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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 16:10

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 16:10

A divine sentence [is] in the lips of the king: his mouth transgresseth not in judgment.

10. A divine sentence ] Lit. divination, A.V. and R.V. marg. The word is generally used in a bad sense, “soothsaying.” See Deu 18:10, where it is positively forbidden, and 1Sa 15:23, where it is called a “sin.” Here, however, it has a good meaning: the true king in judgement, like the true prophet in preaching, “speaks as oracles of God” (1Pe 4:11. See 1Ki 3:28).

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

A divine sentence – See the margin, i. e., soothsaying in its darker aspect as contrasted with prophecy. The true oracle is to be sought, not from soothsayers and diviners, but at the lips of the king, who is ideally the representative, the prophetes of Yahweh, in His government of mankind.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 10. A divine sentence] kesem, “divination,” as the margin has it. Is the meaning as follows? Though divination were applied to a righteous king’s lips, to induce him to punish the innocent and spare the guilty, yet would not his lips transgress in judgment; so firmly attached is he to God, and so much is he under the Divine care and influence. Whatever judgment such a one pronounces, it may be considered as a decision from God.

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

A divine sentence, Heb. divination, which is sometimes taken in a good sense for prudence, as it is Isa 3:2. A great sagacity and piercing judgment to discern dubious and difficult cases.

Is; or, should be; for the verb is wanting in the Hebrew, and this may be supplied as well as is. And he seems not so much to speak of the matter of fact, as if it were thus in all kings, which is notoriously and confessedly untrue, as of the duty of kings, in whom wisdom is a necessary qualification. For thus the two following proverbs concerning kings, Pro 16:12,13, must be understood, otherwise they are repugnant to common experience.

Of the king; either,

1. Of wise kings, who only are worthy of that name and office; king being here put for a wise king, as a name is put for a good name, and a woman for a good woman, Ecc 7:28; and then this is true in fact, as it was in David. 2Sa 14:17, and in Solomon, 1Ki 3:28. Or,

2. Of kings in general, in the sense before given; for seeing the word is generally expressed without any limitation, both here and Pro 16:12,13, it may seem presumption to confine it to those few kings which are or were wise and good.

Transgresseth not; or, shall or should not transgress, or go beyond the bounds of religion and justice.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

10. The last clause depends onthe first, expressing the importance of equity in decisions, soauthoritative.

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

A divine sentence [is] in the lips of the king,…. Or “divination” f, as the word signifies; or what is like to divination, as Aben Ezra and Gersom interpret it g. What be says is as an oracle, and should be strictly true. Some understand it of the sagacity and penetration of kings, as was in Solomon, and appeared in his judging the two harlots; but such is not to be found in kings in common: rather therefore this expresses and designs what should be, and not what is, in kings. These, as the kings of Israel, ought to have the book of God before them, and read in it, and judge and pronounce sentence in every case according to it; they should speak as the oracles of God; and, when they do, a divine sentence may be said to be in their lips. But it is best to understand this of the King of kings, of the King Messiah; into whose lips grace is poured, and from whence none but words of wisdom, grace, and truth, flow; who taught the way of God in truth; who had the word of God in his heart and in his month continually; and on whom the Spirit of wisdom without measure dwelt; and is the wisdom and word of God, as well as the power of God;

his mouth transgresseth not in judgment; this cannot be said of any earthly king; they ought not indeed to transgress in judgment with their mouths, but it is notorious that they too often do: could this be applied to kings in common, they would have a better claim to infallibility than the pope of Rome has. But this is true of Christ, the King of saints; who is a King that reigns in righteousness, and decrees judgment; sits upon his throne, to order and establish it with judgment: nor does his mouth ever transgress in judgment, or ever say, or he do, a wrong thing; his sceptre is a sceptre of righteousness.

f “divinatio”, V. L. Pagninus, Montanus, Cocceius, Gejerus, Michaelis, Schultens. g So Vatablus, Mercerus, Piscator.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

10 Oracular decision (belongeth) to the lips of the king;

In the judgment his mouth should not err.

