Verse 1
Proverbs 30:1. The words of Agur
— Who this Agur was no one has
ever yet been able to show: it
is probable, however, that both
he and Jakeh, his father, were
well known in Israel at the time
this chapter and the next were
added to the preceding parts of
the proverbs. Jakeh is thought
to have lived either in
Solomon’s time or soon after,
and to have been famous in his
generation for wisdom and piety;
even the prophecy — The
prophetical instruction; for as
prophets were public preachers
as well as foretellers of things
to come, so their sermons, no
less than their predictions, are
commonly called their
prophecies. Ithiel and Ucal —
Two friends and cotemporaries of
Agur, who desired his
instructions.
Verse 2-3
Proverbs 30:2-3. Surely I am
more brutish, &c. — This he
utters from an humble and modest
apprehension of his own
ignorance. I neither learned
wisdom — I have not been taught
in the schools of wisdom; nor
have the knowledge of the holy —
Hebrew, קדשׁים, of holy persons,
namely, of the holy prophets. I
have not such divine
inspirations as prophets,
strictly so called, have
received.
Verse 4
Proverbs 30:4. Who hath
ascended, &c. — What mere man
hath ascended into heaven to
learn the mind of God, who
dwells there? None have. And
descended — To teach men below
what he had learned above. No
man can fully know and teach us
these things unless he hath been
in heaven, and sent down from
thence to the earth for that
end. Who hath gathered the wind
in his fists — To hold them in,
or let them out at his pleasure?
And none but he who made and
governs all creatures, can know
and teach these things. The
waters — Those above, the
clouds, and those below, the
sea, which God keeps as it were
within doors, and the waters
which he shuts up in the bowels
of the earth. The ends of the
earth — The whole earth, from
one end to another, which God
upholdeth in the air by the word
of his power. If thou canst tell
— If thou thinkest there be any
man who can do these things,
produce his name; or, if he be
dead, the name of any of his
posterity.
Verse 5
Proverbs 30:5. Every word of God
is pure — You must not expect
the full knowledge of divine
mysteries from me, nor from any
man, but from the word of God,
which is a certain rule, both
for your faith and practice,
because every part of it is
holy, and true, and good, and
there is not the least mixture
of falsehood or folly in it, as
there is in all the words and
writings of men. He is a shield
unto them that trust in him —
Which supposes their knowledge
of him by his word, Psalms 9:10,
and implies their reliance on
his promises, joined with
obedience to his commands.
Verse 6
Proverbs 30:6. Add thou not unto
his words — As the word of God
is pure, do not thou corrupt it,
by adding to it thine own or
other men’s inventions, or
opinions; lest he reprove thee —
By words or deeds; by
discovering thy folly, and
bringing thee to deserved shame
and punishment; and thou be
found a liar — Delivering thy
own fancies and notions in the
name, and as the truths of God,
and thus being guilty of the
worst of forgeries.
Verse 7-8
Proverbs 30:7-8. Two things have
I required of thee — I do most
earnestly and especially desire:
deny me them not — Hebrew, אל
תמנע ממני, withhold them not
from me; before I die — That is,
while I live, as being things of
great and continual necessity,
for thy honour and service, and
my own good. Remove far from me
— From my heart, and from the
course of my life: vanity — That
Isaiah , 1 st, All false and
vain opinions, namely,
concerning God and things
divine; all unbelief, idolatry,
and superstition: and, 2d,
Vanity of heart and life; a vain
conversation, or the love of the
vain things of this world; and
lies — All falsehood and deceit
in my words and actions, and in
my conduct toward God or men.
This is the first of Agur’s
petitions. Give me neither
poverty nor riches — This is his
second request, which may seem
to have some reference to the
former, poverty being commonly
an occasion of, or temptation
to, the sin of lying; and riches
being the great occasions of,
and enticements to, vanity.
Thus, as his first petition was
against the sins themselves, so
this latter is against the
occasions of them. Feed me with
food convenient for me —
Moderate and suitable, both to
my natural necessities and to
that condition of life in which
thou hast placed me. And this
mediocrity of condition is so
amiable, that it has often been
desired by wise heathen as more
eligible than a state of the
greatest plenty and glory.
