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Text -- Proverbs 25:27-28 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
25:27 It is not good to eat too much honey, nor is it honorable for people to seek their own glory. 25:28 Like a city that is broken down and without a wall, so is a person who cannot control his temper.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Self-righteousness | SPIRIT | Pride | PROVERBS, THE BOOK OF | Honey | HEZEKIAH (2) | Anger | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

Other
Evidence

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Pro 25:27 - -- For health.

For health.

Wesley: Pro 25:27 - -- Industriously to seek for applause.

Industriously to seek for applause.

Wesley: Pro 25:27 - -- Is not only sinful, but shameful also.

Is not only sinful, but shameful also.

JFB: Pro 25:27 - -- Satiety surfeits (Pro 25:16); so men who are self-glorious find shame.

Satiety surfeits (Pro 25:16); so men who are self-glorious find shame.

JFB: Pro 25:27 - -- "not" is supplied from the first clause, or "is grievous," in which sense a similar word is used (Pro 27:2).

"not" is supplied from the first clause, or "is grievous," in which sense a similar word is used (Pro 27:2).

JFB: Pro 25:28 - -- Such are exposed to the incursions of evil thoughts and successful temptations.

Such are exposed to the incursions of evil thoughts and successful temptations.

Clarke: Pro 25:27 - -- It is not good to eat much honey - Coverdale translates the whole passage thus: "Like as it is not good to eat to muche hony; even so, he that wyll ...

It is not good to eat much honey - Coverdale translates the whole passage thus: "Like as it is not good to eat to muche hony; even so, he that wyll search out hye thinges, it shal be to hevy for him." As he that etith myche honye, and it is not to him goode; so, that is a sercher of mageste, schal ben oppressid of glorie - Old MS. Bible. He that searches too much into mysteries, is likely to be confounded by them. I really think this is the meaning of the place; and shall not puzzle either myself or my reader with the discordant explanations which have been brought forward with the hope of illustrating this passage.

TSK: Pro 25:27 - -- not good : Pro 25:16 so : Pro 27:2; Joh 5:44; 2Co 12:1, 2Co 12:11; Phi 2:3

TSK: Pro 25:28 - -- Pro 16:32, Pro 22:24; 1Sa 20:30, 1Sa 25:17

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Pro 25:27 - -- So for men ... - A difficult sentence, the text of which is probably defective. The words are not in the original. Many commentators render: so...

So for men ... - A difficult sentence, the text of which is probably defective. The words are not in the original. Many commentators render: so to search into weighty matters is itself a weight, i. e., people soon become satiated with it as with honey. Possibly a warning against an over-curious searching into the mysteries of God’ s word or works.

Poole: Pro 25:27 - -- Not good to wit, for the health of the body. For men which words are easily understood, both out of the foregoing clause, where the honey is suppos...

Not good to wit, for the health of the body.

For men which words are easily understood, both out of the foregoing clause, where the honey is supposed to be eaten by men, and out of the following words, which are evidently meant of them.

To search their own glory industriously to seek for honour and applause from men.

Is not glory is not only sinful, but shameful also, and a sign of a vain and mean spirit. The negative particle not is here understood out of the former part of the verse, as it is Psa 1:5 9:18 .

Poole: Pro 25:28 - -- Over his own spirit over his passions, and especially his anger, Which is signified by this word, Pro 16:2 Ecc 10:4 . Is like a city that is broken ...

Over his own spirit over his passions, and especially his anger, Which is signified by this word, Pro 16:2 Ecc 10:4 .

Is like a city that is broken down, and without walls exposeth himself to manifold dangers and mischiefs.

Haydock: Pro 25:27 - -- Majesty, viz., of God. For to search into that incomprehensible Majesty, and to pretend to sound the depths of the wisdom of God, is exposing our ...

Majesty, viz., of God. For to search into that incomprehensible Majesty, and to pretend to sound the depths of the wisdom of God, is exposing our weak understanding to be blinded with an excess of light and glory, which hit cannot comprehend. (Challoner) ---

When the Church proposes to us any mystery, we have only to believe. Hebrew, "but it is glorious to sound their glory," and see where the wicked end, that we may not envy them, chap. iii. 31., and Psalm xxxvi. 7. (Calmet) ---

Protestants, "so for men to search their own glory, is not glory," but a sin. (Haydock) ---

"It is not good to eat too much honey," (Chaldean) or to sound the glorious words of God and wisdom, or the mysteries of religion. Septuagint, "But it is right to reverence glorious speeches," (Calmet) with esteem and humility. (Cat. Græc.)

Haydock: Pro 25:28 - -- Speaking. He lays himself open to every attack, chap. xxix. 11.

Speaking. He lays himself open to every attack, chap. xxix. 11.

Gill: Pro 25:27 - -- It is not good to eat much honey,.... That is too much otherwise it is good to eat, Pro 24:13; but too much is hurtful, it surfeits the stomach incre...

