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Text -- Proverbs 21:1-10 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 21:1 - -- He names kings not to exclude other men, but because they are more arbitrary and uncontrollable than others.
He names kings not to exclude other men, but because they are more arbitrary and uncontrollable than others.
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Wesley: Pro 21:1 - -- Which husband - men draw by little channels into the adjacent grounds as they please.
Which husband - men draw by little channels into the adjacent grounds as they please.
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Wesley: Pro 21:4 - -- Even their civil or natural actions, which in themselves are lawful, are made sinful as they are managed by ungodly men, without any regard to the glo...
Even their civil or natural actions, which in themselves are lawful, are made sinful as they are managed by ungodly men, without any regard to the glory of God, which ought to be the end of all our actions.
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By any false or deceitful words or actions.
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Is like the chaff or smoak driven away by the wind.
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That take those courses which will bring destruction upon them.
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But he whose heart is pure, his conversation is agreeable to it.
(Pro. 21:1-31)
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JFB: Pro 21:1 - -- Irrigating channels (Psa 1:3), whose course was easily turned (compare Deu 11:10). God disposes even kings as He pleases (Pro 16:9; Psa 33:15).
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JFB: Pro 21:4 - -- Better "lamp," a frequent figure for prosperity (Pro 20:20); hence joy or delight.
Better "lamp," a frequent figure for prosperity (Pro 20:20); hence joy or delight.
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JFB: Pro 21:6 - -- As fleeting as chaff or stubble in the wind (compare Pro 20:17-21; Psa 62:10). Such gettings are unsatisfactory.
As fleeting as chaff or stubble in the wind (compare Pro 20:17-21; Psa 62:10). Such gettings are unsatisfactory.
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Or, "destruction," especially oppression, of which they are authors.
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JFB: Pro 21:7 - -- Literally, "cut with a saw" (1Ki 7:9), that is, utterly ruin them. Their sins shall be visited on them in kind.
Literally, "cut with a saw" (1Ki 7:9), that is, utterly ruin them. Their sins shall be visited on them in kind.
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JFB: Pro 21:8 - -- Any one; his way is opposed to truth, and also estranged from it. The pure proves himself such by his right conduct.
Any one; his way is opposed to truth, and also estranged from it. The pure proves himself such by his right conduct.
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Literally, "house of fellowship," large enough for several families.
Clarke: Pro 21:1 - -- The king’ s heart is in the hand of the Lord - The Lord is the only ruler of princes. He alone can govern and direct their counsels. But there ...
The king’ s heart is in the hand of the Lord - The Lord is the only ruler of princes. He alone can govern and direct their counsels. But there is an allusion here to the Eastern method of watering their lands. Several canals are dug from one stream; and by opening a particular sluice, the husbandman can direct a stream to whatever part he please: so the king’ s heart, wherever it turns; i.e., to whomsoever he is disposed to show favor. As the land is enriched with the streams employed in irrigation; so is the favourite of the king, by the royal bounty: and God can induce the king to give that bounty to whomsoever he will. See Harmer.
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Clarke: Pro 21:2 - -- The Lord pondereth the hearts - Every man feels strongly attached to his own opinions, modes of acting, etc.; and though he will not easily give up ...
The Lord pondereth the hearts - Every man feels strongly attached to his own opinions, modes of acting, etc.; and though he will not easily give up any thing to the judgment of a neighbor, whom he will naturally consider at least as fallible as himself, yet he should consider that the unerring eye of God is upon him; and he should endeavor to see that what he does is acceptable in the eye of his Maker and Judge.
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Clarke: Pro 21:3 - -- To do justice and judgment - The words of Samuel to Saul. See note on 1Sa 15:23.
To do justice and judgment - The words of Samuel to Saul. See note on 1Sa 15:23.
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Clarke: Pro 21:4 - -- A high look - The evidence of pride, self-conceit, and vanity. A proud heart, from which the high look, etc., come
A high look - The evidence of pride, self-conceit, and vanity. A proud heart, from which the high look, etc., come
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Clarke: Pro 21:4 - -- And the ploughing - נר ner , lucerna, the lamp, the prosperity and posterity of the wicked; is sin - it is evil in the seed, and evil in the root...
And the ploughing -
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Clarke: Pro 21:6 - -- Of them that seek death - Instead of מבקשי mebakshey , "them that seek,"several MSS., some ancient editions, with Symmachus, the Septuagint, V...
Of them that seek death - Instead of
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Clarke: Pro 21:7 - -- The robbery of the wicked - The wicked shall be terrified and ruined by the means they use to aggrandize themselves. And as they refuse to do judgme...
The robbery of the wicked - The wicked shall be terrified and ruined by the means they use to aggrandize themselves. And as they refuse to do judgment, they shall have judgment without mercy.
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Clarke: Pro 21:9 - -- In a corner of the housetop - A shed raised on the flat roof - a wide house; בית חבר beith chaber , "a house of fellowship;"what we should ca...