The first line is a noun clause: , as subject, thus needs a distinctive accent, and that is here, after the rule of the sequence of accents, and manuscript authority ( vid., Torath Emeth, p. 49), not Mehuppach legarme, as in our printed copies, but Dechi ( ). Jerome’s translation: Divinatio in labiis regis, in judicio non errabit os ejus , and yet more Luther’s: “his mouth fails not in judgment,” makes it appear as if the proverb meant that the king, in his official duties, was infallible; and Hitzig (Zckler agreeing), indeed, finds here expressed the infallibility of the theocratic king, and that as an actual testimony to be believed, not only is a mere political fiction, like the phrase, “the king can do no wrong.” But while this political fiction is not strange even to the Israelitish law, according to which the king could not be brought before the judgment, that testimony is only a pure imagination. For as little as the N.T. teaches that the Pope, as the legitimate vicarius of Christ, is infallible, cum ex cathedra docet , so little does the O.T. that the theocratic king, who indeed was the legitimate vicarius Dei , was infallible in judicio ferendo . Yet Ewald maintains that the proverb teaches that the word of the king, when on the seat of justice, is an infallible oracle; but it dates from the first bright period of the strong uncorrupted kingdom in Israel. One may not forget, says Dchsel also, with von Gerlach, that these proverbs belong to the time of Solomon, before it had given to the throne sons of David who did evil before the Lord. Then it would fare ill for the truth of the proverb – the course of history would falsify it. But in fact this was never maintained in Israel. Of the idolizing flattering language in which, at the present day, rulers in the East are addressed, not a trace is found in the O.T. The kings were restrained by objective law and the recognised rights of the people. David showed, not merely to those who were about him, but also to the people at large, so many human weaknesses, that he certainly appeared by no means infallible; and Solomon distinguished himself, it is true, by rare kingly wisdom, but when he surrounded himself with the glory of an oriental potentate, and when Rehoboam began to assume the tone of a despot, there arose an unhallowed breach between the theocratic kingdom and the greatest portion of the people. The proverb, as Hitzig translates and expounds it: “a divine utterance rests on the lips of the king; in giving judgment his mouth deceives not,” is both historically and dogmatically impossible. The choice of the word (from , R. , to make fast, to take an oath, to confirm by an oath, incantare , vid., at Isa 3:2), which does not mean prediction (Luther), but speaking the truth, shows that 10a expresses, not what falls from the lips of the king in itself, but according to the judgment of the people: the people are wont to regard the utterances of the king as oracular, as they shouted in the circus at Caesarea of King Agrippa, designating his words as (Act 12:22). Hence 10b supplies an earnest warning to the king, viz., that his mouth should not offend against righteousness, nor withhold it. is meant as warning (Umbreit, Bertheau), like , Pro 22:24, and in is here, as always, that of the object; at least this is more probable than that stands without object, which is possible, and that designates the situation.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

      10 A divine sentence is in the lips of the king: his mouth transgresseth not in judgment.

      We wish this were always true as a proposition, and we ought to make it our prayer for kings, and all in authority, that a divine sentence may be in their lips, both in giving orders, that they may do that in wisdom, and in giving sentence, that they may do that in equity, both which are included in judgment, and that in neither their mouth may transgress, 1 Tim. ii. 1. But it is often otherwise; and therefore, 1. It may be read as a precept to the kings and judges of the earth to be wise and instructed. Let them be just, and rule in the fear of God; let them act with such wisdom and conscience that there may appear a holy divination in all they say or do, and that they are guided by principles supernatural: let not their mouths transgress in judgment, for the judgment is God’s. 2. It may be taken as a promise to all good kings, that if they sincerely aim at God’s glory, and seek direction from him, he will qualify them with wisdom and grace above others, in proportion to the eminency of their station and the trusts lodged in their hands. When Saul himself was made king God gave him another spirit. 3. It was true concerning Solomon who wrote this; he had extraordinary wisdom, pursuant to the promise God made him, See 1 Kings iii. 28.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Proper Exercise of Authority

Verse 10 affirms the responsibility of the king to adhere strictly to divine instructions in the exercise of his duties; to transgress not in so doing, Deu 17:14-15; Deu 17:18-20; Jos 1:8.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

CRITICAL NOTES.

Pro. 16:10. A Divine sentence, literally divination, i.e., an oracle or a decision. His mouth transgresseth not. Stuart and Delitzsch read, In judgment his mouth should not prevaricate, or err.

Pro. 16:11. A just weight, literally the scale the upright iron in scales which the weigher holds in his hand (Fausset). Weights, literally stones which were anciently used as weights.

Pro. 16:13. They love him, etc., rather he who speaketh right, or uprightly, is loved,

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Pro. 16:10-15

KINGS

It is obvious that some of these proverbs as they stand in our authorised version, do not admit of universal application in relation to human monarchs. History and experience both contradict the assertion that a Divine sentence is always, or has been generally, in the lips of a human king, but if we understand the verse, as Miller does (see his comment) as an application of the truth set forth in the preceding verse and in Pro. 16:1, that God is behind and above all the decrees of earthly potentates, we can at once admit the fact and rejoice in it. Again, it cannot, alas! be said that as a rule righteous lips are the delight of kings, or that in the light of the kings countenance is life. Many kings have been themselves incarnations of iniquity, and have bestowed all their favour upon men like themselves, and persecuted often to the death those who have dared to tell them the truth. If this proverb admitted of universal application, Ahab would not have sought to slay Elijah, Jeremiah would not have been imprisoned by Zedekiah, and Herod would not have put to death John the Baptist. And the favour of most of the men who have sat upon the thrones of the world would have had no life in it for some of their subjects. There has been a faithful few in all ages of the world to whom the favour of their wicked rulers would have been very unlike a cloud of the latter rain. But the truths taught here are:

