
Text -- Proverbs 20:26 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 20:26
Wesley: Pro 20:26 - -- As the cart - wheel was anciently turned over the sheaves to beat the corn out of them. He punishes them as their offences deserve.
As the cart - wheel was anciently turned over the sheaves to beat the corn out of them. He punishes them as their offences deserve.
Clarke -> Pro 20:26
Clarke: Pro 20:26 - -- Bringeth the wheel over them - He threshes them in his anger, as the wheel does the grain on the threshing-floor. Every one knows that grain was sep...
Bringeth the wheel over them - He threshes them in his anger, as the wheel does the grain on the threshing-floor. Every one knows that grain was separated from its husks, in Palestine, by the feet of the oxen trampling among the sheaves, or bringing a rough-shod wheel over them. Asiatic kings often threshed their people, to bring out their property; but this is not what is intended here.
TSK -> Pro 20:26
TSK: Pro 20:26 - -- wise : Pro 20:8; 2Sa 4:9-12; Psa 101:5-8
bringeth : 2Sa 12:31; Isa 28:27, Isa 28:28
wise : Pro 20:8; 2Sa 4:9-12; Psa 101:5-8

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 20:26
Barnes: Pro 20:26 - -- The wheel - The threshing wheel Isa 28:27-28, which passes over the grain and separates the grain from the chaff. The proverb involves therefor...
The wheel - The threshing wheel Isa 28:27-28, which passes over the grain and separates the grain from the chaff. The proverb involves therefore the idea of the division of the good from the evil, no less than that of the punishment of the latter.
Poole -> Pro 20:26
Poole: Pro 20:26 - -- A wise king who seriously minds his duty and his true interest,
scattereth the wicked breaks their companies and confederacies, and forceth them to...
A wise king who seriously minds his duty and his true interest,
scattereth the wicked breaks their companies and confederacies, and forceth them to flee several ways for their own safety; driveth them from his presence, and from the society of honest men, as the chaff is by the husbandman separated from the corn, and driven away by the wind, of which this Hebrew word is commonly used, and to which the next clause hath some reference.
Bringeth the wheel over them as the cart-wheel was anciently turned over the sheaves to beat the corn out of them, Isa 28:27,28 . He punisheth them severely, as their offences deserve. This or such-like punishments were not unusual among the Eastern nations, as we may gather from 2Sa 8:2 12:31 Amo 1:3 .
Haydock -> Pro 20:26
Haydock: Pro 20:26 - -- Wheel. Or triumphal arch, fornicem. (Ven. Bede; Jansenius) ---
He will make his enemies lie prostrate under his chariot-wheels, 2 Kings xii. 31.
Wheel. Or triumphal arch, fornicem. (Ven. Bede; Jansenius) ---
He will make his enemies lie prostrate under his chariot-wheels, 2 Kings xii. 31.
Gill -> Pro 20:26
Gill: Pro 20:26 - -- A wise king scattereth the wicked,.... Or "fans them away" i; separates them from his good counsellors, courtiers, and subjects; scatters them from h...
A wise king scattereth the wicked,.... Or "fans them away" i; separates them from his good counsellors, courtiers, and subjects; scatters them from his presence and court, and breaks their counsels and confederacies one with another; he discovers, discountenances, and discourages them; See Gill on Pro 20:8;
and bringeth the wheel over them; alluding to the custom of the eastern nations turning a cart wheel over the grain in threshing it out, and agreeably to the metaphor in the preceding clause; see Isa 28:27. Though some think it refers to a sort of punishment inflicted on malefactors in those times and countries, by putting them under harrows drawn on wheels, as breaking upon the wheel has been since used; see 2Sa 12:31. The Arabic version understands it of exile. Jarchi interprets the wise king of the Lord, and the wicked of Pharaoh and his host, on whom he brought the wheel, or gave measure for measure, and punished in a way of retaliation; and to this sense it is by some k interpreted,
"as the wheel turns over, just in the same place, so as the wicked hath done, it shall be done to them.''
It may be applied to Christ, the wise King, who scatters all his and our enemies; whose fan is in his hand, and he wilt thoroughly purge his floor, Mat 3:12.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 20:26 The king has the wisdom/ability to destroy evil from his kingdom. See also D. W. Thomas, “Proverbs 20:26,” JTS 15 (1964): 155-56.
Geneva Bible -> Pro 20:26
Geneva Bible: Pro 20:26 A wise king scattereth the wicked, and bringeth the ( h ) wheel over them.
( h ) Which was a kind of punishment then used.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 20:26
Matthew Henry -> Pro 20:26
Matthew Henry: Pro 20:26 - -- See here, 1. What is the business of magistrates. They are to be a terror to evil-doers. They must scatter the wicked, who are linked in confedera...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 20:26
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 20:26 - --
26 A wise king winnoweth the godless,
And bringeth over them the wheel.
A variant to Pro 20:8, but here with the following out of the figure of th...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 19:1--22:17
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...
