Verse 1
Proverbs 14:1. Every wise woman
buildeth her house — By her
care, industry: diligence, and
prudent management, she
improves, and raises her family
and estate. So the phrase is
used Exodus 1:21; 2 Samuel 7:11;
Psalms 127:1. He speaks of the
woman, not exclusively of the
man, of whom this is no less
true, but because the women,
especially in those times, were
very industrious in managing
their husbands’ estates. But the
foolish plucketh it down with
her hands — By her negligence,
idleness, ill management, or
want of economy, she lays it
low, and wastes all that had
been gotten by the care of
others.
Verse 2
Proverbs 14:2. He that walketh
in his uprightness — Whose
conversation is sincerely godly
and righteous; feareth the Lord
— Hath a due regard and
reverence for the Lord, from
which all true piety and virtue
flow; but he that is perverse in
his ways — That cares not what
he does, so he may but satisfy
his own lusts and passions;
despiseth him — Plainly declares
that he does not fear him, but
lives in a profane contempt of
him, and of his commands and
threatenings, which is the very
source of all wickedness.
Verse 3
Proverbs 14:3. In the mouth of
the foolish is a rod of pride —
“Fools often bring upon
themselves, by their ungoverned
tongues, the correction due to
their crimes,” and especially to
their pride and arrogance; but
the lips of the wise shall
preserve them — From that rod.
Wise men are careful of their
words, that they may not offend,
much more that they may not
abuse, the meanest person, and
hereby they remain in safety.
Verse 4
Proverbs 14:4. Where no oxen
are, the crib is clean — The
crib and stable may be easily
kept clean where there are few
or no oxen: but there is so much
advantage arising from tilling
the ground, that it is better to
have a litter with plenty of
oxen, than to have great
neatness without them. Some
think this is spoken of those
who boast much of constant
neatness about their houses,
&c., which, at the same time,
shows they carry on but little
business. For where there is
much business done, and many
persons coming and going, there
will necessarily be oftentimes
less cleanliness and neatness.
This verse, however, may be
considered as containing an
admonition for the man without
doors, (as the first admonished
the woman within,) that he
should not neglect his
husbandry, of which it is well
known oxen were the principal
instruments, being not only
employed in ploughing the
ground, and carrying home the
crop, but also in treading out
the corn.
Verse 6-7
Proverbs 14:6-7. A scorner — A
proud, self-conceited, and
profane person; seeketh wisdom
and findeth it not — Because he
doth not seek it aright, namely,
sincerely, earnestly, and
seasonably, and in a constant
and diligent use of all the
means which God hath appointed
to that end; and with an honest
intention of employing his
knowledge in the service of God,
and for the furtherance of true
religion. But knowledge is easy
unto him — That is, is plain,
and easily attained by him; that
understandeth — That knows, and
is deeply sensible of his own
want of it, and of its great
worth and necessity, which will
make him use all possible
diligence in seeking it, and,
among other means, in praying
earnestly to God for it. Go from
the presence of a foolish man —
Avoid the company and
conversation of the ungodly.
When thou perceivest not the
lips of knowledge — When they
break forth into foolish or
wicked speeches, lest thou
either be infected by them, or
seem to approve them.
Verse 8
Proverbs 14:8. The wisdom of the
prudent is to understand his way
— It consists not in vain
speculations, nor in a curious
prying into other men’s matters,
much less in subtle arts of
deceiving others, but in a
diligent study of his own duty,
and of the way to true and
eternal happiness; but the folly
of fools is deceit — The wit of
ungodly men, which, though they
account it their wisdom, is
really their folly, is employed
only in finding out ways of
overreaching and deceiving
others, and themselves too.
