
Text -- Proverbs 26:7 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 26:7 - -- Heb. the legs of the lame are lifted up, in going, or in dancing, which is done with great inequality and uncomeliness.
Heb. the legs of the lame are lifted up, in going, or in dancing, which is done with great inequality and uncomeliness.

No less incident are wise and pious speeches from a foolish and ungodly man.
JFB -> Pro 26:7
JFB: Pro 26:7 - -- Or, "take away the legs," or "the legs . . . are weak." In any case the idea is that they are the occasion of an awkwardness, such as the fool shows i...
Or, "take away the legs," or "the legs . . . are weak." In any case the idea is that they are the occasion of an awkwardness, such as the fool shows in using a parable or proverb (see Introduction; Pro 17:7).
TSK -> Pro 26:7

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 26:7
Barnes: Pro 26:7 - -- Or, Take away the legs of the lame man, and the parable that is in the mouth of fools: both are alike useless to their possessors. Other meanings ar...
Or, Take away the legs of the lame man, and the parable that is in the mouth of fools: both are alike useless to their possessors. Other meanings are:
(1) "The legs of the lame man are feeble, so is parable in the mouth of fools."
(2) "the lifting up of the legs of a lame man, i. e., his attempts at dancing, are as the parable in the mouth of fools."
Poole -> Pro 26:7
Poole: Pro 26:7 - -- The legs of the lame are not equal Heb. As (which note of similitude is plainly understood from the particle so in the following clause) the legs of...
The legs of the lame are not equal Heb. As (which note of similitude is plainly understood from the particle so in the following clause) the legs of the lame are lifted up , to wit, in going, or rather in dancing, which is done with great inequality and uncomeliness.
So is a parable in the mouth of fools no less absurd and indecent are wise and pious speeches from a foolish and ungodly man, whose actions grossly contradict them, whereby he makes them contemptible, and himself ridiculous.
Haydock -> Pro 26:7
Fair. Hebrew, "unequal legs," or "lifted up," so, &c. (Haydock)
Gill -> Pro 26:7
Gill: Pro 26:7 - -- The legs of the lame are not equal,.... Or as "the lifting up the legs by one that is lame" m, to dance to a pipe or violin, is very unseemly, and doe...
The legs of the lame are not equal,.... Or as "the lifting up the legs by one that is lame" m, to dance to a pipe or violin, is very unseemly, and does but the more expose his infirmity, and can give no pleasure to others, but causes derision and contempt;
so is a parable in the mouth of fools; an apophthegm, or sententious expression of his own, which he delivers out as a wise saying, but is lame and halts; it is not consistent with itself, but like the legs of a lame man, one higher than the other: or one of the proverbs of this book, or rather any passage of Scripture, in the mouth of a wicked man; or any religious discourse of his is very unsuitable, since his life and conversation do not agree with it; it is as disagreeable to hear such a man talk of religious affairs as it is to see a lame man dance; or whose legs imitate buckets at a well, where one goes up and another down, as Gussetius n interprets the word.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 26:1-28
TSK Synopsis: Pro 26:1-28 - --1 Observations about fools;13 about sluggards;17 and about contentious busy-bodies.
MHCC -> Pro 26:6-9
MHCC: Pro 26:6-9 - --Fools are not fit to be trusted, nor to have any honour. Wise sayings, as a foolish man delivers and applies them, lose their usefulness.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 26:6-9
Matthew Henry: Pro 26:6-9 - -- To recommend wisdom to us, and to quicken us to the diligent use of all the means for the getting of wisdom, Solomon here shows that fools are fit f...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 26:7
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 26:7 - --
7 The hanging down of the legs of a lame man;
And a proverb in a fool's mouth.
With reference to the obscure דּליוּ , the following views hav...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 26:1-28
Constable: Pro 25:1--29:27 - --IV. MAXIMS EXPRESSING WISDOM chs. 25--29
We return now to the proverbs of Solomon (cf. 1:1-22:16). Chapters 25-2...
