
Text -- Proverbs 17:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 17:12
Barnes: Pro 17:12 - -- The large brown bear of Syria, in her rage at the loss of her whelps, was to the Israelites the strongest type of brute ferocity. Compare 2Sa 17:8; ...
Poole -> Pro 17:12
Poole: Pro 17:12 - -- Robbed of her whelps when she is most cruel and fierce.
In his folly in the heat of his lust or passion, because the danger is greater, all things ...
Robbed of her whelps when she is most cruel and fierce.
In his folly in the heat of his lust or passion, because the danger is greater, all things considered, and more unavoidable.
Haydock -> Pro 17:12
Haydock: Pro 17:12 - -- Fool. Hebrew, "fool in his folly." The danger is not greater in meeting (Calmet) a female bear, though it be the most terrible. (Aristotle, Anim. ...
Fool. Hebrew, "fool in his folly." The danger is not greater in meeting (Calmet) a female bear, though it be the most terrible. (Aristotle, Anim. ix. 1.)
Gill -> Pro 17:12
Gill: Pro 17:12 - -- Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man,.... A bear is a very fierce and furious creature, especially a she bear; and she is still more so when rob...
Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man,.... A bear is a very fierce and furious creature, especially a she bear; and she is still more so when robbed of her whelps, which she has just whelped, and been at great pains to lick into shape and form, by which her fondness to them is increased; and therefore, being stripped of them, is full of rage; and ranging about in quest of them, falls furiously upon the first she meets with. Jerom n observes, that those who have written of the nature of beasts say, that, among all wild beasts, there is none more fierce than a she bear, when she has lost her whelps, or wants food. And yet, as terrible and as dangerous as it is, it is safer and more eligible of the two, to meet an enraged bear in those circumstances,
rather than a fool in his folly; in the height of his folly, in a paroxysm or fit of that; in the heat of his lusts, and the pursuit of them, in which there is no stopping him, or turning him from them; especially in the heat of passion and anger, which exceeds that of a bear, and is not so easily avoided. Jarchi applies it to such fools as seduce persons to idolatry, whom to meet is very dangerous: such are the followers of the man of sin, who have no mercy on the souls of men they deceive, and whose damnation they are the cause of; and who are implacably cruel to those who will not join with them in their idolatrous worship; the beast of Rome, his feet are as the feet of a bear, Rev 13:2; and one had better meet a bear than him and his followers.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 17:12 The human, who is supposed to be rational and intelligent, in such folly becomes more dangerous than the beast that in this case acts with good reason...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 17:12
Geneva Bible: Pro 17:12 Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man, rather than ( f ) a fool in his folly.
( f ) By which he means the wicked in his rage, who has no fear of...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 17:12
Matthew Henry -> Pro 17:12
Matthew Henry: Pro 17:12 - -- Note, 1. A passionate man is a brutish man. However at other times he may have some wisdom, take him in his passion ungoverned, and he is a fool in...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 17:12
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 17:12 - --
12 Meet a bear robbed of one of her whelps,
Only not a fool in his folly.
The name of the bear, as that of the cow, Job 21:10; Psa 144:14, preserv...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 17:1-28
Constable: Pro 10:1--22:17 - --II. COUPLETS EXPRESSING WISDOM 10:1--22:16
Chapters 1-9, as we have seen, contain discourses that Solomon eviden...
