
Text -- Proverbs 11:1-8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
The use of all false weights and measures in commerce.
(Pro. 11:1-31)
(Compare Margin). The Hebrews used stones for weights.

JFB: Pro 11:2 - -- Self-conceit is unteachable; the humble grow wise (compare Pro 16:18; Pro 18:12).


JFB: Pro 11:6 - -- That is, from evil, which the wicked suffer by their own doings (Pro 5:22; Psa 9:16).

JFB: Pro 11:7 - -- Better, "hope of wealth," or "power" (compare Isa 40:29, Hebrew). This gives an advance on the sentiment of the first clause. Even hopes of gain die w...
Better, "hope of wealth," or "power" (compare Isa 40:29, Hebrew). This gives an advance on the sentiment of the first clause. Even hopes of gain die with him.
Clarke: Pro 11:1 - -- A false balance is abomination - This refers to the balance itself deceitfully constructed, so that it is sooner turned at one end than at the other...
A false balance is abomination - This refers to the balance itself deceitfully constructed, so that it is sooner turned at one end than at the other. This is occasioned by one end of the beam being longer than the other

Clarke: Pro 11:1 - -- But a just weight - אבן שלמה eben shelemah , the perfect stone probably because weights were first made of stone; see the law, Deu 25:13-16 ...
But a just weight -

Clarke: Pro 11:2 - -- When pride cometh - The proud man thinks much more of himself than any other can do; and, expecting to be treated according to his own supposed wort...
When pride cometh - The proud man thinks much more of himself than any other can do; and, expecting to be treated according to his own supposed worth, which treatment he seldom meets with, he is repeatedly mortified, ashamed, confounded, and rendered indignant

Clarke: Pro 11:2 - -- With the lowly - צנועים tsenuim , ταπεινων, the humble, the modest, as opposed to the proud, referred to in the first clause. The hu...
With the lowly -

Clarke: Pro 11:4 - -- Riches profit not in the day of wrath - Among men they can do all things; but they cannot purchase the remission of sins, nor turn aside the wrath o...
Riches profit not in the day of wrath - Among men they can do all things; but they cannot purchase the remission of sins, nor turn aside the wrath of God when that is poured out upon the opulent transgressor.

Clarke: Pro 11:7 - -- When a wicked man dieth - Hope is a great blessing to man in his present state of trial and suffering; because it leads him to expect a favorable te...
When a wicked man dieth - Hope is a great blessing to man in his present state of trial and suffering; because it leads him to expect a favorable termination of his ills. But hope was not made for the wicked; and yet they are the very persons that most abound in it! They hope to be saved, and get at last to the kingdom of God; though they have their face towards perdition, and refuse to turn. But their hope goes no farther than the grave. There the wicked man’ s expectation is cut off, and his hope perishes. But to the saint, the penitent, and the cross-bearers in general, what a treasure is hope! What a balm through life!

Clarke: Pro 11:8 - -- The wicked cometh in his stead - Often God makes this distinction; in public calamities and in sudden accidents he rescues the righteous, and leaves...
The wicked cometh in his stead - Often God makes this distinction; in public calamities and in sudden accidents he rescues the righteous, and leaves the wicked, who has filled up the measure of his iniquities, to be seized by the hand of death. Justice, then, does its own work; for mercy has been rejected.
TSK: Pro 11:1 - -- A false balance is : Heb. Balances of deceit, are, Pro 16:11, Pro 20:10, Pro 20:23; Lev 19:35, Lev 19:36; Deu 25:13-16; Hos 12:7; Amo 8:5, Amo 8:6; Mi...