I. That a king ought to be Gods prophet and vicegerent upon the earth. All painters have an ideal in their minds to which they desire to attain in their handiwork. They must place before them the highest model, if they would rise to anything like excellence. And Solomon, as a great theoretic moralist, is here setting before himself, and before all rulers, an ideal king. Kingship among men ought to be a type and symbol of Divine kingship. The loyal obedience which the majority of men have always been ready to yield to those whom they have regarded as their appointed rulers, has its root deep down in the constitution of human natureit is a prophecy of a need which is only fully met in the rule of the true and perfect King of menthat King whose right it is to reign, and who can do no wrong to any of His subjects. That was not an inconsiderable moment, says Carlyle, when wild armed men first raised their strongest aloft on the buckler-throne, and, with clanging armour and hearts said solemnly, Be thou our acknowledged strongest (well named King, Kn-ning, Canning, or Man that was Able), what a symbol shone now for themsignificant with the destinies of the world! A symbol of true guidance in return for loving obedience; properly, if he knew it, the prime want of man. A symbol which might be called sacred, for is there not, in reverence for what is better than we, an indestructible sacredness? And when a king realises what idea he embodies, and strives to fulfil worthily the duties of his high calling, and in proportion as he does so, he is a representative of God to men. Then he will have a Divine sentence in his mouth because he will be a truth-speaker. His lips will be a reflection of his character. Being a man of truth, he cannot do other than speak the truth. He will be able in a limited sense to use the words of His Divine Ideal, and say, To this end was I born, and for this cause came I into the world, that I should bear witness of the truth (Joh. 18:37). And as all truth and justice is from God (Pro. 16:11), he who is a truth-speakerhe from whose lips come only just decisions, utters a Divine sentenceis a representative of Him whose is a just weight and balance, whose work are all the weights of the bag. To such an one it will be an abomination to commit wickednessany kind of iniquity will be detested by him. He will nothe cannotbe a sinless man; the desires and intentions of every good man are always beyond his deedshe can always say, To will is present with me, but how to perform that which is good I find not (Rom. 7:18), but he will not commit sin because he loves it. Such a king will be a real benefactor to his nation by exalting the true and the good, and so blessing all. It is a blessing for all menwhether they be good or badwhen the best men in the nation are in the fore-frontwhen the righteous fill the highest positions in the State. And a true king will gladly avail himself of the service of men of righteous lips, and so will be a source of blessing to all his people. The latter rain which refreshes the thirsty earth after a long season of drought lets its life-giving drops fall upon the parched leaves of the humblest weed as well as upon the stately oak. And the influence of a wise and godly monarch is beneficial to all classes of his subjects from the highest to the lowest. All such are typesdim fore shadowingsof that king who reigns in righteousness and who is as an hiding place from the wind, and a covert from the tempest; as rivers of water in a dry place, as the shadow of a great rock in a weary land (Isa. 32:1-2).

II. That the stability of a throne is in proportion to the moral excellence of him who sits upon it. The power that men have over other men is lasting in proportion as it has its origin in character. The fathers kingship over his children is immutable in proportion to his goodness. If his rule has its foundation only in his position, his children will not be slow to shake it off as they reach manhood; but if it is founded upon his godliness, they will be compelled to acknowledge it to the day of his death and even beyond it. His throne in his family is established by righteousness, the consciences of his children consent to his right to reign among them and over them. The throne of the universe is established by righteousness. Thy throne, O God, is for ever and ever: the sceptre of Thy kingdom is a right sceptre. Thou lovest righteousness and hatest wickedness; therefore God, thy God, hath anointed thee with the oil of gladness above thy fellows (Psa. 45:6-7). This King of Righteousness is now enthroned in the affections and consciences of myriads of His subjects, and He who rules mens hearts has set his throne upon a firm foundation. And there will come a day when every creature will be compelled by his conscience to yield to Him that sitteth upon the throne, the right to reign over them for ever (Rev. 5:13), because they will feel that all his ways are and ever have been just and true (Rev. 15:3). If we read the history of the past or look around us now, we find this truth abundantly illustrated. Thrones which have been backed up by mighty armies, and whose occupants have for a few short years been the arbiters of the destinies of millions, have been overturned in a few weeks. And we have but to look at the steps by which such men came to power to find a reason for their fall. None can doubt from the experience of past ages, and from the very constitution of men, that the thrones of the present are founded upon a rock or upon sand, in proportion as those who sit upon them take as their model the king who judges His people with righteousness and the poor with judgment (Psa. 72:2).

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

Pro. 16:10. A Divine sentence may be understood either as to its character, or as to its authoritative effect. If taken in the former sense, it means a sentence according to perfect equity; if in the latter, the idea is, that as every judgment or sentence of God is decisive and effectual, so that the execution of it cannot be evaded or resisted, such, in measure, is the case with the sentence of kings among men, and in the general idea of a Divine sentence may fairly be included both character and efficiencyboth equity and power. When understood of equity, the latter part of the verse, according to the principle of Hebrew parallelisms, will be a kind of counterpart or echo to the former, and when understood of power, the verse might be renderedA Divine sentence is in the lips of the king; let not his mouth transgress in judgment. In proportion to the authoritative and efficacious nature of his sentence, ought he to see to it that the sentence be right. He should weigh well his decision ere he pronounces it, seeing it involves consequences so certain, immediate, and important. And the principle of this lesson applies to all in situations of authority and influence, whether more private or more public.Wardlaw.

