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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 28:2
By a wise and good prince.
JFB: Pro 28:1 - -- (Pro. 28:1-28)
A bad conscience makes men timid; the righteous are alone truly bold (Pro 14:26; Psa 27:1).

Anarchy producing contending rulers shortens the reign of each.

JFB: Pro 28:2 - -- Or, "by a man of understanding--that is, a good ruler--he who knows or regards the right, that is, a good citizen, shall prolong (his days)." Good rul...
Or, "by a man of understanding--that is, a good ruler--he who knows or regards the right, that is, a good citizen, shall prolong (his days)." Good rulers are a blessing to the people. Bad government as a punishment for evil is contrasted with good as blessing to the good.
Clarke: Pro 28:1 - -- The wicked flee - Every wicked man, however bold he may appear, is full of dreary apprehensions relative to both worlds. But the righteous has true ...
The wicked flee - Every wicked man, however bold he may appear, is full of dreary apprehensions relative to both worlds. But the righteous has true courage, being conscious of his own innocence, and the approbation of his God. The unpitious fleeith - Old MS. Bible. This word is often used for impious, wicked, ungodly; hence it appears that our word pity anciently meant piety or godliness.

Clarke: Pro 28:2 - -- Many are the princes - Nations, as nations, cannot be judged in a future world; therefore, God judges them here. And where the people are very wicke...
Many are the princes - Nations, as nations, cannot be judged in a future world; therefore, God judges them here. And where the people are very wicked, and the constitution very bad, the succession of princes is frequent - they are generally taken off by an untimely death. Where the people know that the constitution is in their favor, they seldom disturb the prince, as they consider him the guardian of their privileges

Clarke: Pro 28:2 - -- But by a man of understanding - Whether he be a king, or the king’ s prime minister, the prosperity of the state is advanced by his counsels.
But by a man of understanding - Whether he be a king, or the king’ s prime minister, the prosperity of the state is advanced by his counsels.
TSK: Pro 28:1 - -- wicked : Lev 26:17, Lev 26:36; Deu 28:7, Deu 28:25; 2Ki 7:6, 2Ki 7:7, 2Ki 7:15; Psa 53:5; Isa 7:2; Jer 20:4
the righteous : Exo 11:8; Psa 27:1, Psa 27...

TSK: Pro 28:2 - -- the transgression : 1Ki 15:25, 1Ki 15:28, 16:8-29; 2Kings 15:8-31; 2Ch 36:1-12; Isa 3:1-7; Hos 13:11
but : Gen 45:5-8; 2Ch 32:20-26; Job 22:28-30; Ecc...
the transgression : 1Ki 15:25, 1Ki 15:28, 16:8-29; 2Kings 15:8-31; 2Ch 36:1-12; Isa 3:1-7; Hos 13:11
but : Gen 45:5-8; 2Ch 32:20-26; Job 22:28-30; Ecc 9:15; Isa 58:12; Dan 4:27
by a man : etc. by men of understanding and wisdom shall they likewise be prolonged

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 28:2
Barnes: Pro 28:2 - -- Transgression - Better, rebellion. A revolt against a ruler leads to rapid changes of dynasty (the whole history of the kingdom of Israel was a...
Transgression - Better, rebellion. A revolt against a ruler leads to rapid changes of dynasty (the whole history of the kingdom of Israel was a proof of this), but "with men of understanding and knowledge thus shall he (the prince) continue."True wisdom will lead people to maintain an existing order. The King James Version implies that political disorders may come as the punishment of any national sin.
The state - Better, it (the land) shall surely prolong its days in stability.
Poole: Pro 28:1 - -- The wicked flee when no man pursueth because the conscience of their own guilt puts them into a continual expectation and dread of God’ s judgm...
The wicked flee when no man pursueth because the conscience of their own guilt puts them into a continual expectation and dread of God’ s judgments.
The righteous are bold are courageous and resolute, having the witness of a good conscience, and the assurance of Divine favour and protection, and the supports and consolations of the Holy Ghost.

