Verse 1-2
Proverbs 19:1-2. Better is the
poor — Hebrew, רשׁ, a poor man;
that walketh in his integrity —
Who is upright in his words and
actions; he has a better
character, is in a better
condition, is more beloved,
lives to better purpose, and is
greater and more excellent in
the eyes of God, and of all wise
and good men; than he that is
perverse in his lips — Who is in
the habit of uttering sinful and
mischievous expressions, however
high he may be in rank, wealth,
or dignity. Also, that the soul
be without knowledge — Without
wisdom or prudence to discern
the right way of speaking and
acting, and how a person ought
to conduct himself in all
affairs, and on all occasions;
is not good — Is of evil and
pernicious consequence; and he
that hasteth with his feet —
That rashly and hastily rushes
into actions without serious
consideration; sinneth —
Contracts guilt, and involves
himself, and perhaps also many
others, into difficulties and
troubles. “Solomon, in this
verse,” says Bishop Patrick,
“observes two great springs of
all our miscarriages; want of
understanding and want of
deliberation. To make too much
haste in a business is the way
not to speed; and to run blindly
upon any thing is no less
prejudicial to our undertakings.
Both he that affects things
without knowledge, and he that
pursues what he understands
without deliberation, runs into
many mistakes, and commits many
sins. For which Solomon shows in
the next verse that he must
blame none but himself, and
never, in the least, reflect
upon God as if he were negligent
of us, or hard to us; which men
are prone to think, when they
have foolishly undone
themselves.”
Verse 5
Proverbs 19:5. A false witness
shall not be unpunished — Though
he escape the observation and
punishment of men, yet he shall
not avoid the judgment of God.
And he that speaketh lies — That
accustoms himself to lying,
either in giving evidence in
courts of justice, or in common
conversation; shall not escape —
The righteous judgment of God,
though he may flatter himself
with hopes of impunity, for the
Lord is jealous of his honour,
and will not suffer his name to
be profaned.
Verse 6-7
Proverbs 19:6-7. Many will
entreat the favour of the prince
— Or, of the liberal, or
bountiful man, as נדיבmay be
properly rendered. Kings and
princes were anciently called
benefactors, Luke 22:25. And
every man is a friend to him
that giveth gifts — Not
sincerely, however, as daily
experience shows, but only in
show, or profession, or in the
outward expressions of
friendship and kindness. All the
brethren of the poor — His
nearest and dearest relations,
who are often called brethren in
the Scriptures; do hate him —
Despise and shun him, as men do
a thing that they hate, and as
the following words explain it;
How much more do his friends go
far from him — His other
friends, who are no way related
to him, but in his prosperity
professed love and friendship to
him. He pursueth them with words
— Earnestly imploring their pity
and help. Or, He urgeth their
words, as מרדŠ אמריםmay be
rendered; that is, he allegeth
their former promises and
professions of friendship: or,
He seeketh words, (as the
preacher sought to find out
acceptable words, Ecclesiastes
12:10,) wherewith he might
prevail and move them to pity;
yet they are wanting to him —
Hebrew, לא המה, not they, or,
they not. The meaning is, they
are not what they pretended to
be, namely, friends to him: or,
their words are vain, and
without effect; there is no
reality in them. Houbigant
renders the verse, “All his own
brethren hate a poor man; how
much more his neighbours! They
have departed far from him; he
followeth after them, but they
are not found.”
Verse 8
Proverbs 19:8. He that getteth
wisdom — That takes pains, and
labours to get knowledge, grace,
and acquaintance with God;
loveth his own soul — Or, loveth
himself, because he procures
great and lasting, yea,
everlasting good to himself, as
sinners, on the contrary, are
said to hate their souls, chap.
29:24, because they bring evil
upon them; he that keepeth
understanding — That observes,
and carefully practises its
precepts; shall find good —
Shall have great benefit by it,
both for his conduct in this
life, and for his happiness in
the next.
Verse 10
Proverbs 19:10. Delight is not
seemly for a fool — To live in
affluence, pleasure, and outward
glory, doth not become him, nor
suit with him; because
prosperity corrupts even wise
men, and makes fools mad; and
because it gives him more
opportunity to discover his
folly, and to do mischief both
to himself and others. He
implies that a rod, or
punishment, is fitter for him
than pleasure; much less for a
servant — For one who has been a
slave, or who is in a servile
condition, and of a servile
disposition, not much differing
from a fool; or who is a servant
to his lusts, and wholly unfit
to rule other men; to have rule
over princes — Over men of
better quality than himself: for
servants are commonly ignorant;
and when they are advanced, they
grow insolent, presumptuous, and
intolerable.