Verse 9
Proverbs 14:9. Fools make a mock
at sin — Wicked men, here meant
by fools, please and divert
themselves with their own and
other men’s sins, which is a
high offence to God and all good
men. Or, as others render the
clause, excuse, or cover sin;
they sin against God or men, and
then justify or extenuate their
sins, which is to double the
iniquity. Possibly the Hebrew of
this clause, אולים יליצ אשׁם,
may be rendered, Sin deludes, or
makes a mock of, fools, or
sinners; that is, exposes them
to shame and contempt, which is
fitly opposed to favour, in the
next clause. This translation
suits exactly with the Hebrew
words, and is adopted by two
ancient and learned
interpreters, Aquila and
Theodotion. But among the
righteous — Who are so far from
making a mock at sin, or
excusing it, that they do not
allow themselves to commit it;
there is favour — They find
favour with God and men, because
they make conscience of ordering
their lives so that they may
offend neither. Or, there is
good-will, as the word רצןis
properly and usually understood:
they have a real love to one
another, and are ready to
perform to each other all
offices of kindness; and
therefore they neither willingly
sin against others, nor rejoice
in the sins of others.
Verse 10
Proverbs 14:10. The heart
knoweth its own bitterness — The
inward griefs and joys of men’s
hearts, though sometimes they
may be partly manifested by
outward signs, yet are not
certainly and fully known to any
but the persons themselves who
are the subjects of them; or, as
Bishop Patrick paraphrases the
verse, “Nobody can know what
another suffers so well as the
sufferer himself; and he alone
is privy to the greatness of
that joy which springs from the
happy conclusion of his
sufferings.” The scope of the
proverb may be, to keep men from
murmuring under their own
troubles, or envying other men’s
happiness.
Verse 12
Proverbs 14:12. There is a way
which seemeth right unto a man —
There are some evil actions or
courses which men may think to
be lawful and good, either
through gross ignorance, or
self-flattery, or through want
of necessary diligence in
examining them by the rule of
God’s word; all which are
culpable causes of the mistake,
and therefore do not excuse the
error; but the end thereof are
the ways of death — The event
shows that they were sinful and
destructive.
Verse 13
Proverbs 14:13. Even in laughter
the heart is sorrowful — Do not
think that every one that laughs
is happy, or that profuse and
immoderate joy is true pleasure,
for the outward signs of it are
often mixed with, or end in,
real sadness: nay, such is the
vanity of this present life,
that there is no joy without a
mixture of sorrow, which often
immediately follows upon it.
Verse 14
Proverbs 14:14. The backslider
in heart — He who departs from
God, although but inwardly;
shall be filled with his own
ways — With the fruit of his
ways, namely, the punishment of
his sins; and a good man shall
be satisfied from himself — From
the pious temper of his own
heart, which cleaves to the
Lord, and from the holy and
righteous course of his life, he
shall receive unspeakable
comfort, both in this world and
in the next.
Verse 15
Proverbs 14:15. The simple — A
foolish man; believeth every
word — Is easily deceived with
the smooth words and fair
pretences of false and deceitful
men; but the prudent man — The
man well instructed and truly
wise; looketh well to his goings
— Either, 1st, To his own
goings: he ordereth his
conversation and dealings in the
world with due circumspection,
not considering so much what
other men say as what he ought
to do. Or, 2d, To the goings of
the deceiver: that is, he judges
of men’s words and professions
by their conduct, which is a
good rule. He is cautious,
examining before he believes,
and trying before he trusts,
especially in matters of great
moment; and considering things
maturely before he does as he is
advised. Bochart observes well
upon this verse, that “as
prudence without simplicity
degenerates into craft, so
simplicity without prudence is
no better than downright folly.
We must follow our Saviour’s
counsel, and unite the serpent
with the dove.”
Verse 16
Proverbs 14:16. A wise man
feareth, and departeth from evil
— He trembles at God’s judgments
when they are either inflicted
or threatened; and shuns sin,
which is the procuring cause of
all calamities; but the fool
rages — Frets against God, or is
enraged against his messengers
who declare the threatening; or,
as the Hebrew, מתעבר, should
rather be translated here,
transgresseth, or goeth on in
sin constantly and resolutely;
which is fitly opposed to
departing from evil; as his
being confident, in the next
clause, that is, secure and
insensible of danger, till God’s
judgments overtake him, is
opposed to fearing. Bishop
Patrick’s interpretation is, “A
wise man, being admonished of
his error, and of his danger, is
afraid of incurring the divine
displeasure; and instantly
starts back from that evil way
into which he was entering, or
wherein he was engaged: but a
fool storms at those that would
stop him in his course, and
proceeds boldly and securely to
his own ruin.”