TSK: Pro 11:2 - -- pride : Pro 3:34, Pro 3:35, Pro 16:18, Pro 16:19; Dan 4:30-32; Luk 14:8-11, Luk 18:14
but : Pro 15:33; 1Co 8:1, 1Co 8:2
pride : Pro 3:34, Pro 3:35, Pro 16:18, Pro 16:19; Dan 4:30-32; Luk 14:8-11, Luk 18:14

TSK: Pro 11:3 - -- The integrity : Pro 11:5, Pro 13:6; Psa 25:21, Psa 26:1; Joh 7:17
the perverseness : Pro 21:7, Pro 28:18; Ecc 7:17; Isa 1:28

TSK: Pro 11:4 - -- Riches : Pro 10:2; Job 36:18, Job 36:19; Psa 49:6-8; Eze 7:19; Zep 1:18; Mat 16:26; Luk 12:20
but : Pro 12:28; Gen 7:1; Rom 5:17; 1Ti 4:8

TSK: Pro 11:5 - -- direct : Heb. rectify, Pro 11:3, Pro 1:31, Pro 1:32, Pro 5:22; 2Sa 17:23; Est 7:3-10; Psa 9:15, Psa 9:16; Mat 27:4, Mat 27:5

TSK: Pro 11:6 - -- righteousness : Gen 30:33, Gen 31:37; 1Sa 12:3, 1Sa 12:4
but : Pro 5:22; 1Ki 2:32, 1Ki 2:33, 1Ki 2:44; Psa 7:16; Ecc 10:8

TSK: Pro 11:7 - -- Pro 10:28, Pro 14:32; Exo 15:9, Exo 15:10; Job 8:13, Job 8:14, Job 11:20; Psa 146:4; Eze 28:9; Luk 12:19, Luk 12:20

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Pro 11:1 - -- This emphatic reproduction of the old rule of Deu 25:13-14 is perhaps a trace of the danger of dishonesty incidental to the growing commerce of the ...
This emphatic reproduction of the old rule of Deu 25:13-14 is perhaps a trace of the danger of dishonesty incidental to the growing commerce of the Israelites. The stress laid upon the same sin in Pro 16:11; Pro 20:10; bears witness to the desire of the teacher to educate the youth of Israel to a high standard of integrity, just as the protest of Hosea against it Hos 12:7 shows the zeal of the prophet in rebuking what was becoming more and more a besetting sin.
A just weight - literally, as in the margin, indicating a time when stones rather than metal were used as a standard of weight. Compare Deu 25:13.

Barnes: Pro 11:2 - -- A rabbinic paraphrase of the second clause is: "Lowly souls become full of wisdom as the low place becomes full of water."
A rabbinic paraphrase of the second clause is: "Lowly souls become full of wisdom as the low place becomes full of water."

Barnes: Pro 11:4 - -- The day of wrath - Words true in their highest sense of the great "diesirae"of the future, but spoken in the first instance (compare Zep 1:15-1...
The day of wrath - Words true in their highest sense of the great "diesirae"of the future, but spoken in the first instance (compare Zep 1:15-18) of any "day of the Lord,"any time of judgment, when men or nations receive the chastisement of their sins. At such a time "riches profit not."

Barnes: Pro 11:7 - -- Significant words, as showing the belief that when the righteous died, his "expectation"(i. e., his hope for the future) did not perish. The second ...
Significant words, as showing the belief that when the righteous died, his "expectation"(i. e., his hope for the future) did not perish. The second clause is rendered by some, "the expectation that brings sorrow."
Poole: Pro 11:1 - -- A false balance the use of all false weights and measures in commerce,
is abomination i.e. highly abominable, as the abstract signifies; which is...
A false balance the use of all false weights and measures in commerce,
is abomination i.e. highly abominable, as the abstract signifies; which is opposed to the false opinion of men, who account it a fineness of wit, or, at worst, but a trivial fault.
To the Lord partly because this wickedness is acted under a colour of justice; and partly because it is destructive to human society, and especially to the poor, whose patron the Lord owneth himself to be.

Poole: Pro 11:2 - -- When pride cometh, then cometh shame pride, as it is the effect of folly, so it bringeth a man to contempt and destruction, such persons being common...
When pride cometh, then cometh shame pride, as it is the effect of folly, so it bringeth a man to contempt and destruction, such persons being commonly hated both by God and by all men.
With the lowly is wisdom whereby they are kept from those foolish and wicked actions which expose men to shame.