The glaring fact of what Solomon avows in Pro. 16:9 can be seen in the instance of a king. The word of a king can ruin France, and change the whole system of the world. How, possibly, could God govern, unless He could a king? Eternal ages will not get over the edict of a prince, and the banded universe will feel its differences. Must not God control that word? Our passage answers that He does. He may be George III. of the low forehead; his speech is shaped omnisciently. He may be as treacherous as Charles; he does not betray by a hair the counsel of the Almighty. This is a grand thought. A poor princeling may be governed by a girl, and yet, though his utterance might move the globe, we need have no fear. There is a divination, i.e., an oracle, behind his lips. He says what God pleases. And though his mouth may have the very treachery of the cup, it has no treacheryeven to a grainto the plans of the All Wise.Miller.

It cannot be denied but that there is a nearer reference between God and His immediate deputies, the kings of the earth, than any other persons. He that maketh them kings maketh Himself to be their counsel. But then they must make Him the president of their council.Jermin.

For Homiletics on Pro. 16:11, considered by itself, see on chap. Pro. 11:1, page 190.

Pro. 16:11. The proposition expresses an ownership in Jehovah as the first cause, for, like agriculture (Ecc. 7:15), God instituted weights and measures, as an indispensable ordinance and instrument in just business intercourse.Zckler.

Weight and measure, as the invisible and spiritual means by which material possessions are estimated and determined for men, according to their value, are holy unto the Lord, a copy of His law in the outer world, taken up by Himself into His sanctuary; and, therefore, as His work, to be regarded as holy also by men.Von Gerlach.

The heathen poet Hesiod says, God gave justice to men.Fausset.

He is not only just, but justice belongs to Him. He is not only partly just, but His work (and we see at a glance that Gods work is the total universe) is in its very self considered, all the stones of the bag. Stones, better weights than iron, because not altering by rust. Bag, in which the stone weights were carried, in the peripatetic barter of the old trades-people. No difficulty should be had in understanding all of which the sentence is capable. Gods work is justice, and justice is His work. The very ideas of equity sprang out of the Eternal Mind. If all this were not so how could God govern the creation, for It is an abomination to kings to commit wickedness, etc. (Pro. 16:12).Miller.

The Jews are said to have kept their standard weights and measures in the sanctuary. The fact might arise from the particularity of the law, and might operate as a remembrancer of the righteousness of Him by whom the law was given, and the weights and measures fixed. All adulteration of them was therefore a sacrilege. It was not cheating men merely, but defrauding Jehovah, changing what He had fixed. And from the connection in which the words are here introduced they lead us to observe that while kings are called up to do justly themselves in their whole administration and in every department of it, it is, at the same time, a most important part of their official duty to promote among their subjects, to the utmost of their power, the principles and the practice of equity between man and man.Wardlaw.

Pro. 16:12. This is true of earthly monarchies. A throne, without some equity in it, could not last an instant. If it were unmitigatedly bad, it would be swept out of existence. A king must be just to his people, or else to his soldiers, who support him against his people. His strength is justice, somewhere. The strength of a bad throne is precisely that part of it that is just. But if this be true of a worlds throne, where it has been seen that God governs as well as the king, how not of a Divine throne, that rests solely on its Maker? It is impossible to conceive of a universe without justice, or of anything so complicated being eternally possible without every sort of harmony, and especially that sort which is highest and best. Hence many of the expressions in the eighth chapter (Pro. 16:22; Pro. 16:30, etc.), the personage being personified Wisdom, which is holiness or moral light, and which includes all the attributes of justice.Miller.

The greater men be, the more grievous their faults are when they fall into sin. For

1. The more bountiful God hath been to them, the more grateful they ought to be to Him, and as He hath increased their wages, so they ought to mend their work; large pay doth duly challenge large pains, and therefore, contrariwise, their great offences must needs deserve the greater punishment.
2. Their sins are very pernicious and pestilent, they bring evil into request, and men by their example will practise it for credits sake. When Jeroboam is mentioned, he is usually described by this, that he made Israel to sin.

3. They draw down the plagues and judgments upon the places and people that are under them, as David did. And the strokes which the fearful sins of Manasseh, Jehoiakim, and others brought upon the city and inhabitants of Jerusalem were very lamentable in those days, and very memorable still in these times. The goodness and justice of men in authority doth better uphold their estate than greatness and riches. The throne is established by righteousness, for
(1) There, and nowhere else, is stability and assurance, where God is a refuge and defence; they stand all firm whom He protecteth, and down they must whom He neglecteth. And whom doth He prefer but the righteous? And what righteous man was ever forsaken?
(2) Equal and upright administration of justice doth knit the hearts of a people to their governors, and the love of the subjects is a strong foot and a mighty munition for the safety of the ruler.
(3) When the magistrate doth right to all and wrong to none, every good and indifferent man will reverence him, and stand in the greater awe of his laws, so that none but such as are desperately rebellious will dare to attempt anything against him.Dod.

Pro. 16:13. There never was a kingdom so corrupt that its courts of justice were not used, in the main, against wickedness. There never was a Nero, or a Borgia, who, on the very account of his own crimes, did not find crime sore, and a trouble to him, in those about him. It is one of the strangest miracles of Omnipotence that a universe can take in transgression and yet last. And, while God has made even the wicked for his decree (Pro. 16:4), yet a pleasure to kings are lips of righteousness, and he who speaks right is loved.Miller.