It is not good to eat much honey,.... That is too much otherwise it is good to eat, Pro 24:13; but too much is hurtful, it surfeits the stomach increases choler e and creates loathing; and indeed, too much of anything is bad f;

so for men to search their own glory is not glory: to set forth their own excellencies, to sound forth their own praises to seek honour of men, to use all methods to gain popular applause; this is not glorious and praiseworthy, but dishonourable; or it may be rendered as it literally lies in the original, "but to search out", or "the searching out of their glory is glory" g; either the glory of righteous men, as Aben Ezra interprets it, such as stand and do not fall before the wicked; to search out their excellencies and virtues, and follow their example, is glorious and honourable: or to search the glory of the knowledge of divine things, comparable to honey, is commendable and glorious; for though a man may eat too much honey, yet he cannot have too much knowledge of divine and spiritual things, or be satiated and overfilled with them; to which the Septuagint version agrees, "but we ought to honour glorious words": the glorious truths of the word of God ought to be had in great esteem, and to search out the glory of them is honourable; our Lord directs to a search of the Scriptures, because they testify of him, Joh 5:39; and we can never know too much of him, or of the precious doctrines of the Gospel; unless this is to be understood of such things as should not be curiously inquired into; men should not be wise above what is written nor search into those things which God has concealed; as his own nature and perfections, the mode of subsisting of the three Persons in the Godhead, his secret purposes and decrees, and unsearchable judgments. To which sense agrees the Vulgate Latin version,

"so he who is the searcher of majesty shall be oppressed by glory;''

he shall be bore down by it, and not able to bear the glory of it: and the Targum is,

"to eat much honey is not good, nor to search glorious words.''

Jarchi takes the words in this sense; and illustrates them by the work of creation, Ezekiel's vision of the wheels, the decrees of God, and the reasons of them.

Gill: Pro 25:28 - -- He that hath no rule over his own spirit,.... His affections and passions, puts no restraint, unto them, as the word signifies; no guard against them...

He that hath no rule over his own spirit,.... His affections and passions, puts no restraint, unto them, as the word signifies; no guard against them, no fence about them, to curb his curiosity, to check his pride and vanity, to restrain his wrath and anger and revenge, and keep within due bounds his ambition and itch of vainglory;

is like a city that broken down and without walls; into which the may go with pleasure, and which is exposed to the rapine and violence of everyone; and so a man that has no command of himself and passions, but gives the reins to them, is exposed to the enemy of souls, Satan and is liable to every sin, snare and temptation.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 25:27 Heb “and the investigation of their glory is not glory.” This line is difficult to understand but it forms an analogy to honey – glo...

NET Notes: Pro 25:28 Heb “whose spirit lacks restraint” (ASV similar). A person whose spirit (רוּחַ, ruakh) “lacks restrain...

Geneva Bible: Pro 25:28 He that [hath] no rule over his own spirit [is like] a city [that is] ( q ) broken down, [and] without walls. ( q ) And so is in extreme danger.

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Pro 25:1-28 - --1 Observations about kings,8 and about avoiding causes of quarrels, and sundry causes thereof.

Maclaren: Pro 25:28 - --An Unwalled City He that hath no rule over his oven spirit is like a city that is broken down, and without walls.'--Proverbs 25:28. THE text gives us...

MHCC: Pro 25:27 - --We must be, through grace, dead to the pleasures of sense, and also to the praises of men.

MHCC: Pro 25:28 - --The man who has no command over his anger, is easily robbed of peace. Let us give up ourselves to the Lord, and pray him to put his Spirit within us, ...

Matthew Henry: Pro 25:27 - -- I. Two things we must be graciously dead to: - 1. To the pleasures of sense, for it is not good to eat much honey; though it pleases the taste, an...

Matthew Henry: Pro 25:28 - -- Here is, 1. The good character of a wise and virtuous man implied. He is one that has rule over his own spirit; he maintains the government of him...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 25:27 - -- This verse, as it stands, is scarcely to be understood. The Venet . translates 27b literally: ἔρευνά τε δόξας αὐτῶν ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 25:28 - -- This verse, counselling restraint as to the spirit, is connected with the foregoing, which counsels to self-control as to enjoyment: A city broken ...

Constable: Pro 25:1--29:27 - --IV. MAXIMS EXPRESSING WISDOM chs. 25--29 We return now to the proverbs of Solomon (cf. 1:1-22:16). Chapters 25-2...

Constable: Pro 25:1-28 - --1. Wise and foolish conduct ch. 25 25:1 A group of scholars who served during King Hezekiah's reign (715-686 B.C.) added more of Solomon's 3,000 prove...

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Commentary -- Other

Evidence: Pro 25:28 We allow the enemy entrance when we give the flesh free reign, having no self-control over our spirit.

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE NATURE AND USE OF PROVERBS.--A proverb is a pithy sentence, concisely expressing some well-established truth susceptible of various illustrations ...

TSK: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The wisdom of all ages, from the highest antiquity, has chosen to compress and communicate its lessons in short, compendious sentences, and in poetic ...

TSK: Proverbs 25 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Pro 25:1, Observations about kings, Pro 25:8, and about avoiding causes of quarrels, and sundry causes thereof.

MHCC: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The subject of this book may be thus stated by an enlargement on the opening verses. 1. The Proverbs of Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel. 2. ...

Matthew Henry: Proverbs (Book Introduction) An Exposition, With Practical Observations, of The Proverbs We have now before us, I. A new author, or penman rather, or pen (if you will) made use o...

Constable: Proverbs (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is "The Proverbs of Solo...

Constable: Proverbs (Outline) Outline I. Discourses on wisdom chs. 1-9 A. Introduction to the book 1:1-7 ...

Constable: Proverbs Proverbs Bibliography Aitken, Kenneth T. Proverbs. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1986. Alden...

Haydock: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PROVERBS. INTRODUCTION. This book is so called, because it consists of wise and weighty sentences, regulating the morals of men; and...

Gill: Proverbs (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PROVERBS This book is called, in some printed Hebrew copies, "Sepher Mishle", the Book of Proverbs; the title of it in the Vulgate ...

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