Poole: Pro 11:3 - -- The integrity of the upright their sincere obedience to God’ s laws,
shall guide them shall keep them from crooked and dangerous courses, and ...
The integrity of the upright their sincere obedience to God’ s laws,
shall guide them shall keep them from crooked and dangerous courses, and lead them in a right and safe way.
The perverseness of transgressors shall destroy them those wicked devices by which they design and expect to secure themselves, shall be the instrument of their destruction.

Poole: Pro 11:4 - -- In the day of wrath in the time of God’ s judgments, when he is executing wrath and vengeance upon sinners.
Righteousness or mercy , as this ...
In the day of wrath in the time of God’ s judgments, when he is executing wrath and vengeance upon sinners.
Righteousness or mercy , as this word is oft rendered; or charity to the poor, which is fitly opposed to riches laid up in store.
Delivereth from death it moveth God to deliver them ofttimes from temporal calamities, and always from eternal death, where such actions are done from a right principle.

Poole: Pro 11:5 - -- Shall direct his way shall bring all his designs and endeavours to a happy issue, by comparing this clause with the next.
Shall direct his way shall bring all his designs and endeavours to a happy issue, by comparing this clause with the next.

Shall deliver them from many snares and dangers.

Poole: Pro 11:7 - -- His expectation shall perish all his hope and felicity, which he placed wholly in earthly things, is lost and gone with him.
The hope of unjust men ...
His expectation shall perish all his hope and felicity, which he placed wholly in earthly things, is lost and gone with him.
The hope of unjust men so it is a repetition of the same thing in other words. Or, as divers render it, the hope of their strengths , i.e. which they place in their carnal strengths, their riches, children, friends, &c. So this is added by way of aggravation.

Poole: Pro 11:8 - -- Is by God’ s providence brought into the same miseries, which either he designed against the righteous, or had formerly inflicted upon the righ...
Is by God’ s providence brought into the same miseries, which either he designed against the righteous, or had formerly inflicted upon the righteous, and now lately removed from them.
Life. Producing excellent fruits of virtue and edification.

Haydock: Pro 11:1 - -- Balance. Both in commerce, (Deuteronomy xxv. 13.; Calmet) and in passing sentence on others. (Ven. Bede)
Balance. Both in commerce, (Deuteronomy xxv. 13.; Calmet) and in passing sentence on others. (Ven. Bede)

Haydock: Pro 11:2 - -- Wisdom. God resists the proud, chap. xvi. 18., and xviii. 12., and James iv. 6.
Wisdom. God resists the proud, chap. xvi. 18., and xviii. 12., and James iv. 6.

Haydock: Pro 11:7 - -- So licitous. Or ambitious. Hebrew, "the potent," or Septuagint, "the impious."
So licitous. Or ambitious. Hebrew, "the potent," or Septuagint, "the impious."

Haydock: Pro 11:8 - -- For him. As comparatively nothing worth to his master, chap. xxi. 18., and Isaias xliii. 3
For him. As comparatively nothing worth to his master, chap. xxi. 18., and Isaias xliii. 3
Gill: Pro 11:1 - -- A false balance is abomination to the Lord,.... Under which are included all false weights and measures, and all fraudulent practices in commerce and...
A false balance is abomination to the Lord,.... Under which are included all false weights and measures, and all fraudulent practices in commerce and dealing; which are forbidden by the Lord, and are abominable to him, as being injurious to the estates and properties of men: and more especially must be abominable in professors of religion, as being contrary to the grace of God; for though there may be common honesty where there is not the grace of God, yet there cannot be the true grace of God where there is not honesty; for the grace of God teaches to deny all such worldly lusts;
but a just weight is his delight; or a "perfect stone" c; the ancient practice being to make use of stones for weights; Now to give just weight, and also just measure, and to do justly in all civil dealings with men, is what God requires, and is well pleasing in his sight d; see Lev 19:35. This may be understood of balances and weights in religious affairs; the balance of the sanctuary is the word of God, with which all doctrines are to be weighed, and, if found wanting, they are to be rejected; this is agreeable to the will of God: false balances are abominable to him; such as carnal reason, vain philosophy, and the traditions of men, used by antichrist and his followers; the harlot, described in some preceding chapters, opposed to Wisdom or Christ, who directs to the search of the Scriptures, and the use of them to try doctrines by, Joh 5:39; see Act 17:11.

