
Text -- Proverbs 27:22 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 27:22
The obstinate wickedness of such is incurable by the heaviest inflictions.
Clarke -> Pro 27:22
Clarke: Pro 27:22 - -- Though thou shouldest bray a fool - Leaving all other conjectures, of which commentators are full, I would propose, that this is a metaphor taken fr...
Though thou shouldest bray a fool - Leaving all other conjectures, of which commentators are full, I would propose, that this is a metaphor taken from pounding metallic ores in very large mortars, such as are still common in the East, in order that, when subjected to the action of the fire, the metal may be the more easily separated from the ore. However you may try, by precept or example, or both, to instruct a stupid man, your labor is lost; his foolishness cannot be separated from him. You may purge metals of all their dross; but you cannot purge the fool of his folly.
TSK -> Pro 27:22

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 27:22
Barnes: Pro 27:22 - -- Bray - To pound wheat in a mortar with a pestle, in order to free the wheat from its husks and impurities, is to go through a far more elaborat...
Bray - To pound wheat in a mortar with a pestle, in order to free the wheat from its husks and impurities, is to go through a far more elaborate process than threshing. But the folly of the fool is not thus to be got rid of. It sticks to him to the last; all discipline, teaching, experience seem to be wasted on him.
Poole -> Pro 27:22
Poole: Pro 27:22 - -- Not a natural, but a moral and wilful fool, who by long continuance in sin is hardened and stupefied, and so incorrigible under all the means of ame...
Not a natural, but a moral and wilful fool, who by long continuance in sin is hardened and stupefied, and so incorrigible under all the means of amendment.
Haydock -> Pro 27:22
Mortar. Such were used by those who could not afford handmills. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 27:22
Gill: Pro 27:22 - -- Though thou shouldest bray a fool in a mortar among wheat with a pestle,.... As the manna was, Num 11:8; and as wheat beat and bruised in a mortar, or...
Though thou shouldest bray a fool in a mortar among wheat with a pestle,.... As the manna was, Num 11:8; and as wheat beat and bruised in a mortar, or ground in a mill, retains its own nature; so, let a wicked man be used ever so roughly or severely, by words, admonitions, reproofs, and counsels; or by deeds, by corrections and punishment, by hard words or blows, whether publicly or privately; in the midst of the congregation, as the Targum and Syriac version; or of the sanhedrim and council, as the Septuagint and Arabic versions;
yet will not his foolishness depart from him; his inbred depravity and natural malignity and folly will not remove, nor will he leave his course of sinning he has been accustomed to; he is stricken in vain, he will revolt more and more, Isa 1:5. Anaxarchus the philosopher was ordered by the tyrant Nicocreon to be pounded to death in a stone mortar with iron pestles q, and which he endured with great patience.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 27:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Pro 27:1-27 - --1 Observations of self love;5 of true love;11 of care to avoid offenses;23 and of the household care.
MHCC -> Pro 27:22
MHCC: Pro 27:22 - --Some are so bad, that even severe methods do not answer the end; what remains but that they should be rejected? The new-creating power of God's grace ...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 27:22
Matthew Henry: Pro 27:22 - -- Solomon had said (Pro 22:15), The foolishness which is bound in the heart of a child may be driven out by the rod of correction, for then the mi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 27:22
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 27:22 - --
22 Though thou bruise a fool in a mortar among grit with a pestle,
Yet would not his folly depart from him.
According to the best accredited accen...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 27:1-22
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...
