bishop, after a most lamentable and frightful groan, was found dead in his bed.

The Last Days of Nero. Nero had landed in Italy about the end of February, and now, at the beginning of June, his cause had already become hopeless. Galba, though stedfast in his resolution, had not yet set his troops in motion; nevertheless, Nero was no longer safe in the city. Terrified by dreams, stung by ridicule or desertion, when his last hope of succour was announced to have deceived him, the wretched tyrant started from his couch at supper, upset the tables, and dashed his choicest vessels to the ground; then, taking poison from Locusta, and placing it in a golden casket, he crossed from the palace to the Servilian gardens, and sent his trustiest freedman to secure a galley at Ostia. He conjured some tribunes and centurions, with a handful of guards, to join his flight, but all refused; and one, blunter than the rest, exclaimed, tauntingly, Is it, then, so hard to die? At last, at midnight, finding that even the sentinels had left their posts, he sent, or rushed himself, to assemble his attendants. Every door was closed; he knocked, but no answer came. Returning to his chamber, he found the slaves fled, the furniture pillaged, the case of poison removed. Not a guard, not a gladiator, was at hand, to pierce his throat. I have neither friend nor foe, he exclaimed. He would have thrown himself into the Tiber but his courage failed him. He must have time, he said, and repose to collect his spirits for suicide, and his freedman Phaon at last offered him his villa in the suburbs, four miles from the city. In undress and barefooted, throwing a rough cloak over his shoulders and a kerchief across his face, he glided through the doors, mounted a horse and, attended by Sporus and three others, passed the city gates with the dawn of a summer morning. The Nomentane road led him beneath the wall of the prtorians, whom he might hear uttering curses against him and pledging vows to Galbo; and the early travellers from the country asked him as they met, What news of Nero? or remarked to one another, These men are pursuing the tyrant. Thunder and lightning, and a shock of earthquake, added terror to the moment. Neros horse started at a dead body on the roadside, the kerchief fell from his face, and a prtorian passing by recognised and saluted him. At the fourth milestone the party quitted the highway, alighted from their horses, and scrambled on foot through a canebrake, laying their own cloaks to tread on, to the rear of the promised villa. Phaon now desired Nero to crouch in a sand-pit hard by, while he contrived to open the drain of the bath-room, and so admit him unperceived; but he vowed that he would not go alive, as he said, underground, and remained trembling beneath the wall. At last a hole was made through which he crept on all fours into a narrow chamber of the house, and there threw himself on a pallet. The coarse bread that was offered him he could not eat, but swallowed a little tepid water. Suddenly was heard the tramp of horsemen, sent to seize the culprit alive. Then at last he placed a weapon to his breast, and the slave Epaphroditus drove it home. Nero perished at the age of thirty years and six months.Merivale.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

There are two descriptions of mercy. There is mercy to sufferers, and mercy to offenders. Mercy to sufferers is the disposition to relieve; mercy to offenders is the disposition to forgive. The two are infinitely united in God. Under His government all sufferers are offenders. It is only as offenders that they are sufferers; and when He pardons the offence, He cancels the sentence to suffering. And in every good man the two are united. They should, indeed, be regarded as one principle, operating in different departments. Now the merciful man whether considered in the one light or the other,in exercising forgiveness or in relieving distresseffectually consults his own interests. He does so, even for present enjoyment. The divine sentiment of the SaviourIt is more blessed to give than to receive, has its full application here. Jesus Himself, above all that ever lived on earth, experienced its truth. He delighted in mercy. He came from above on an errand of mercy. The merciful man participates in the blessedness of the Son of God. He, moreover, procures favour with his fellow-men;he makes himself friends of the mammon of unrighteousness; he causes society to feel an interest in himto regard and treat him as its friend and benefactor. This is eminently gratifying and pleasing;to know that in the hearts of our fellow-men our names are associated with affection and blessing, and that when we fail, there will be some ready to receive us into everlasting habitations, who had been made friends by our kindness during their sojourn in the wilderness. But above all, the mercy of the merciful is associated with the favour and blessing of God. But the cruel stirs up resentment, instead of conciliating favour; so that on every hand, in every face, he sees an enemy, from whom he dreads the fulfilment of the Saviours maxim,With what measure ye mete it shall be measured to you again. How can he be happy? There is unhappiness in his very passions. The opposite of the character of God, they cannot but be associated with misery.Wardlaw.