Verse 17
Proverbs 14:17. He that is soon
angry dealeth foolishly — His
passion hurries him into many
rash and foolish speeches and
actions; and a man of wicked
devices — One who, it may be,
suppresses his passion, but
designs and meditates revenge,
watching for the fittest
opportunities of executing it;
is hated — Both by God and men;
as being most deeply malicious,
and like the devil, and most
dangerous and pernicious to
human society. The LXX.
translate this verse, οξυθυμος
πρασσει μετα αβουλιας, ανηρ δε
φρονιμος πολλα υποφερει, A hasty
man acteth rashly, but a prudent
man endureth many things: to
which Houbigant’s translation is
similar, He who is soon angry
will deal inconsiderately; a
considerate man will endure
patiently.
Verse 18
Proverbs 14:18. The simple
inherit folly — Possess it as
their inheritance, or portion;
holding it fast, improving it,
and delighting in it; but the
prudent are crowned with
knowledge — They place their
honour and happiness in a sound,
practical, and saving knowledge
of God, and of their duty; and
therefore earnestly pursue it,
and heartily embrace it.
Verse 19
Proverbs 14:19. The evil bow
before the good — Giving honour
to them, and supplicating their
favour and help; and the wicked
at the gates of the righteous —
As clients and petitioners are
wont to wait at the houses of
the great and powerful, or
beggars at the doors of such as
they expect will relieve their
wants. The sense is, good men
will have the pre-eminence over
the wicked often in this life,
when God sees it expedient, but
assuredly in the life to come.
Verse 20
Proverbs 14:20. The poor is
hated — That is, despised and
abandoned, as hateful persons
and things are; of his own
neighbour — Strictly so called
of persons nearest to him,
either by habitation or
relation, and therefore most
obliged to love and help him;
but the rich hath many friends —
As matter of fact daily shows.
Every one is ready to make court
to those whom the world smiles
upon, though otherwise unworthy.
Such, however, are not so much
friends to the rich as to their
riches, hoping to get some
benefit by them. There is little
friendship in the world but what
is governed by self- interest,
which is no true friendship at
all; nor what a wise man will
value himself upon, or put any
confidence in.
Verse 21
Proverbs 14:21. He that
despiseth his neighbour — That
doth not pity and relieve the
poor, as this is explained in
the next clause; sinneth — And
therefore shall be punished for
his inhumanity, which is opposed
to his being happy, in the next
branch; but he that hath mercy
on the poor — That shows his
compassion for them by his
bounty to them; happy is he — He
doth a worthy action, and shall
be blessed in his deed.
Verse 23
Proverbs 14:23. In all labour
there is profit, &c. — Diligent
labour is the ready way to
riches; but idle talking,
wherein too many spend most of
their precious time, will bring
a man to poverty. Houbigant
renders the verse, All labour
will produce abundance, but
garrulity nothing but want.
“Solomon here,” says Lord Bacon,
as quoted by Bishop Patrick,
“separates the fruit of the
labour of the tongue, and of the
labour of the hands; as if want
was the revenue of the one, and
wealth the revenue of the other.
For it commonly comes to pass
that they who talk liberally,
boast much, and promise mighty
matters, are beggars, and
receive no benefit by their
brags, or by any thing they
discourse of. Nay, rather, for
the most part, such men are not
industrious and diligent in
their employment; but only feed
and fill themselves with words
as with wind.”
Verse 24
Proverbs 14:24. The crown of the
wise is their riches — They are
a singular advantage and
ornament to them, partly as they
make their wisdom more regarded,
while the poor man’s wisdom is
despised, Ecclesiastes 9:16; and
partly as they give a man great
opportunity to exercise wisdom
or virtue, by laying out his
riches in the service of God, to
the great good of mankind; which
also tends to his own glory and
happiness; but the foolishness
of fools, &c. — But as for rich
fools, their folly is not cured,
but made worse and more manifest
by their riches. Their riches
find them fools, and leave them
fools; they are not a crown, but
a reproach to them, and an
occasion of greater contempt.
