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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 22:12

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Proverbs 22:12

The eyes of the LORD preserve knowledge, and he overthroweth the words of the transgressor.

12. knowledge ] R.V. rightly inserts him that hath, before knowledge.

transgressor ] Rather, treacherous man, R.V.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Verse 12. The eyes of the Lord – (the Divine providence) preserve knowledge] This providence has been wonderfully manifested in preserving the sacred oracles, and in preserving many ancient authors, which have been of great use to the civil interests of man.

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

The eyes of the Lord preserve, God by the watchful eye of his providence maintains and defends,

knowledge, to wit, men of knowledge; the abstract being put for the concrete, as pride is put for a proud man, Psa 36:11, deceit for the deceitful, as Pro 12:17; so here knowledge for knowing and good men, such as the last verse spoke of, whose hearts are pure, and speeches gracious; not only the king shall be their friend, as he said there, but God also, which he adds here,

The words; their false and flattering speeches, whereby they designed and expected to gain the favour and friendship of great men, which are opposed to the sincere and gracious speeches of good men, implied in the first cause of this verse, and expressed in the foregoing verse; or, as others render it, and the word is very commonly used, the matters; all his counsels, hopes, enterprises, and concerns.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

12. preserveor guard.

knowledgeitsprinciples and possessors.

overthrowethutterlyconfounds and destroys the wicked.

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

The eyes of the Lord preserve knowledge,…. That is, the providence of God, whose eyes run to and fro throughout the whole earth; these preserve the knowledge of himself, even among the Heathens in some measure; for what may be known of God is manifest in them, and showed to them: more particularly his providence has preserved the Scriptures, the means of knowledge, which men would have destroyed; and preserves men of knowledge, as Aben Ezra interprets it, the ministers of the word, the stars he holds in his right hand; and he preserves spiritual and experimental knowledge in the hearts of his people, and causes it to increase; and continues his Gospel and a Gospel ministry in the world, till they all come to the unity of the faith, and the knowledge of the Son of God. Or his eyes observe, look unto with delight and pleasure, knowledge and men of knowledge, that know him, and do his will;

and he overthroweth the words of the transgressor; the perfidious, treacherous man; the false teacher, that corrupts the word of God, and handles it deceitfully: the doctrines of such he overthrows, and confutes, and brings to nothing, by his Spirit in his faithful ministers; and causes truth to prevail, and all iniquity to stop its mouth: particularly the words and doctrines of the great transgressor, the lawless and wicked one, the man of sin, antichrist; these have been exposed and overthrown already, and will be more and more so in God’s due time.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

12 The eyes of Jahve preserve knowledge;

So he frustrateth the words of the false.

The phrase “to preserve knowledge” is found at Pro 5:2; there, in the sense of to keep, retain; here, of protecting, guarding; for it cannot possibly be said that the eyes of God keep themselves by the rule of knowledge, and thus preserve knowledge; this predicate is not in accord with the eyes, and is, as used of God, even inappropriate. On the other hand, after “to preserve,” in the sense of watching, guarding a concrete object is to be expected, cf. Isa 26:3. We need not thus with Ewald supply ; the ancients are right that , knowledge, stands metonymically for (Meri), or (Aben Ezra), or (Arama); Schultens rightly: Cognitio veritatis ac virtutis practica fertur ad homines eam colentes ac praestantes . Where knowledge of the true and the good exists, there does it stand under the protection of God. 12b shows how that is meant, for there the perf. is continued in the second consec. modus ( fut. consec.): there is thus protection against the assaults of enemies who oppose the knowledge which they hate, and seek to triumph over it, and to suppress it by their crooked policy. But God stands on the side of knowledge and protects it, and consequently makes vain the words (the outspoken resolutions) of the deceitful. Regarding ( ), vid., Pro 11:3 and Pro 19:3. The meaning of is here essentially different from that in Exo 23:8; Deu 16:19: he perverteth their words, for he giveth them a bearing that is false, i.e., not leading to the end. Hitzig reads [wickedness] for , which Zckler is inclined to favour: God keeps the evil which is done in His eyes, and hinders its success; but “to observe wickedness” is an ambiguous, untenable expression; the only passage that can be quoted in favour of this “to observe” is Job 7:20. The word , handed down without variation, is much rather justified.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

      12 The eyes of the LORD preserve knowledge, and he overthroweth the words of the transgressor.

      Here is, 1. The special care God takes to preserve knowledge, that is, to keep up religion in the world by keeping up among men the knowledge of himself and of good and evil, notwithstanding the corruption of mankind, and the artifices of Satan to blind men’s minds and keep them in ignorance. It is a wonderful instance of the power and goodness of the eyes of the Lord, that is, his watchful providence. He preserves men of knowledge, wise and good men (2 Chron. xvi. 9), particularly faithful witnesses, who speak what they know; God protects such, and prospers their counsels. He does by his grace preserve knowledge in such, secures his own work and interest in them. See Pro 2:7; Pro 2:8. 2. The just vengeance God takes on those that speak and act against knowledge and against the interests of knowledge and religion in the world: He overthrows the words of the transgressor, and preserves knowledge in spite of him. He defeats all the counsels and designs of false and treacherous men, and turns them to their own confusion.