We have here in this passage Solomons king, and in these words the delight of his king. For, whereas, many are, and well may be, the delights of kings, this one it is, the delight of righteousness, which sweetens all the rest unto them. This is a royal delight indeed, which makes the king of righteousness to delight in them. And surely needful it is that a kings lips should delight in righteousness. For fear may compel others, but delight must carry him unto it. Needful is it that righteous lips should be a kings delight, because it is in kings courts that there is too much lying. We read of one who said that he would be a lying prophet in the mouths of all Ahabs prophets (1Ki. 22:22), to which the answer of God is, Thou shalt go and prevail. Upon which the note of Cajetan is, God manifested the efficacy of this meansnamely, of lying in the Court. It is needful, therefore, that the king should delight in lips of righteousness, for he that doth himself delight in them will also love others that speak right; yea, will therefore love them that they also may delight in it. For then is righteousness best spoken when delight openeth the door of the lips.Jermin.

Pro. 16:14. The report of one may be a mistake, but the relation of many carrieth more force with it. The wrath, therefore, of a king is as messengers of death, enough to pull down the stoutest heart; and if his moved spirit send down this message to any, it is sufficient to tell them and to assure them, that they had need to look unto themselves. But well it is that the wrath of a king is as the messengers of death, and not the executioners of it. For so it ought to be, that himself may have time either to alter or recall his message, and they may have time to whom it is sent to answer for themselves. St. Peter was hasty in wrath when he cut off the ear of Malchus, whereupon Tertullian saith, The patience of God was wounded in Malchus. And surely the mercy of God is often wounded in the hasty wrath of a king. Plutarch saith well, that as bodies through a cloud, so through anger things seem greater than they are. To put therefore wrath to a journey, is a good way to moderate, if by nothing else, by wearying the hasty fierceness of it. And let a wise man have respite to meet with it, he will with gentle blasts of cool air easily mitigate the violent force of it. Let him be told of a kings wrath against him, he need not be told that he take care to prevent it. But, though great be the wrath of heaven against careless sinners, and though many be the messengers that He sendeth to them, yet they all cry, Who hath believed our report? Did they hear one word of an earthly kings anger against them, it would more move them than the whole word of God doth, wherein the message of His anger is so often repeated. The answer which they send back to the message of Gods wrath, is obstinate rebellion in their sinful courses.Jermin.

ILLUSTRATION

Executions in the East are often very prompt and arbitrary. In many cases the suspicion is no sooner entertained, or the cause of offence given, than the fatal order is issued. The messenger of death hurries to the unsuspecting victim, shows his warrant, and executes his orders that instant, in silence and solitude. Instances of this kind are continually occurring in the Turkish and Persian histories. Such executions were not uncommon among the Jews under the government of their kings. Solomon sent Benaiah as his capidgi, or executioner, to put to death Adonijah, a prince of his own family, and Joab, the commander-in-chief of the forces during the reign of his father. A capidgi likewise beheaded John the Baptist, and carried his head to the court of Herod. To such silent and hasty executioners the royal Preacher seems to refer in the proverb. From the dreadful promptitude with which Benaiah executed the commands of Solomon on Adonijah and Joab, it may be concluded that the executioner of the court was as little ceremonious, and the ancient Jews nearly as passive, as the Turks or Persians. The prophet Elisha is the only person on the inspired record who ventured to resist the bloody mandate of the sovereign (2Ki. 6:32). But if such mandates had not been too common among the Jews, and in general submitted to without resistance, Jehoram had scarcely ventured to despatch a single messenger to take away the life of so eminent a person as Elisha.Paxtons Illustrations.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

Pro. 16:15. As the wise man before teacheth subjects to fear the kings wrath, and to seek his favour, so here he teacheth kings to join the light of mercy, the softness of clemency, unto the hardness and severity of wrath. Or else we may thus meditate upon the wordsthe true favour of a king is not only to shine with a cheerful countenance upon them whom he affecteth, but sometimes to look through a thick cloud upon them. For as the light of the sun giveth life to the fruits of the earth, but the cloud of latter rain giveth bigness and fulness unto them, so the light of the kings countenance giveth life to the fruits of earthly honour, but it is the dewy cloud of his wise displeasure, when things are amiss, that giveth fulness of worth unto them whom his favour honoureth. The latter rain many times does them more good and sheweth in the king greater favour to them than his former sunshining countenance. But to apply the verse unto a fuller profit. The light of the countenance of the King of heaven is Jesus Christ our Lord, who is the brightness of His glory; and in this light there is life indeed. For as He is light and in Him is no darkness, so He is life, and in Him is no death. It was in the latter time that He was clouded with the veil of our flesh, and that He became a heavenly cloud of the latter rain unto us, pouring out the glorious dew of His precious blood for us, that so, we being watered therewith might even swell in grace, and grow to a fulness of glory in heaven. In Judea usually about harvest time there are evening clouds which, yielding a sweet rain, do much increase the largeness of the fruits; and in the evening of the world, when the harvest was great, this heavenly cloud was sent unto us, whereby the fruit of Gods Church, confined before to Judea, was enlarged throughout the world.Jermin.

