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Text -- Proverbs 26:2 (NET)

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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Secures itself from the fowler.

Upon the innocent person, but he shall escape from it like a bird.
Though not obvious to us,

Have an object in their motions, so penal evil falls on none without a reason.
Clarke -> Pro 26:2
Clarke: Pro 26:2 - -- As the bird - צפור tsippor is taken often for the sparrow; but means generally any small bird. As the sparrow flies about the house, and the ...
As the bird -
TSK -> Pro 26:2

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 26:2
Barnes: Pro 26:2 - -- i. e., "Vague as the flight of the sparrow, aimless as the wheelings of the swallow, is the causeless curse. It will never reach its goal."The margi...
i. e., "Vague as the flight of the sparrow, aimless as the wheelings of the swallow, is the causeless curse. It will never reach its goal."The marginal reading in the Hebrew, however, gives"to him"instead of "not"or "never;"i. e., "The causeless curse, though it may pass out of our ken, like a bird’ s track in the air, will come on the man who utters it."Compare the English proverb, "Curses, like young chickens, always come home to roost."
Poole -> Pro 26:2
Poole: Pro 26:2 - -- By wandering from place to place; by its perpetual restlessness it secures itself from the fowler, that he cannot shoot at it, nor spread his net ove...
By wandering from place to place; by its perpetual restlessness it secures itself from the fowler, that he cannot shoot at it, nor spread his net over it.
Shall not come to wit, upon the innocent person, but he shall escape from it like a bird, &c.
PBC -> Pro 26:2
Haydock -> Pro 26:2
Haydock: Pro 26:2 - -- As a bird, &c. The meaning is, that a curse uttered without cause shall do no harm to the person that is cursed, but will return upon him that curse...
As a bird, &c. The meaning is, that a curse uttered without cause shall do no harm to the person that is cursed, but will return upon him that curseth; as whithersoever a bird flies, it returns to its own nest. (Challoner) ---
Come. Chaldean, "shall not come in vain," if it be just, like that of Noe, Josue, &c. Hebrew, "shall not come" (Calmet) to the person against whom it is uttered, though God will not hold the curser guiltless, as the Vulgate intimates. (Haydock) Curses, anathemas, &c., vented without reason, do not injure any but those who denounce them. Yet out of respect for ecclesiastical authority, those who are under censures, must abstain from their functions till they be absolved. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 26:2
Gill: Pro 26:2 - -- As the bird by wandering, as the swallow by flying,.... As a bird, particularly the sparrow, as the word h is sometimes rendered, leaves its nest and ...
As the bird by wandering, as the swallow by flying,.... As a bird, particularly the sparrow, as the word h is sometimes rendered, leaves its nest and wanders from it; and flies here and there, and settles nowhere; and as the swallow flies to the place from whence it came; or the wild pigeon, as some i think is meant, which flies away very swiftly: the swallow has its name in Hebrew from liberty, because it flies about boldly and freely, and makes its nest in houses, to which it goes and comes without fear;
so the curse causeless shall not come; the mouths of fools or wicked men are full of cursing and bitterness, and especially such who are advanced above others, and are set in high places; who think they have a right to swear at and curse those below them, and by this means to support their authority and power; but what signify their curses which are without a cause? they are vain and fruitless, like Shimei's cursing David; they fly away, as the above birds are said to do, and fly over the heads of those on whom they are designed to light; yea, return and fall upon the heads of those that curse, as the swallow goes to the place from whence it came; it being a bird of passage, Jer 8:7; in the winter it flies away and betakes itself to some islands on rocks called from thence "chelidonian" k. According to the "Keri", or marginal reading, for here is a double reading, it may be rendered, "so the curse causeless shall come to him" l; that gives it without any reason. The Septuagint takes in both,
"so a vain curse shall not come upon any;''
what are all the anathemas of the church of Rome? who can curse whom God has not cursed? yea, such shall be cursed themselves; see Psa 109:17.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 26:1-28
TSK Synopsis: Pro 26:1-28 - --1 Observations about fools;13 about sluggards;17 and about contentious busy-bodies.
MHCC -> Pro 26:2
MHCC: Pro 26:2 - --He that is cursed without cause, the curse shall do him no more harm than the bird that flies over his head.
Matthew Henry -> Pro 26:2
Matthew Henry: Pro 26:2 - -- Here is, 1. The folly of passion. It makes men scatter causeless curses, wishing ill to others upon presumption that they are bad and have done il...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 26:2
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 26:2 - --
This verse is formed quite in the same way as the preceding:
As the sparrow in its fluttering, as the swallow in its flying,
So the curse that is ...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 26:1-28
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...




