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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 11:30 - -- His discourses and his whole conversation, is like the fruit of the tree of life.
His discourses and his whole conversation, is like the fruit of the tree of life.
JFB: Pro 11:24-31 - -- The scope of the whole is a comment on Pro 11:23. Thus liberality, by God's blessing, secures increase, while penuriousness, instead of expected gain,...
The scope of the whole is a comment on Pro 11:23. Thus liberality, by God's blessing, secures increase, while penuriousness, instead of expected gain, procures poverty.

JFB: Pro 11:30 - -- (Compare Margin) to do them good as opposed to Pro 6:25; Eze 13:18 (compare Luk 5:10).

JFB: Pro 11:31 - -- Thus calling attention to the illustrations (compare Pro 11:23), the sentiment of which is confirmed even in time, not excluding future rewards and pu...
Thus calling attention to the illustrations (compare Pro 11:23), the sentiment of which is confirmed even in time, not excluding future rewards and punishments.
Clarke: Pro 11:30 - -- The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life - עץ חיים ets chaiyim , "the tree of lives."It is like that tree which grew in the paradise of G...
The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life -

Clarke: Pro 11:30 - -- He that winneth souls is wise - Wisdom seeks to reclaim the wanderers; and he who is influenced by wisdom will do the same.
He that winneth souls is wise - Wisdom seeks to reclaim the wanderers; and he who is influenced by wisdom will do the same.

Clarke: Pro 11:31 - -- Behold, the righteous shall be recompensed in the earth, etc. - The Septuagint, Syrian, and Arabic read this verse as follows: "And if the righteous...
Behold, the righteous shall be recompensed in the earth, etc. - The Septuagint, Syrian, and Arabic read this verse as follows: "And if the righteous scarcely be saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?"And this St, Peter quotes literatim , 1Pe 4:18 (note), where see the note.
Defender: Pro 11:30 - -- See note on Pro 3:18 for the figurative uses in Proverbs for the "tree of life."
See note on Pro 3:18 for the figurative uses in Proverbs for the "tree of life."

Defender: Pro 11:30 - -- This favorite verse of soul-winners relates the "taking of souls" to true wisdom and righteousness, both of which are associated with the "tree of lif...
This favorite verse of soul-winners relates the "taking of souls" to true wisdom and righteousness, both of which are associated with the "tree of life.""

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Pro 11:30 - -- Winneth souls - Better, a wise man winneth souls. He that is wise draws the souls of people to himself, just as the fruit of the righteous is t...
Winneth souls - Better, a wise man winneth souls. He that is wise draws the souls of people to himself, just as the fruit of the righteous is to all around him a tree of life, bearing new fruits of healing evermore. The phrase is elsewhere translated by "taketh the life"1Ki 19:4; Psa 31:13. The wise man is the true conqueror. For the Christian meaning given to these words, see the New Testament reference in the margin.

Barnes: Pro 11:31 - -- The sense would appear to be, "The righteous is requited, i. e., is punished for his lesser sins, or as a discipline; much more the wicked, etc."Com...
The sense would appear to be, "The righteous is requited, i. e., is punished for his lesser sins, or as a discipline; much more the wicked, etc."Compare 1Pe 4:18.
Poole: Pro 11:30 - -- The fruit of the righteous i.e. which he produceth; his discourses and his whole conversation.
Is a tree of life is like the fruit of the tree of l...
The fruit of the righteous i.e. which he produceth; his discourses and his whole conversation.
Is a tree of life is like the fruit of the tree of life; is a great preserver of his life, and a procurer of eternal life, not only to himself, but to others also.
He that winneth souls Heb. that catcheth souls , as a fowler doth birds; that maketh it his design and business, and useth all his skill and diligence, to gain souls to God, and to pluck them out of the snare of the devil.
Is wise showeth himself to be a truly wise and good man. But this clause is and may be rendered thus, and he that is wise (the same with the righteous in the former clause) winneth souls , or brings them to life. So this clause agrees very well with the former.