For Homiletics on Pro. 16:16, see chap. Pro. 8:10-11, page 107.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

Not wisdom, but to get wisdom. Wisdom itself is glorious. Wisdom in God is above all praise. It will be the gem of Paradise. It will be the grand opulence of the family of the skies. But what the great Preacher would confine us to in the language of the text is, our getting wisdom as the evangelical condition; our getting it, moreover, in time, like the latter rain, so as to be in season for the crop; for, as a former sentence urges (chap. Pro. 4:7), As the chiefest thing in wisdom, get wisdom. Because, what shall it profit a man, if he gain the whole world, if God is his King, and the wrath of the King makes all His providences but as messengers of gloom (Pro. 16:14).Miller.

Let us call to mind in word-outline the scene on a spring morning in the city of David, when Davids son was king in Jerusalem. Before the portico of the fragrant cedar-house of Solomon, the royal guards, Cherithites and Pelethites, executioners and messengers of the kings behests, waited their masters coming. Impatient steeds from Arabia, or the far-off banks of the Nile, pawed the highway, and shook with pride their plumes and costly accoutrements. Soldiers, with silken standards blazoned with the sacred Name, and throwing back the sunlight from their targets and shields of beaten gold, kept their ranks firm and close, as if the foe were at hand, and the silver trumpets waited but to sound the battle charge. Veterans, grown grey in Davids service, and wearing the laurels of many a hard-fought field, were driven all along the line in their chariots of State, and the grim faces of these old warriors gleamed with satisfaction as they looked about them on the evidences of their nations military strength. But now the trumpets sound, and the echoing shout of welcome rises on the morning air. Solomon, arrayed in all his glory, appears, and the cry, God save the king! is heard on every side. Children chanting their sweet hosannahs to Davids son and Davids heir strew the path with the lilies of the field, or the roses of Sharon, and the boughs of palms. Others throw their garments upon the dusty highway as the long procession moves to the soft music of Eastern minstrelsy along the narrow streets, and out upon the broader pathway leading to the royal gardens, or the cool retreats of Olivet, each beaming face by the wayside, or peering from latticed balcony, each welcome shout and song from the daughters of Jerusalem, or the trained singers of the temple choirs, attest the affection of a grateful people, and make of the monarchs morning progress a triumphal ovation. Such was Solomon in all his glory; such the popular acclaim, and we might go on to tell until the tale were tiresome to tell how Solomon surpassed all the kings of the earth, in riches, splendour, fame. But was this the principal thing? Had Solomon in getting all this glory, and in winning all this praise, gained that with which his soul was satisfied, and the cravings of his nobler self appeased. Years before. Give me wisdom and knowledge, was his prayer Even in the wishes of one so lately invested with royal power, wisdom in its relation to his Maker, knowledge so far as it concerned his fellow-men, seemed the principal thing. And that prayer was heard in heaven He to whom God gave such gifts may well direct us to the possession of this principal thing. We need not ask for an earthly teacher with higher qualifications.Bishop Perry.

Gold is the crown of metals, wisdom is the crown of knowledge. Silver beareth the image of an earthly king, understanding beareth the image of the King of heaven. Gold is the treasure of the purse, wisdom the treasure of the soul. Silver is the price of outward commodities, understanding is the price of inward virtues; by that sought, by that bought. Wherefore by how much knowledge is better than metal, virtue than worldly commodities, the image of God than the image of man; by so much wisdom and knowledge are better than silver and gold. But they are not wisdom and understanding that are here compared with them, there being no comparison between them. But the very getting of wisdom and understanding, the very pains taken in procuring of them, the very honour of being a possessor of them, is better than all the gold and silver in the world.Jermin.

The question only is written in the book; the learner is expected to work out the answer. We, of this mercantile community, are expert in the arithmetic of time. Here is an example to test our skill in casting up the accounts of eternity. Deeper interests are at stake; greater care should be taken to avoid an error, more labour willingly expended in making the balance true. The question is strictly one of degree. It is not, whether wisdom or gold is the more precious portion for a soul. That question was settled long ago by common consent. All who in any sense make a profession of faith in God, confess that wisdom is better than gold; and this teacher plies them with another problem, How much better? Two classes of persons have experience in this matterthose who have chosen the meaner portion, and those who have chosen the nobler; but only the latter class are capable of calculating the difference suggested by the text. Those who give their heart to money understand only the value of their own portion; those who possess treasures in heaven have tasted both kinds, and can appreciate the difference between them. As the man born blind cannot tell how much better light is than his native darknessas the slave born under the yoke of his master cannot tell how much better liberty is than his life-long bondageso he who has despised treasures at Gods right hand cannot conceive how much more precious they are to a man in his extremity than the riches that perish in the use. But even these cannot compute the difference. Eye hath not seen it, ear hath not heard it. Wisdom from above, like the love of God, passeth knowledge. How much better is wisdom than gold? Better by all the worth of a soulby all the blessedness of heavenby all the length of eternity. But all these expressions are only tiny lines that children fling into the ocean to measure its depth withal. In a time of war between two great maritime nations, a ship belonging to one of them is captured upon the high seas by a ship belonging to the other. The captain, with a few attendants, goes on board his prize, and directs the native crew to steer for the nearest point of his countrys shore. The prize is very rich. The victors occupy themselves wholly in collecting and counting the treasure, and arranging their several shares, abandoning the care of the ship to her original owners. These, content with being permitted to handle the helm, allow their rivals to handle the treasure unmolested. After a long night, with a steady breeze, the captured mariners quietly, at dawn, run the ship into a harbour on their own shores. The conquerers are in turn made captives. They lose all the gold which they grasped too eagerly, and their liberty besides. In that case it was much better to have hold of the helm which directed the ship, than of the money which the ship contained. Those who seized the money, and neglected the helm, lost even the money which was in their hands. Those who neglected the money and held the helm, obtained the money which they neglected and liberty too. They arrived at home, and all their wealth with them. Thus they who make money their aim suffer a double loss, and they who seek the wisdom from above secure a double gain. The gold with which men are occupied will profit little, if the voyage of life be not pointed home. If themselves are lost, their possessions are worthless.Arnot.