Gill: Pro 11:2 - -- When pride cometh, then cometh shame,.... The one follows the other, or rather keep pace together; as soon as one comes, the other comes; as in the c...
When pride cometh, then cometh shame,.... The one follows the other, or rather keep pace together; as soon as one comes, the other comes; as in the case of the angels that sinned, Adam and Eve, Haman, Nebuchadnezzar, and others; and will be the case of the Romish antichrist, who, while vaunting and priding himself in his glory and grandeur, will fall into shame, disgrace, and destruction, Rev 18:7;
but with the lowly is wisdom; or wisdom shall come, as Jarchi: the consequence of which is honour and glory; as with Christ, who is meek and lowly, are all the treasures of wisdom and knowledge; so with his humble followers, who reckon themselves the least of saints, and chief of sinners, and own that it is by the grace of God they are what they are, is true wisdom; they are wise unto salvation, and in the way to honour and glory; such humble souls shall be exalted, Luk 14:11.

Gill: Pro 11:3 - -- The integrity of the upright shall guide them,.... The Spirit of God is the best guide of an upright man; he leads into all truth, and unto the land o...
The integrity of the upright shall guide them,.... The Spirit of God is the best guide of an upright man; he leads into all truth, and unto the land of uprightness, and continues to be a guide, even unto death; and it is right to walk after him, and not after the flesh: and besides him, the upright man has the word of God as a lamp to his feet, and a light to his paths, which he does well to take heed to; and next to that is the sincerity and uprightness of his heart, which will not suffer him, knowingly and willingly, to go aside into crooked paths, or to do amiss: integrity of heart and innocency of hand go together; such are the followers of the Lamb, as described, Rev 14:4; see Psa 25:21;
but the perverseness of transgressors shall destroy them; the perverse ways, words, and actions of such as transgress the law of God, deal treacherously with God and men, as the word e signifies, shall be their ruin: the perverse doctrines and worship of the man of sin, and his followers, shall bring destruction upon them, 2Th 2:4. The word for "perverseness" is only used here and in Pro 15:4; and there plainly signifies the perverseness of the tongue or speech, and so may have respect to corrupt doctrine.

Gill: Pro 11:4 - -- Riches profit not in the day of wrath,.... When God takes away the soul, and summons to judgment, and brings to it; and as riches profited not Rome Pa...
Riches profit not in the day of wrath,.... When God takes away the soul, and summons to judgment, and brings to it; and as riches profited not Rome Pagan, in the day of the Lamb's wrath upon it; so neither will they profit Rome Papal, when it will come in remembrance before God, to give it the cup of the wine of the fierceness of his wrath; see Rev 6:15;
but righteousness delivereth from death; from the curse of a corporeal death; from the power of a spiritual one; and from dying the second or an eternal one; See Gill on Pro 10:2; the Targum is,
"from an evil death.''

Gill: Pro 11:5 - -- The righteousness of the perfect shall direct his way,.... Or "make it plain" f; that is, the righteousness of those who are perfect in Christ, compl...
The righteousness of the perfect shall direct his way,.... Or "make it plain" f; that is, the righteousness of those who are perfect in Christ, complete in him, perfectly justified by his righteousness; that righteousness makes their way plain; it is the direct way, the highway, the pathway to eternal life and happiness; see Pro 12:28;
but the wicked shall fall by his own wickedness; or, "in his wickedness" g: in his own wicked way, which he has chosen and delights to walk in; he shall stumble therein, and fall into ruin and destruction, into hell and damnation: or by means or because of it he will fall; his wickedness will be the cause of his fall; as it will be the cause of the fall of Babylon, Rev 18:2.

