Exalt her, and she shall promote thee: she shall bring thee to honor, when thou dost embrace her.
Pro 4:8
Exalt her, and she shall promote thee.
Man and religion mutually exalted
True wisdom includes two things–first, the choice of the highest possible good; secondly, the adoption of the best possible means for the attainment of that good.
I. Man exalting religion. There is a sense in which it may be said that man cannot exalt religion. But–
1. Man may exalt it into his heart as a supreme passion. Abounding around us are organisations which have for their object the reformation of morals, the correcting or suppressing certain evil habits, social and national. But mere external reformation without inward renewal will leave the man lost and perishing. When man proposes to improve the condition of humanity he begins outside, whereas God always begins inside. Man works from circumference to centre, God works from centre to circumference. You must place religion on the throne of your heart, give her supremacy, and the effect will be seen in the temper, conversation, and life.
2. Man may exalt it into his will as the all-controlling force, the life-principle. Tell me what the ruling force in the man is and I will tell you his character. All intelligent beings in the universe are under the dominion of either selfishness or benevolence. There is no sin apart from selfishness; there is no virtue apart from benevolence. When Christ takes possession of the heart the usurper is overthrown. Sin is no longer in the ascendancy, Christ becomes king; but although the power, the supremacy, of sin is broken, evil in a subordinate state may exist within. Christ can also expel His rivals.
3. Man may exalt it in his practice by living its lofty precepts. Christianity is not a creed, it is a life. The morals of Christianity are the purest the world has ever known, our enemies being judges. We want living epistles, men and women sanctified to God, embodying in their daily life and conversation the lofty precepts of the New Testament.
II. Christianity exalting man.
1. It will promote your honour. Men everywhere yearn for a twofold immortality–the immortality of the life in the world beyond, and the immortality of posthumous fame in this world. Men have obtained honour in other ways than by religion. But where is the man who will match for:honour the men of faith mentioned in Heb 11:1-40?
2. It will promote your happiness. One of the strongest instincts of the human soul is the instinct for happiness. All men covet it. In order to gain this coveted prize man must be brought into harmony with himself. Man is a being of strange contrarieties. Within him are forces of evil which drive him into wrong courses; there is also a power of conscience which meets him in these evil ways, denounces, condemns, and punishes him. You cannot secure peace by forgetting the past. In order to peace and contentment you must be in harmony with your surroundings.
3. Religion will promote your prospects. It supplies man with blessed hopes, cheerful prospects, and a glorious future. (R. Roberts.)
Wisdoms bargain
I. Exalt wisdom.
1. By entertaining lofty thoughts about her.
2. By making earnest efforts to obtain her.
3. By giving her the highest place in our affections.
4. By placing her upon the seat of government within the soul.
5. By helping her to reach her throne of universal dominion.
II. Wisdom shall promote thee–
1. To the favour and fellowship of God on earth.
2. To a place of safety aria comfort among the trials and dangers of life.
3. To a position of usefulness and honour amongst men.
4. To a throne of glory in the skies. (T. Whitelaw, M. A.)
She shall bring thee to honour.
The true honour of man
The love of honour is one of the strongest passions in the human heart. All wish, by some means or other, to acquire respect from those among whom they live. Among the advantages which attend religion and virtue, the honour which they confer on man is frequently mentioned in Scripture. By the true honour of man is to be understood, not what merely commands external respect, but what commands the respect of the heart, what raises one to acknowledged eminence above others of the same species. From what cause does this eminence arise?
1. Not from riches.
2. Not from rank or office.
3. Not from splendid actions and abilities which excite high admiration.
4. Not in reputation derived from civil accomplishments.
5. Not from any adventitious circumstances of fortune.
We must look to the mind and the soul. The honour which man acquires by religion and virtue is more independent and more complete than what can be acquired by any other means. The universal consent of mankind in honouring real virtue is sufficient to show what the genuine sense of human nature is on this subject. The honour acquired by religion and virtue is honour Divine and immortal. (Hugh Blair, D. D.)
Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell
Verse 8. She shall bring thee to honour] There is nothing, a strict life of piety and benevolence excepted, that has such a direct tendency to reflect honour upon a man, as the careful cultivation of his mind. One of Bacon’s aphorisms was, Knowledge is power; and it is truly astonishing to see what influence true learning has. Nothing is so universally respected, provided the learned man be a consistent moral character, and be not proud and overbearing; which is a disgrace to genuine literature.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Exalt her; let her have thine highest esteem and affection.
