
Text -- Proverbs 11:17 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Pro 11:17 - -- Kind to others; opposed to cruel. Such benefit themselves by doing good to others (compare Pro 24:5), while the cruel injure themselves as well as oth...
Kind to others; opposed to cruel. Such benefit themselves by doing good to others (compare Pro 24:5), while the cruel injure themselves as well as others.
Clarke: Pro 11:17 - -- The merciful man doeth good to his own soul - Every gracious disposition is increased while a man is exercised in showing mercy. No man can show an ...
The merciful man doeth good to his own soul - Every gracious disposition is increased while a man is exercised in showing mercy. No man can show an act of disinterested mercy without benefiting his own soul, by improving his moral feeling

Clarke: Pro 11:17 - -- But he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh - We seldom see a peevish, fretful, vindictive man either in good health, or good plight of body. I hav...
But he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh - We seldom see a peevish, fretful, vindictive man either in good health, or good plight of body. I have often heard it observed of such, "He frets his flesh off his bones."
TSK -> Pro 11:17
TSK: Pro 11:17 - -- merciful : Psa 41:1-4, Psa 112:4-9; Isa 32:7, Isa 32:8, Isa 57:1, Isa 58:7-12; Dan 4:27; Mat 5:7; Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15, Mat 25:34-40; Luk 6:38; 2Co 9:6-...
merciful : Psa 41:1-4, Psa 112:4-9; Isa 32:7, Isa 32:8, Isa 57:1, Isa 58:7-12; Dan 4:27; Mat 5:7; Mat 6:14, Mat 6:15, Mat 25:34-40; Luk 6:38; 2Co 9:6-14; Phi 4:17
but : Pro 15:27; Job 20:19-23; Ecc 4:8; Jam 2:13, Jam 5:1-5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Pro 11:17
Poole: Pro 11:17 - -- To his own soul i.e. to himself, because his liberality shall turn to his own infinite advantage, both in this life and in the next. Cruel; hard-hear...
To his own soul i.e. to himself, because his liberality shall turn to his own infinite advantage, both in this life and in the next. Cruel; hard-hearted and uncharitable to others.
His own flesh either,
1. His own children or kindred, who are commonly expressed by this very word, for whose sakes he is thus covetous and uncharitable, that he may hoard it up for them; but they, saith the wise man, shall have nothing but trouble and vexation, and God’ s curse with it. Or,
2. Himself, denominated here from his flesh or body, as in the former branch from his soul. But he may seem to mention his flesh rather than his soul, to intimate that the mischiefs of his covetousness shall not only fall upon his soul, which he despiseth, but upon his flesh or outward man, which is the only thing that he feareth.
Haydock -> Pro 11:17
Haydock: Pro 11:17 - -- Kindred. Hebrew, "flesh," Genesis xxix. 14. The miser is cruel even to himself.
Kindred. Hebrew, "flesh," Genesis xxix. 14. The miser is cruel even to himself.
Gill -> Pro 11:17
Gill: Pro 11:17 - -- The merciful man doeth good to his own soul,.... Or "to himself": a man of mercy or grace, a liberal bountiful man, he comfortably enjoys what God has...
The merciful man doeth good to his own soul,.... Or "to himself": a man of mercy or grace, a liberal bountiful man, he comfortably enjoys what God has given him, Ecc 5:18; and he does good to others with it, and thereby does good to himself also; as well as he is solicitous in a spiritual sense for the good and welfare of his immortal soul;
but he that is cruel troubleth his own flesh; a sordid avaricious man withholds from himself that which is meet, will not allow himself the necessaries of life, nor will he provide that which is fit and convenient for his family; he hides himself from his own flesh, and will not communicate to the wants of his nearest friends and relations, and shuts up his bowels of compassion against his own brother; all which may be called a troubling his own flesh; see Isa 58:7. R. Levi Ben Gersom interprets this of such who place religion in afflicting and macerating the body by fasting, which the law does not require; and it may fitly be applied to the Papists, who do this by penances and fastings, and whippings and scourgings; and which the apostle calls a neglecting of the body, not in any honour to the satisfying of the flesh, Col 2:23.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 11:17 There may be a conscious effort by the sage to contrast “soul” and “body”: He contrasts the benefits of kindness for the ̶...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 11:17
Geneva Bible: Pro 11:17 The merciful man ( k ) doeth good to his own soul: but [he that is] cruel troubleth his own flesh.
( k ) Rewards both himself and others.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 11:17
MHCC: Pro 11:17 - --A cruel, froward, ill-natured man, is vexatious to those that are, and should be to him as his own flesh, and punishes himself.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 11:17
Matthew Henry: Pro 11:17 - -- It is a common principle, Every one for himself. Proximus egomet mihi - None so near to me as myself. Now, if this be rightly understood, it wi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 11:17
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:17 - --
Three proverbs regarding benevolence:
17 The benevolent man doeth good to his own soul,
And the violent man brings trouble on his own flesh.
Many...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 11:16-31
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...
