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Proverbs 14

Cambridge

Proverbs 14:1

  1. Every wise woman] Some texts read the wisdoms (plur. of excellence, as in Proverbs 9:1) of women. And so in next clause, the folly (of women). A slightly different reading is followed by A.V. and R.V., the wise ones of (among) women, buildeth every one her house; σοφαὶγυναῖκες, LXX.; sapiens mulier, Vulg. Comp. Her wise princesses, lit. the wise (ones) of her princesses, Judges 5:29. her hands] her own hands, R.V., as indicated by the order of the words in the Heb.: “with her hands plucketh it down.”

Proverbs 14:2

  1. The proverb maintains the intimate relation between piety and probity.

Proverbs 14:3

  1. a rod of pride] This may mean either that he smites with his proud words as with a rod (comp. Isaiah 11:4, where however the Heb. word is different); or (preserving better the antithesis between the two clauses of the verse) that his own mouth furnishes “a rod for his pride” (R.V. marg.); his own words cause his humiliation. Instead of “rod,” however, we may render “shoot” (R.V. marg.): proud words spring out of his mouth like a sucker or branch (comp. Isaiah 11:1, the only other place in which the same Heb. word occurs).

Proverbs 14:4

  1. the crib is clean] and therefore the labour of cleansing and replenishing it is avoided; but the fruit of such labour is lost also. This is what we ourselves understand by a “proverb,” a salient example of a general law. See Introd. ch. II. p. 16.

Proverbs 14:5

  1. will utter] uttereth, R.V., “Heb. breatheth out” marg.; ἐκκαίειψευδῆ, LXX., in the sense of kindleth, bloweth into flame.

Proverbs 14:6

  1. findeth it not] Lit. and it is not (there)! Only to the lowly and reverent does Wisdom reveal herself. Comp. Matthew 11:25.

Proverbs 14:7

  1. Go from … when thou perceivest not] Rather, Go into … and thou shalt not perceive, R.V. text. Take up your position, as it were, over against him, and contemplate him carefully, and weigh his words; and your first impression of him will be confirmed, “thou shalt not perceive” &c.

Proverbs 14:8

  1. deceit] It has been questioned whether this means self-deceit, as the parallel might seem to suggest, or deceiving others. But the design of the proverb is to shew that the two things are really one. Whereas the wisdom of the prudent consists in his understanding his own character and conduct, in its relation to God, to his neighbour and to himself, the folly of fools is that being self-deceived, they think they can deceive God and man to their own advantage. Comp. 2 Timothy 3:13.

Proverbs 14:9

  1. sin] Rather, guilt, R.V. If this rendering be adopted, the Heb. construction (a sing. verb with a plur. noun, lit. fools, he maketh &c.) will serve to individualise (comp. Proverbs 3:18), and the contrast will be between the noisy assembly of fools, each one turning into jest and ridicule the guilt he has incurred, and the “favour” (or, good will, R.V.) of God and man that rests upon the righteous. We may, however, understand the word guilt to be the subject of the sentence, and then take it in either of two senses: (a) guilt makes a mock of fools, laughing to scorn their anguish and deprecation when it overtakes them (comp. Proverbs 1:26); or (b) a guilt-offering mocks the fool, who offers it with the vain idea that it will take the place of amendment of life, for only on the upright does God’s favour rest. Comp. Isaiah 1:11-20.

Proverbs 14:10

  1. The poet of the Christian Year has caught something of the beauty and pathos of this proverb as he writes: “Each in his hidden sphere of joy or woe Our hermit spirits dwell and range apart.” “Nor e’en the tenderest heart, and next our own, Knows half the reasons why we smile or sigh”; and Matthew Arnold (quoted by Horton): “Yes! in the sea of life enisled, With echoing straits between us thrown, Dotting the shoreless watery waste, We mortal millions live alone. The islands feel the enclasping flow, And then their endless bounds they know.” It is worth quoting, if only as a foil to it, the prosaic apothegm, “None knows the weight of another’s burden,” Geo. Herbert, Jac. Prud.

Proverbs 14:13

  1. that mirth] Rather, mirth. The statement is general though not universal. “The bright talker, the merry jester, the singer of the gay song, goes home when the party separates, and on his threshold he meets the veiled sorrow of his life, and plunges into the chilly shadow in which his days are spent.” Horton.

Proverbs 14:16

  1. rageth] Or, beareth himself insolently, R.V. The rendering however, rageth, or loses his temper, is borne out by Psalms 78:21; Psalms 78:59, where both A.V. and R.V. render the same Heb. word, was wroth.

