Verse 1-2
Proverbs 5:1-2. My son, attend
unto my wisdom — “There being
nothing,” says Bishop Patrick,
“to which youth is so prone as
to give up themselves to satisfy
their fleshly desires, and
nothing proving so pernicious to
them; the wise man gives a new
caution against those impure
lusts which he had taken notice
of before: (Proverbs 2:16-19,)
as great obstructions to wisdom;
and, with repeated entreaties,
begs attention to so weighty an
argument: which here he
prosecutes more largely, and
presses not only with singular
evidence, but with powerful
reasons.” That thou mayest
regard, or keep, as
שׁמרsignifies, that is, hold
fast, as it is in the next
clause, discretion — Or wisdom
for the conduct of thy life, as
this word is used, chap. 1:4,
and in other parts of this book.
And that thy lips may keep
knowledge — That, by wise and
pious discourses, thou mayest
preserve and improve thy wisdom,
for thine own good, and that of
others.
Verses 3-6
Proverbs 5:3-6. For the lips of
a strange woman, &c. — It
concerns thee to get and to use
discretion, that thou mayest be
able to resist those manifold
temptations to which thou art
exposed; drop as a honeycomb —
Her words and discourses are
sweet, pleasing, and prevalent.
But her end is bitter as
wormwood — Her design, and the
effect of that lewdness to which
she entices men, are the
sinner’s destruction. So that
the beginning of this
intercourse is not so sweet as
the conclusion is bitter: after
a short pleasure follows long
pain, by the impairing men’s
health, strength, estates, and
credit, which they cannot
reflect upon without trouble and
vexation, remorse of conscience,
and anguish of spirit, for, like
a sword that cuts on both sides,
she wounds both mind and body.
Her feet — Her course, or manner
of life, go down to death — Lead
those that follow her to an
untimely, shameful, and
miserable end. Her steps take
hold on hell — To have any, the
least, converse with her, is to
approach to certain, inevitable
destruction. Lest thou shouldest
ponder — Though thou mayest
think to make a retreat in time:
thou wilt be deceived, she
having more arts than thou canst
ever know, (winding and turning
herself a thousand ways,) to
keep thee from so much as
deliberating about thy return to
a virtuous course of life.
Verses 8-14
Proverbs 5:8-14. Come not nigh
the door of her house — Lest
thine eyes affect thy heart, and
her allurements prevail over
thee. Lest thou give thine
honour — Thy dignity and
reputation, the strength and
vigour of thy body and mind;
unto others — Unto whores, and
their base attendants; and thy
years — The flower of thine age,
and thy precious time, unto the
cruel — To the harlot, who,
though she pretends love, yet,
in truth, is one of the most
cruel creatures in the world,
wasting thy estate and body,
without the least pity, and
destroying thy soul for ever.
Lest strangers be filled with
thy wealth — Not only the
strange women themselves, but
others who are in league with
them; and thy labours — Wealth
gotten by thy labours; in the
house of a stranger — Of a
strange family, whose house and
table are furnished with the
fruit of thy care and labours.
And thou mourn at the last —
Bitterly bewail thy madness and
misery, when it is too late;
when thy flesh and thy body, or
even thy body, are consumed — By
those manifold diseases which
the indulgence of fleshly lusts
bring upon the body; And say,
How have I hated instruction! —
How stupidly foolish have I been
in not considering all this
sooner! How senselessly bent
upon my own ruin! And my heart
despised reproof — I am amazed
to think how I hated the
cautions that were given me to
avoid such ways, and the just
reproofs I received for
inclining to them. And have not
obeyed the voice of my teachers
— Of my parents, friends, and
God’s ministers, who informed me
of my danger, and faithfully and
seasonably warned me of those
mischiefs and miseries in which
I am now involved. I was almost
in all evil — I gave myself up
to follow my lusts, which, in a
short time, engaged me in almost
every kind of wickedness, from
which the reverence of no
persons could restrain me, not
even a regard to the
congregation and assembly of
God’s people.
Verse 15
Proverbs 5:15. Drink waters out
of thine own cistern — “The
allegory here begun is carried
on through several verses. It
has been differently understood;
but the interpretation which
seems most generally followed,
is that of those who conceive
that the wise man here subjoins
a commendation of matrimony, and
the chaste preservation of the
marriage- bed, for the
propagation of a legitimate
offspring, to his dehortation
from illegitimate embraces, and
stolen waters; and Schultens
observes, that no figure is more
elegant or more common among the
easterns than this.” — Dodd.
