Verses 1-3
Proverbs 23:1-3. When thou
sittest to eat with a ruler —
When thou art invited to the
table of a great man; consider
diligently what is before thee —
What things, what plenty and
variety of meats and drinks, by
which thou mayest easily be
tempted to excess in partaking
of them, and so mayest be
induced to speak or act in an
unbecoming manner. And put a
knife to thy throat, &c. —
Restrain and govern thine
appetite, so as to avoid all
excess, as with a sword hanging
over thy head, or as if a man
stood with a knife at thy throat
ready to take thy life, if thou
didst transgress. Schultens,
however, with some others, reads
this verse, For thou wilt put a
knife to thy throat, if thou art
given to appetite; that is, “If
thou dost not curb thy appetite,
it will expose thee to certain
danger, as if a knife were at
thy throat.” And be not desirous
of his dainties — Especially be
on thy guard when exquisite
delicacies are set before thee;
for they are deceitful meat —
Agreeable to the taste, and
promising pleasure, but, if
eaten to excess, loading the
stomach, injuring the health,
defiling the conscience, and
depriving a man of peace with
God, and peace of mind. “There
are two evils,” says Dr. Dodd,
from Patrick, Melancthon, and
others, “to be avoided at the
tables of the great: the one is,
too much talking; the other, too
much eating: the wise man
exhorts his disciple to avoid
both the one and the other, by
the phrase, Put a knife to thy
throat; repress your appetite
and your inclination to talk.
Wine, company, and the gayety
which attends entertainments,
often invite men to be too free
in the use of meat and drink;
and it is by these that kings
frequently prove the fidelity
and the secrecy of their
confidants.”
Verse 4-5
Proverbs 23:4-5. Labour not —
Hebrew, אל תיגע, Do not weary
thyself, namely, with immoderate
cares and labours, as many
covetous men do; to be rich — To
raise an estate, and make thy
property abundantly more than it
is. Solomon does not forbid all
labour, nor a provident care,
which he commends in other
places; but only represents how
vain and foolish it is to be
over solicitous, and to carry
our cares and labours to such
excess as to injure, if not our
health of body, yet our peace
and serenity of mind, and to
endanger or even preclude our
everlasting salvation. Cease
from thine own wisdom — From
that carnal wisdom which is
natural to man in his corrupt
estate, and which persuades men
to believe that it is their
interest to use all possible
means to get riches, and that
the happiness of their lives
consists in the abundance of
their possessions, directly
contrary to the assertion of our
blessed Lord, Luke 12:15. Wilt
thou set thine eyes — Wilt thou
look with earnestness and eager
desire; Hebrew, Wilt thou cause
thine eyes to fly; upon that
which is not — Which has no
solid and settled existence;
which is thine to have, but not
to hold; which is always upon
the wing, and ofttimes gone in
the twinkling of an eye. For
riches certainly make themselves
wings — The wings on which they
fly away are of their own
making: like the wings of a
fowl, they grow out of
themselves. They have in
themselves the principles of
their own corruption, their own
moth and rust. They are wasting
in their own nature, and like a
handful of sand, which, when
griped, slips through the
fingers. “The covetous man,”
says Henry, “sits hatching and
brooding over his wealth till it
be fledged, as the chickens
under the hen, and then it is
gone. Or, as if a man should be
enamoured with a flight of wild
fowl that light in his field,
and call them his own, because
they are upon his ground;
whereas, if he happen to come
near them, they take wing
immediately, and are gone to
another man’s field.” They fly
away as an eagle — Swiftly,
strongly, and irrecoverably. We
quickly lose the sight and the
possession of them. Their flying
away from us is elegantly
opposed to our eyes being set,
or flying upon them, in the
beginning of the verse.
Verses 6-8
Proverbs 23:6-8. Eat not thou
the bread of him that hath an
evil eye — Of an envious or
covetous man, who secretly
grudges thee the meat which is
set before thee. For as he
thinketh in his heart, so is he
— Thou must not judge of him by
his words, for in them he
professes kindness, (as it
follows,) but by the constant
temper of his mind, which he
hath fully discovered to all
that know him by the course of
his life. Eat and drink, saith
he, but his heart is not with
thee — He hath no sincere love
to thee, but inwardly grudges
thee that which he outwardly
offers thee. The morsel, &c.,
shall thou vomit up again — When
thou perceivest his churlish
disposition and conduct, his
meat will be loathsome to thee,
and thou wilt wish that thou
hadst never eaten it; and lose
thy sweet words — Thy pleasant
discourse, wherewith thou didst
adorn his table, and design both
to delight and profit him, is
lost, and of no effect to him,
and thou wilt be ready to repent
of it.
