Text -- Nehemiah 4:17 (NET)
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Neh 4:17
Wesley: Neh 4:17 - -- This is to be taken figuratively; being a proverbial speech, as when they say of a man pretending kindness, he carries bread in one hand, and a stone ...
This is to be taken figuratively; being a proverbial speech, as when they say of a man pretending kindness, he carries bread in one hand, and a stone in another. Thus must we work out our salvation, with the weapons of our warfare in our hands. For in every duty we must expect opposition from our spiritual enemies.
Clarke -> Neh 4:17
Clarke: Neh 4:17 - -- With one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other hand held a weapon - That is, he had his arms at hand, and was as fully prepared to fi...
With one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other hand held a weapon - That is, he had his arms at hand, and was as fully prepared to fight as to work. So Ovid, Epist. xi., Canace Macario, ver. 1: -
Si qua tamen caecis errabunt scripta lituris
Oblitus a dominae caede libellus erit
Dextra tenet calamum; strictum tenet altera ferrum
Et jacet in gremio charta soluta meo
If streaming blood my fatal letter stain
Imagine, ere you read, the writer slain
One hand the sword, and one the pen employs
And in my lap the ready paper lies
Dryden
By this mode of speech Canace does not intimate to her brother Macarius, that she actually held the sword in one hand while she held the pen in the other, but that she had it ready to slay herself as soon as she had written the epistle.
TSK -> Neh 4:17
TSK: Neh 4:17 - -- bare burdens : Neh 4:10
every one : That is, he had his arms at hand; and was as fully prepared to fight as to work. The builders could not possibly ...
bare burdens : Neh 4:10
every one : That is, he had his arms at hand; and was as fully prepared to fight as to work. The builders could not possibly have made any progress, if they had literally held a weapon in one of their hands; but the expression is evidently figurative, implying that every man was a much a soldier as a builder.
with one : Dan 9:25; 1Co 9:12, 1Co 16:9, 1Co 16:13; 2Co 6:7; Eph 6:11-20; Phi 1:28; 2Ti 2:3; 2Ti 4:7
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Neh 4:17
Poole: Neh 4:17 - -- This is not to be taken properly, for they could never have done their work with one hand; and the next verse tells us the sword was not in their ha...
This is not to be taken properly, for they could never have done their work with one hand; and the next verse tells us the sword was not in their hands, but by their sides: but figuratively; this being a proverbial speech, such as is frequent amongst the Latins, as when they say of a man pretending kindness with evil design, he carries bread in one hand, and a stone in another .
Haydock -> Neh 4:17
Haydock: Neh 4:17 - -- Sword. Hebrew, "dart." (Calmet) ---
The expression seems to be proverbial. So Ovid makes Canacea speak, "My right hand holds the pen, my left the...
Sword. Hebrew, "dart." (Calmet) ---
The expression seems to be proverbial. So Ovid makes Canacea speak, "My right hand holds the pen, my left the sword;" (Haydock) while I write, I am on the point of killing myself. (Calmet) Dextra tenet calamum, strictum tenet altera ferrum. (Ep. Her.)
Gill -> Neh 4:17
Gill: Neh 4:17 - -- That laid the mortar and stones upon it, and timber where it was necessary:
and they that bore burdens; that carried the mortar, stones, and timber...
That laid the mortar and stones upon it, and timber where it was necessary:
and they that bore burdens; that carried the mortar, stones, and timber to the builders, and served them:
with those that laded; which prepared the above for them, and laid them on their shoulders:
everyone with one of his hands wrought in the work, and with the other hand held a weapon; which is not to be understood strictly and literally, for without both hands they could not well perform either of the above works; but proverbially, signifying that they were intent on both working and fighting, and were ready and prepared to do the latter, as well as the former, having weapons lying by them, or girt about them, as is explained in the following verse.