To honour, both with God and men; which Solomon knew by experience.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
8. As you highly esteem her, shewill raise you to honor.
embrace herwith fondaffection.
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Exalt her, and she shall promote thee,…. Christ is to be exalted in his person, by asserting his proper deity; by ascribing all divine perfections to him; by allowing him to be the author of all divine works; by giving him divine worship and homage; by owning his divine and eternal sonship, and distinct personality: he is to be exalted in all his offices of Prophet, Priest, and King, and as the only Redeemer and Saviour; by trusting in him, embracing his Gospel, and submitting to his ordinances, and such that exalt him, he will “promote” them here and hereafter; of which more in the next clause. According to the Talmudists u, the word for “exalt” signifies a diligent search, by turning things about to find out what is sought; and so the Septuagint interpret the word in the sense of “searching”,
Jer 50:26;
she shall bring thee to honour, when thou dost embrace her: by faith: for this is an act of faith, and a very considerable one, and is expressive of great nearness to Christ, of much intimacy and familiarity with him, of strong love and affection to him, of a good degree of boldness used with him, and of joy and exaltation in him; for such an action is used by persons near akin, and are very familiar with, and have a very great affection for one another, and use much freedom with each other, and rejoice at meeting together. Now such who embrace Christ, in the arms of their faith, as their alone Saviour, such he promotes and “brings to honour”; not to honour among men, for to embrace Christ and exalt him is the way to disgrace, though the disgrace is an honour, and will be before long rolled off; but to honour hereafter. Such will be set at his right hand, and be owned by him before his Father and his angels; and they will be placed on the same throne with him, and will reign with him for ever and ever; see 1Sa 2:30.
u T. Bab. Roshhashanah, fol. 26. 2.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
The meaning of the . . is determined by in the parallel clause; signifies to raise, exalt, as a way or dam by heaping up; the Pilpel, here tropical: to value or estimate highly. Bttcher interprets well: hold it high in price, raise it (as a purchaser) always higher, make offer for it upon offer. The lxx (approved by Bertheau), , circumvallate it, i.e., surround it with a wall ( ) – a strange and here unsuitable figure. Hold it high, says the author, and so it will reward
(Note: Lwenstein has rightly , vid., my preface to Baer’s Genesis, p. vii.)
thee with a high place, and (with chiastic transposition of the performance and the consequence) she will honour
(Note: We read , not (Hahn) or (Lwenstein); the tone lies on the penult., and the tone-syllable has the point Tsere, as in , Deu 32:7; vid., Michlol 66b.)
thee if ( ) thou lovingly embracest her. is used of embracing in the pressure of tender love, as in Son 2:6; Son 8:3; the Piel is related to the Kal as amplexari to amplecti . Wisdom exalts her admirers, honours her lovers, and makes a man’s appearance pleasant, causing him to be reverenced when he approaches. Regarding , vid., Pro 1:9. , to deliver up (Gen 14:20), to give up (Hos 11:8), is connected in the free poetic manner with two accusatives, instead of with an accus. and dat. lxx has , but one does not defend himself (as with a shield) by a wreath or crown.
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
(8) Exalt her, and she shall promote thee.Comp. 1Sa. 2:30, Them that honour me I will honour.
Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)
8. Bring thee to honour Or, “load thee with honour.”
When (or because) thou dost embrace her Honour will follow as a consequence. Embracing is expressive of affectionate attachment, love. Nothing is more honourable than a highly cultivated mind. Knowledge not only imparts power, but obtains for its possessor respect and admiration, especially when his intellectual acquirements are accompanied, as is supposed in this case, with high moral endowments.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Pro 4:8 Exalt her, and she shall promote thee: she shall bring thee to honour, when thou dost embrace her.
Ver. 8. Exalt her, and she shall. ] Have a high and honourable esteem of her and her children. Rabbi Solomon, out of the Talmudists, renders it, Search for her, minutatim in ea singula consectans, do it diligently, as holding every parcel of her precious, as men do the very filings of gold.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
when = because. Hebrew. ki.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Pro 3:35, Pro 22:4, 1Sa 2:30, 1Ki 3:5-13, Dan 12:3
Reciprocal: Pro 14:29 – exalteth Ecc 8:1 – a man’s Jam 1:4 – perfect and