
Text -- Proverbs 4:4 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 4:4
Wesley: Pro 4:4 - -- The following verses, at least as far as the tenth verse, are the words of David.
The following verses, at least as far as the tenth verse, are the words of David.
Or directed me.
Clarke -> Pro 4:4
Clarke: Pro 4:4 - -- He taught me also, and said - Open thy heart to receive my instructions - receive them with affection; when heard, retain and practice them; and tho...
He taught me also, and said - Open thy heart to receive my instructions - receive them with affection; when heard, retain and practice them; and thou shalt live - the great purpose of thy being brought into the world shall be accomplished in thee.
TSK -> Pro 4:4
TSK: Pro 4:4 - -- He : Pro 22:6; Gen 18:19; 1Ch 22:11-16, 1Ch 28:9; Eph 6:4; 2Ti 1:5, 2Ti 3:15
Let : Pro 3:1; Deu 4:9, Deu 6:6; Psa 119:11
keep : Pro 7:2; Lev 18:3-5; I...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 4:4-20
Barnes: Pro 4:4-20 - -- The counsel which has come to him, in substance, from his father. Compare it with 2Sa 23:2 etc.; 1Ch 28:9; 1Ch 29:17; Psa 15:1-5; Psa 24:1-10; Ps. 3...
The counsel which has come to him, in substance, from his father. Compare it with 2Sa 23:2 etc.; 1Ch 28:9; 1Ch 29:17; Psa 15:1-5; Psa 24:1-10; Ps. 37.
Or, "The beginning of wisdom is - get wisdom."To seek is to find, to desire is to obtain.
The ever-recurring parable of the journey of life. In the way of wisdom the path is clear and open, obstacles disappear; in the quickest activity ("when thou runnest") there is no risk of falling.
She is thy life - Another parallel between personified Wisdom in this book and the Incarnate Wisdom in Joh 1:4.
A fearful stage of debasement. Sin is the condition without which there can be no repose.
i. e., Bread and wine gained by unjust deeds. Compare Amo 2:8. A less probable interpretation is, "They eat wickedness as bread, and drink violence as wine."Compare Job 15:16; Job 34:7.
Shining ... shineth - The two Hebrew words are different; the first having the sense of bright or clear. The beauty of a cloudless sunshine growing on, shining as it goes, to the full and perfect day, is chosen as the fittest figure of the ever increasing brightness of the good man’ s life. Compare the marginal reference.
Compare our Lord’ s teaching Joh 11:10; Joh 12:35.
The teacher speaks again in his own person.
Poole -> Pro 4:4
Poole: Pro 4:4 - -- Said unto me: the following verses, at least as far as the 10th verse, are propounded as the words of David, that the name of so great a king and hol...
Said unto me: the following verses, at least as far as the 10th verse, are propounded as the words of David, that the name of so great a king and holy a prophet might add the more authority and efficacy to his counsels.
And live i.e. thou shalt live. It is a promise in the form of a command, as Pro 3:25 .
Haydock -> Pro 4:4
Haydock: Pro 4:4 - -- He. Hebrew is masculine. (Calmet) ---
As David instructed his son, so the latter teaches all how they may learn wisdom. (Worthington)
He. Hebrew is masculine. (Calmet) ---
As David instructed his son, so the latter teaches all how they may learn wisdom. (Worthington)
Gill -> Pro 4:4
Gill: Pro 4:4 - -- He taught me also, and said unto me,.... The Targum is,
"they taught me,''
his father and his mother; and so the Septuagint version,
"who sai...
He taught me also, and said unto me,.... The Targum is,
"they taught me,''
his father and his mother; and so the Septuagint version,
"who said and taught me;''
and the Arabic version,
"they both taught me, and said unto me;''
but in the Hebrew it is singular, and is restrained to the father. He taught him when he was very young, and also gave him instructions when he was older, and a little before his own death; see 1Ch 28:8; he taught him by the several psalms he wrote; some of which are called "maschil", instructive or causing to understand; two of them particularly were written for him, the seventy-second and the hundred twenty-seventh psalms; he taught him in the following words. How far the words of David his father reach is not agreed on, on all hands; some think they end with Pro 4:5; others with Pro 4:6, others with the Pro 4:9, and the words of Solomon begin at Pro 4:10, some will have it that they take in the whole chapter, which is not probable; nay, others say that the whole of the book following is his, which can by no means be agreed to: it seems most likely to me that they end at Pro 4:6, and at most are not to be carried beyond Pro 4:9;
let thine heart retain my words: says David to his son: the instructions he gave him by word of mouth, concerning his moral behaviour, relating to political things, the government of the people; and especially such as concerned the everlasting welfare of his soul, or were about Wisdom or Christ, and the knowledge of divine and spiritual things; these he would have him lay up in his heart, and keep them there, as a rich treasure, to have recourse unto upon all occasions;
keep my commandments, and live: which commandments may respect him both in his private and public capacity, and in a religious and political one; how he should behave as a man, a king, and one that feared God: as well as they may respect his orders for the building of the temple, and settling and establishing the worship of God in it; by observing which he would live comfortably and honourably, and to a good old age.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Pro 4:4
NET Notes: Pro 4:4 The imperative with the vav expresses volitional sequence after the preceding imperative: “keep and then you will live,” meaning “ke...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 4:4
Geneva Bible: Pro 4:4 He ( b ) taught me also, and said unto me, Let thine heart retain my words: keep my commandments, and live.
( b ) Meaning, David his father.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 4:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Pro 4:1-27 - --1 Solomon persuades to wisdom,14 and to shun wickedness.20 He exhorts to sanctification.
MHCC -> Pro 4:1-13
MHCC: Pro 4:1-13 - --We must look upon our teachers as our fathers: though instruction carry in it reproof and correction, bid it welcome. Solomon's parents loved him, the...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 4:1-13
Matthew Henry: Pro 4:1-13 - -- Here we have, I. The invitation which Solomon gives to his children to come and receive instruction from him (Pro 4:1, Pro 4:2): Hear, you children...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 4:1-4
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 4:1-4 - --
He now confirms and explains the command to duty which he has placed at the beginning of the whole (Pro 1:8). This he does by his own example, for h...
Constable: Pro 1:1--9:18 - --I. DISCOURSES ON WISDOM chs. 1--9
Verse one introduces both the book as a whole and chapters 1-9 in particular. ...

Constable: Pro 1:8--8:1 - --B. Instruction for Young People 1:8-7:27
The two ways (paths) introduced in 1:7 stretch out before the r...

Constable: Pro 4:1-27 - --4. Encouragements to obey these instructions ch. 4
"This chapter is comprised of three discourse...