Verse 11
Proverbs 19:11. The discretion
of a man deferreth his anger —
Defers the admission of anger,
till he has thoroughly
considered all the merits of the
provocation, seen them in a true
light, and weighed them in a
just balance; and then defers
the prosecution of it, till
there be no danger of going into
indecencies of speech or
behaviour. Plato said to his
servant, “I would beat thee if I
were not angry.” And it is his
glory to pass over a
transgression — Not to revenge a
wrong, or an affront, when he
hath an opportunity. This is
opposed to the perverse judgment
of worldly men, who account it
folly and stupidity not quickly
to resent a provocation, and a
dishonour and reproach not to
revenge it.
Verse 12
Proverbs 19:12. The king’s wrath
is as the roaring of a lion —
The words of a king in anger are
as much to be feared as the
roaring of a lion; but his
favour is as dew upon the grass
— Any token of his favour and
kindness is as comfortable as
the dew which refreshes the
grass and herbs, parched by the
hot beams of the sun.
Verse 13
Proverbs 19:13. A foolish son,
&c. — Two things make a man
exceeding unhappy, a dissolute
son, and a contentious wife: for
the former is a perpetual grief
to his father, to see him likely
to prove the utter destruction
of his family; and the quarrels
of a wife spoil a man’s
happiness, like perpetual
droppings, which wear away what
they fall upon.
Verse 14
Proverbs 19:14. House and riches
are the inheritance of fathers,
&c. — Parents may bestow on
their children houses, and
lands, and riches; but a prudent
wife is from the Lord — Is
vouchsafed to a man by the
singular providence of God, who
is the only searcher and ruler
of hearts, exactly discerning
who are prudent or pious, (with
regard to which the judgments
even of wise men are frequently
mistaken,) and inclining the
hearts of persons one toward
another. So that when such a
wife falls to the lot of any
one, he should look upon it as a
singular favour of God to him,
for which he ought to be very
thankful.
Verse 15
Proverbs 19:15. Slothfulness
casteth into a deep sleep — “As
labour makes men vigorous and
rich, so sloth and idleness have
these two miserable effects,
that they insensibly sink the
mind into a dull stupidity and
unconcernedness about the most
necessary things, and thereby
reduce a man to extreme want and
beggary; to which may be added a
third, that they tempt him to
shift and use dishonest arts for
a livelihood.” — Bishop Patrick.
Verse 17
Proverbs 19:17. He that hath
pity on the poor — And relieves
their necessities; lendeth unto
the Lord — Doth not empoverish,
but enrich himself: for the Lord
takes what is done to them as
done to himself, because it is
done to those whom he has
appointed in his own stead to be
his receivers, and whom he hath,
in a peculiar manner, commended
to the care and charity of all
other men. He therefore will not
fail to make a full
compensation; he will return the
benefit done to others, with
large interest and increase of
blessings, upon the beneficent
man and his posterity.
Verse 18
Proverbs 19:18. Chasten thy son
while there is hope — Before
custom in sin, and thy
indulgence have made him
hard-hearted and incorrigible;
and let not thy soul spare for
his crying — Forbear not to give
him due and necessary
correction, through a foolish
and destructive pity, excited by
his tears and cries; for it is
better he should cry under thy
rod, than under the sword of the
magistrate, or, which is more to
be feared, that of divine
vengeance.
Verse 19
Proverbs 19:19. A man of great
wrath — Or, he who is of great
wrath, that is, of strong
passions; who is of a fierce and
furious temper; shall suffer
punishment — Will certainly
bring great mischiefs upon
himself; for if thou deliver him
— If any parent, relation, or
friend deliver him out of one
trouble, through his
ungovernable temper he will soon
involve himself in another; and
thou must do it again — Thou
wilt soon find it necessary to
interpose for his deliverance a
second, third, or even fourth
time: all which trouble to
themselves and others would be
prevented if such men would look
unto God for grace to enable
them to mortify their passions,
and to get the rule of their own
spirits.
Verse 20
Proverbs 19:20. Hear counsel,
&c. — Be willing to be taught
and ruled; to be advised and
reproved, when thou art young;
that thou mayest be wise in thy
latter end — Before thy death
come. Which he adds, not
exclusively, as if a man ought
not to be wise before, but
emphatically, to show that how
foolishly soever he may have
spent his former and younger
years, it highly and especially
concerns him to be wise before
it is too late, or before death
comes.
Verse 21
Proverbs 19:21. There are many
devices in a man’s heart — Which
shall not stand, but be
disappointed; many designs and
contrivances, which he thinks to
be so well devised and planned
that they cannot miscarry.
Nevertheless, the counsel of the
Lord — Which ofttimes
contradicts, and therefore
overrules or defeats the designs
and purposes of men; that shall
stand — Shall certainly be
fulfilled, and bring to pass
whatever he pleases.