In a corner of the housetop - A shed raised on the flat roof - a wide house;
Defender -> Pro 21:2
Defender: Pro 21:2 - -- Even imprisoned criminals are commonly found still to be justifying and blaming others for the sinful deeds which caused their problems. The human "he...
Even imprisoned criminals are commonly found still to be justifying and blaming others for the sinful deeds which caused their problems. The human "heart is deceitful above all things, and desperately wicked" (Jer 17:9). It takes God Himself, the Holy Spirit, to bring true conviction and repentance to the heart of a sinner (Joh 16:7-11)."
TSK: Pro 21:1 - -- The king’ s : Pro 16:1, Pro 16:9, Pro 20:24; Ezr 7:27, Ezr 7:28; Neh 1:11, Neh 2:4; Psa 105:25, Psa 106:46; Dan 4:35; Act 7:10
as : Psa 74:15, Ps...
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TSK: Pro 21:2 - -- right : Pro 16:2, Pro 16:25, Pro 20:6, Pro 30:12; Psa 36:2; Luk 18:11, Luk 18:12; Gal 6:3; Jam 1:22
the Lord : Pro 24:12; 1Sa 16:7; Jer 17:10; Luk 16:...
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TSK: Pro 21:3 - -- Pro 15:8; 1Sa 15:22; Psa 50:8; Isa 1:11-17; Jer 7:21-23; Hos 6:6; Mic 6:6-8; Mar 12:33
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TSK: Pro 21:4 - -- An high look : Heb. Haughtiness of eyes, Pro 6:17, Pro 8:13, Pro 30:13; Psa 10:4; Isa 2:11, Isa 2:17, Isa 3:16; Luk 18:14; 1Pe 5:5
and the : Pro 21:27...
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TSK: Pro 21:5 - -- thoughts : Pro 10:4, Pro 13:4, Pro 27:23-27; Eph 4:28; 1Th 4:11, 1Th 4:12
of every : Pro 14:29, Pro 20:21, Pro 28:22
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TSK: Pro 21:6 - -- getting : Pro 10:2, Pro 13:11, Pro 20:14, Pro 20:21, Pro 22:8, Pro 30:8; Jer 17:11; 1Ti 6:9, 1Ti 6:10; Tit 1:11; 2Pe 2:3
seek : Pro 8:36; Eze 18:31
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TSK: Pro 21:7 - -- robbery : Pro 1:18, Pro 1:19, Pro 10:6, Pro 22:22, Pro 22:23; Psa 7:16, Psa 9:16; Isa 1:23, Isa 1:24; Jer 7:9-11, Jer 7:15; Eze 22:13, Eze 22:14; Mic ...
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TSK: Pro 21:8 - -- way : Gen 6:5, Gen 6:6, Gen 6:12; Job 15:14-16; Psa 14:2, Psa 14:3; Ecc 7:29, Ecc 9:3; 1Co 3:3; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3; Tit 3:3
but : Pro 15:26, Pro 30:12; ...
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TSK: Pro 21:9 - -- better : Pro 21:19, Pro 12:4, Pro 19:13, Pro 25:24, Pro 27:15, Pro 27:16
brawling woman in a wide house : Heb. woman of contentions in a house of soci...
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TSK: Pro 21:10 - -- soul : Pro 3:29, Pro 12:12; Psa 36:4, Psa 52:2, Psa 52:3; Mar 7:21, Mar 7:22; 1Co 10:6; Jam 4:1-5; 1Jo 2:16
findeth no favour : Heb. is not favoured, ...
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Pro 21:1 - -- Rivers of water - See the Psa 1:3 note. As the cultivator directs the stream into the channels where it is most wanted, so Yahweh directs the t...
Rivers of water - See the Psa 1:3 note. As the cultivator directs the stream into the channels where it is most wanted, so Yahweh directs the thoughts of the true king, that his favors may fall, not at random, but in harmony with a divine order.
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Barnes: Pro 21:3 - -- Compare the marginal reference. The words have a special significance as coming from the king who had built the temple, and had offered sacrifices t...
Compare the marginal reference. The words have a special significance as coming from the king who had built the temple, and had offered sacrifices that could not be numbered for multitude"1Ki 8:5.
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Barnes: Pro 21:4 - -- The plowing - The Hebrew word, with a change in its vowel points, may signify either: (1) the "fallow field,"the "tillage"of Pro 13:23, or (2) ...
The plowing - The Hebrew word, with a change in its vowel points, may signify either:
(1) the "fallow field,"the "tillage"of Pro 13:23, or
(2) the lamp.
According to: (1) the verse would mean, "The outward signs of pride, the proud heart, the broad lands of the wicked, all are evil."(2) however, belongs, as it were, to the language of the time and of the book Pro 13:9; Pro 24:20. The "lamp of the wicked"is their outwardly bright prosperity.
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Barnes: Pro 21:5 - -- Here diligence is opposed, not to sloth but to haste. Undue hurry is as fatal to success as undue procrastination.
Here diligence is opposed, not to sloth but to haste. Undue hurry is as fatal to success as undue procrastination.
