
Text -- Proverbs 5:15 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 5:15
Wesley: Pro 5:15 - -- Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee in the sober use of the marriage - bed.
Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee in the sober use of the marriage - bed.
JFB -> Pro 5:15-20
JFB: Pro 5:15-20 - -- By figures, in which well, cistern, and fountain [Pro 5:15, Pro 5:18] represent the wife, and rivers of waters [Pro 5:16] the children, men are exhort...
By figures, in which well, cistern, and fountain [Pro 5:15, Pro 5:18] represent the wife, and rivers of waters [Pro 5:16] the children, men are exhorted to constancy and satisfaction in lawful conjugal enjoyments. In Pro 5:16, fountains (in the plural) rather denote the produce or waters of a spring, literally, "what is from a spring," and corresponds with "rivers of waters."
Clarke -> Pro 5:15
Clarke: Pro 5:15 - -- Drink waters out of thine own cistern - Be satisfied with thy own wife; and let the wife see that she reverence her husband; and not tempt him by in...
Drink waters out of thine own cistern - Be satisfied with thy own wife; and let the wife see that she reverence her husband; and not tempt him by inattention or unkindness to seek elsewhere what he has a right to expect, but cannot find, at home.
TSK -> Pro 5:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 5:15
Barnes: Pro 5:15 - -- The teacher seeks to counteract the evils of mere sensual passion chiefly by setting forth the true blessedness of which it is the counterfeit. The ...
The teacher seeks to counteract the evils of mere sensual passion chiefly by setting forth the true blessedness of which it is the counterfeit. The true wife is as a fountain of refreshment, where the weary soul may quench its thirst. Even the joy which is of the senses appears, as in the Song of Solomon, purified and stainless (see Pro 5:19 marginal reference).
Poole -> Pro 5:15
Poole: Pro 5:15 - -- This metaphor contained here, and Pro 5:16-18 , is to be understood either,
1. Of the free and lawful use of a man’ s estate, both for his own...
This metaphor contained here, and Pro 5:16-18 , is to be understood either,
1. Of the free and lawful use of a man’ s estate, both for his own comfort, and for the good of others. Or rather,
2. Of the honest use of matrimony, as the proper remedy against these filthy practices. This best suits with the whole context, both foregoing and following; and thus it is explained in the end of Pro 5:18 . So the sense is, Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee, with the sober use of the marriage bed. Why shouldst thou ramble hither and thither, trespassing against God and men, to steal their waters, which thou mightest freely take out of thine own cistern or well. The ground of the metaphor is this, that waters were scarce and precious in those countries, and therefore men used to make cisterns and wells for their own private use. And the same metaphor of
waters and of a pit , or well , is applied to things of this nature elsewhere, as Pro 23:27 Isa 48:1 51:1 .
Haydock -> Pro 5:15
Haydock: Pro 5:15 - -- Well. Live comfortably on your own property, (Cajetan) with your own wife. (Calmet)
Well. Live comfortably on your own property, (Cajetan) with your own wife. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 5:15
Gill: Pro 5:15 - -- Drink waters out of thine own cistern,.... Arguments being used to dissuade from conversation with an adulterous woman, taken from the disgrace, disea...
Drink waters out of thine own cistern,.... Arguments being used to dissuade from conversation with an adulterous woman, taken from the disgrace, diseases, poverty, and distress of mind on reflection, it brings a man to; the wise man proceeds to direct to marriage, as a proper antidote against it: take a wife and cleave to her, and enjoy all the pleasures and comforts of a marriage state. As every man formerly had his own cistern for the reception of water for his own use, 2Ki 18:31; so every man should have his own wife, and but one: and as drinking water quenches thirst, and allays heat; so the lawful enjoyments of the marriage bed quench the thirst of appetite, and allay the heat of lust; for which reason the apostle advises men to marry and not burn, 1Co 7:9; and a man that is married should be content with his own wife, and not steal waters out of another cistern. The allusion may be to a law, which, Clemens of Alexandria t says, Plato had from the Hebrews; which enjoined husbandmen not to take water from others to water their lands, till they themselves had dug into the earth, called virgin earth, and found it dry and without water;
and running waters out of thine own well; the pure, chaste, and innocent pleasures of the marriage state, are as different from the embraces of an harlot, who is compared to a deep ditch and a narrow pit, Pro 23:27; as clear running waters of a well or fountain from the dirty waters of a filthy puddle; see Pro 9:17. Some interpret these words, and what follows, of persons enjoying with contentment the good things of life they have for the support of themselves and families; and of a liberal communication of them to the relief of proper objects; but not to spend their substance on harlots. Jarchi understands by the "cistern", the law of Moses: but it may be better applied to the Scriptures in general, from whence all sound doctrine flows, to the comfort and refreshment of the souls of men; and from whence all doctrine ought to be fetched, and not elsewhere.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Pro 5:15
NET Notes: Pro 5:15 Paul Kruger develops this section as an allegory consisting of a series of metaphors. He suggests that what is at issue is private versus common prope...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 5:15
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:15 Drink waters out of ( h ) thine own cistern, and running waters out of thine own well.
( h ) He teaches us sobriety exhorting us to live of our own l...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 5:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Pro 5:1-23 - --1 Solomon exhorts to wisdom.3 He shews the mischief of whoredom and riot.15 He exhorts to contentedness, liberality, and chastity.22 The wicked are ov...
MHCC -> Pro 5:15-23
MHCC: Pro 5:15-23 - --Lawful marriage is a means God has appointed to keep from these destructive vices. But we are not properly united, except as we attend to God's word, ...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 5:15-23
Matthew Henry: Pro 5:15-23 - -- Solomon, having shown the great evil that there is in adultery and fornication, and all such lewd and filthy courses, here prescribes remedies again...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 5:15-17
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:15-17 - --
The commendation of true conjugal love in the form of an invitation to a participation in it, is now presented along with the warning against non-co...
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 5:1-23 - --5. Warnings against unfaithfulness in marriage ch. 5
Chapters 5-7 all deal with the consequences...