Poole: Pro 11:31 - -- The righteous shall be recompensed i.e. punished for his sins, as appears from the next clause; the general word being here used of this one particul...
The righteous shall be recompensed i.e. punished for his sins, as appears from the next clause; the general word being here used of this one particular, by a synecdoche. In the earth ; whereby he intimates that all his sufferings are confined to this world, which is an unspeakable felicity.
Much more they shall be punished more certainly and more severely, either in this life or in the next,
the wicked and the sinner those who make sin their great study, and daily and most delightful exercise. Compare this verse with 1Pe 4:18 , which is a good comment upon it.
Haydock -> Pro 11:31
Haydock: Pro 11:31 - -- Receive. Punishment, for almost inevitable faults, or be treated according to his deserts. Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic, "if the just be hardly s...
Receive. Punishment, for almost inevitable faults, or be treated according to his deserts. Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic, "if the just be hardly saved, where shall the impious and the sinner appear?" (1 Peter iv. 18.) (Calmet) ---
Afflictions attend the just in this life. Shall the wicked escape? (Menochius)
Gill: Pro 11:30 - -- The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life,.... Either the fruit which grows upon Christ, the tree of life, and which they receive from him; even a...
The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life,.... Either the fruit which grows upon Christ, the tree of life, and which they receive from him; even all the blessings of grace, peace, pardon, righteousness, and life, Rev 2:7; or the fruits which the righteous bring forth under the influence of divine grace; they are trees of righteousness, and are filled with the fruits of righteousness by Christ, and have their fruit unto holiness, and their end everlasting life. Aben Ezra interprets it,
"the fruit of the righteous is as the fruit of the tree of life;''
that is, lovely, beautiful, desirable, salutary, and issues in life;
and he that winneth souls is wise; antichrist trades in the souls of men, that is one part of his wares, Rev 18:13; but his negotiations about them are to the loss, and not to the saving of them: whereas wise and faithful ministers of the word, such as are here described, use all prudent methods to gain and save the souls of men, 1Co 9:19; even their precious immortal souls, which are of more worth than a world, are the immediate production of God, made after his image, which by sin they come short of; and having sinned, are liable to eternal death; the redemption of which is precious; the charge of which Christ has taken, and therefore is called the Shepherd and Bishop of souls; and which he commits to the care of his under shepherds, who watch for them, as they that must give an account. To "win" them is to teach them, for the word g has the signification of teaching or doctrine; see Pro 4:2; the ministers of Christ are teachers, qualified and sent by him as such; and their business is to teach men their state by nature, how sinful, miserable, and helpless they are; and also Christ, and the way of life by him; that salvation is in him, and in no other; that justification is only by his righteousness, peace and pardon by his blood, and atonement by his sacrifice: they also teach various other things; as the fear of God, faith in Christ, love to him, and obedience to all his commands. To win souls is to proselyte them and convert them to the true religion; to bring them into a love and liking of it, and to embrace it: the souls that Abraham got or made in Haran are supposed to be such; and the same with those trained or instructed in his house, whom he armed for the rescue of Lot, Gen 12:5; the former of which texts Jarchi compares with this, as explanative of it. The phrases of "turning many to righteousness", done by the "wise": and of "converting a sinner from the error of his way", whereby a "soul is saved from death", Dan 12:3, are a proper comment on these words: which, moreover, may be rendered, "he that taketh souls" h; as a fort or castle is taken, and which is sometimes expressed by "winning"; see 2Ch 32:1. The soul of man is a hold, and a strong hold, of foul spirits; it is Satan's palace or castle, which he keeps and holds against Christ, but is won and taken by him; which is usually done by means of the word, and the ministry of it, which are made effectual to the pulling down of strong holds, 2Co 10:4. Or the allusion is to the taking or catching of birds in a snare, or fishes in a net. The souls of men are got into the snare of the devil, and they are taken out from hence by breaking this snare; by which means they escape the hands of the fowler, Satan, and come into better hands: the old serpent laid a bait for our first parents, by which he gained his point, and that was the fruit of the forbidden tree; but the bait which wise men lay to catch souls is the fruit of the tree of life, mentioned in the former clause, the blessings of grace in Christ. Again, Christ's ministers are called "fishers" of men, and are said to "catch" men, Mat 4:19; which they do by casting and spreading the net of the Gospel; the Gospel is the net; the world is the sea into which it is cast; where natural men are in their element, as fishes in the sea: the casting of the net is the preaching of the Gospel; and by means of this souls are caught and gathered in to Christ and his churches, Mat 13:47. Once more, the words are by some rendered, "he that allures souls" i; which is done, not by the terrors of the law, but by the charming voice of the Gospel; by which souls are drawn to God and Christ, and brought among his people: and one that is an instrument of all this had need be "wise", and so he appears to be; he that teacheth men the knowledge of divine and spiritual things had need to be as he is, as a scribe well instructed in the kingdom of God; he who is to be the instrument of converting sinners must have a mouth and wisdom to address them in a proper manner; as he that wills a castle, or takes a fort, ought to have military skill as well as courage; and to cast a net well requires art as well as strength.