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Barnes: Pro 21:6 - -- Vanity - Or, "a breath driven to and fro of those that are seeking death."Another reading of the last words is: "of the snares of death"(compar...
Vanity - Or, "a breath driven to and fro of those that are seeking death."Another reading of the last words is: "of the snares of death"(compare 1Ti 6:9). Some commentators have suggested that the "vapor"or "mist"is the mirage of the desert, misleading those who follow it, and becoming a "net of death."
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Barnes: Pro 21:7 - -- Robbery - Probably the "violence"which the wicked practice. Shall destroy them - More literally, carries them away.
Robbery - Probably the "violence"which the wicked practice.
Shall destroy them - More literally, carries them away.
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Or, "Perverse is the way of a sin burdened man."
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Barnes: Pro 21:9 - -- A wide house - literally, "a house of companionship,"i. e., a house shared with her. The flat roof of an Eastern house was often used for retir...
A wide house - literally, "a house of companionship,"i. e., a house shared with her. The flat roof of an Eastern house was often used for retirement by day, or in summer for sleep by night. The corner of such a roof was exposed to all changes of weather, and the point of the proverb lies in the thought that all winds and storms which a man might meet with there are more endurable than the tempest within.
Poole: Pro 21:1 - -- The king’ s heart his very inward purposes and inclinations, which seem to be most in a man’ s own power, and out of the reach of all oth...
The king’ s heart his very inward purposes and inclinations, which seem to be most in a man’ s own power, and out of the reach of all others, and much more his tongue and hand, and all his outward actions. He names kings not to exclude other men, but because they are more arbitrary and uncontrollable than other men.
As the rivers of water which husbandmen or gardeners can draw by little channels into the adjacent grounds as they please, and as their occasions require.
He turneth it directeth and boweth, partly by suggesting those things to their minds which have a commanding influence upon their wills; and partly by a direct and immediate motion of their wills and affections, which being God’ s creatures must needs be as subject to his power and pleasure as either men’ s minds or bodies are, and which he moves sweetly and suitably to their own nature, though strongly and effectually.
Withersoever he will so as they shall fulfil his counsels and designs, either of mercy or of correction to themselves, or to their people.
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Poole: Pro 21:2 - -- This was said Pro 16:2 , where it is explained, and is here repeated, either for the great importance and usefulness of it, or because he perceived ...
This was said Pro 16:2 , where it is explained, and is here repeated, either for the great importance and usefulness of it, or because he perceived that the Israelites were very prone to self-deceit.
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Poole: Pro 21:3 - -- Justice and judgment the conscientious performance of all our duties to men.
Than sacrifice than the most costly outward services offered to God, j...
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Poole: Pro 21:4 - -- An high look one gesture or sign of pride put for all the rest, Pro 6:17 .
A proud heart pride lurking and reigning in the heart, though it do not ...
An high look one gesture or sign of pride put for all the rest, Pro 6:17 .
A proud heart pride lurking and reigning in the heart, though it do not discover itself to men by outward actions, but be disguised with a show of humility, it is frequently.
The ploughing either,
1. Strictly and properly so called: even their civil or natural actions, which in themselves are lawful and good, are made sinful, as they are managed by ungodly men, without any regard to the service and glory of God, which ought to be the great end of all our actions, 1Co 10:31 , and with a design of serving their own wicked lusts by it. Or,
2. Metaphorically, their designs and endeavours, which are said to be sin , because they are wholly and fully set upon sin, and they make sin their trade or business, which is called ploughing wickedness , Job 4:8 . But all the ancient interpreters, and divers others, render the word the lamp or light , as this Hebrew word, even thus pointed, is rendered, 1Ki 11:36 15:4 2Ki 8:19 2Ch 21:7 ; and the lamp of the wicked is a phrase used in this book, Pro 13:9 24:20 , as also Job 21:17 ; whereas the ploughing of the wicked is a phrase not elsewhere used. And this seems best to agree with the context, for by their lamp he seems to understand all their pomp and glory, that worldly greatness and prosperity, which is the fuel of their pride, and therefore is most fitly joined with it. Is sin ; it is by them turned into sin, and made the occasion of much wickedness. The whole verse may be thus rendered, An high look and a proud heart , which is the light or glory of the wicked , (i.e. wherein they glory, esteeming it magnanimity or gallantry of spirit,) is sin , i.e. is a great and grievous sin. And in this manner the learned Mercer renders the verse, save only that he translates the Hebrew word nir, the ploughing .
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Poole: Pro 21:5 - -- The diligent who carefully and industriously prosecutes what he hath wisely contrived and resolved.
That is hasty who manageth his affairs rashly, ...
The diligent who carefully and industriously prosecutes what he hath wisely contrived and resolved.
That is hasty who manageth his affairs rashly, without due consideration.
Only to want is likely to bring himself to poverty.
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Poole: Pro 21:6 - -- By a lying tongue by false witness-hearing, or by any other false or deceitful words or actions, whereby many men get riches.
Is a vanity tossed to ...
