
Text -- Proverbs 13:8 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 13:8
Wesley: Pro 13:8 - -- Riches enable a man to redeem his life when it is in greatest danger, and poverty preserves a man from many injuries. Because they are cautious, that ...
Riches enable a man to redeem his life when it is in greatest danger, and poverty preserves a man from many injuries. Because they are cautious, that they may not provoke others; and because they are esteemed objects of pity.
JFB -> Pro 13:8
JFB: Pro 13:8 - -- Riches save some from punishment, while others suffer because they will not heed the rebuke of sloth, which makes and keeps them poor.
Riches save some from punishment, while others suffer because they will not heed the rebuke of sloth, which makes and keeps them poor.
Clarke -> Pro 13:8
Clarke: Pro 13:8 - -- The ransom of a man’ s life - Those who have riches have often much trouble with them; as they had much trouble to get them, so they have much ...
The ransom of a man’ s life - Those who have riches have often much trouble with them; as they had much trouble to get them, so they have much trouble to keep them. In despotic countries, a rich man is often accused of some capital crime, and to save his life, though he may be quite innocent, is obliged to give up his riches; but the poor, in such countries, are put to no trouble.
TSK -> Pro 13:8
TSK: Pro 13:8 - -- ransom : Pro 6:35; Exo 21:30; Job 2:4; Psa 49:6-10; Jer 41:8; Mat 16:26; 1Pe 1:18, 1Pe 1:19
the poor : 2Ki 24:14, 2Ki 25:12; Jer 39:10; Zep 3:12

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 13:8
Barnes: Pro 13:8 - -- On the one side is the seeming advantage of wealth. The rich man who gets out of many troubles often escapes from a just retribution by his money. B...
On the one side is the seeming advantage of wealth. The rich man who gets out of many troubles often escapes from a just retribution by his money. But then the poor man in his turn is free from the risk of the threats and litigation that beset the rich. He "hears no rebuke"(the words are not used as in Pro 13:1) just as the dead "hear not the voice of the oppressor"Job 3:18 or the abuse of the envious.
Poole -> Pro 13:8
Poole: Pro 13:8 - -- This verse sets forth, either,
1. The several advantages of riches and poverty. Riches enable a man to redeem his life when it is in greatest dange...
This verse sets forth, either,
1. The several advantages of riches and poverty. Riches enable a man to redeem his life when it is in greatest danger, and poverty preserves a man from those rebukes and injuries which endanger and oft destroy the rich. Or,
2. The convenience of poverty above riches. Riches frequently expose men to the peril of losing their lives by false accusers, or thieves, or tyrants, which they are forced to redeem with the loss of their riches; whereas poverty commonly secures men not only from such kinds of death, but even from rebukes and injuries; partly because such persons are cautious that they may not offend or provoke others; and partly because their persons and actions are neglected and slighted, and they are esteemed objects of pity.
Haydock -> Pro 13:8
Haydock: Pro 13:8 - -- Reprehension. Or is not able to defend himself, like the rich. (Calmet) ---
He is not exposed so much to great revolutions. (Bayn.)
Reprehension. Or is not able to defend himself, like the rich. (Calmet) ---
He is not exposed so much to great revolutions. (Bayn.)
Gill -> Pro 13:8
Gill: Pro 13:8 - -- The ransom of a man's life are his riches,.... As Benhadad's were to him, when he was in the hands of the king of Israel, 1Ki 20:34; and as the treas...
The ransom of a man's life are his riches,.... As Benhadad's were to him, when he was in the hands of the king of Israel, 1Ki 20:34; and as the treasures the ten men had in the field were to them, for the sake of which Ishmael, the son of Nethaniah, slew them not, Jer 41:8. This is the advantage of riches when a man is taken captive in war, or by pirates, or is in the hands of thieves and robbers, he can redeem himself by his money; or when his life is in danger by diseases, he can procure healing medicines; or by famine, he can get food to preserve it, when a poor man cannot: but this is not to be done always, and is only to be understood of a temporal life; for, as to the spiritual and eternal redemption of the soul of man, that requires a greater ransom price than such corruptible things as silver and gold; nothing short of the precious blood of Christ is sufficient for that, Job 36:18. Moreover, these words may not so much design the convenience as the inconvenience of riches to men; since these often invite thieves to assault their persons, and break into their houses, and threaten their lives; and put wicked men upon forming schemes, and drawing up charges and accusations against them, purely to get their money; which bring their lives into danger, and which they can only redeem by their riches;
but the poor heareth not rebuke; no charge and accusation is brought against him; no rebuke or reproof is given him; no notice is taken of him, because nothing is to be got from him; he may sleep with his door unlocked, thieves will give him no disturbance; he may travel upon the road without being bid to stand c. Jarchi interprets this of him that is poor in the law; that hearkens not to reproofs and admonitions, given him to depart from evil: but rather it may be applied to the poor in spirit; who trust not in themselves and their own righteousness, but in the grace of God and righteousness of Christ; who indeed hear the rebukes of good men, and take them kindly; and of bad men, and return not revilings for them; and also the rebukes of Providence, or the chastisements of their heavenly Father, yet they will never hear any rebuke in wrath from him here or hereafter; when the rich in their own conceit, who trust in their riches and righteousness, and think to ransom their souls from death by them, will have rebukes with flames of fire.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 13:8
MHCC: Pro 13:8 - --Great riches often tempt to violence against those that possess them; but the poor are free from such perils.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 13:8
Matthew Henry: Pro 13:8 - -- We are apt to judge of men's blessedness, at least in this world, by their wealth, and that they are more or less happy accordingly as they have mor...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 13:8
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 13:8 - --
8 A ransom for a man's life are his riches;
But the poor heareth no threatening.
Bertheau falls into error when he understands גּערה of warni...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 13:1-25
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...