We are to preserve, as much as in us lies, these two parts of our nature, our souls and our bodies. He that may truly be called a kind man, is kind to his own soul, in comforting his own heart, and in granting there-unto the delight which may be received by sleep, by food, and the use of all things necessary and pleasant. Wherefore the counsel which the son of Sirach giveth is good and worthy to be followed: Love thy soul, and comfort thine heart, and put heaviness far away from thee. (Sir. 30:21, etc.) On the contrary side the cruel person, either for niggardliness, or travail, or sorrow, pincheth, consumeth, or pineth his body. He ceaseth not to labour, nor saith, For whom do I travail and deprive my soul of good things.Muffet.

The merciful man will ever find a merciful God. (Psa. 41:1 Mat. 5:7). The widow of Sarepta and the woman of Shunem, each for their kindness to the Lords prophets received a prophets reward. (2Ki. 4:16; 2Ki. 8:1; 2Ki. 8:6). The alms of Cornelius brought good to his own soul. (Act. 10:2; Act. 10:4). Even now God is not unrighteous to forget our work and labour of love. (Heb. 6:10; Mat. 10:42). At the great day He will honour it before the assembled universe. (Mat. 25:34). Cain found his brothers murder an intolerable trouble to his flesh. (Gen. 4:13-14). The doom of Ahab and Jezebel was the curse of their own cruelty. (1Ki. 22:38; 2Ki. 9:36-37). The treasures of selfishness will eat as a canker in our own flesh. (Jas. 5:1; Jas. 5:3).Bridges.

Why did not the wise man say, he that is cruel troubleth his own soul? He knew that a cruel man cares nothing for his soul. If you would obtain a hearing from the merciless man, say nothing about his soul. He values it less than his dog. But if you could convince him that his want of mercy will be hurtful to his flesh, he would think a little about his ways. And it is evident from Scripture, that his flesh, no less than his soul, is under a fearful curse.Lawson.

His chief business is with and for himself: how to set all to rights within, how to keep a continual sabbath of soul, a constant composedness. He will not purchase earth with his loss of heaven. And inasmuch as the body is the souls servant, and should therefore be fit for the souls businessit ought not to be pinched or pined with penury or overmuch abstinence, as those impostors (Col. 2:23), and our Popish merit-mongers, that starve their genius, and are cruel to their own flesh. They shall one day hear, Who required these things at your hand?Trapp.

In every act that mercy prompts there are two parties who obtain a benefit,the person in need, who is the object of compassion, and the person not in need, who pities his suffering brother. Both get good, but the giver gets the larger share. The good Samaritan who bathed the wounds and provided for the wants of a plundered Jew, obtained a greater profit on the transaction than the sufferer who was saved by his benevolence. It is like God to constitute His world so. Even Christ himself, in the act of showing mercy, has His reward. And a man cannot hurt his neighbour without hurting himself. The rebound is heavier than the blow Such is the fence which the Creator has set up to keep man off his fellows. This dividing line is useful now to keep off the ravages of sin; but when perfect love has come, that divider, no longer needed, will be no longer seen. It is like one of those black jagged ridges of rock that at low water stretch across the sand from the edge of the cultivated ground to the margin of the sea, an impassable, an unapproachable barrier: when the tide rises, all is level, and it is nowhere seen. This law of God, rising as a rampart between man and man, is confined to this narrow six thousand year strip of time. In the perfect state it will act no more, for want of material to act upon.Arnot.

It is to his own soul that a merciful man doeth good. For it hath been well said, there is nothing so much a mans own as that which is given to the poor. That which men do, they do as to a poor soul, of as noble birth, and by nature of as great excellency as their own soul is, and so they do it, as it were, to their own. That which God doth, He doth to a sinful soul, degenerate from the birth which He gave it, and turned to be a rebel against Him. So that God is more ready to be good to His enemies, than we are to be good to ourselves.Jermin.

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

(17) The merciful man.Rather, one who shows love. (See above on Pro. 3:3.) Our good and evil deeds return to us in blessings or curses. (Comp. Pro. 11:25.)

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

17. The merciful The kind, benevolent, or pious.

Doeth good to his own soul To himself; the fruit of his kindness comes back to him.

Troubleth his own flesh Himself. , , ( nephesh, sheer,) and similar words expressive of parts of the person, are often used in Hebrew with the force of reflexive pronouns, of which the language is destitute. Comp. Psa 61:1; Psa 112:4; Psa 112:9; Isa 32:7-8; Isa 57:1; Dan 4:27; Mat 5:7; Mat 6:14; Luk 6:38 ; 2Co 9:6; Php 4:17.