Gill: Pro 11:6 - -- The righteousness of the upright shall deliver them,.... From death, as in Pro 11:4; and from falling by sin, totally and finally; or into it, so as t...
The righteousness of the upright shall deliver them,.... From death, as in Pro 11:4; and from falling by sin, totally and finally; or into it, so as to perish eternally; as well as it shall deliver those out of Babylon, who are the Lord's people, that will be found therein when that is about to fall; see Rev 18:4;
but transgressors shall be taken in their own naughtiness; in the very act of sin, and be punished for it; taken in it as in a net, and which they have spread for others, or as in a pit, which they have dug for others; taken as wild beasts are taken, to be destroyed; and that in the very midst of their wickedness, when fighting against God and the Lamb, as the beast and false prophet will, Rev 19:20.

Gill: Pro 11:7 - -- When a wicked man dieth, his expectation shall perish,.... His expectation of a longer life, of getting more riches, attaining to more honour, enjoyi...
When a wicked man dieth, his expectation shall perish,.... His expectation of a longer life, of getting more riches, attaining to more honour, enjoying more pleasure here, and of having happiness hereafter, and of being delivered from wrath to come; he will then find, when he comes to die, that his expectations in this world are vain, and those which respect happiness in another world are ill-grounded; or when he dies, the expectation of others that depended on him, trusted in him, and looked for great things from him, will then be at an end;
and the hope of unjust men perisheth; which is as the giving up of the ghost, and expires when a man does; it is only in this life, or however it ceases when that does; he has no hope in his death, as the righteous man has; if he does not live without hope in the world, he has none when he goes out of it, or that will be of any use unto him: moreover, the hope of "unjust" men to oppress and injure others ceases when they die, Job 3:17. The word rendered unjust men is by some h understood of strength, substance, riches; and so the meaning may be, that such a hope that is placed in strength and riches perishes at death. Jarchi interprets it of children, which are a man's substance; as if the sense was, that the hope of the children of such persons is then cut off.

Gill: Pro 11:8 - -- The righteous is delivered out of trouble,.... One after another he comes into, if not in this life, yet at death; which is to him a perfect deliveran...
The righteous is delivered out of trouble,.... One after another he comes into, if not in this life, yet at death; which is to him a perfect deliverance out of all tribulation; see Rev 7:14; or when the wicked die, as in Pro 11:7, then the righteous are delivered from the trouble they gave them, or designed to give them; though it seems rather to design deliverance from trouble in the first sense, since it follows,
and the wicked cometh in his stead; as Haman did in the room of Mordecai, and was hanged upon the gallows the other was delivered from, and he had prepared for him, Est 7:10; and as Daniel was delivered from the lion's den, and his enemies thrown into it, Dan 6:24; and as in the latter day the righteous will be delivered from all their persecutors, and antichrist will be destroyed with the breath of Christ's mouth, and the brightness of his coming; and then they that destroyed the earth shall be destroyed themselves, Rev 11:18.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 11:1 Heb “a perfect stone.” Stones were used for measuring amounts of silver on the scales; here the stone that pleases the Lord is whole, comp...

NET Notes: Pro 11:2 The term “comes” does not appear in the Hebrew, but is supplied in the translation from parallelism.

NET Notes: Pro 11:3 The form is a Kethib/Qere reading. The Qere יְשָׁדֵּם (yÿshadem) is an imperfect tense with...


NET Notes: Pro 11:5 The righteous will enjoy security and serenity throughout life. Righteousness makes the path straight; wickedness destroys the wicked.