By a lying tongue by false witness-hearing, or by any other false or deceitful words or actions, whereby many men get riches.
Is a vanity tossed to and fro is like the chaff or smoke driven away by the wind; it is neither satisfactory nor durable, but quickly vanisheth away, as hath been frequently observed of estates ill gotten.
That seek death not designedly, but eventually, that take those courses which will bring death or destruction upon them or theirs.
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Poole: Pro 21:7 - -- The robbery of the wicked shall destroy them the injury which they do to others shall either by God or men be returned upon their own heads. They ref...
The robbery of the wicked shall destroy them the injury which they do to others shall either by God or men be returned upon their own heads. They refuse to do judgment; they wilfully and obstinately give up themselves to unrighteous practices.
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Poole: Pro 21:8 - -- The way of man the course of his life. Of man ; of every man; of man by nature and in his corrupt estate; of a wicked or impure man, to whom the pur...
The way of man the course of his life. Of man ; of every man; of man by nature and in his corrupt estate; of a wicked or impure man, to whom the pure is opposed in the next clause.
Strange estranged from God and from man’ s primitive integrity, and from the rule of his actions, reason and Scripture; in which respects wicked men are called strangers , Psa 54:3 Eze 44:7 , and elsewhere.
But as for the pure, his work is right but he whose heart is pure and upright, his conversation is agreeable to it.
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Poole: Pro 21:9 - -- To dwell to wit, alone in quietness, as appears from the opposite clause.
Of the house-top of the roof of the house, which in those countries was f...
To dwell to wit, alone in quietness, as appears from the opposite clause.
Of the house-top of the roof of the house, which in those countries was flat and plain, and habitable, but was exposed to all the injuries of the weather. In a
wide house or, in a common house; or, a house of society, where husband and wife live together, or which is capable of many friends or companies.
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Poole: Pro 21:10 - -- The soul of the wicked desireth evil; his heart is fully and earnestly set in him as it is expressed, Ecc 8:11 , to do evil, to work wickedness, to d...
The soul of the wicked desireth evil; his heart is fully and earnestly set in him as it is expressed, Ecc 8:11 , to do evil, to work wickedness, to do mischief to others, to satisfy his own lusts, though it be with injury of others.
His neighbour findeth no favour in his eyes if he either dissuade him from his wickedness, or stand in the way of his lusts. He spares neither friend nor foe.
PBC -> Pro 21:1
PBC: Pro 21:1 - -- God, for His own inscrutable but wise purposes, often allows wicked men to do some reprehensible things, but even then He is ultimately in control. Th...
God, for His own inscrutable but wise purposes, often allows wicked men to do some reprehensible things, but even then He is ultimately in control. The wise man made this very plain in Pr 21:1 when he said " The king’s heart is in the hand of the LORD, as the rivers of water: he turneth it whithersoever he will."
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Haydock: Pro 21:1 - -- It. Though it be free, and may resist grace or embrace virtue, Isaias xlv. 22., Jeremias iii. 14., and vii. 3., and Josue xxiv. 23. (Calmet) ---
Y...
It. Though it be free, and may resist grace or embrace virtue, Isaias xlv. 22., Jeremias iii. 14., and vii. 3., and Josue xxiv. 23. (Calmet) ---
Yet God knows how to turn the heart even of a king, so as to preserve his liberty, with the same ease as a gardener brings the streams of water to his plants. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Pro 21:3 - -- Mercy. Septuagint, "justice and truth." (Haydock) See Osee vi. 6. (Menochius)
Mercy. Septuagint, "justice and truth." (Haydock) See Osee vi. 6. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Pro 21:4 - -- Heart. Or when it is proud, it causes the eyes to appear so too. (Calmet) ---
Lamp. Protestants, "ploughing of the wicked is sin." When it is...
Heart. Or when it is proud, it causes the eyes to appear so too. (Calmet) ---
Lamp. Protestants, "ploughing of the wicked is sin." When it is done with a bad motive, out of pride. Hebrew, "the haughtiness of the eyes, and the enlarging of the heart, are the labour (" tillage, " Montanus; " thought, " Pagnin) of the wicked; yea, sin." (Haydock) ---
Those things are their employment, and their sin. (Calmet) ---
Septuagint and Vulgate may also mean, "sin is the lamp and exultation of the wicked." (Haydock)
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Haydock: Pro 21:5 - -- Sluggard. Hebrew, "hasty man," as the slothful is ironically styled. He would see his desires accomplished without labouring; and will never stick ...
Sluggard. Hebrew, "hasty man," as the slothful is ironically styled. He would see his desires accomplished without labouring; and will never stick to work. This levity is most injurious to his advancement.
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Death. Their injustice shall be punished.
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Haydock: Pro 21:8 - -- Strange. Unknown, impure way, Leviticus x. 1., and Deuteronomy xvii. 15. (Calmet)
Strange. Unknown, impure way, Leviticus x. 1., and Deuteronomy xvii. 15. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Pro 21:9 - -- Top, ( domatis ) as the roofs in Palestine were flat. (St. Jerome, ad Sun.) ---
Any inconvenience had better be endured, than to live with the quarr...