Verse 25
Proverbs 14:25. A true witness
delivereth souls — That is,
persons, namely, such as, being
innocent, are falsely accused;
whom he delivers from the
mischief designed against them,
by declaring the truth, and
thereby clearing them from the
charges brought against them;
but a deceitful witness speaketh
lies — To the injury and
destruction of the innocent.
Verse 28
Proverbs 14:28. In the multitude
of people is the king’s honour —
“The honour and splendour of a
king depend upon the multitude,
wealth, and strength of his
subjects, whom, therefore, he
ought to protect and cherish:
for if they be wasted by
unnecessary wars, or forced into
other countries by oppression
and unjust exactions, it proves
the ruin of his kingdom.” —
Bishop Patrick.
Verse 29
Proverbs 14:29. He that is slow
to wrath, &c. — He who is not
soon provoked to anger by
reproaches or ill usage, shows
himself to be a wise and great
man; but he that is hasty of
spirit exalteth folly — Exposes
his folly, and makes it apparent
to every body. Hebrew, מרים
אולת, lifteth up folly, displays
it like a banner.
Verse 30
Proverbs 14:30. A sound heart —
Free from envy, and such like
inordinate passions, which are
commonly called the diseases of
the soul, even in heathen, as
well as in the sacred writers.
Or, as others render לב מרפא, a
healing heart, mild, merciful,
and kind to others, which is
opposed to envy; is the life of
the flesh — Procures and
maintains the health and vigour
of the whole body; but envy the
rottenness of the bones — It
wasteth the spirits, or
consumeth even the strongest and
most inward parts of the body.
Verse 31
Proverbs 14:31. He that
oppresseth the poor — That uses
the poor man hardly, as the
Syriac renders it: that
withholdeth from him that which
is his due, either by the rules
of strict justice, or by the
great law of charity, of which
see Proverbs 3:27; reproacheth
his Maker — Whose image the poor
man bears, by whose counsel and
providence he is made poor, and
who hath declared himself to be
the protector and avenger of the
poor; but he that honoureth him
— That honoureth God’s image,
and works, and laws; hath mercy
on the poor — Does not only
forbear oppressing or injuring
the poor man, but affords him
his pity and help.
Verse 32
Proverbs 14:32. The wicked is
driven away — From God’s favour
and presence, and from the
society of the righteous, and
from all his hopes of happiness,
both in this life and in the
next; in his wickedness — Or,
for his wickedness. The Hebrew,
however, ברעת, is literally, in
his evil; and may be understood
of the evil of punishment: in
the day of his trouble, when he
shall flee to God for help, he
shall be driven away from him.
But the righteous hath hope in
his death — In his greatest
dangers and distresses; yea,
even in death itself he hath
hope of deliverance from, or of
great and everlasting advantage
by what he suffers.
Verse 33
Proverbs 14:33. Wisdom resteth
in the heart, &c. — Is laid up
and hid there, and not vainly or
rashly uttered by him, but only
brought forth upon necessary or
fit occasions; but that which is
in the midst — That is, in the
heart; of fools, is made known —
That folly which is there
instead of wisdom, or that small
degree of wisdom which they
have, they will publish in all
times and companies, without any
consideration or discretion.
Verse 34
Proverbs 14:34. Righteousness
exalteth a nation — A righteous
administration of the government
of it, impartial equity between
man and man, public countenance
given to religion, the general
practice and profession of
virtue, the protecting and
preserving of virtuous men,
mercy, humanity, and kindness to
strangers and enemies: these
things put honour upon a nation,
and exalt it in the eyes of God,
and of all other nations. But
sin is a reproach to any people
— Brings contempt and ruin upon
them, by provoking both God and
men against them.
Verse 35
Proverbs 14:35. The king’s
favour is toward a wise servant
— He will respect and prefer
those who behave themselves
wisely and virtuously, whatever
enemies they may have that seek
to undermine them. This Solomon
was determined to do. He was
resolved that no man’s services
should be neglected to please a
party, or a favourite. But his
wrath is against him that
causeth shame — He will displace
and banish from the court those
who are selfish and false, who
betray their trust, oppress the
poor, sow the seeds of discord
in the country, and thus cause
shame both to themselves, for
their foolish and improper
management of the king’s
affairs, and to the king, who
made so foolish a choice of
servants. |