NET Notes: Pro 11:7 The LXX adds an antithesis to this: “When the righteous dies, hope does not perish.” The LXX translators wanted to see the hope of the rig...

NET Notes: Pro 11:8 The verb is masculine singular, so the subject cannot be “trouble.” The trouble from which the righteous escape will come on the wicked ...
Geneva Bible: Pro 11:1 A false ( a ) balance [is] abomination to the LORD: but a just weight [is] his delight.
( a ) Under this word he condemns all false weights, measures...

Geneva Bible: Pro 11:2 [When] pride cometh, then cometh ( b ) shame: but with the lowly [is] wisdom.
( b ) When man so gets himself, and thinks to be exalted above his call...

Geneva Bible: Pro 11:8 The righteous is delivered out of trouble, and the wicked cometh in his ( c ) stead.
( c ) That is, will enter into trouble.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC: Pro 11:1 - --However men may make light of giving short weight or measure, and however common such crimes may be, they are an abomination to the Lord.

MHCC: Pro 11:2 - --Considering how safe, and quiet, and easy the humble are, we see that with the lowly is wisdom.




MHCC: Pro 11:7 - --When a godly man dies, all his fears vanish; but when a wicked man dies, his hopes vanish.

MHCC: Pro 11:8 - --The righteous are often wonderfully kept from going into dangerous situations, and the ungodly go in their stead.
Matthew Henry: Pro 11:1 - -- As religion towards God is a branch of universal righteousness (he is not an honest man that is not devout), so righteousness towards men is a branc...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:2 - -- Observe, 1. How he that exalts himself is here abased, and contempt put upon him. When pride comes then comes shame. Pride is a sin which men have...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:3 - -- It is not only promised that God will guide the upright, and threatened that he will destroy the transgressors, but, that we may be the more fully a...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:4 - -- Note, 1. The day of death will be a day of wrath. It is a messenger of God's wrath; therefore when Moses had meditated on man's mortality he tak...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:5-6 - -- These two verses are, in effect, the same, and both to the same purport with Pro 11:3. For the truths are here of such certainty and weight that the...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:7 - -- Note, 1. Even wicked men, while they live, may keep up a confident expectation of a happiness when they die, or at least a happiness in this world. ...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:8 - -- As always in death, so sometimes in life, the righteous are remarkably favoured and the wicked crossed. 1. Good people are helped out of the distres...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:1 - --
The next three proverbs treat of honesty, discretion, and innocence or dove-like simplicity:
1 Deceitful balances are an abomination to Jahve;
But...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:2 - --
Now follows the Solomonic "Pride goeth before a fall."
There cometh arrogance, so also cometh shame;
But with the humble is wisdom.
Interpreted a...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:3 - --
3 The integrity of the upright guideth them;
But the perverseness of the ungodly destroyeth them.
To the upright, ישׁרים , who keep the line...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:4 - --
Three proverbs in praise of צדקה :
4 Possessions are of no profit in the day of wrath;
But righteousness delivereth from death.
That which i...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:5 - --
5 The righteousness of the blameless smootheth his way,
And by his own wickedness doth the wicked fall.
With the תּמים (cf. Pro 1:12), formed...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:6 - --
6 The rectitude of the upright saveth them,
And in their own covetousness are the faithless taken.
The integrity of those who go straight forward ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:7 - --
Three proverbs regarding destruction and salvation:
7 When a godless man dies, his hope cometh to nought,
And the expectation of those who stand i...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:8 - --
8 The righteous is delivered from trouble,
And the godless comes in his stead.
The succession of the tenses gives the same meaning as when, period...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 11:1-15
Constable: Pro 10:1--22:17 - --II. COUPLETS EXPRESSING WISDOM 10:1--22:16
Chapters 1-9, as we have seen, contain discourses that Solomon eviden...

Constable: Pro 11:1-15 - --3. Wise living in various contexts 11:1-15
11:2 A proud person refuses to accept instruction from God, which, if he or she would follow it, would resu...