Verse 9
Proverbs 23:9. Speak not in the
ears of a fool — Cast not away
good counsels upon obstinate and
incorrigible sinners: see
Matthew 7:6. For he will despise
the wisdom of thy words — He
will scornfully reject thy wise
and good admonitions.
Verse 10-11
Proverbs 23:10-11. Enter not
into the fields of the
fatherless — Either to take away
their goods, or rather, to
possess their lands, as this
phrase is used, 2 Samuel 5:6.
For their Redeemer is mighty —
Hebrew, גאלם, their near
kinsman, to whom it belongs to
avenge their wrongs, and to
recover and maintain their
rights: see on Leviticus 25:25;
Numbers 35:12; Job 19:25. God is
pleased to call himself the
kinsman of the fatherless, to
show how much he concerns
himself for the relief of
oppressed and helpless persons.
Verse 17-18
Proverbs 23:17-18. Let not thy
heart envy sinners — Let not the
consideration of their present
impunity and prosperity excite
thee either to envy them, or to
approve and imitate their evil
courses; but be thou in the fear
of the Lord — Reverence the
presence of the Divine Majesty,
and dread his power and justice,
and those judgments which he
hath prepared for sinners, and
thou wilt see no cause to envy,
but rather to pity them; all the
day long — Not only when thou
art in trouble, but in all times
and conditions. For surely there
is an end — An expected and
happy end for such as fear God;
or, a reward, as the word אחרית,
here used, is rendered, Proverbs
24:20. And thine expectation
shall not be cut off — Thou
shalt certainly enjoy that good
which thou expectest, as the
wicked shall lose that happiness
which they enjoy.
Verses 19-21
Proverbs 23:19-21. Hear and be
wise — Rest not in hearing, but
see that thou grow wiser and
better by it. And guide thy
heart in the way — Order the
whole course of thine affections
and actions in God’s way, often
termed the way, as has been
observed before. Be not among
wine-bibbers — Avoid their
conversation and company, lest
thou be either infected or
injured by them. The drunkard
and the glutton shall come to
poverty — Which is the common
effect of revelling, feasting,
and riotous living. Drowsiness
shall clothe a man with rags —
They are wont to be attended
also with immoderate sleeping,
laziness, and neglect of all
business, which as certainly
will reduce men to extreme
beggary as gluttony or
drunkenness does.
Verses 22-25
Proverbs 23:22-25. Hearken unto
thy father that begat thee — And
who, therefore, desires and
seeks thy good in all his
counsels; and despise not thy
mother when she is old — When
the infirmity of age is added to
that of her sex, which is apt to
produce contempt. Buy the truth
— Purchase a true and saving
knowledge of God, and his will
concerning thy salvation, upon
any terms; spare no pains nor
cost to obtain it; and sell it
not — Do not forget it, nor
forsake it for any worldly
advantages, as unthinking
backsliders frequently do; also
wisdom and understanding —
Whereby thou mayest be enabled
to love and practice the truths
known and received. The father
of the righteous shall greatly
rejoice — “For there is no
greater joy a parent can have
than to see his son take
virtuous ways; which, as it is
the only wisdom, so it gives
both parents and children the
highest pleasure and
satisfaction.” Thy father and
thy mother shall be glad — “Let
not thy father and mother then
want this singular pleasure;
but, by thy well-doing, fill the
heart of her that bare thee with
joy and triumph; who, for all
the pains and care she hath had
in thy birth, and about thy
education, desires no other
requital but only this.” —
Bishop Patrick. Thus Solomon
twice urges the same
consideration, as a powerful
argument to prevail with all
children, that are not void of
natural affection, to labour to
be wise and good, that so they
may rejoice the hearts of their
parents, to whom they are under
such high and indelible
obligations.
Verse 26
Proverbs 23:26. My son, give me
thy heart — Receive my counsels
with thy whole heart; for the
heart being esteemed by the
ancients the seat of the
affections, Solomon may,
accordingly, be properly
understood as calling upon his
disciples to embrace his
doctrine and injunctions with
the warmest affection, and to
reduce them to practice without
any reluctance or delay; and let
thine eyes observe my ways — Let
thy mind seriously and
practically consider the ways
which I prescribe to thee. Or,
rather, God is here speaking by
Solomon, and saying to every
true child of his, Son,
daughter, give me thy heart.
Certainly the heart is that
which God especially requires,
and calls for from every one of
us; whatever we give, if we do
not give him our hearts, it will
not be accepted: he must be the
chief object of our love. Our
thoughts must dwell upon him;
and on him, as our chief good
and highest end, our most
fervent affections must be
placed. We must not think to
divide our hearts between him
and the world: he will have the
whole heart, or no part of it.
Thou shalt love the Lord thy God
with all thy heart.