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

v. 17. The merciful man doeth good to his own soul, that is, if he practices benevolence, manifests true goodness toward others, he thereby benefits his own soul, the Lord Himself granting him this as a reward; but he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh, for God visits a cruel and hardhearted conduct with a severe penalty.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Pro 11:17. His own flesh His own relations, it may mean, as well as his own body; for the Hebrews frequently call their brethren or relations their flesh. See Gen 29:14., 2Sa 19:13.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Pro 11:17 The merciful man doeth good to his own soul: but [he that is] cruel troubleth his own flesh.

Ver. 17. The merciful doth good to his own soul. ] His chief business is with and for himself: how to set all to rights within, how to keep a continual sabbath of soul, a constant composedness. He will not violate his conscience to get or retain riches, as Pro 11:16 , or purchase earth with the loss of heaven. And inasmuch as the body is the soul’s servant, a and should therefore be neither supra negotium, above the business, nor infra negotium, below the business but par negotio, fit for the soul’s business – it ought not to be pined or pinched with penury and overmuch abstinence, as those impostors, Col 2:23 and our Popish merit mongers, that starve their genius, and are cruel to their own flesh. These shall one day hear, “Who required these things at your hands?”

a Corpus, sive corpor, quasi cordis por, i.e., puer, sive famulus; ea forma qua mancipor. Quintipot. Camer.

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

merciful man = man of lovingkindness, or grace.

his own soul = his own self. Hebrew. nephesh. App-13. Illustrations: the Kenites (1Sa 15:6. Ecc 11:1); David (1Sa 30:11-20); Jonathan (2Sa 9:7; 2Sa 21:7); Job (Job 42:10. Compare Pro 13:2); the Centurion (Luk 7:2-10); Cornelius (Act 10:4. Compare Pro 12:14); the Maltese (Act 28:1-10).

troubleth, &c. Illustrations: Cain (Gen 4:10-12); Cornelius (Act 10:4. Compare Pro 12:14); the Maltese (Act 28:1-10).

troubleth, &c. Illustrations: Cain (Gen 4:10-12); Joseph’s brethren (Genesis 37 and Gen 42:21); Adoni-bezek (Jdg 1:6, Jdg 1:7); Agag (1Sa 15:33); Haman (Est 9:25); Jonah (Jon 4:1-3); the miser (Ecc 4:8).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Pro 11:17

Pro 11:17

“The merciful man doeth good to his own soul; But he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh.”

“A merciful man doeth good to his own soul; but he that is cruel casteth off even his own kindred. “You do yourself a favor when you are kind. If you are cruel, you only hurt yourself.” The RSV leaves out the word only.

Pro 11:17 The merciful man does good to himself in that others will show mercy to him (Mat 5:7; Mat 25:34-35). On the other hand the cruel are asking for trouble, and it will surely come to him (1Ki 21:17-19).

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

merciful: Psa 41:1-4, Psa 112:4-9, Isa 32:7, Isa 32:8, Isa 57:1, Isa 58:7-12, Dan 4:27, Mat 5:7, Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15, Mat 25:34-40, Luk 6:38, 2Co 9:6-14, Phi 4:17

but: Pro 15:27, Job 20:19-23, Ecc 4:8, Jam 2:13, Jam 5:1-5

Reciprocal: Gen 34:30 – Ye have Ecc 4:5 – eateth Eph 5:29 – hated

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Pro 11:17. The merciful man Who is compassionate toward persons in distress, bountiful to such as are in want, and kind to all; doth good to his own soul That is, to himself, because his mercy and liberality shall turn to his own infinite advantage, both in this life and the next. But he that is cruel That is, hard-hearted, and uncharitable to others; troubleth his own flesh Either, 1st, His own children and kindred, for whose sakes he is thus covetous and uncharitable, in order that he may lay up for them; but, as these words imply, they shall have nothing but disappointment, trouble, and vexation with what they receive. Or, 2d, Himself, denominated here from his flesh, or body, as in the former clause, from his soul; perhaps to intimate, that the mischievous effects of his covetousness shall not only fall upon his soul, which he despises, but upon his flesh, or outward man, which is the only thing he fears or regards.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

11:17 The merciful man {k} doeth good to his own soul: but [he that is] cruel troubleth his own flesh.

(k) Rewards both himself and others.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes