Proverbs 10
CambridgeII. First Collection of Pro 10:1 to Proverbs 22:16 Ch. 10. Title. The Proverbs of SolomonAt this point we pass from the direct and continuous appeal of the opening chapters of the Book to the first and by far the largest Collection of proverbs proper, that is to say of short and for the most part disconnected maxims, each of them contained as a rule in a couplet or distich formed strictly on the model of Hebrew parallelism. “Golden sayings,” Maurer calls them, “not unworthy of Solomon, and fitted to form and fashion the whole life.” It is only however as regards the mould in which it is cast, not in its tone or principles, that the teaching of the Book takes here a new departure. In this first Collection each verse contains a proverb, generally antithetic, and consists of two members only. On the apparent exception, Proverbs 19:7, see note there.
Proverbs 10:1
- heaviness] or sorrow, as the same somewhat uncommon word is rendered in Proverbs 17:21. It is perhaps significant that the first proverb deals with so fundamental a relation of human society.
Proverbs 10:2
- Treasures of wickedness … righteousness] The contrast would seem to be between “wickedness” in its highest prosperity and success, when it has amassed “treasures,” when it has “found all precious substance and filled the house with spoil” (Proverbs 1:13), and “righteousness,” in itself considered, independently of the consequences which may attach to it. Comp. Proverbs 11:4.
Proverbs 10:3
- to famish] Comp. Psalms 37:25; and for the soul’s highest hungering, Matthew 5:6. casteth away the substance] Rather, thrusteth away (as Gehazi would have done the Shunammite, 2 Kings 4:27) the desire, R.V.
Proverbs 10:4
- He becometh poor] It has been thought that the change of a single vowel point would give A slack hand maketh poor, which is an exact parallel to the second clause of the verse, and is adopted by the Vulg., egestatem operata est manus remissa.
Proverbs 10:5
- sleepeth] Sleeps heavily, goes fast to sleep. Stertit, Vulg. Comp. Jonah 1:5-6, where the Heb. word is the same. This is an example of an exactly balanced proverb in the wording of the two clauses, especially if with R.V. marg. we render literally, a son that doeth wisely … that doeth shamefully. The LXX., having introduced another proverb at the beginning of this verse: “A son who receives instruction shall be wise, And shall serve himself of the fool as his minister,” gives as the equivalent of our present proverb, “A prudent son shall be saved from the heat, But a son that is a transgressor shall be carried away by the wind in harvest.”
Proverbs 10:6
- violence covereth &c.] This, which is the rendering both of A.V. and R.V. text, is to be preferred to the rendering of R.V. marg., “the mouth of the wicked covereth violence,” i.e. in what he says there is a covert purpose of violence, which he endeavours to conceal. So rendered it may mean either (a) the violence of the wicked man himself covers his mouth—he never opens it without pouring forth violence; and then perhaps we are to complete the parallelism by supplying from the first clause, “you may judge therefore what comes upon his head”; or (b) in more obvious parallelism, instead of the blessings which all men pour upon the head of the just, the mouth of the wicked they cover with violence, with reproaches, and it may be with blows (Acts 23:2). To this, however, it is objected that the Heb. word always connotes wrongful treatment. The idea of covering the mouth as a sign of condemnation is farfetched, and it is not borne out by the passages cited in support of it (Esther 7:8; Leviticus 13:45; Ezekiel 24:17; Micah 3:7), in all of which it is the “lip” or the “face,” and not the “mouth” which is covered.
Proverbs 10:8
- a prating fool] A happy rendering, lit. the foolish of lips. shall fall] Or, shall be overthrown, or laid low. R.V. marg.
Proverbs 10:9
- known] i.e. found out. Comp. 1 Timothy 5:24; 1 Timothy 3:9. Some, however, render, “shall be punished,” shall be taught by bitter experience his folly, comparing Jeremiah 31:19, where the same Heb. word is rendered, “I was instructed.”
Proverbs 10:10
- a prating fool &c.] The repetition of this clause in a new connection is interesting. In Proverbs 10:8 the contrast is between a wise heart and an unbridled tongue, in its consequences to its possessor. Here it is between crafty reticence which injures others, and foolish loquacity which injures oneself. “The Sept. and Syr. read, But he that rebuketh openly maketh peace,” R.V. marg.; but nothing is gained by the change.
Proverbs 10:11
- violence covereth &c.] See Proverbs 10:6, note. The former (a) of the meanings suggested there best suits the parallelism here.
Proverbs 10:12
- love covereth &c.] See 1 Peter 4:8, where the use of charity for love in A.V. obscures the fact that it is probably a quotation of this proverb. The LXX., however, has here a different reading (πάνταςδὲτοὺςμὴφιλονεικοῦνταςκαλύπτειφιλία), so that the Apostle must either have quoted from the Hebrew, or taken the proverb as it was then in common use. Comp. James 5:20.
Proverbs 10:13
- that hath understanding] or, discernment, R.V. The contrast is heightened by pursuing in the second clause the want of understanding to its consequences. The Speaker’s Comm. quotes the Egyptian proverb, “A youth hath a back that he may attend to his teacher.”
Proverbs 10:14
- near destruction] Rather, is a near, or imminent (R.V. a present) destruction: “it is like a house ready to fall at any moment.” The antithesis is between wise men who treasure their wisdom to be used as occasion serves, and a fool who blurts out his folly, and may at any moment bring upon himself and others its disastrous consequences. Comp. Proverbs 12:23. The A.V. follows LXX., ἐγγίζεισυντριβῇ; and Vulg., confusioni proximum est.
Proverbs 10:15
- destruction] The Heb. word is the same as in Proverbs 10:14. If we take it here, too, to denote a tottering building, ready to fall upon its tenant and bury him beneath its ruins, the parallelism is complete. We have here an instance of the candour and sobriety of the moral teaching of this Book. Wealth has its advantages and poverty its drawbacks, and the fact is honestly stated. There is nothing of the unreality which represents poverty as in itself desirable, or wealth as in itself to be avoided. Comp. Proverbs 18:11.
Proverbs 10:16
- fruit] or, increase, R.V. It has been thought that a contrast is here drawn between the actual “labour” of the righteous which, however toilsome in itself, has its issue in life, and the “increase,” the fruit of labour, of the wicked, which is sin. Comp. Proverbs 10:2 above. But “labour” may mean “the fruit of labour”, or “increase”, which for the righteous tends to what truly may be called “life.” The same Heb. word is rendered “wages,” Leviticus 19:13, and “reward,” Psalms 109:20. sin] which involves death, the opposite of “life” in the first clause of the parallelism. The Speaker’s Comm. suggests that this maxim is intended to guard against a misunderstanding of Pro 10:15.
Proverbs 10:17
- in the way &c.] Rather (with R.V. marg.), A way of life is he that heedeth correction:But he that forsaketh reproof causeth to err. The one by his example and influence is a way of life to his fellow men; in measure and degree he can say what only the Perfect Example could say fully, “I am the way.” The other on the contrary not only goes himself, but leads others, astray.
Proverbs 10:18
- with lying lips] Rather, is of lying lips, R.V.
Proverbs 10:19
- A Greek parallel has been cited from Stobζus: πολυλογίαπολλὰσφάλματαἔχει, and a Latin from Cato: Virtutem primam esse puta compescere linguam. Proximus ille Deo est qui scit ratione tacere.
Proverbs 10:20
- tongue … heart] The force of the antithesis lies in these two words: even the tongue of the one, but the very heart of the other.
Proverbs 10:21
- feed] In the wider sense perhaps which the word commonly has, supply the wants of, as a shepherd does.
Proverbs 10:22
- addeth no sorrow] It is without alloy, free from the drawbacks and anxieties which attach to earthly riches. Or, with Maur. and R.V. marg., toil, or anxiety, addeth nothing thereto. Comp. Matthew 6:25-34; Psalms 127:2.
Proverbs 10:23
- hath wisdom] Rather, And so is wisdom (a sport or pastime) to a man of understanding. She imparts to him her own joy, or exultation. Comp. Proverbs 8:30, where the Heb. word is the same. See John 15:11.
Proverbs 10:25
- As &c.] Rather, When the whirlwind passeth the wicked is no more. The parallelism is thus best preserved. Like the house on the sand when the whirlwind passes over it, the wicked shall be swept away (Psalms 37:10): like the house on the rock unshaken by the storm, the righteous shall stand firm as “an everlasting foundation.”
Proverbs 10:26
- them that send him] Contrast Proverbs 25:13.
Proverbs 10:27
- Comp. Proverbs 3:2.
Proverbs 10:29
- shall be] These words should not be introduced. “The way of the Lord” is the subject of both clauses of the verse: it is at once a “stronghold” and a “destruction,” or “ruin” (see Proverbs 10:15, note: the Heb. word is the same) to the two opposite classes of men. So R.V.: The way of the Lord is a stronghold to the upright; But it is a destruction to the workers of iniquity. “The way of the Lord” may mean either His way of dealing with men (comp. Psalms 18:30, [Heb. 31]), or the way which He has prescribed for men to walk in (Psalms 27:11). In the latter case, it may be the destruction of those who do not keep it, because to have known and not kept it is their condemnation. Comp. John 3:19. See also Hosea 14:9.
Proverbs 10:30
- the earth] Comp. Matthew 5:5; or, the land (sc. of Canaan), as R.V. Comp. Proverbs 21:21-22; Exodus 20:12. The law holds good, though its sphere of action may vary.
Proverbs 10:31
- bringeth forth] as a tree its leaves or fruit: “buddeth with,” R.V. marg.
Proverbs 10:32
- speaketh] So R.V. text: “is,” R.V. marg. Others supply the verb “knoweth” from the first clause, as in Proverbs 10:29.