Poole: Pro 28:2 - -- Many are the princes thereof either,
1. Together, contending for supremacy. Or rather,
2. Successively, as appears from the following clause. Their...
Many are the princes thereof either,
1. Together, contending for supremacy. Or rather,
2. Successively, as appears from the following clause. Their princes are soon cut off, and other persons, and ofttimes persons of other families, come in their stead, which is justly threatened as a curse, because such frequent changes are seldom for the better, and commonly for the worse, and are frequently attended with blood and slaughter, with the change and subversion of laws, with heavy taxes and charges, with the ruin of many families, and with many other mischiefs.
By a man of understanding and knowledge by a wise and good man; which may be understood either,
1. Collectively, for
men of understanding & c., as it is rendered in the margin. i.e. when the men or people of a land are wise and good. Or rather,
2. Singularly; and that either,
1. Of a wise and righteous prince, who by the good government of himself, and his family, and kingdom, by punishing and preventing the transgressions of the people, turns away God’ s wrath, and saves himself and people. Or,
2. Of any other man of eminent wisdom or piety, who prevents this judgment, either by his good counsels given to the prince and people, and entertained by them, or by his intercession to God; for God hath sometimes spared a people for the sake of one man, as he did Zoar for Lot, Gen 19:20,21 . and the Israelites for Moses, Psa 106:23 .
The state thereof shall be prolonged the land shall enjoy its former state and tranquillity, and the life of their good prince shall be prolonged.
Haydock: Pro 28:1 - -- Pursueth. "A crime is its own punishment." (Seneca, ep. 93.) (Leviticus xxvi. 36.) ---
Dread. Of any thing terrestrial, as long as the object o...
Pursueth. "A crime is its own punishment." (Seneca, ep. 93.) (Leviticus xxvi. 36.) ---
Dread. Of any thing terrestrial, as long as the object of his love is not attacked, Romans viii. 35.

Princes. Who each contend for the sovereign power. (Calmet)
Gill: Pro 28:1 - -- The wicked flee when no man pursueth,.... Through the terrors of a guilty conscience, as in Cain and others; who fear where no immediate cause of fear...
The wicked flee when no man pursueth,.... Through the terrors of a guilty conscience, as in Cain and others; who fear where no immediate cause of fear is, are frightened with their own shadows; and as Gaal was with the shadow of the mountains, he took for an army of men, as his friend told him, Jdg 9:36; they are chased with the sound of a shaken leaf, and fancy men are at their heels to destroy them, and therefore with all haste flee to some place of safety; see Lev 26:17;
but the righteous are bold as a lion; which turns not away from any creature it meets with, nor mends its pace when it is pursued, but walks on intrepidly, and oftentimes lies down and sleeps in open places, and as securely as in woods and dens, being devoid of all fear; hence the heart of a valiant man is said to be as the heart of a lion, 2Sa 17:10; see Pro 30:30; so Pindar z compares a courageous man to a lion for boldness. Now righteous men are as bold as this creature, or more so; some of them have stopped the mouths of lions, and have dwelt securely in the midst of them, as righteous Daniel: and all righteous men are or may be as fearless as the lion; fear God they do, but have no reason to fear any other; and many of them are fearless of men, of their menaces and reproaches, or of anything they can do to them; since not only angels are their guardians, but God is on their side, and Christ has overcome the world for them: they are fearless of Satan and his principalities; they are delivered out of his hands; they know he is a coward, though a roaring lion, and when resisted will flee from thorn; yea, that he is a chained, conquered, enemy: and, though they are afraid of committing sin, yet are fearless of the damning power of it; Christ having bore their sins, made satisfaction for thong; for whose sake they are pardoned; and whose righteousness justifies and blood cleanses from all sin: they are fearless of death; its sting being removed, itself abolished as a penal evil, and become a blessing, and is the righteous man's, gain: they are fearless of wrath to come; Christ having delivered them from it, and they being justified by his blood: they are courageous as the lion in fighting the Lord's battles with sin, Satan, and the world, and in enduring hardiness as good soldiers of Christ; knowing their cause is good, that Christ is the Captain of their salvation, their spiritual armour is proved, and they are sure of victory and of a crown They are "confident" a as the lion, as the word may he rendered; they are confident of the love of God, of their interest in Christ, of the grace of God in their hearts, and that all things work together for their good; and that it is, and always will be, well with them, let things go how they will in the world, and so are secure. They are bold and undaunted, both before God and men; before God in prayer, knowing him to be their covenant God in Christ, having in view the blood and righteousness of Christ, and being assisted by his Spirit: and they are undaunted before men; if the righteous man is a minister of the word, he speaks it boldly, as it ought to be spoken, fearing the faces of none, knowing it to be the Gospel of Christ, the truth, as it is in him, and the power of God to salvation; and if a private Christian, he is a public professor of Christ, this word and ordinances, which he is not ashamed to own before all the world; in short, the righteous are bold in life and in death, and will be so in the day of judgment; and it is their righteousness which makes them so, from which they are denominated righteous, even not their own, but the righteousness of Christ.

