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Text -- Proverbs 20:13 (NET)

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Context
20:13 Do not love sleep, lest you become impoverished; open your eyes so that you might be satisfied with food.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Poverty | Poor | Laziness | Industry | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Pro 20:13 - -- Shake off sloth and betake thyself to thy employment with diligence and vigour.

Shake off sloth and betake thyself to thy employment with diligence and vigour.

JFB: Pro 20:13 - -- Activity and diligence contrasted with sloth (Pro 6:9; Pro 10:11).

Activity and diligence contrasted with sloth (Pro 6:9; Pro 10:11).

JFB: Pro 20:13 - -- Literally, "be deprived of inheritance."

Literally, "be deprived of inheritance."

Clarke: Pro 20:13 - -- Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty - Sleep, indescribable in its nature, is an indescribable blessing; but how often is it turned into a curs...

Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty - Sleep, indescribable in its nature, is an indescribable blessing; but how often is it turned into a curse! It is like food; a certain measure of it restores and invigorates exhausted nature; more than that oppresses and destroys life. A lover of sleep is a paltry, insignificant character.

TSK: Pro 20:13 - -- Love : Pro 6:9-11, Pro 10:4, Pro 12:11, Pro 13:4, Pro 19:15, Pro 24:30-34; Rom 12:11; 2Th 3:10 open : Jon 1:6; Rom 13:11; 1Co 15:34; Eph 5:14

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Pro 20:13 - -- Open thine eyes - Be vigilant and active. That is the secret of prosperity.

Open thine eyes - Be vigilant and active. That is the secret of prosperity.

Poole: Pro 20:13 - -- Love not sleep i.e. immoderate sleep, or sloth, or idleness. Take sleep because necessity requires it, not from any love to it. Open thine eyes awa...

Love not sleep i.e. immoderate sleep, or sloth, or idleness. Take sleep because necessity requires it, not from any love to it.

Open thine eyes awake out of sleep, shake off sloth, and betake thyself to thy employment with diligence and rigour.

Haydock: Pro 20:13 - -- Sleep. Septuagint, "back-biting, that thou mayst not be taken off." (Haydock)

Sleep. Septuagint, "back-biting, that thou mayst not be taken off." (Haydock)

Gill: Pro 20:13 - -- Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty,.... Sleep is a very great natural blessing; it is a gift of God, what nature requires, and is desirable; it...

Love not sleep, lest thou come to poverty,.... Sleep is a very great natural blessing; it is a gift of God, what nature requires, and is desirable; it is to be loved, though not immoderately; it is sweet to a man, and what he should be thankful for; yet should not indulge himself in to the neglect of the proper business of life; nor to be used but at the proper time for it; for the eye is made for sight, and not for sleep only, as Aben Ezra observes, connecting the words with the preceding; and therefore should not be kept shut and inattentive to business, which must necessarily end in poverty and want; see Pro 6:9; and so spiritual sleep and slothfulness bring on a spiritual poverty in the souls of men, both as to the exercise of grace and the performance of duty;

open thine eyes, and thou shall be satisfied with bread; that is, open thine eyes from sleep, awake and keep so, and be sedulous and industrious in the business of thy calling; so shalt thou have a sufficiency of food for thyself and family; see Pro 12:11. It may be applied to awaking out of sleep in a spiritual sense, and to a diligent attendance to duty and the use of means, whereby the souls of men come to be satisfied with the goodness of the Lord, and the fatness of his house; see Eph 5:14.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 20:13 Heb “bread” (so KJV, ASV, NRSV), although the term often serves in a generic sense for food in general.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

MHCC: Pro 20:13 - --Those that indulge themselves, may expect to want necessaries, which should have been gotten by honest labour.

Matthew Henry: Pro 20:13 - -- Note, 1. Those that indulge themselves in their ease may expect to want necessaries, which should have been gotten by honest labour. "Therefore, tho...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 20:13 - -- 13 Love not sleep, lest thou become poor; Open thine eyes, and have enough to eat. What is comprehended in the first line here is presented in det...

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...

Constable: Pro 19:1--22:17 - --4. Further advice for pleasing God 19:1-22:16 As was true in the chapter 10-15 section, this one (16:1-22:16) also becomes more difficult to outline a...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE NATURE AND USE OF PROVERBS.--A proverb is a pithy sentence, concisely expressing some well-established truth susceptible of various illustrations ...

TSK: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The wisdom of all ages, from the highest antiquity, has chosen to compress and communicate its lessons in short, compendious sentences, and in poetic ...

TSK: Proverbs 20 (Chapter Introduction) Overview

Poole: Proverbs 20 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 20

MHCC: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The subject of this book may be thus stated by an enlargement on the opening verses. 1. The Proverbs of Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel. 2. ...

Matthew Henry: Proverbs (Book Introduction) An Exposition, With Practical Observations, of The Proverbs We have now before us, I. A new author, or penman rather, or pen (if you will) made use o...

Constable: Proverbs (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is "The Proverbs of Solo...

Constable: Proverbs (Outline) Outline I. Discourses on wisdom chs. 1-9 A. Introduction to the book 1:1-7 ...

Constable: Proverbs Proverbs Bibliography Aitken, Kenneth T. Proverbs. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1986. Alden...

Haydock: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PROVERBS. INTRODUCTION. This book is so called, because it consists of wise and weighty sentences, regulating the morals of men; and...

Gill: Proverbs (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PROVERBS This book is called, in some printed Hebrew copies, "Sepher Mishle", the Book of Proverbs; the title of it in the Vulgate ...

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