
Text -- Proverbs 18:19 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 18:19
JFB: Pro 18:19 - -- No feuds so difficult of adjustment as those of relatives; hence great care should be used to avoid them.
No feuds so difficult of adjustment as those of relatives; hence great care should be used to avoid them.
Clarke -> Pro 18:19
Clarke: Pro 18:19 - -- A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city - Almost all the versions agree in the following reading: "A brother assisted by a brother...
A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city - Almost all the versions agree in the following reading: "A brother assisted by a brother, is like a fortified city; and their decisions are like the bars of a city."Coverdale is both plain and terse: "The unitie of brethren is stronger then a castell, and they that holde together are like the barre of a palace."The fable of the dying father, his sons, and the bundle of faggots, illustrates this proverb. Unity among brethren makes them invincible; small things grow great by concord. If we take the words according to the common version, we see them express what, alas! we know to be too generally true: that when brothers fall out, it is with extreme difficulty that they can be reconciled. And fraternal enmities are generally strong and inveterate.
TSK -> Pro 18:19
TSK: Pro 18:19 - -- brother : Pro 6:19; Gen 4:5-8, Gen 27:41-45, Gen 32:6-11, Gen 37:3-5, Gen 37:11, Gen 37:18-27; 2Sa 13:22, 2Sa 13:28; 1Ki 2:23-25, 1Ki 12:16; 2Ch 13:17...
brother : Pro 6:19; Gen 4:5-8, Gen 27:41-45, Gen 32:6-11, Gen 37:3-5, Gen 37:11, Gen 37:18-27; 2Sa 13:22, 2Sa 13:28; 1Ki 2:23-25, 1Ki 12:16; 2Ch 13:17; Act 15:39
than : Pro 16:32

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 18:19
Barnes: Pro 18:19 - -- The meaning of the first clause is obtained in the King James Version by the insertion of the words in italics, and it seems on the whole to be the ...
The meaning of the first clause is obtained in the King James Version by the insertion of the words in italics, and it seems on the whole to be the best. The Septuagint and Vulgate give an entirely different rendering, based, apparently, upon a different text.
Poole -> Pro 18:19
Poole: Pro 18:19 - -- Offended to wit, by his brother’ s unkindness or injury.
Is harder to be won or, is stronger , which is sufficiently understood by the mentio...
Offended to wit, by his brother’ s unkindness or injury.
Is harder to be won or, is stronger , which is sufficiently understood by the mention of a strong city, to which he is compared; such ellipses being frequent in the Hebrew, as hath been noted before.
Than a strong city which is hardly to be conquered.
Like the bars of a castle which are very strong, and not to be broken, and make the castle strong, and hardly to be won. The truth of this assertion is confirmed by the testimony of Aristotle and other learned authors, who affirm the same fixing; and the reason of it is evident, because the nearness of the relation greatly heightens the provocation, and love abused frequently turns to extreme hatred.
Haydock -> Pro 18:19
Haydock: Pro 18:19 - -- Judgments of many are more deserving of credit. Hebrew, "a brother offended, is like a strong place, and their quarrels," &c. The are not easily ...
Judgments of many are more deserving of credit. Hebrew, "a brother offended, is like a strong place, and their quarrels," &c. The are not easily reconciled. Civil wars are most terrible. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 18:19
Gill: Pro 18:19 - -- A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city,.... A fortified city may sooner be taken by an enemy, than one brother offended can be rec...
A brother offended is harder to be won than a strong city,.... A fortified city may sooner be taken by an enemy, than one brother offended can be reconciled to another; their resentments against each other are keener than against another person that has offended them; and their love being turned into hatred, it is more bitter; and it is more difficult to compose differences between brethren than between enemies; wherefore such should take care that they fall not out by the way: this is true of brethren in a natural sense; as the cases of Abel and Cain, Jacob and Esau, Joseph and his brethren, Amnon and Absalom, and others, show; and of brethren in a spiritual sense, as Paul and Barnabas, Luther and Calvin, and others;
and their contentions are like the bars of a castle: which cannot be easily broken or cut asunder: so contentions, especially those among brethren, are with great difficulty made to cease, and their differences composed; they will stand it out against one another as long as a strong city, or a barred castle, against an enemy.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 18:19 The proverb is talking about changing a friend or a relative into an enemy by abuse or strife – the bars go up, as it were. And the “walls...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 18:19
Geneva Bible: Pro 18:19 A brother offended [is harder to be won] than a strong city: and [their] contentions [are] like the ( n ) bars of a castle.
( n ) Which for the stren...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 18:19
MHCC: Pro 18:19 - --Great care must be taken to prevent quarrels among relations and those under obligations to each other. Wisdom and grace make it easy to forgive; but ...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 18:19
Matthew Henry: Pro 18:19 - -- Note, 1. Great care must be taken to prevent quarrels among relations, and those that are under special obligation to each other, not only because t...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 18:12-19
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 18:12-19 - --
We place together Pro 18:12-19, in which the figure of a secure fortress returns:
Pro 18:12
This proverb is connected with the preceding of the ri...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 18:1-24
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...
