
Text -- Proverbs 14:28 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 14:28
The teaching of a true political economy.
Clarke -> Pro 14:28
Clarke: Pro 14:28 - -- In the multitude of people - It is the interest of every state to promote marriage by every means that is just and prudent; and to discourage, disgr...
In the multitude of people - It is the interest of every state to promote marriage by every means that is just and prudent; and to discourage, disgrace, and debase celibacy; to render bachelors incapable, after a given age, of all public employments: and to banish nunneries and monasteries from all parts of their dominions; - they have ever, from their invention, contributed more to vice than virtue; and are positively point blank against the law of God.
TSK -> Pro 14:28

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 14:28
Barnes: Pro 14:28 - -- A protest against the false ideal of national greatness to which Eastern kings, for the most part, have bowed down. Not conquest, or pomp, or gorgeo...
A protest against the false ideal of national greatness to which Eastern kings, for the most part, have bowed down. Not conquest, or pomp, or gorgeous array, but a happy and numerous people form the true glory of a king. The word translated "prince"is of doubtful meaning; but the translation is supported by the Septuagint, Vulg, and most commentators.
Poole -> Pro 14:28
Poole: Pro 14:28 - -- Is the king’ s honour because it is an evidence of his wise and good government. Under honour he here comprehends also strength and safety, (a...
Is the king’ s honour because it is an evidence of his wise and good government. Under honour he here comprehends also strength and safety, (as appears from the opposite clause,) which depend much upon a prince’ s reputation. And honour may be here put for strength, as strength is put for honour or glory, Psa 8:2 29:1 96:7 .
Haydock -> Pro 14:28
Haydock: Pro 14:28 - -- King. Who formerly was styled "a shepherd," to remind him of the care with which he ought to seek the welfare of his subjects. (Calmet)
King. Who formerly was styled "a shepherd," to remind him of the care with which he ought to seek the welfare of his subjects. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 14:28
Gill: Pro 14:28 - -- In the multitude of people is the king's honour,.... For it is a sign of a good and wise government, of clemency and righteousness being exercised, o...
In the multitude of people is the king's honour,.... For it is a sign of a good and wise government, of clemency and righteousness being exercised, of liberty and property being enjoyed, of peace, plenty, and prosperity; which encourage subjects to serve their king cheerfully, and to continue under his reign and government peaceably; and which invites others from different parts to come and settle there also; by which the strength and glory of a king are much increased. This is true of the King of kings, of Jesus Christ, who is King of saints; his honour and glory, as Mediator, lies in a large number of voluntary subjects, made "willing" to serve him "in the day of his power" upon them, as numerous as the drops of the morning "dew", Psa 110:3; such as he had in the first times of the Gospel, both among the Jews and among the Gentiles; and as he will have more especially in the latter day, when those prophecies shall be fulfilled in Isa 60:4; and so this is interpreted of the King Messiah, in an ancient writing b of the Jews;
but in the want of people is the destruction of the prince; or, "the consternation" c of him; if his people are destroyed in wars his ambition or cruelty has led him to; or they are driven out from his kingdom by persecution or oppression; hence follows a decay of trade, and consequently of riches; lack of cultivation of land, and so want of provision: in course of time there is such a decrease, that, as there are but few to carry on trade and till the land, so to fight for their prince, and defend his country; wherefore, when attacked by a foreign power, he is thrown into the utmost consternation, and is brought to destruction. This will be the case of the prince of darkness, the man of sin, antichrist; who, though however populous he may be, or has been, ruling over tongues, people, and nations, yet before long he will be deserted by them; one nation after another will fall off from him; they and their kings will hate him, make him bare and desolate, and burn him with fire, Rev 17:15. Some render it, "the consternation of leanness" d; such consternation as causes leanness in a king.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 14:28 The word means “ruin; destruction,” but in this context it could be a metonymy of effect, the cause being an attack by more numerous peopl...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 14:28
Geneva Bible: Pro 14:28 In the multitude of ( l ) people [is] the king's honour: but in the lack of people [is] the destruction of the prince.
( l ) That is, the strength of...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 14:28
MHCC: Pro 14:28 - --Let all that wish well to the kingdom of Christ, do what they can, that many may be added to his church.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 14:28
Matthew Henry: Pro 14:28 - -- Here are two maxims in politics, which carry their own evidence with them: - 1. That it is much for the honour of a king to have a populous kingdom;...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 14:28
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 14:28 - --
28 In the multitude of the people lies the king's honour;
And when the population diminishes, it is the downfall of his glory.
The honour or the o...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 14:1--15:33
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...