Verse 9
Proverbs 30:9. Lest I be full,
and deny thee — By trusting to
riches, which is a denial of
God, and by un-thankfulness for,
and the abuse of his mercies.
And say, Who is the Lord — That
I should obey or serve him? I do
not need him: I can live without
him. Lest by degrees, I should
arrive at downright atheism or
infidelity, which is most
incident to rich and great men,
as is manifest from experience.
Or lest I be poor and steal —
Lest, being in a state of
poverty, I be under a strong
temptation to dishonesty, and
become injurious to others for
my own relief; and take the name
of my God in vain — Use false
oaths, either to vindicate
myself when I am suspected or
accused of theft, and my oath is
required according to the law,
Exodus 22:8-11; or to gratify
others for filthy lucre, as poor
men frequently do.
Verse 10
Proverbs 30:10. Accuse not a
servant unto his master —
Without sufficient cause, for
otherwise, in some cases, this
may be a duty. As if he had
said, A servant’s condition is
in itself mean and miserable,
and therefore thou shouldest not
make it worse without great and
apparent necessity. Lest he
curse thee — Desire God to
punish thee, which, though it
might be sinful in him, yet,
being deserved by thee, thou
wouldst have reason to fear and
expect; and thou be found guilty
— By God, who is always ready to
plead the cause of the
afflicted.
Verses 11-14
Proverbs 30:11-14. There is a
generation — A sort of men,
abominable both to God and men,
which is implied concerning
these and the following kind of
sinners, mentioned in these
verses; that curseth their
father — And mother too, as it
follows; ungrateful and
unnatural children. There are
those that are pure in their own
eyes — Who not only pretend to
others, but sincerely think
within themselves, that they are
truly religious persons, and in
all respects such as they should
be; and yet are not washed from
their filthiness — Not delivered
from the guilt or power of their
sins; not saved by the washing
of regeneration, and the
renewing of the Holy Ghost,
Titus 3:5; not justified, not
sanctified, in the name of the
Lord, the Messiah, and by the
Spirit of our God, 1 Corinthians
6:11. Reader, is this thy case?
There is a generation, O how
lofty are their eyes! — With
what disdain do they look upon
their neighbours! At what a
distance do they expect every
body to keep! A sort of men that
are proud and insolent,
advancing themselves, and
despising all others in
comparison of themselves, and
showing the pride of their
hearts in their countenances and
behaviour. There is a generation
whose teeth, &c. — Extortioners,
and cruel oppressors, who grind
the faces of the poor.
Verse 15
Proverbs 30:15. The horseleech —
An insatiable creature, sucking
blood till it be ready to burst;
hath two daughters — The
following things, which resemble
the horseleech in their
insatiableness, nothing being
more common than to call those
persons or things the sons or
daughters of those whose example
they imitate. And whereas it is
objected that they are not only
two, but three, yea, four, as is
said in the next clause, the
answer is easy, that though he
begin with two, yet he proceeds
from thence to three and four,
all which are said to be the
daughters of the horseleech, if
the words be rendered properly,
as they are in the Hebrew, as we
shall presently see. Crying,
Give, give — Never filled, but
always craving, and ready to
receive more and more. There are
three — It should rather have
been rendered, Yea, three, or
they (namely, the daughters of
the horse- leech) are three;
that are never satisfied — This
is added to explain the former
clause, Give, give, and to show
the cause of that excessive
desire of more, namely, they are
not contented with what they
have. Four things — Or, yea,
they are four; which say not, It
is enough — Hebrew, הון, it is
wealth, it is abundance. Those
are never rich that are always
coveting.