Gill: Pro 28:2 - -- For the transgression of a land many are the princes thereof,.... Either together; that is, reigning princes, such as lay claim to the crown, and usu...
For the transgression of a land many are the princes thereof,.... Either together; that is, reigning princes, such as lay claim to the crown, and usurp it; otherwise it is a happiness to a nation to have many princes of the blood, to inherit in succession, to support the crown in their family, and defend a nation, and study the good of it; but it is a judgment to a nation when many rise up as competitors for rule, or do rule, as at Athens, where thirty tyrants sprung up at once; by which factions and parties are made, and which issue in oppression, rapine, and murder: or successively, very quickly, one after another, being dethroned the one by the other: or removed by death, as in the land of Israel, in the times of the judges, and of the kings of Israel and Judah, after the revolt of the ten tribes; which frequent changes produce different administrations, new laws, and fresh taxes, disagreeable to the people; and oftentimes children come to be their princes, which is always reckoned an infelicity to a nation; see Ecc 10:16; and all this is usually for some national sin or sins indulged to, which draw upon a people the divine resentment, and provoke God to suffer such changes among there;
but by a man of understanding and knowledge the state thereof shall be prolonged, either by a set of wise and understanding, good and virtuous men, who will oppose the growing vice and immoralities of a people, and form themselves into societies for the reformation of manners; the word "man" being taken collectively for a body of men: or by a wise and prudent minister or ministry, or a set of civil magistrates, who will show themselves to be terrors to evildoers, and a praise to them that do well: or by a wise and prudent prince, who seeks to establish his throne by judgment and mercy; who will take care that justice and judgment be executed in the land, and that vice and profaneness be discouraged; by means of such, the state of a kingdom, which seemed near to ruin, will be prolonged, and the happiness and prosperity of it secured and established; and God, in mercy to it, may long preserve the life of their king, will being a good one, a long reign is always a happiness to a nation. And to this sense is the Vulgate Latin version, "the life of the prince shall be longer"; and the Targum, which is,
"and the sons of men that understand knowledge shall endure;''
see Ecc 9:15.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 28:1 The righteous, who seek to find favor with God and man, have a clear conscience and do not need to look over their shoulders for avengers or law enfor...

NET Notes: Pro 28:2 For a study of the verses in chapters 28 and 29 concerning kings and governments, see B. V. Malchow, “A Manual for Future Monarchs,” CBQ 4...
Geneva Bible: Pro 28:1 The wicked ( a ) flee when no man pursueth: but the righteous are bold as a lion.
( a ) Because their own conscience accuses them.

Geneva Bible: Pro 28:2 For the transgression of a land ( b ) many [are] its princes: but by a man of understanding [and] knowledge [its] state shall be prolonged.
( b ) The...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 28:1-28
MHCC: Pro 28:1 - --Sin makes men cowards. Whatever difficulties the righteous meet in the way of duty, they are not daunted.

Matthew Henry: Pro 28:1 - -- See here, 1. What continual frights those are subject to that go on in wicked ways. Guilt in the conscience makes men a terror to themselves, so tha...

Matthew Henry: Pro 28:2 - -- Note, 1. National sins bring national disorders and the disturbance of the public repose: For the transgression of a land, and a general defection...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 28:1 - --
1 The godless flee without any one pursuing them;
But the righteous are bold like a lion.
We would misinterpret the sequence of the accents if we ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 28:2 - --
There now follows a royal proverb, whose key-note is the same as that struck at Pro 25:2, which states how a country falls into the οὐκ ἀγ...
Constable -> Pro 25:1--29:27; Pro 28:1--29:27
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...
