
Text -- Proverbs 23:2 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 23:2
Restrain thine appetite, as if a man stood with a knife at thy throat.
JFB -> Pro 23:2
An Eastern figure for putting restraint on the appetite.
Clarke -> Pro 23:2
Clarke: Pro 23:2 - -- Put a knife to thy throat - Repress thy appetite, and do not be incontinent of speech. Eat, drink, and converse, under a check.
Put a knife to thy throat - Repress thy appetite, and do not be incontinent of speech. Eat, drink, and converse, under a check.
TSK -> Pro 23:2

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 23:2
Barnes: Pro 23:2 - -- i. e., "Restrain thy appetite, eat as if the knife were at thy throat."Others render the words "thou wilt put a knife to thy throat"etc., i. e., "in...
i. e., "Restrain thy appetite, eat as if the knife were at thy throat."Others render the words "thou wilt put a knife to thy throat"etc., i. e., "indulgence at such a time may endanger thy very life."
Poole -> Pro 23:2
Poole: Pro 23:2 - -- Put a knife to thy throat restrain and moderate thine appetite, as if a knife or some other thing stuck in thy throat, and hindered thee from swallow...
Put a knife to thy throat restrain and moderate thine appetite, as if a knife or some other thing stuck in thy throat, and hindered thee from swallowing what thou didst desire; or as if a man stood with a knife at thy throat ready to kill thee, if thou didst transgress; or though it be as irksome to thee to do so as if thou hadst a knife put to thy throat. So this is to be understood metaphorically, as that phrase of
cutting off the right hand & c., Mat 5:29,30 . Or, For thou dost (or, lest thou shouldst , as the Syriac interpreter renders it; or, otherwise thou wilt or shouldst) put a knife to thy throat. So the sense is, When thou goest to their feasts, thou dost expose thyself to great and manifest hazards, to thy own intemperance, and to all its dangerous consequences, and to the ill effects of other men’ s intemperance.
Given to appetite prone to excess in eating and drinking.
Haydock -> Pro 23:2
Haydock: Pro 23:2 - -- Throat. Restrain intemperance and talkativeness, Ecclesiasticus xxxi. 12. Septuagint, "stretch forth thy hand, knowing that thou must prepare the ...
Throat. Restrain intemperance and talkativeness, Ecclesiasticus xxxi. 12. Septuagint, "stretch forth thy hand, knowing that thou must prepare the like; but if thou be more insatiable, ( 3. ) desire not his meats, for he has them of deceitful life." They cannot afford real happiness, (Haydock) and to vie with the rich would only reduce them to poverty, Ecclesiasticus xiii. 2. St. Augustine (tr. xlvii. in Joan.) explains this text of the blessed Eucharist, observing, that we must give our life for our brethren, as Christ did for us. Before communion, we must slay the old man, and subdue our passions. (Calmet) ---
Power. Protestants, "if thou be a man given to appetite." The situation of a courtier is very critical. (Haydock) ---
Those who eat with the kings of Persia, were nicely observed by an eunuch, lest they should cast their eyes on any of his concubines. (Lucian. de Merced.)
Gill -> Pro 23:2
Gill: Pro 23:2 - -- And put a knife to thy throat,.... Refrain from too much talk at the table; give not too loose to thy tongue, but bridle it, considering in whose pres...
And put a knife to thy throat,.... Refrain from too much talk at the table; give not too loose to thy tongue, but bridle it, considering in whose presence thou art; do not use too much freedom, either with the ruler or fellow guests; which, when persons have ate and drank well, they are too apt to do, and sometimes say things offensive to one or the other; it is good for a man to be upon his guard; see Ecc 5:2. Or restrain thine appetite; deny thyself of some things agreeable, that would lead thee to what might be hurtful, at least if indulged to excess: put as it were a knife unto thine appetite, and mortify it; which is the same as cutting off a right hand, or plucking out a right eye Mat 5:29. Or while thou art at such a table, at such a sumptuous entertainment, consider thyself as in danger, as if thou hadst a knife at thy throat; and shouldest thou be too free with the food or liquor, it would be as it were cutting thine own throat;
if thou be a man given to appetite; there is then the more danger; and therefore such a person should be doubly on his guard, since he is in the way of temptation to that he is naturally inclined to. Or, "if thou art master of appetite" r: so the Targum,
"if thou art master of thy soul;''
if thou hast power over it, and the command of it, and canst restrain it with ease; to which agrees the Vulgate Latin version: but the former sense is more agreeable to the Hebrew idiom.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
MHCC -> Pro 23:1-3
Matthew Henry -> Pro 23:1-3
Matthew Henry: Pro 23:1-3 - -- The sin we are here warned against is luxury and sensuality, and the indulgence of the appetite in eating and drinking, a sin that most easily beset...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 23:1-3
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 23:1-3 - --
Pro 22:29, which speaks of a high position near the king, is appropriately followed by a hexastich referring to the slipperiness of the smooth groun...
Constable: Pro 22:17--25:1 - --III. WISE SAYINGS 22:17--24:34
A third major section of the Book of Proverbs begins with 22:17. This is clear fr...

Constable: Pro 22:17--24:23 - --A. Thirty Sayings of the Wise 22:17-24:22
Many scholars have called attention to the similarities betwee...