Verse 16
Proverbs 30:16. The grave, and
the barren womb — As the
Israelitish women did generally
and vehemently desire to have
many children, for divers
reasons elsewhere mentioned, so
those who were barren among them
were most eager in those
desires, as we see in Rachel,
Genesis 30:1. And, as in all
other cases, persons most prize
and thirst after those good
things which they want. The
earth — Which, when it is dry,
thirsts for rain, and in a
little time sucks up great
quantities of water, and gapes
for more. And the fire — Which
continually burns, as long as
there is any combustible matter
left for it. “Some commentators
compare certain vices with these
four insatiable things: the
desire of revenge to the grave;
libidinous desires to the barren
womb; covetousness, or rather
drunkenness, to the thirsty
earth; and ambition to the
devouring fire. It is easy to
show how fitly all these are
resembled to the horseleech; it
being the vulgar saying, that
harlots, for instance, are the
horseleeches of young men; and
the servant in Plautus, when he
was about to rob the chests of
two old men, says, Jam ego me
vertam in hirudinem, &c. ‘Now
will I turn myself into a
horseleech, and suck out their
very blood.’” — Dodd.
Verse 17
Proverbs 30:17. The eye that
mocketh at his father — He that
scorneth or derideth his
parents, though it be but with a
look or gesture, and much more
when he breaks out into
opprobrious words and actions;
the ravens of the valley shall
pick it out — “They who are
guilty of such an enormous
ingratitude to their parents
shall come to an infamous end,
and their dead bodies shall be
exposed for a prey to the ravens
which frequent the brooks that
run in the valleys, and to the
young eagles, which shall pick
out those eyes in which their
scorn and derision of their
parents were wont to appear.”
Verse 18-19
Proverbs 30:18-19. There be
three things too wonderful for
me — The way whereof I cannot
trace; the way of an eagle in
the air — Either, 1st, The
manner of her flight, which is
exceedingly high, swift, and
strong: or, rather, 2d, The way,
or part of the air through which
she passes, without leaving any
print or sign in it. The way of
a serpent upon a rock — Where it
leaves no impression, nor slime,
nor token which way it went. The
way of a ship in the sea — In
which, though at present it make
a furrow, yet it is speedily
closed again; and the way of a
man with a maid — The various
methods and artifices which
young men sometimes use to slide
into the hearts of young
virgins, and win their love,
that they may persuade them
either to honourable marriage or
to unlawful lust. “I would just
observe upon this” last clause,
says Dr. Dodd, “that some have
understood it as a reference to
the incarnation of the Word in
the Virgin Mary.” The word עלמה,
rendered maid, signifies a
virgin, strictly speaking; and
גבר, rendered a man, may signify
the man, or great one, by way of
eminence. But for more on this
text the reader is referred to
Schultens’s very accurate
discussion of it. Houbigant
thinks that the sacred writer
here refers to the human
conception; which is indeed
truly miraculous and
incomprehensible.
Verse 20
Proverbs 30:20. Such — So secret
and undiscernible; is the way of
an adulterous woman — Of one
that secretly lives in the sin
of adultery. As “artful men
insinuate themselves into the
affections of young women, and
seduce them to their ruin, by an
almost infinity of stratagems,
which can never be all
unravelled, so also the
adulterous wife uses much
ingenuity to impose on her
husband, to shun detection, and
to escape shame and punishment,
by schemes and devices which
cannot all be enumerated. Every
new crime intended, or
committed, gives rise to some
new artifice; as the ship, in
some degree, deviates every time
from the course which it steered
before. The object of the
seducer is to prevail over his
prey, and that of the adulteress
to conceal her guilt; and the
whole extent of their subtlety
and ingenuity is employed to
effect those purposes.” — Scott.
Verses 21-23
Proverbs 30:21-23. For three
things the earth — That is, the
inhabitants of the earth; is
disquieted — By their insolence
and impudence they cause great
disturbances in the places where
they live; for four it cannot
rest — They are intolerable in
human societies. For a servant
when he reigneth — When he is
advanced to great power and
dignity; for such a one is
ignorant and unfit for his
place, and therefore commits
many errors; he is poor, and
therefore insatiable; he is
proud and imperious, and usually
injurious and cruel; and a fool
— A conceited fool, or an
obstinately wicked man; when he
is filled with meat — When he is
over fed, his meat and drink
heating his blood, and stirring
him up to many insolences: or,
when he abounds in wealth,
which, in that case, is like a
sword in a madman’s hand, being
an instrument and occasion of
many acts of wickedness and
mischief. For an odious woman —
Proud and perverse, and full of
other offensive qualities; when
she is married — For then she
displays all those ill humours
which before she concealed. And
a handmaid that is heir — Which
great and sudden change
transports her beside herself,
and makes her insufferably proud
and scornful.
