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Text -- Proverbs 27:4 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 27:4
Clarke -> Pro 27:4
Clarke: Pro 27:4 - -- Who is able to stand before envy? - The rabbins have a curious story on this subject, and it has been formed by the moderns into a fable. There were...
Who is able to stand before envy? - The rabbins have a curious story on this subject, and it has been formed by the moderns into a fable. There were two persons, one covetous and the other envious, to whom a certain person promised to grant whatever they should ask; but double to him who should ask last. The covetous man would not ask first, because he wished to get the double portion, and the envious man would not make the first request because he could not bear the thoughts of thus benefiting his neighbor. However, at last he requested that one of his eyes should be taken out, in order that his neighbor might lose both.
TSK -> Pro 27:4
TSK: Pro 27:4 - -- cruel, and anger is outrageous : Heb. cruelty, and anger an overflowing, Jam 1:19-21
but : Pro 14:30; Gen 26:14, Gen 37:11; Job 5:2; Mat 27:18; Act 5:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 27:4
Poole -> Pro 27:4
Poole: Pro 27:4 - -- Envy is worse than both of them, partly, because it is more unjust and unreasonable, as not caused by any provocation, as wrath and anger are, but o...
Envy is worse than both of them, partly, because it is more unjust and unreasonable, as not caused by any provocation, as wrath and anger are, but only proceeding from a malignity of mind, whereby a man is grieved for another man’ s happiness, in which he should rejoice; partly, because it is more deeply rooted and implacable, whereas the other passions are commonly allayed; and partly, because it is more secret and undiscernible, and therefore the mischievous effects of it are hardly avoidable; whereas wrath and anger discover themselves, and so forewarn and forearm a man against the danger.
Haydock -> Pro 27:4
Haydock: Pro 27:4 - -- And who. Septuagint, "but envy (zeal) beareth nothing." The more we yield to the envious, the more he is offended at our good behaviour.
And who. Septuagint, "but envy (zeal) beareth nothing." The more we yield to the envious, the more he is offended at our good behaviour.
Gill -> Pro 27:4
Gill: Pro 27:4 - -- Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous,.... Or "an inundation" x; it is like the breaking in of the sea, or a flood of mighty waters, which know no...
Wrath is cruel, and anger is outrageous,.... Or "an inundation" x; it is like the breaking in of the sea, or a flood of mighty waters, which know no bounds, and there is no stopping them: so cruel and outrageous were the wrath and anger of Simeon and Levi, in destroying the Shechemites; of Pharaoh, in making the Israelites to serve with hard bondage, and ordering their male children to be killed and drowned; and of Herod, in murdering the infants in and about Bethlehem;
but who is able to stand before envy? which is secret in a man's heart, and privately contrives and works the ruin of another, and against which there no guarding. All mankind in Adam fell before the envy of Satan; for it was through the envy of the devil that sin and death came into the world, in the Apocrypha:
"Nevertheless through envy of the devil came death into the world: and they that do hold of his side do find it.'' (Wisdom 2:24)
Abel could not stand before the envy of Cain; nor Joseph before the envy of his brethren; nor Christ before the envy of the Jews, his bitter enemies; and, where it is, there is confusion and every evil work, Jam 3:14. An envious man is worse than an angry and wrathful man; his wrath and anger may be soon over, or there may be ways and means of appeasing him; but envy continues and abides, and works insensibly.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 27:4 The Hebrew term translated “jealousy” here probably has the negative sense of “envy” rather than the positive sense of “...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 27:4
Geneva Bible: Pro 27:4 Wrath [is] cruel, and anger [is] outrageous; but who [is] able to stand before ( b ) envy?
( b ) For the envious are obstinate, and cannot be reconci...

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 27:3-4
Matthew Henry -> Pro 27:3-4
Matthew Henry: Pro 27:3-4 - -- These two verses show the intolerable mischief, 1. Of ungoverned passion. The wrath of a fool, who when he is provoked cares not what he says and do...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 27:4
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 27:4 - --
4 The madness of anger, and the overflowing of wrath -
And before jealousy who keeps his place!
Here also the two pairs of words 4a stand in conn...
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...