Verse 27-28
Proverbs 23:27-28. For a whore
is a deep ditch — In which a man
is in evident danger of
perdition, and out of which it
is exceeding difficult to
escape. See the note on Proverbs
22:14. She lieth in wait, &c. —
Watching all opportunities of
insnaring young men to their
destruction; and increaseth the
transgressors among men — She is
the cause of innumerable sins
against God, and against the
souls and bodies of those whom
she insnares, and by her arts
and wicked example involves many
persons in the guilt of her
sins. She is of no other use in
the world, which already is too
bad, but to make it worse, by
increasing the number of lewd,
faithless, and incorrigible
sinners.
Verse 29-30
Proverbs 23:29-30. Who hath wo?
— From the sin of lewdness, he
proceeds to that of drunkenness,
which frequently accompanies it.
As if he had said, If thou
intendest to avoid such filthy
practices, avoid intemperance;
the lamentable effects of which
are so many, that it is a hard
matter to enumerate them. For
who hath sorrow? who hath
contentions? — If thou
considerest who they are that
run themselves into all manner
of mischief; that are never out
of danger, but are engaged in
perpetual quarrels, disturbing
the neighbourhood where they
live by their noise, tumult, and
fighting; who hath babbling? —
The sin of much and impertinent
talking, or clamour and
confusion, usual among
drunkards; who hath wounds
without cause? — Wounds
received, not in the defence of
his country, but for frivolous
causes, and on slight occasions;
who hath redness of eyes — Which
men, inflamed with wine, are
very apt to have. They that
tarry long at the wine, &c. —
Thou wilt find they are such as
are so in love with wine, that
they neither willingly stir from
it, nor content themselves with
the ordinary sort, but make a
diligent search for the richest
and most generous kinds; they
that go to seek mixed wine —
Wine mixed with divers
ingredients, to make it strong
and delicious. Hebrew, ממסךְ,
mixture, mixed drinks of several
sorts suited to their palates.
Verse 31-32
Proverbs 23:31-32. Look not thou
upon the wine — Earnestly, so as
to inflame thine appetite toward
it; in which sense men are
forbidden to look upon a woman,
Job 31:1; Matthew 5:28. When it
is red — Which was the colour of
the best wines in that country,
which therefore are called
blood, Genesis 49:11;
Deuteronomy 32:14; and such were
used by them in the passover.
Red wine, it appears, is still
more esteemed in the East than
white. And, according to
Olearius, in his account of his
travels, it is customary with
the Armenian Christians, in
Persia, to put Brazil wood or
saffron into their wine, to give
it a higher colour, when it is
not so red as they wish, as they
make no account of white wine.
At the last it biteth like a
serpent, &c. — It hurts the body
in many respects, impairs the
vigour of the mind, wastes the
estate, stains the character,
wounds the conscience, and,
without repentance, destroys the
soul. “Remember,” says Bishop
Patrick, in his paraphrase here,
“that the pleasure will be
attended at last with
intolerable pains; when it works
like so much poison in thy
veins, and casts thee into
diseases as hard to cure as the
biting of a serpent, or the
stinging of a basilisk;” for so
the word צפעני, here rendered
adder, properly signifies.
Verse 33-34
Proverbs 23:33-34. Thine eyes
shall behold strange women —
With evil intent: lustful, nay,
adulterous desires will be
excited in thee, which thou wilt
neither have inclination nor
power to restrain and govern;
and thy heart shall utter
perverse things — Will discover
its wickedness by unseemly and
perverse, perhaps, even by
filthy, scurrilous, and
blasphemous speeches. Thou shalt
be as he that lieth down — To
sleep; in the midst of the sea —
That is, in a ship in the midst
of the sea; as he that lieth
upon the top of the mast — The
worst part of a ship to lie down
upon, because of its perpetual
tossings, and the hazard of him
that sleeps upon it. “Thou wilt
grow so perfectly senseless,
that not only thy most important
business will be neglected, but
thou wilt un-thinkingly run
thyself into the extremest
hazards, without any
apprehension of danger: being no
more able to direct thy course,
than a pilot who sleeps when a
ship is tossed in the midst of
the sea; or to take notice of
the peril thou art in, than he
that falls asleep on the top of
a mast, where he was set to keep
the watch.”
Verse 35
Proverbs 23:35. They have
stricken me, shalt thou say, &c.
— “And to complete thy misery,
shouldst thou be not only mocked
and abused, but beaten also,
thou thyself wilt confess
afterward, that it made no
impression on thee:
nay, shouldst thou be most
lamentably bruised, thou wilt
neither know who did it, nor at
all regard it; but, as if no
harm had befallen thee, no
sooner wilt thou open thine
eyes, but thou wilt stupidly
seek an occasion to be drunk and
beaten again.” — Bishop Patrick. |