
Text -- Proverbs 27:20 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 27:20 - -- The grave devours all the bodies which are put into it, and is always ready to receive and devour more.
The grave devours all the bodies which are put into it, and is always ready to receive and devour more.

The desires, which discover themselves by the eyes.
JFB -> Pro 27:20
Men's cupidity is as insatiable as the grave.
Clarke: Pro 27:20 - -- Hell and destruction are never full - How hideous must the soul of a covetous man be, when God compares it to hell and perdition
Hell and destruction are never full - How hideous must the soul of a covetous man be, when God compares it to hell and perdition

Clarke: Pro 27:20 - -- The eyes of man are never satisfied - As the grave can never be filled up with bodies, nor perdition with souls; so the restless desire, the lust of...
The eyes of man are never satisfied - As the grave can never be filled up with bodies, nor perdition with souls; so the restless desire, the lust of power, riches, and splendor, is never satisfied. Out of this ever unsatisfied desire spring all the changing fashions, the varied amusements, and the endless modes of getting money, prevalent in every age, and in every country.
Defender -> Pro 27:20
TSK -> Pro 27:20
TSK: Pro 27:20 - -- Hell : Pro 30:15, Pro 30:16; Hab 2:5
never : Heb. not
so : Pro 23:5; Ecc 1:8, Ecc 2:10, Ecc 2:11, Ecc 5:10, Ecc 5:11, Ecc 6:7; Jer 22:17; 1Jo 2:16

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 27:20
Barnes: Pro 27:20 - -- Hades, the world of the dead, and Destruction (Death, the destroying power, personified) have been at all times and in all countries thought of as a...
Hades, the world of the dead, and Destruction (Death, the destroying power, personified) have been at all times and in all countries thought of as all-devouring, insatiable (compare the marginal reference). Yet one thing is equally so, the lust of the eye, the restless craving which grows with what it feeds on Ecc 1:8.
Poole -> Pro 27:20
Poole: Pro 27:20 - -- Hell and destruction are never full the grave devours all the bodies which are put into it, and is always ready to receive and devour more and more w...
Hell and destruction are never full the grave devours all the bodies which are put into it, and is always ready to receive and devour more and more without end.
The eyes i.e. the desires, which work and discover themselves by the eyes, 1Jo 2:16 , and other senses; for otherwise the eyes in themselves are neither capable of satisfaction nor of dissatisfaction.
Haydock -> Pro 27:20
Haydock: Pro 27:20 - -- Destruction. Hebrew abaddo, or abadon, chap. xv. 11., and Apocalypse ix. 11. People die, and are plunged in hell daily. ---
Eyes. Avaric...
Destruction. Hebrew abaddo, or abadon, chap. xv. 11., and Apocalypse ix. 11. People die, and are plunged in hell daily. ---
Eyes. Avarice and ambition, Ecclesiasticus xiv. 9.
Gill -> Pro 27:20
Gill: Pro 27:20 - -- Hell and destruction are never full,.... The grave, as the word used often signifies; and which may be called "destruction", because bodies laid in it...
Hell and destruction are never full,.... The grave, as the word used often signifies; and which may be called "destruction", because bodies laid in it are soon corrupted and destroyed; and though bodies are cast into it and devoured by it, it is ready for more; it is one of the four things which never have enough. The place where Gog is said to be buried is called Hamongog, the multitude of Gog, Eze 39:11; and by the Septuagint there Polyandrion, which is the name the Greeks give to a burying place, because many men are buried there; and with the Latins the dead are called Plures o, the many, or the more; and yet the grave is never satisfied with them, Pro 30:16. Or hell, the place of everlasting damnation and destruction, is meant, which has received multitudes of souls already, and where there is room for more, nor will it be full until the last day;
so the eyes of man are never satisfied; as not the eyes of his body with seeing corporeal objects, but still are desirous of seeing more, and indeed everything that is to be seen, and are never glutted, Ecc 1:8; so neither the eyes of the carnal mind, or the lusts of it, which are insatiable things, let the objects of them be what they will; as in an ambitious man, a covetous person, or an unclean one.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 27:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Pro 27:1-27 - --1 Observations of self love;5 of true love;11 of care to avoid offenses;23 and of the household care.
MHCC -> Pro 27:20
MHCC: Pro 27:20 - --Two things are here said to be never satisfied, death and sin. The appetites of the carnal mind for profit or pleasure are always desiring more. Those...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 27:20
Matthew Henry: Pro 27:20 - -- Two things are here said to be insatiable, and they are two things near of kin - death and sin. 1. Death is insatiable. The first death, the second ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 27:20
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 27:20 - --
The following proverb has, in common with the preceding, the catchword האדם , and the emphatic repetition of the same expression:
20 The under...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 27:1-22
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...