Top, ( domatis ) as the roofs in Palestine were flat. (St. Jerome, ad Sun.) ---
Any inconvenience had better be endured, than to live with the quarrelsome. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Pro 21:10 - -- Neighbour. Symmachus, "he has no idea of friendship." Septuagint, "he shall not be treated with mercy by any man." (Haydock)
Neighbour. Symmachus, "he has no idea of friendship." Septuagint, "he shall not be treated with mercy by any man." (Haydock)
Gill: Pro 21:1 - -- The king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water,.... The heart of every king, and all that is in it, his thoughts, counsels, pur...
The king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water,.... The heart of every king, and all that is in it, his thoughts, counsels, purposes, and designs; the hearts of bad kings, as Pharaoh, whom the Lord hardened and softened at pleasure; the antichristian kings, into whose hearts he put it to give their kingdoms to the beast, Rev 17:17; the hearts of good kings, as David, Solomon, Cyrus, and others: and if the hearts of kings are in the hands of the Lord, which are full of things of the greatest importance with respect to the government of the world; and which are generally more untractable and unmanageable; and who are more resolute and positive, and will have their own wills and ways, especially arbitrary princes; then much more the hearts of other persons. And which are as "rivers of water"; for so the words may be rendered, as rivers of water is "the heart of a king", which is "in the hand of the Lord"; unstable, fluid, and fluctuating; and yet the Lord can stay and settle, and fix them, and keep them steady and within bounds: or which, like a torrent of water, comes with force and impetus; and so the Septuagint render it, "the force of waters"; and bears all before it, as do the wills of despotic kings; and yet these the Lord can stop and bound, and rule and overrule: or like rivers of water, reviving and refreshing, so is the heart of a good king, full of wisdom and prudence, of integrity and faithfulness, of clemency and goodness; the streams of whose bounty and kindness flow among his subjects, to their great pleasure and profit; so Christ, the King of kings, is said to be as "rivers of water", Isa 32:2. The allusion is to gardeners, that make channels for the water to run in, to water their gardens; or to husbandmen, that cut aqueducts from rivers, to water their fields; or to the turning of the course of rivers, as Euphrates was by Cyrus, when he took Babylon. The heart of a king is as much at the dispose of the Lord, and can be turned by him as easily as such canals may be made, or the course of a river turned; for it follows:
he turneth it whithersoever he will; contrary to their first designs, and to answer another purpose; oftentimes towards his people, and for the good of his cause and interest, which they never designed; and to bring about such things as were out of their view. And so, in conversion, the Lord can turn the hearts of men as he pleases; their understanding, will, and affections, are in his hands: he can make the understanding light which was darkness, and so turn it from darkness to light; he can take off the stiffness of the will, and turn it from its bias and bent, and make it willing to that which is good in the day of his power: he can turn the channel and course of the affections from sinful lusts and pleasures, to himself, his son, his truths, word, worship, ordinances, and people; he can take out of the heart what he pleases, its ignorance, hardness, enmity, unbelief, pride, and vanity; and he can put in what he pleases, his fear, his laws, his Spirit, and the gifts and graces of if; he can change and turn it just as he will; he that made the heart can operate upon it, and do with it as seems good in his sight. The Heathens very wrongly call one of their deities Verticordia o, from the power of turning the heart they ascribe to it; however, this shows their sense, that to turn the heart is the property of deity.
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Gill: Pro 21:2 - -- Every way of a man is right in his own eyes,.... This is repeated, from Pro 16:2; for the confirmation of it; and that it might be observed and taken...
Every way of a man is right in his own eyes,.... This is repeated, from Pro 16:2; for the confirmation of it; and that it might be observed and taken notice of, and men be brought under a conviction of it; which is not easily done, it being what affects all men: every man is conceited of himself and his own way, and is not easily persuaded off of it; his sinful ways are agreeable to him promising him pleasure, profit, or honour; and his self-righteous ways suit with the vain opinion he has of himself, whereby he promises himself eternal life and happiness. The Septuagint and Arabic versions render it to this sense,
"every man seems righteous to himself;''
but the Lord pondereth the hearts: weighs them in the balance of righteousness and truth; considers them, having a perfect knowledge of them, and all the springs of action in them; and knows that every way of man is not right, though they may seem so to him.
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Gill: Pro 21:3 - -- To do justice and judgment,.... The moral duties of religion, what is holy, just, and good, which the law requires; what is agreeably to both tables, ...
To do justice and judgment,.... The moral duties of religion, what is holy, just, and good, which the law requires; what is agreeably to both tables, piety towards God, and justice to men; that which is just and right between man and man; which, especially if done from right principles and with right views,
is more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice; not than any sacrifice; than the sacrifice of a broken heart, or the sacrifice of praise and thanksgiving, or of acts of goodness and beneficence, or of a man's whole self to the Lord; but than ceremonial sacrifices; which, though of divine institution, and typical of Christ, and when offered up in the faith of him, were acceptable to God, while in force; yet not when done without faith and in hypocrisy, and especially when done to cover and countenance immoral actions; and, even when compared with moral duties, the latter were preferable to them; see 1Sa 15:22.