Verse 22-23
Proverbs 19:22-23. The desire of
a man is his kindness — This
expression is obscure, and will
admit of several
interpretations. The Seventy
render it, καρπος ανδρι
ελεημοσυνη, alms-giving, or
charity, is fruit to a man. The
meaning, Le Clerc thinks, is,
that there is no virtue a man
ought to be so desirous of as
benignity, or a generous,
charitable spirit, as it is the
greatest ornament of human
nature, and the strongest bond
of human society; which if any
one wants, however rich he may
be, yet he is despised. Others
think, that if it be considered
as connected with the following
clause, the most natural
construction is, “A man shows
his kindness by his will, or
desire to do good; and in this
respect a poor man, who would be
beneficent if he could, is
better than a liar, that is,
than a rich man, who makes a
profession of kindness, but does
not perform it. The Seventy read
this latter clause, A poor
righteous man is better than a
rich man who is a liar: and the
Syriac renders it, A poor man is
better than a deceitful rich
one. The fear of the Lord
tendeth to life — To holiness
and happiness here and
hereafter; in other words,
nothing makes a man so
comfortable to himself, and so
useful to others, as a religious
care to please God in all
things; and he that hath it
shall abide satisfied — Shall
want nothing, and shall be fully
contented with God’s favour and
blessing; he shall not be
visited with evil — With any
destructive calamity. But the
Hebrew text of the verse being
obscure, interpreters have taken
it in different senses.
Houbigant renders it, The fear,
&c., tendeth to life, and he who
is filled with it shall sleep,
or pass his nights, free from
all evil. Schultens and Grey
interpret it, The fear of
Jehovah indeed is life; but he
who sleeps in carnal security
shall not be free from evil: see
Deuteronomy 32:15. The Seventy
read it, The fear of the Lord is
to a man’s life; but he that is
without fear (namely, of God)
shall abide in places where
there is no knowledge to govern
him; that is, shall run blindly
into all manner of mischief.
Verse 24
Proverbs 19:24. A slothful man
hideth his hand in his bosom —
Either to keep it warm in cold
weather, or to give it rest,
being unwilling to fatigue it
with the labour of any action;
and will not bring it to his
mouth again — Namely, to feed
himself; as if he expected that
the meat should drop into his
mouth. “It is a most elegant,
but hyperbolical, description of
a man who hath given himself up
to sloth; who refuses to do
things as easy as pulling his
hand out of his bosom, and as
necessary as eating and
drinking.”
Verse 25
Proverbs 19:25. Smite a scorner
— An obstinate and impudent
transgressor, a derider of
religion and virtue, who rejects
and scorns all admonition: that
is, punish him; and the simple
will beware — Though the
punishment do him no good, yet
other inconsiderate persons, who
sin, it may be, through
ignorance, imprudence, or
infirmity, will be awakened by
it to a better way of thinking
and acting; who, if they saw him
pass with impunity, would be apt
to follow his example. And
reprove one that hath
understanding, &c. — A verbal
reproof will be more effectual
for his reformation than the
severest punishments will be to
that of a scorner.
Verse 26
Proverbs 19:26. He that wasteth
his father — That is, his
father’s estate, by unjust or
riotous courses; and chaseth
away his mother — Causes her to
avoid and abhor his presence and
society, and to go from the
house where he is; is a son that
causeth shame — Both to himself,
and to his parents and family.
But this verse ought rather to
be rendered, A son that causeth
shame, and bringeth reproach,
wasteth his father, and chaseth
away his mother; that is, as
some interpret it, he gives them
as much concern as if he were to
waste his father’s substance,
and turn his mother out of
doors.
Verse 27
Proverbs 19:27. Cease, my son,
to hear the instruction, &c. —
If thou hast done it formerly,
yet do not now, any longer,
hearken to those false
doctrines, or evil counsels,
which tend to withdraw thee from
the belief or practice of God’s
holy word. Or, as Bishop Patrick
interprets the verse, “My son,
beware of their discourse, who,
under the show of greater
learning, seduce thee from the
plain doctrines of virtue; or,
if thou hast been unhappily
engaged in such company, quit it
presently, and stick to those
that honestly instruct thee;
for, remember this, to leave off
hearing the instruction of good
men, is the first step toward a
departure from all religion.”
Verse 28
Proverbs 19:28. An ungodly
witness scorneth judgment — Hath
no reverence to the place of
justice, nor to the presence of
God there, nor to that sacred
and solemn work, of executing
judgment, but, in spite of all,
gives in a false testimony. And
the mouth of the wicked
devoureth iniquity — Uttereth it
with as great greediness,
delight, and ease, as they
swallow down delicious meats and
drinks; or, is as eager to
commit it in word and deed, as
if it were as necessary to their
well-being as the food they eat.
Verse 29
Proverbs 19:29. Judgments are
prepared for scorners — Either
by men, or, at least, by God;
although they be deferred for a
time, yet they are treasured up
for them, and shall infallibly
be inflicted upon them: and
stripes for the back of fools —
Nor shall other sinners escape,
who sin through want of
consideration, but they also
shall be punished, though in a
less degree. |