Fuente: Matthew Henry’s Whole Bible Commentary

Jehovah Preserves Truth

Verse 12 declares that the LORD (JEHOVAH) is the ever watchful preserver of truth, and in His own way counteracts the falsehoods of the transgressor, Pro 21:12; Rom 2:6-9. See examples 2Sa 17:14; 2Sa 17:23; Neh 6:1-2; Neh 6:14-16.

Fuente: Garner-Howes Baptist Commentary

MAIN HOMILETICS OF Pro. 22:12

THE PRESERVATION OF KNOWLEDGE

I. God preserves knowledge by preserving the man who possesses the knowledge. The preservation of the life of the man of science who has discovered some secret of nature is a preservation of the knowledge that he has gained. If the discovery has been made by him alone and he dies before he has revealed it, the knowledge is lost to the world. When a physician is acquainted with a special remedy or method of treatment for a certain disease which is known only to himself, the preservation of his life is the preservation of this special knowledge. If he leaves the world without imparting what he knows to another man, his secret dies with himthe abstract knowledge is not left behind when the man who possessed it is gone. All knowledge is preserved to us from age to age by its being communicated from one human being to another, as one generation succeeds the other, and the hand of God is to be recognised in its preservation. But this is especially true of the knowledge of God. In the days of old, God long preserved a knowledge of Himself in the world by preserving the life of Noah, of Abraham, of Isaac and of Jacob. They stood almost alone in the world in this respect, and were like lighthouses on a dark and stormy ocean, sheltering and preserving a moral light in the moral darkness. If the lighthouse is destroyed the light goes out; and if these men had died without transmitting to others the light which they possessed, the world would have been left in ignorance of God. As the ages have rolled on, there have been more of these spiritual lighthouses, and God has always preserved a sufficient number upon the earth to bear witness of Himself.

II. God has preserved knowledge by causing special care to be taken of His written Word. Holy men of old wrote as they were moved by the Holy Ghost, and the record of the truths which were revealed to them is with us until this day. The knowledge of the way of salvation through Jesus Christ has thus been preserved for nearly nineteen centuries, and to-day we can become as familiar with the events of the Incarnation, and with the teachings of the Apostles, as if we had lived in the first century of the Christian era. Although many efforts have been made to destroy the Scriptures of truth, they are with us still, preserved by the providence of their Divine author, in order that men may not be without the means of becoming wise unto salvation through believing the truths which they contain. There have been dark days when the living guardians of Divine truth were hardly to be found; but if they had quite died out after the Bible was written we should still have had this source of spiritual knowledge with us, like a seed-corn, preserving within its husk the living germ, ready to burst forth and grow when it found a congenial soil. God, as the preserver of the knowledge of Himself, has made its safety doubly sure by not only committing it to the living man, but by causing it to be committed to the written page.

III. The preservation of knowledge by the Lord counteracts the evil and false words of wicked men. Acquaintance with truth concerning anything overthrows all false ideas and teachings concerning it. The coming of the morning light scatters all the darkness of night, and with it many false conceptions as to what is around a traveller on an unknown road. So a knowledge of Divine truth scatters error, and overthrows false conceptions concerning God and godliness, and convicts their enemies of falsehood, thus rendering them powerless to do harm. Our Lord, by His knowledge, thus overthrew the words of a great transgressor in His temptation in the wilderness, and it is by the spread of this knowledge of God which He has Himself preserved to us that the final overthrow of evil will be accomplished.

OUTLINES AND SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS

There is still another sense of the words,which they may bear; though by some, perhaps, it may be regarded as fanciful:The eyes of the Lord keep knowledge:they retain it. What He sees, be it but for a moment, does not, as with our vision, pass away. It remains. We see, and, having seen, what passes from the eye passes also from the memory. Not so is it with Gods vision. The sight of His eye is no uncertain or forgetful glance. It is unerring and permanent. All that His eyes have ever seen is known as perfectly now as when it passed before them,as when it existed or happened!And in the exercise of this permanent and perfect knowledge, He overthroweth the words of the transgressors. All their evil desert remains before Him. They can neither elude His knowledge, nor bribe His justice, nor resist His power. They shall all be made to learn by fearful experience, whose words shall stand, His, or theirs!Wardlaw.

When knowledge seemed on the eve of perishing, a single copy of the Scriptures, found as it were accidentally, preserved it from utter extinction. (2Ch. 34:14-18). For successive generations the Book was in the custody of faithful librarians, handed down in substantial integrity. (Rom. 3:2) When the church herself was on the side of the Arian heresy, the same watchful eyes raised up a champion (Athanasius) to preserve the testimony. Often has the infidel transgressor laboured with all the might of man for its destruction. Often has Rome partially suppressed it, or committed it to the flames, or circulated perverted copies and false interpretations. Yet all these words and deeds of the transgressors have been overthrown.Bridges.