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Gill: Pro 21:4 - -- An high look, and a proud heart,.... The former is a sign of the latter, and commonly go together, and are both abominable to the Lord; see Psa 101:5....
An high look, and a proud heart,.... The former is a sign of the latter, and commonly go together, and are both abominable to the Lord; see Psa 101:5. A man that looks above others, and with disdain upon them, shows that pride reigns in him, and swells his mind with a vain opinion of himself; this may be observed in every self-righteous man; the parable of the Pharisee and publican is a comment upon it; sometimes there may be a proud heart under a disguise of humility; but the pride of the heart is often discovered by the look of the eyes. It may be rendered, "the elevation of the eyes, and the enlargement of the heart" p; but not to be understood in a good sense, of the lifting up of the eyes in prayer to God, with faith and fear; nor of the enlargement of the heart with solid knowledge and wisdom, such as Solomon had; but in a bad sense, of the lofty looks and haughtiness of man towards his fellow creatures, and of his unbounded desires after filthy lucre or sinful lusts: the Targum renders it,
"the swelling of the heart,''
with pride and vanity;
and the ploughing of the wicked is sin; taken literally; not that it is so in itself; for it is a most useful invention, and exceeding beneficial to mankind, and is to be ascribed to God himself; and of this the Heathens are so sensible, that they have a deity to whom they attribute it, and whom they call Ceres q, from
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Gill: Pro 21:5 - -- The thoughts of the diligent tend only to plenteousness,.... A man that is thoughtful and studious, and wisely forms schemes in his mind, and diligen...
The thoughts of the diligent tend only to plenteousness,.... A man that is thoughtful and studious, and wisely forms schemes in his mind, and diligently pursues them; the issue of it is, generally speaking, prosperity and plenty: such a man is usually thriving and flourishing; and this holds good in things spiritual, as well as in things temporal, Mat 25:29;
but of everyone that is hasty only to want; that is in haste to be rich, and is resolved to be so, right or wrong, he comes at last to poverty and want: or he who is rash and precipitate in acting, who never thinks before he acts, but rashly engages in an affair; or, however, does not give himself time enough to think it over, but, as soon as ever it has entered his thoughts, he immediately attempts to put it in execution; a man so thoughtless and inconsiderate, so rash and hasty, brings himself and family to poverty; see Pro 20:21.
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Gill: Pro 21:6 - -- The getting of treasures by a lying tongue,.... By telling lies in trade; by bearing false witness in a court of judicature; or by preaching false doc...
The getting of treasures by a lying tongue,.... By telling lies in trade; by bearing false witness in a court of judicature; or by preaching false doctrines in the church of God:
is a vanity tossed to and fro of them that seek death: such treasures, though ever so great, are like any light thing, smoke or vapour, straw, stubble, chaff, or a feather, tossed about the wind; which is expressive of the instability uncertainty of riches ill gotten; they do not last long, but are taken away and carried off by one providence or another; and they are likewise harmful and pernicious; they issue in death: and those that seek after them, and obtain them in a bad way, are said to "seek death": not intentionally, but eventually; this they certainly find, if grace prevent not; see Pro 8:36. Jarchi reads it, they are the "snares of death" to him; and so the Septuagint version.
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Gill: Pro 21:7 - -- The robbery of the wicked shall destroy them,.... Or cut them, so Ben Melech: dissect or "saw" s them; cut them to the heart; that is, when the sins t...
The robbery of the wicked shall destroy them,.... Or cut them, so Ben Melech: dissect or "saw" s them; cut them to the heart; that is, when the sins they have been guilty of, in robbing God of his due, or doing injury to men in their properties, cheating them or stealing from them, are set home on their consciences, they are in the utmost agonies and distress; it is as if a saw was drawn to and fro over them, and will be their case for ever without true repentance: this is the worm that never dies, and the fire that is never quenched; this is everlasting destruction from the presence of the Lord, and is very just and righteous;
because they refuse to do judgment; to do that which is just between man and man, to let everyone enjoy his own property: as it is true of private robbers, so of men in public offices, whose business it is to defend men in the quiet possession of property; which, if they refuse to do, as it is a refusal to do judgment, it is in effect a robbery of them; and will be charged on their consciences at one time or another.
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Gill: Pro 21:8 - -- The way of man is froward and strange,.... Not the way of any and every man; not the way of righteous and good men, of believers in Christ; who know ...