Proverbs 14:17

  1. and] Rather, but. The comparison is between hasty anger leading to folly, and deliberate malice provoking hatred.

Proverbs 14:22

  1. The LXX. add: They understand not mercy and faith who are devisers of evil, But things merciful and faithful are with them who devise good.

Proverbs 14:24

  1. The crown of the wise] i.e. the wisdom which is their crown (Proverbs 14:18) is (constitutes) their riches. It is at once an ornament and a thing of price; whereas the folly of fools is, and always remains (only) folly. It is possible, however, to render, with R.V. marg., Their riches is a crown unto the wise, gracing and graced by the wearer; but the folly of fools no wealth can ennoble; it is still only folly.

Proverbs 14:25

  1. delivereth souls] by clearing them from false accusation and establishing their innocence. a deceitful witness speaketh lies] Rather: he that uttereth (lit. breatheth) lies (causes, or is) deceit, R.V.; is a cheat, Lange. He who, in contrast to the “faithful witness,” gives false evidence obscures the truth and (it is implied) destroys, instead of “delivering” souls. The rendering of A.V. has the support both of LXX., ἐκκαίειδὲψευδῆδόλιος (sc. μάρτυς); and of Vulg. profert mendacia versipellis.

Proverbs 14:26

  1. his] i.e. the Lord’s. Ewald and others render, to his children (who feareth Jehovah) he (Jehovah) will be &c. Comp. R.V. marg.: the children of him that hath it (sc. the fear of the Lord) shall have, &c.

Proverbs 14:27

  1. Comp. Proverbs 13:14.

Proverbs 14:29

  1. slow to wrath] Comp. βραδὺςεἰςὀργήν, James 1:19. exalteth] The Heb. word may either mean, with A.V. and R.V. text, lifteth up, i.e. gives it prominence, brings it into notice; or, with R.V. marg., taketh up, and so carrieth away, as his possession. The first of these is to be preferred.

Proverbs 14:30

  1. sound] Or, tranquil, R.V. marg. (deriving the word from another root). See Proverbs 15:4 and comp. Ecclesiastes 10:4, where the same Heb. word is rendered, yielding, or gentleness, A.V. and R.V. envy] Or, jealousy, R.V. marg. See for illustrations, Genesis 4:4-5; Genesis 37:4; 1 Samuel 18:8; Esther 5:13.

Proverbs 14:31

  1. he that honoureth &c.] Rather, he that hath mercy on the needy honoureth him, R.V. Comp. Proverbs 17:5; Matthew 25:40.

Proverbs 14:32

  1. his wickedness] Lit. his evil; which may mean either, with R.V. text, the evil which he does, his evil-doing, or, with R.V. marg., the evil which he suffers, his calamity. The latter meaning preserves best the parallelism: when calamity overtakes the wicked it crushes him utterly (comp. Psalms 36:12), but even in his last extremity of death the righteous hath hope. hope in his death] which implies a belief in a future state. The same vivid contrast meets us in a more expanded form in Psalms 73. The “prosperity of the wicked,” in contrast to the hard lot of the righteous, had been the stumbling-block of the writer of the Psalm (Psalms 73:1-16). It was by considering “the end” both of the one and of the other, that his faith was re-established. The wicked are thrust down in their calamity, “How are they become a desolation in a moment! They are utterly consumed with terrors” (Proverbs 14:19): The righteous hath hope in his death, “Thou shalt guide me with thy counsel, and afterward receive me to glory” (Proverbs 14:24). Comp.

Psalms 49:14-15. It is to be noticed that in both these Psalms (Psalms 73:24; Psalms 49:15) the same word, take, or receive, is used to express the hope of the Psalmist, as that by which the translation of Enoch is described, God took him (Genesis 5:24; Hebrews 11:5). The LXX. read, “but he that trusteth in his own integrity is righteous,” ὁδὲπεποιθὼςτῇἑαυτοῦὁσιότητιδίκαιος; on which Lange observes, “may not this divergent reading owe its origin to the endeavour to gain an antithesis as exact as possible to the ‘in his wickedness’ of the first clause?”

Proverbs 14:33

  1. the midst] Rather (answering to the heart in the 1st clause) the inward part, R.V. Adopting this, we may render, either with A.V. and R.V. text, “that which is in the inward part” (i.e. their folly, comp. Proverbs 12:23); or “but in the inward part of fools it (wisdom, any modicum of it which they have or think they have), so far from resting and biding its time, is blurted out.”

Proverbs 14:35

  1. causeth shame] Or, doeth shamefully, R.V. marg. Comp. Proverbs 10:5.

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