The eyes of the Lord are His knowledge, and it is in Him, in His knowledge that knowledge is preserved. That is the bottomless treasure of it; from thence issue out all the veins of knowledge, wherewith the world is enriched. It is He that preserveth knowledge for the seekers of it, it is He that preserveth knowledge in the teachers of it. His eyes shall watch over it, and though blindness put out the eyes of many, yet in Goshen it shall shine and bring comfort to His people.Jermin.

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

(12) The eyes of the Lord preserve knowledgei.e., men who know and speak the truth. (See above on Pro. 21:28.)

He overthroweth the words of the transgressori.e., the deceitful; He brings his lies to light.

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

12. Preserve knowledge Stand guard over it. It would seem from the next clause that knowledge is here used for the concrete the knowing, the intelligent. Providence especially guards those who join piety with intelligence, or defends their sayings and teachings the knowledge which they communicate.

Transgressor The treacherous. Comp. Pro 13:6; Pro 21:12.

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

v. 12. The eyes of the Lord preserve knowledge, for His eyes are fixed in protecting care upon those who observe the norm of true knowledge as found in His Word, and He overthroweth the words of the transgressor, all the proposals and plans by which the wicked intends to harm the believer.

Fuente: The Popular Commentary on the Bible by Kretzmann

Pro 22:12 The eyes of the LORD preserve knowledge, and he overthroweth the words of the transgressor.

Ver. 12. The eyes of the Lord preserve knowledge. ] That is, Knowing persons. Those in the former verse that love truth in the inward parts, and hold this a rule, Truth must be spoken, however it be taken; these, howsoever they may suffer for a season, as Daniel in the den, Micaiah in the stock house, yet the watchful providence of God will preserve them, and provide for them. He will clear their innocence, and so plead for them in the hearts of greatest princes, that they shall find the truth of this divine proverb, and the falsity of that other so common among men, Obsequium amicos, veritas odium parit; Flattery gets friends, but truth hatred.

And he overthroweth the words (or matters) of the transgressors.] That is, Of the court parasites, who speak only pleasing things, et saepe leonum laudibus murem obruunt, flatter abominably, as those in Act 12:21-23 did Herod; as the false prophets did Ahab. God will confute and convince their soothing words of singular vanity; he will also overthrow their matters, attempts, practices, “as a man wipeth a dish, turning it upside down.” 2Ki 21:13 See in that claw back Amalekite, 2Sa 1:4-10 in Ahithophel, Haman, Sejanus, &c.

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

preserve = guard.

words: or affairs. Hebrew. dabar. App-73.

transgressor = traitor. Hebrew. bagad. Illustrations: Ahithophel (2Sa 17:14); Noadiah (Neh 6:14-16); Ezra’s opponents (Ezr 3:3, Ezr 3:13. Compare Proverbs 5and Proverbs 6); the Sanhedrin (Act 5:34).

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Pro 22:12

Pro 22:12

“The eyes of Jehovah preserve him that hath knowledge; But he overthroweth the words of the treacherous man.”

“This first clause says that God oversees and protects the man who knows God and walks in his ways, and uses his means and abilities for the good of others. The second clause means that, “God frustrates the intentions of the treacherous man by turning them in another direction. It is of interest that the Septuagint renders the passage thus: “The eyes of the Lord preserve discretion; but the transgressor despises wise words.

Pro 22:12. The eyes of Jehovah here stand for his knowledge of the affairs upon earth and of His providential workings resulting from what He sees, He preserves those who have knowledge, who use their God-created faculties to acquire enlightment that He gives. It pleased Him that Solomon placed such a high value upon wisdom and knowledge (1Ki 3:9-10; 1Ki 4:29-34). God lamented in Hoseas day, My people are destroyed for lack of knowledge: because thou has rejected knowledge, I will also reject thee (Hos 4:6). When God overthrew Sennacherib (2Ki 19:35), it was an instance of His overthrowing the words of the treacherous (2Ki 18:28-35).

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

eyes: 2Ch 16:9, Isa 59:19-21, Mat 16:16-18, Act 5:39, Act 12:23, Act 12:24, Rev 11:3-11, Rev 12:14-17

he: Job 5:12, Job 5:13, Act 8:9-12, Act 13:8-12, 2Th 2:8, 2Ti 3:8, 2Ti 3:9

words: or, matters

Reciprocal: Jer 5:3 – are not thine

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Pro 22:12. The eyes of the Lord preserve knowledge God, by the watchful eye of his providence, maintains and defends men of knowledge, or wise and good men, such as the last verse spoke of, whose hearts are pure, and speeches gracious. Not only shall the king be their friend, as he said there, but God also, which he adds here. And he overthroweth the words of the transgressor Their false and flattering speeches, whereby they designed and expected to gain the favour and friendship of great men, which are opposed to the sincere and gracious speeches of good men, implied in the first clause of this verse, and expressed in the foregoing verse.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

22:12 The eyes of the LORD preserve {h} knowledge, and he overthroweth the words of the transgressor.

(h) Favour them that love knowledge.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes