
Text -- Proverbs 23:35 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
I was not sensible of it.

Wesley: Pro 23:35 - -- At present my condition requires sleep to settle myself, and when I am composed, I purpose to return to my former course.
At present my condition requires sleep to settle myself, and when I am composed, I purpose to return to my former course.
JFB -> Pro 23:35
Clarke -> Pro 23:35
Clarke: Pro 23:35 - -- They have stricken me - Though beat and abused, full of pain, and exhibiting a frightful figure; yet so drunk was he, as to be insensible who had st...
They have stricken me - Though beat and abused, full of pain, and exhibiting a frightful figure; yet so drunk was he, as to be insensible who had struck him: still, after all this abuse and disgrace, he purposes to embrace the next opportunity of repeating his excesses! Sin makes a man contemptible in life, miserable in death, and wretched to all eternity. Is it not strange, then, that men should Love it?
TSK -> Pro 23:35
TSK: Pro 23:35 - -- stricken : Pro 27:22; Jer 5:3, Jer 31:18
I felt it not : Heb. I knew it not, Eph 4:19
I will : Pro 26:11; Deu 29:19; Isa 22:13, Isa 56:12; 1Co 15:32-3...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 23:15-35
Barnes: Pro 23:15-35 - -- Another continuous exhortation rather than a collection of maxims. Pro 23:16 The teacher rejoices when the disciple’ s heart Pro 23:15 r...
Another continuous exhortation rather than a collection of maxims.
The teacher rejoices when the disciple’ s heart Pro 23:15 receives wisdom, and yet more when his lips can utter it.
Reins - See Job 19:27 note.
Envy sinners - Compare in Psa 37:1; Psa 73:3; the feeling which looks half-longingly at the prosperity of evil doers. Some connect the verb "envy"with the second clause, "envy not sinners, but envy, emulate, the fear of the Lord."
Or, For if there is an end (hereafter), thine expectations shall not be cut off. There is an implied confidence in immortality.
Riotous eaters of flesh - The word is the same as "glutton"in Pro 23:21 and Deu 21:20.
The three forms of evil that destroy reputation and tempt to waste are brought together.
Drowsiness - Specially the drunken sleep, heavy and confused.
Observe - Another reading gives, "let thine eyes delight in my ways."
As for a prey - Better as in the margin.
The transgressors - Better, the treacherous,"those that attack men treacherously.
Woe ... sorrow - The words in the original are interjections, probably expressing distress. The sharp touch of the satirist reproduces the actual inarticulate utterances of drunkenness.
Mixed wine - Wine flavored with aromatic spices, that increase its stimulating properties Isa 5:22. There is a touch of sarcasm in "go to seek."The word, elsewhere used of diligent search after knowledge Pro 25:2; Job 11:7; Psa 139:1, is used here of the investigations of connoisseurs in wine meeting to test its qualities.
His color - literally, "its eye,"the clear brightness, or the beaded bubbles on which the wine drinker looks with complacency.
It moveth itself aright - The Hebrew word describes the pellucid stream flowing pleasantly from the wineskin or jug into the goblet or the throat (compare Son 7:9), rather than a sparkling wine.
Adder - Said to be the Cerastes, or horned snake.
The passage is interesting, as showing the increased familiarity of Israelites with the experiences of sea life (compare Psa 104:25-26; Psa 107:23-30).
In the midst of the sea - i. e., When the ship is in the trough of the sea and the man is on the deck. The second clause varies the form of danger, the man is in the "cradle"at the top of the mast, and sleeps there, regardless of the danger.
The picture ends with the words of the drunkard on waking from his sleep. Unconscious of the excesses of the night, his first thought is to return to his old habit.
When shall I awake ... - Better, when I shall awake I will seek it yet again.
Poole -> Pro 23:35
Poole: Pro 23:35 - -- They have stricken me I cannot deny that I exposed myself by my drunkenness to manifold abuses and injuries.
I was not sick I was not then sensible...
They have stricken me I cannot deny that I exposed myself by my drunkenness to manifold abuses and injuries.
I was not sick I was not then sensible of it, neither do I now find any great hurt by it; it was but the effect of a present frolic, at which I have no cause to be much troubled.
When shall I awake? I will seek it yet again at present I find some inconvenience, and my condition requires sleep to settle myself, and when I am composed and refreshed, I purpose to return to my former course. But that which Solomon here expresseth, seems rather to be the language of their hearts or lives than of their tongues. Compare Pro 1:11 .
Haydock -> Pro 23:35
Haydock: Pro 23:35 - -- Drew. Chaldean, "plundered." Septuagint, "mocked at me." ---
Again. This is the woeful effect of drunkenness, that men are not deterred from it,...
Drew. Chaldean, "plundered." Septuagint, "mocked at me." ---
Again. This is the woeful effect of drunkenness, that men are not deterred from it, though they be sensible of its dreadful consequences. (Menochius)
Gill -> Pro 23:35
Gill: Pro 23:35 - -- They have stricken me, shalt thou say, and I was not sick,.... Or "grieved not" x; or was not wounded or skin broken y; see Jer 5:3. The drunken man ...
They have stricken me, shalt thou say, and I was not sick,.... Or "grieved not" x; or was not wounded or skin broken y; see Jer 5:3. The drunken man is here represented as saying, that though his companions, with whom he quarrelled and fought in his drunken frolics, beat him very much, yet he was not sensible of the pain and smart; and it had left no sickness nor disorder upon him; he did not find himself much the worse for it;
they have beaten me; as with hammers z; battered and bruised him terribly, laying very hard and heavy strokes upon him;
and I felt it not; or "knew it not" a; did not perceive it, was not sensible of it, when the blows were given, or who gave them; and thus feeling no more, and coming off so well, as he thinks, he is so far from being reclaimed from this vice, that he is more strengthened in it, and desirous of it;
when shall I awake? I will seek it yet again: that is, the wine and his boon companions, though he has been so used. So the Vulgate Latin version, "when shall I awake, and again find wines?" being heavy with sleep through intemperance, and yet thirsty, is desirous of shaking off his sleep, that he may get to drinking again, and "add drunkenness to thirst", Deu 29:19; so the Septuagint version,
"when will it be morning, that going I may seek with whom I may meet?''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 23:35 The last line has only “I will add I will seek it again.” The use of אוֹסִיף (’osif) signa...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 23:35
Geneva Bible: Pro 23:35 They have stricken me, [shalt thou say, and] I was not sick; they have beaten me, [and] I felt [it] not: when shall I awake? I will ( q ) seek it yet ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
Maclaren -> Pro 23:29-35
Maclaren: Pro 23:29-35 - --The Portrait Of A Drunkard
Who hath woe? who hath sorrow? who hath contentions? who hath babbling who hath wounds without cause? who hath redness of ...
MHCC -> Pro 23:29-35
MHCC: Pro 23:29-35 - --Solomon warns against drunkenness. Those that would be kept from sin, must keep from all the beginnings of it, and fear coming within reach of its all...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 23:29-35
Matthew Henry: Pro 23:29-35 - -- Solomon here gives fair warning against the sin of drunkenness, to confirm what he had said, Pro 23:20. I. He cautions all people to keep out of the...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 23:29-35
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 23:29-35 - --
The author passes from the sin of uncleanness to that of drunkenness; they are nearly related, for drunkenness excites fleshly lust; and to wallow w...
Constable: Pro 22:17--25:1 - --III. WISE SAYINGS 22:17--24:34
A third major section of the Book of Proverbs begins with 22:17. This is clear fr...

Constable: Pro 22:17--24:23 - --A. Thirty Sayings of the Wise 22:17-24:22
Many scholars have called attention to the similarities betwee...

Constable: Pro 23:13--24:23 - --The last 20 sayings 23:13-24:22
23:13-14 The sage again advocated discipline. Beating with a rod is not the only form of discipline advocated in Prove...