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

(10) His mouth transgresseth not in judgment.Or, should not transgress, as being the representative of God upon earth, and so distinguished by the title of God himself (Psa. 82:6). This verse recalls the days of Solomons youth, when it was his highest aspiration to judge his people righteously (1Ki. 3:9). Comp. Davids noble words (2Sa. 23:3).

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

10. A divine sentence Or, decision. , ( kesem,) an oracle.

The king , ( melekh,) so often used in the following verses, means a sovereign ruler, by whatever name called, whether king, emperor, president, governor, judge, supreme commander, or any other title. The president of the United States, and the governors of the several States, are as truly melakhim, in the scriptural sense, as any sovereign or supreme ruler in the world. The idea implied in the root is that of sovereign authority or rulership. Wherever this is in civil affairs there is, in the Bible sense, a melekh. The word ruler would, indeed, more nearly express the sense of the original than “king,” which by usage is applied to the sovereign of a particular form of government a monarchy.

His mouth transgresseth not in judgment Does not swerve or decline from justice. This proverb is spoken of kings as they ought to be ideal representatives of Jehovah and is equivalent to saying, that such should be the word of a ruler that his mouth should not prevaricate or speak deceptively in his official acts. Much official lying is sometimes done in high places. All this is condemned. It is the opinion of some that kesem refers to what might be called supernatural sagacity, bestowed upon good rulers, by which they are able to detect fraud and false pretences, unravel the intricacies and difficulties of a case brought before them. “God,” says Bishop Patrick, “is present in a singular manner with a pious king, inspiring his mind to divine sagaciously in dubious and obscure things, that his resolutions and decrees may be received like oracles, and all causes may be decided by him so justly and exactly that no man may be wronged in his judgment which he passes.” Comp. 2Sa 14:17 ; 1Ki 3:16-28; Psa 82:6; Rom 13:12.

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

Pro 16:10  A divine sentence is in the lips of the king: his mouth transgresseth not in judgment.

Pro 16:10 Comments – At this place in the journey through life, a man not only begins to see God’s divine hand of intervention in the affairs of mankind (Pro 16:1-9), even in his own life, because he is now learning to recognize these event, but he now begins to realize how God gives divine insight to people who have been given positions of authority over others. If he has learned to honor God, then he must now learn to honor those whom God has placed in positions of authority.

How many times have I seen as an employee and then as a supervisor, the hand of God in my daily work. The boss walks in when I relax, convicting me of sin, or I have a word of knowledge or a dream about co-workers or employees; or, perhaps I opened my mouth and words of wisdom come out that I had not been thinking about.

Note other Scriptures that confirm the divine insight that God gives to rulers.

Rom 13:1-4, “Let every soul be subject unto the higher powers. For there is no power but of God: the powers that be are ordained of God. Whosoever therefore resisteth the power, resisteth the ordinance of God: and they that resist shall receive to themselves damnation. For rulers are not a terror to good works, but to the evil. Wilt thou then not be afraid of the power? do that which is good, and thou shalt have praise of the same: For he is the minister of God to thee for good . But if thou do that which is evil, be afraid; for he beareth not the sword in vain: for he is the minister of God, a revenger to execute wrath upon him that doeth evil.”

1Pe 2:13-14, “Submit yourselves to every ordinance of man for the Lord’s sake: whether it be to the king, as supreme; Or unto governors, as unto them that are sent by him for the punishment of evildoers, and for the praise of them that do well .”

Note also that the Scriptures tell us to pray for leaders so that they will be given divine insight in their ministry.

1Ti 2:1-4, “I exhort therefore, that, first of all, supplications, prayers, intercessions, and giving of thanks, be made for all men; For kings, and for all that are in authority; that we may lead a quiet and peaceable life in all godliness and honesty. For this is good and acceptable in the sight of God our Saviour; Who will have all men to be saved, and to come unto the knowledge of the truth.”

Pro 16:14  The wrath of a king is as messengers of death: but a wise man will pacify it.

Pro 16:14 Illustration – An illustration is found in Daniel chapter 2, where Daniel appeased the wrath of King Nebuchadnezzar by giving him the interpretation of his dream.