The way of man is froward and strange,.... Not the way of any and every man; not the way of righteous and good men, of believers in Christ; who know him, the way, and walk in him and after him, and being led by him; who have his spirit to be their guide, and do walk in his ways, and find pleasure in them; the way of such is not froward or perverse, but upright and even, and is not strange, for the Lord knows and approves of it: but the way of wicked and impure men, as may be learned from the opposition in the next clause; the way of unregenerate men, who are gone out of the good way, and turned to their own way, which is according to the course of the world, and after the prince of it, and according to the flesh, and dictates of corrupt nature, which is the common and broad road that leads to destruction. This is a "froward" or perverse way, a way contrary to reason and truth; contrary to the word of God, and the directions of it; it is a crooked distorted path; it is not according to rule; it is a deviation from the way of God's commandment, and is a "strange" one; the Scriptures know nothing of it, and do not point and direct unto it; it estranges a man from God, and carries him further and further off from him. It may be rendered, "perverse is the way of a man, even of a stranger" t; of one that is a stranger to God and godliness; to Christ and his Gospel; to the Spirit, and the operations of his grace on the heart; to his own heart, and his state and condition by nature; and to all good men, and all that is good;
but as for the pure, his work is right. God is pure, purity itself, in comparison of whom nothing is pure; and his work in creation, providence, and grace, is right; there is no unrighteousness in him; and this sense is favoured by the Septuagint and Arabic versions: or rather every good man, who, through the pure righteousness of Christ imputed to him, and through his precious blood being sprinkled on him, or rather through being washed in it, and through the grace of God bestowed on him, is pure, wholly cleansed from sin; has a pure heart, speaks a pure language, and holds the mystery of faith in a pure conscience or conversation: and his work, or the work of God upon him, is right and good; or his work of faith, which he exercises on God, is hearty and genuine: and even his works, as the Targum, Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions, have it in the plural number; all his good works are right; being done from love, in faith, in the name and strength of Christ, and to the glory of God.
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Gill: Pro 21:9 - -- It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop,.... The roofs of houses in Judea were that, encompassed with battlements, whither persons might re...
It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop,.... The roofs of houses in Judea were that, encompassed with battlements, whither persons might retire for solitude, and sit in safety: and it is better to be in a corner of such a roof alone, and be exposed to scorching heat, to blustering winds, to thunder storms and showers of rain,
than with a brawling woman in a wide house; large and spacious, full of rooms, fit for a numerous family: or, "an house of society" u; where many families might dwell and live sociably with each other; or a house where a man, his wife and family, might dwell together, and have communion with each other; it is opposed to the corner of the housetop, and the solitariness of it; as the scolding of the brawling woman, or "a woman of contentions" w, who is always noisy and quarrelsome, her violent passions, her storming language, and thundering voice, are to the inclemencies of the heavens, to which a man on the housetop is exposed; and yet these are more eligible than the other; see Pro 21:19.
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Gill: Pro 21:10 - -- The soul of the wicked desireth evil,.... The evil of sin, it being natural to him; he chooses it, delights in it, craves after it, under a notion of ...
The soul of the wicked desireth evil,.... The evil of sin, it being natural to him; he chooses it, delights in it, craves after it, under a notion of pleasure or profit: or the evil of mischief; it is a sport and pastime to him to do injury to others; see Pro 10:23; he desires both the one and the other with all his soul; his heart is in it, he is set upon it, which shows him to be a wicked man;
his neighbour findeth no favour in his eyes; not only he delights to do mischief to an enemy or a stranger, but even to a neighbour and friend; he will do him no kindness, though he asks it of him; he will show him no mercy, though an object of it; he will spare him not, but do him an injury, if he attempts to hinder or dissuade him from doing mischief, or reproves him for it.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Pro 21:1; Pro 21:1; Pro 21:1; Pro 21:1; Pro 21:2; Pro 21:2; Pro 21:2; Pro 21:3; Pro 21:3; Pro 21:4; Pro 21:5; Pro 21:5; Pro 21:5; Pro 21:5; Pro 21:6; Pro 21:6; Pro 21:6; Pro 21:6; Pro 21:7; Pro 21:7; Pro 21:7; Pro 21:7; Pro 21:8; Pro 21:8; Pro 21:8; Pro 21:9; Pro 21:9; Pro 21:9; Pro 21:9; Pro 21:10; Pro 21:10; Pro 21:10
NET Notes: Pro 21:1 The farmer channels irrigation ditches where he wants them, where they will do the most good; so does the Lord with the king. No king is supreme; the ...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:2 Heb “the hearts.” The term לֵב (lev, “heart”) is used as a metonymy of association for thoughts and motives ...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:3 The Lord prefers righteousness above religious service (e.g., Prov 15:8; 21:29; 1 Sam 15:22; Ps 40:6-8; Isa 1:11-17). This is not a rejection of ritua...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:4 Heb “the tillage [נִר, nir] of the wicked is sin” (so NAB). The subject picks up the subjects of the first half of the v...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:6 The Hebrew has “seekers of death,” meaning “[they that seek them] are seekers of death,” or that the fortune is “a fleet...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:8 If this translation stands, then the construction is formed with an independent nominative absolute, resumed by the suffixed noun as the formal subjec...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:9 Heb “a wife of contentions”; KJV “a brawling woman”; TEV, CEV “a nagging wife.” The Greek version has no reference...