Verses 24-28
Proverbs 30:24-28. There be four
things little, &c., but
exceeding wise — Comparatively
to other brute creatures, they
act very wisely and providently,
through the direction of Divine
Providence, which secretly
influences them to do those
things for their own
preservation which are most
agreeable to the rules of
wisdom. The design of this
observation Isaiah , 1 st, To
commend wisdom to us, and to
teach us to imitate the
providence of these creatures,
as we are excited, Proverbs 6:6,
to imitate their diligence; 2d,
To keep us from being proud of
our own wisdom, because we are
either equalled or exceeded
therein by brute creatures, in
the wise conduct of their
affairs; and, 3d, To direct us
to whom to apply for wisdom when
we want and desire it, even to
that God who inspires such
wisdom even into irrational
animals. The ants are a people —
Which title is often given to
insects, and other inferior
creatures, both in the
Scriptures, (see Joel 1:6; Joel
2:2,) and in Homer, and Virgil,
and divers other authors; yet
they prepare their meat in the
summer — Of which see on
Proverbs 6:6-8. The conies are
but a feeble folk — Rather, the
rock-rats, or mountain-mice: see
on Leviticus 11:5. Yet make
their houses in the rocks — In
the holes of rocks, where they
secure themselves against their
too potent enemies. The locusts
have no king — To rule and order
them; yet they go forth all of
them by bands — In great
numbers, in several companies,
and in exact order, as is
observed in Scripture, and in
other authors. The spider taketh
hold — Of the threads which she
spins out of her own bowels;
with her hands — With her legs,
which he calls hands, because
they serve her for the same use
to do her work, to weave her
web, and to catch gnats or
flies. And is in kings’ palaces
— Is not only in poor cottages,
but many times in palaces also.
Verses 29-31
Proverbs 30:29-31. There be
three things which go well —
That walk decently, and with
great alacrity and courage, or
whose motion is majestic; A
lion, which turneth not away for
any — Doth not flee from his
pursuers, whether men or beasts,
but walks away with a slow and
majestic pace, as is observed by
Aristotle, and many others; A
greyhound — Called in the Hebrew
זרזיר מתנים, girt in the loins,
either because its loins are
slender, and, as it were, girt
up into a little compass, or
because of its great agility and
swiftness; for the girding of
the loins was used for
expedition, in going or working.
The word is rendered by some, a
horse, namely, a war- horse,
having his armour girt about
him, and marching to battle,
which he does with great majesty
and courage, as God himself
observes at large, Job 39:19,
&c. A he-goat also — Which
marches at the head of the flock
in a grave and stately manner,
conducting them with great
courage and resolution, and
being ready to fight for them,
either with beasts or men that
oppose him. And a king — Hebrew,
a king and his people with him,
a king when he hath the hearts
and hands of his people going
along with him in his
undertakings.
Verse 32
Proverbs 30:32. If thou hast
done foolishly — “If thy pride
or thy passion hath engaged thee
in some foolish action, whereby
thou hast disgraced thyself; or
made thee contrive and endeavour
any thing that is unwarrantable,
do not add one fault to another,
by excusing it, or blaming any
body but thyself for it, much
less by quarrelling at those
that admonish thee of it, and
reprehend thee for it; but stop
at the first motion to this, and
silently acknowledge thy error.”
— Bishop Patrick.
Verse 33
Proverbs 30:33. Surely the
churning of milk — This verse,
which is connected with that
preceding, is thus paraphrased
by the last-mentioned author:
“For from little things there is
an easy progress unto greater.
And just as you see milk is
first pressed out of the cow’s
udders, and then, being shaken
in the churn, is forced into
butter; and as the nose, being
wrung, though at first it only
purge itself, yet, if it be
harder pressed, there comes out
blood; even so words, passing to
and fro, raise a heat, and that,
if continued, stirs up anger,
which frequently ends in broils
and irreconcileable quarrels.” |