Gill: Pro 11:31 - -- Behold, the righteous shall be recompensed in the earth,.... Which Aben Ezra understands of the recompence of their good works. There is a reward for ...
Behold, the righteous shall be recompensed in the earth,.... Which Aben Ezra understands of the recompence of their good works. There is a reward for the righteous, and which they have now in keeping, though not "for" keeping, the commandments of God; they have the promise of this life, as well as of that which is to come, and which is made good to them; they have every good thing now which is proper and convenient for them; and they shall be recompensed in the new earth, in which only righteous persons will dwell. But it seems better, with Jarchi, to interpret it of the recompence of their sins and transgressions; that is, of their chastisements and afflictions, with which they are chastised by their heavenly Father, when they sin against him; which are all in love and for their good; and which they have only here on earth, while they are in this world; they will be all over in another, when there will be no more sin, and no more chastisement for it, much less condemnation; see 1Co 11:32;
much more the wicked and the sinner; who shall not only be punished on earth as they often are, but in hell to all eternity. The Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions, render the whole thus; "if the righteous be scarcely saved, where shall the ungodly and the sinner appear?" Which words are used by the Apostle Peter, to show, that if judgment or chastisement begin at the house of God, or with the righteous, that the end of the wicked must be very bad; which entirely agrees with the sense of this passage; see 1Pe 4:17; a "behold" is prefixed to the whole, as a note, either of admiration, or rather of attention to what is sure and certain, and worthy of regard and consideration. The Targum is,
"behold, the righteous are strengthened in the earth; but the wicked and the sinners shall be consumed out of the earth;''
which seems to agree with Aben Ezra's sense of the words; see Psa 104:35.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 11:30 The MT reads חָכָם (khakham, “wise”) and seems to refer to capturing (לָקַח, l...

NET Notes: Pro 11:31 Heb “the wicked and the sinner.” The two terms may form a hendiadys with the first functioning adjectivally: “the wicked sinner.R...
Geneva Bible: Pro 11:30 The fruit of the righteous [is] a tree of life; and he that ( s ) winneth souls [is] wise.
( s ) That is, brings them to the knowledge of God.

Geneva Bible: Pro 11:31 Behold, the righteous shall be ( t ) recompensed upon the earth: much more the wicked and the sinner.
( t ) Will be punished as he deserves, (1Pe 4:1...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC: Pro 11:30 - --The righteous are as trees of life; and their influence upon earth, like the fruits of that tree, support and nourish the spiritual life in many.

MHCC: Pro 11:31 - --Even the righteous, when they offend on earth, shall meet with sharp corrections; much more will the wicked meet the due reward of their sins. Let us ...
Matthew Henry: Pro 11:30 - -- This shows what great blessings good men are, especially those that are eminently wise, to the places where they live, and therefore how much to be ...

Matthew Henry: Pro 11:31 - -- This, I think, is the only one of Solomon's proverbs that has that note of attention prefixed to it, Behold! which intimates that it contains not ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:30 - --
30 The fruit of the righteous is a tree of life,
And the wise man winneth souls.
The lxx translate, ἐκ καρποῦ δικαιοσύνη...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 11:31 - --
31 Lo, the righteous findeth on earth his reward;
How much more the godless and the sinner!
The particles אף כּי signify properly, interrogat...
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...

Constable: Pro 11:16-31 - --4. Wise investments 11:16-31
11:19 The full quality of life is in view (cf. John 10:10), not just the possession of life.
"Since life and death result...