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NET Notes: Pro 21:10 The form יֻחַן (yukhan) is a Hophal imperfect from חָנַן (khanan); it means “to be s...
Geneva Bible: Pro 21:1 The ( a ) king's heart [is] in the hand of the LORD, [as] the rivers of water: he turneth it wherever he will.
( a ) Though kings seem to have all th...
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Geneva Bible: Pro 21:4 An high look, and a proud heart, [and] the ( b ) plowing of the wicked, [is] sin.
( b ) That is, the thing by which he is guided or which he brings f...
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Geneva Bible: Pro 21:5 The thoughts of the diligent [tend] only to plenteousness; but of ( c ) every one [that is] hasty only to want.
( c ) He who goes rashly about his bu...
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Geneva Bible: Pro 21:7 The ( d ) robbery of the wicked shall destroy them; because they refuse to do judgment.
( d ) He means this chiefly of judges and princes who leave t...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC: Pro 21:1 - --The believer, perceiving that the Lord rules every heart as he sees fit, like the husbandman who turns the water through his grounds as he pleases, se...
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MHCC: Pro 21:3 - --Many deceive themselves with a conceit that outward devotions will excuse unrighteousness.
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MHCC: Pro 21:4 - --Sin is the pride, the ambition, the glory, the joy, and the business of wicked men.
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MHCC: Pro 21:9 - --It is best to shun bitter contention by pouring out the heart before God. For by prudence and patience, with constant prayer, the cross may be removed...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:1 - -- Note, 1. Even the hearts of men are in God's hand, and not only their goings, as he had said, Pro 20:24. God can change men's minds, can, by a p...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:2 - -- Note, 1. We are all apt to be partial in judging of ourselves and our own actions, and to think too favourably of our own character, as if there was...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:3 - -- Here, 1. It is implied that many deceive themselves with a conceit that, if they offer sacrifice, that will excuse them from doing justice, and proc...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:4 - -- This may be taken as showing us, 1. The marks of a wicked man. He that has a high look and a proud heart, that carries himself insolently and scor...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:5 - -- Here is, 1. The way to be rich. If we would live plentifully and comfortably in the world, we must be diligent in our business, and not shrink from ...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:6 - -- This shows the folly of those that hope to enrich themselves by dishonest practices, by oppressing and over-reaching those with whom they deal, by f...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:7 - -- See here, 1. The nature of injustice. Getting money by lying (Pro 21:6) is no better than downright robbery. Cheating is stealing; you might as well...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:8 - -- This shows that as men are so is their way. 1. Evil men have evil ways. If the man be froward, his way also is strange; and this is the way of m...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:9 - -- See here, 1. What a great affliction it is to a man to have a brawling scolding woman for his wife, who upon every occasion, and often upon no occas...
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Matthew Henry: Pro 21:10 - -- See here the character of a very wicked man. 1. The strong inclination he has to do mischief. His very soul desires evil, desires that evil may be...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:1 - --
The group, like the preceding one, now closes with a proverb of the king.
A king's heart in Jahve's hand is like brooks of water;
He turneth it wh...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:2 - --
The next group extends from Pro 21:2 to Pro 21:8, where it closes as it began.
2 Every way of a man is right in his own eyes;
But a weigher of hea...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:3 - --
3 To practice justice and right
Hath with Jahve the pre-eminence above sacrifice.
We have already (vol. i. p. 42) shown how greatly this depreciat...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:4 - --
4 Loftiness of eyes and swelling of heart -
The husbandry of the godless is sin.
If נר , in the sense of light, gives a satisfactory meaning, ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:5 - --
5 The striving of the diligent is only to advantage.
And hastening all [excessive haste] only to loss;
or in other words, and agreeably to the Heb...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:6 - --
6 The gaining of treasures by a lying tongue
Is a fleeting breath of such as seek death.
One may, at any rate, after the free manner of gnomic res...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:7 - --
7 The violence of the godless teareth them away,
For they have refused to do what is right.
The destruction which they prepare for others teareth ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:8 - --
8 Winding is the way of a man laden with guilt;
But the pure - his conduct is right.
Rightly the accentuation places together "the way of a man"as...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:9 - --
The group now following extends to Pro 21:18, where a new one begins with a variation of its initial verse.
9 Better to sit on the pinnacle of a ho...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 21:10 - --
10 The soul of the godless hath its desire after evil;
His neighbour findeth no mercy in his eyes.
The interchange of perf. and fut. cannot be wit...
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...
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Constable: Pro 19:1--22:17 - --4. Further advice for pleasing God 19:1-22:16
As was true in the chapter 10-15 section, this one (16:1-22:16) also becomes more difficult to outline a...
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expand allCommentary -- Other
Evidence: Pro 21:1 This is our great confidence when preaching to sinners. God has control of the hearts of men and women.
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Evidence: Pro 21:2 Right in his own eyes . Consider the way dogs cross the road. A dog will wander onto a freeway oblivious to the danger. His tail wags as he steps betw...
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Evidence: Pro 21:6 It has been rightly said that taking the easy path is what makes men and rivers crooked.
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