Fuente: Everett’s Study Notes on the Holy Scriptures

v. 10. A divine sentence is in the lips of the king, he, in his position as sovereign, makes his decision as the representative of Jehovah; his mouth transgresseth not in judgment, he may not use his power for his own private interests by arbitrarily setting aside true justice.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Pro 16:10. A divine sentence is in the lips of the king These words, according to Melancthon, affirm the whole political order, magistrates, laws, distinction of dominions, contracts, judgments, punishments, to be things ordained by the wisdom of God among men; and since we know political order to be the work of God, we ought to love it, and study to defend it; modestly for God’s sake to obey it; give thanks to God who preserves it, and look upon those who would disturb this order as most hateful in the sight of God. See Romans 13.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Pro 16:10 A divine sentence [is] in the lips of the king: his mouth transgresseth not in judgment.

Ver. 10. A divine sentence is in the lips of the king. ] It is, or should be. His words usually pass for oracles, and many times stand for laws. It should be his care, therefore, to “speak as the oracles of God.” 1Pe 4:11 Yea, “so to speak, and so to do, as one that shall be judged by the law of liberty,” Jam 2:12 or, as some read it, As they that should judge by the law of liberty. Our old word Koning, and by contraction King, comes of Con, saith Becanus, which comprehends three things, Possum, scio, audeo – I can do it, I know how to do it, and I dare do it. If either he want power, or skill, or courage to do justice, the people, instead of admiring his divinations, will cry out of him, as the Romans did of Pompey, Miseria nostra magnus est: This great one is our great misery.

His mouth transgresseth not in judgment. ] Viz, If he ask counsel at God’s mouth, as David did, and execute “justice, justice,” as Moses speaks, Deu 16:20 , marg. that is, pure justice, without mud or mixture of selfish affections sparing neither the great for might, nor the mean for misery.

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

A divine sentence = an oracle.

lips. Put by Figure of speech Metonymy (of Cause), App-6, for what is uttered by them.

transgresseth not: or, will not be unfaithful.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Pro 16:10

Pro 16:10

“A divine sentence is in the lips of the king; His mouth shall not transgress in judgment.”

Many of the judgments pronounced by Solomon in the days prior to his apostasy were examples of what is written here. “The Israelites never thought of their kings as infallible; and this verse means merely that true judgment is the duty of kings.

Pro 16:10. God has both instituted government (Rom 13:1-7) and commanded that they rule justly (2Sa 23:3; Deu 16:18-20; Pro 16:12 of this chapter). When a king does his duty properly, man is being ruled governmentally as God intends, and man should submit to his governments decrees as he would to God (1Pe 2:13-14). The latter statement of the verse must be understood in this context; namely, that if he is wisely and righteously doing his kingly duty, his verdicts will be true verdicts.

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

A divine sentence: Heb. Divination, Pro 16:12, Pro 16:13, Gen 44:5, Gen 44:15, Deu 17:18-20, 2Sa 23:3, 2Sa 23:4, Psa 45:6, Psa 45:7, Psa 72:1-4, Psa 99:4, Isa 32:1, Isa 32:2, Jer 23:5, Jer 23:6

transgresseth: Hos 10:4, Amo 5:7, Amo 6:12

Reciprocal: Pro 17:7 – much Eze 21:21 – to use Jam 1:26 – bridleth

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Pro 16:10. A divine sentence Hebrew, , divination, (a word which is sometimes taken in a good sense for prudence, as Isa 3:2,) that is, great sagacity, and a piercing judgment to discern dubious and difficult cases; is in the lips of the king Of a wise king, who only is worthy of the name and office. Thus understood, the assertion was verified by fact in David, 2Sa 14:17; and in Solomon, 1Ki 3:28. God, says Bishop Patrick, is present, in a singular manner, with a pious king, inspiring his mind to divine sagaciously in dubious and obscure things; that his resolutions and decrees may be received like oracles; and all causes be decided by him so justly and exactly, that no man may be wronged in the judgment which he passes. But as the verb is wanting, and there is nothing for is, in the Hebrew, the clause may be rendered, A divine sentence, or divination, should be in the lips of the king. Thus it speaks not so much of a matter of fact, as if it were thus in all kings, which is notoriously and confessedly untrue, as of the duty of kings, in whom wisdom is a necessary qualification; and thus the two proverbs, Pro 16:12-13, must be understood, otherwise they are repugnant to common experience. His mouth transgresseth not in judgment That is, does not easily transgress, or go beyond the bounds of justice, or truth, or piety, in pronouncing sentence, if he be truly wise and pious: or, should not transgress, if understood of kings in general.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

A king’s edict becomes law for his people. [Note: For the meaning of "divine decision" or "oracle," see E. W. Davies, "The Meaning of qesem in Prv 16:10," Biblica 61 (1980):554-56.] His ordinances are the will of God for them (unless he commands contrary to God’s revealed will; cf. Act 4:19-20). Consequently it is very important that the ruler not err in his judgment. [Note: See W. Lee Humphreys, "The Motif of the Wise Courtier in the Book of Proverbs," in Israelite Wisdom: Theological and Literary Essays in Honor of Samuel Terrien, pp. 177-90.]

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