Bishop Patrick’s paraphrase on
the verse is, “Marry; and in a
wife of thy own, enjoy the
pleasures thou desirest, and be
content with them alone;
innocent, chaste, and pure
pleasures; as much different
from the other, as the clear
waters of a wholesome fountain
are from those of a dirty lake
or puddle.”
Verse 16-17
Proverbs 5:16-17. Let thy
fountains — Rather, thy streams,
as Dr. Waterland renders the
word, that is, thy children,
proceeding from thy wife, called
thy fountain, Proverbs 5:18, and
from thyself; be dispersed
abroad — They shall be
multiplied, and in due time
appear abroad in the world, to
thy comfort and honour, and for
the good of others; whereas
harlots are commonly barren, and
men are ashamed to own the
children of whoredom. Let them
be only thine own — “Children
that acknowledge no other
father, because they spring from
one whom thou enjoyest (like a
fountain in thy own ground)
thyself alone: she being taught,
by thy confining thyself to her,
never to admit any stranger to
thy bed.” — Bishop Patrick.
Verse 18
Proverbs 5:18. Let thy fountain
be blessed — Thy wife, as the
next clause explains it, shall
be blessed with children; or
rather, she shall be a blessing
and a comfort to thee, as it
follows, and not a curse and
snare, as a harlot would be. And
rejoice, &c. — Seek not to
harlots for that comfort and
delight which God allows thee to
take in thy wife. So here he
explains the foregoing metaphor,
and applies it to its present
design; with the wife of thy
youth — Whom thou didst marry in
thy youthful days, with whom,
therefore, in all reason and
justice, thou oughtest still to
satisfy thyself, even when she
is old.
Verse 19
Proverbs 5:19. Let her be as the
loving hind — Hebrew, as the
hind of loves; as amiable and
delightful as the hinds are to
princes and great men, who used
to make them tame and familiar,
and to take great delight in
them, as has been observed by
many writers. “The wise man,”
says Bishop Patrick, “describes
allegorically the felicities of
the nuptial state, first under
the comparison of a domestic
fountain, where a man may quench
his natural thirst, and from
whence streams, that is,
children, may be derived, to
serve the public good; and,
secondly, under the comparisons,
of a young hind and pleasant
roe, which naturalists have
observed to be very fond
creatures, which were usually
kept by the greatest persons in
their palaces, who diverted
themselves with them, and
adorned them with chains and
garlands.” Let her breasts —
Rather, her loves, as Houbigant
renders דדוה, at all times, in
all ages and conditions; not
only love her when she is young
and beautiful, but when she is
old, or even deformed; and be
thou always ravished with her
love — Love her fervently. It is
a hyperbolical expression.
Verse 20-21
Proverbs 5:20-21. And why wilt
thou be ravished with a strange
woman? — Consider a little, and
deny, if thou canst, that it is
an unaccountable folly to seek
that satisfaction and comfort in
a vile harlot, which thou mayest
enjoy more pleasantly, securely,
and constantly, as well as more
innocently, in a pious wife of
thine own people. For the ways
of man are before the Lord —
“From whom no one can hide his
most private actions, but he
plainly sees and weighs all that
a person doth, wheresoever he
be; and will exactly proportion
rewards and punishments
according as he behaves
himself.”
Verse 22-23
Proverbs 5:22-23. His own
iniquities shall take the wicked
— “Let him not think to escape,
because he is so cunning that
nobody observes him, or so
powerful that no one can call
him to an account; for his own
manifold iniquities shall arrest
and apprehend him.” And he shall
be holden with the cords of his
sins — “He shall need no other
chains to bind, and hold him
fast, to answer for them to
God.” — Bishop Patrick. He shall
die without instruction —
Because he neglected
instruction; or, as באין מוסר,
may be rendered, without
correction, or amendment. He
shall die in his sins, and not
repent of them, as he designed
and hoped to do, before his
death. And in the greatness of
his folly — Through his
stupendous folly, whereby he
cheated himself with hopes of
repentance or impunity, and
exposed himself to endless
torments for the momentary
pleasures of gratifying sinful
lusts; he shall go astray — From
God, and from the way of life
and eternal salvation. |