
Text -- Proverbs 28:26-28 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 28:26 - -- Distrusting his own judgment, and seeking the advice of others, and especially of God.
Distrusting his own judgment, and seeking the advice of others, and especially of God.

Righteous men are afraid to appear publickly.

Clarke: Pro 28:26 - -- He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool - For his heart, which is deceitful and desperately wicked, will infallibly deceive him.
He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool - For his heart, which is deceitful and desperately wicked, will infallibly deceive him.
TSK: Pro 28:26 - -- that : Pro 3:5; 2Ki 8:13; Jer 17:9; Mar 7:21-23, Mar 14:27-31; Rom 8:7
but : Job 28:28; 2Ti 3:15; Jam 1:5, Jam 3:13-18
that : Pro 3:5; 2Ki 8:13; Jer 17:9; Mar 7:21-23, Mar 14:27-31; Rom 8:7
but : Job 28:28; 2Ti 3:15; Jam 1:5, Jam 3:13-18

TSK: Pro 28:27 - -- that giveth : Pro 19:17, Pro 22:9; Deu 15:7, Deu 15:10; Psa 41:1-3, Psa 112:5-9; 2Co 9:6-11; Heb 13:16
hideth : Isa 1:15
shall : Pro 11:26, Pro 24:24
that giveth : Pro 19:17, Pro 22:9; Deu 15:7, Deu 15:10; Psa 41:1-3, Psa 112:5-9; 2Co 9:6-11; Heb 13:16
hideth : Isa 1:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Pro 28:26 - -- The contrast between the wisdom of him who trusts in the Lord, and the folly of self-trust.
The contrast between the wisdom of him who trusts in the Lord, and the folly of self-trust.
Poole: Pro 28:26 - -- He that trusteth in his own heart who trusts to his own wit, neglecting or slighting the advice of others, and the counsel of God himself.
Is a fool...
He that trusteth in his own heart who trusts to his own wit, neglecting or slighting the advice of others, and the counsel of God himself.
Is a fool and shall receive the fruit of his folly, to wit, destruction.
Whoso walketh wisely distrusting his own judgment, and seeking the advice of others, and especially of God, as all truly wise men do, he shall be delivered from those dangers and mischiefs which fools bring upon themselves; whereby he showeth himself to be a wise man.

Poole: Pro 28:27 - -- Shall not lack shall not impoverish himself by it, as covetous men imagine or pretend; but shall be enriched, which is implied.
That hideth his eyes...
Shall not lack shall not impoverish himself by it, as covetous men imagine or pretend; but shall be enriched, which is implied.
That hideth his eyes lest he should see poor and miserable men, and thereby be moved to pity or obliged to relieve them. So he cunningly avoids the beginnings, and occasions, and provocations to charity; teaching us to use the same caution against sin.
Shall have many a curse partly from the poor, whose curses, being not causeless, shall come upon him, and partly from God, who will curse his very blessings, and bring him to extreme want and misery.

Poole: Pro 28:28 - -- Men hide themselves men, i.e. righteous men, as appears from the following clause, are ashamed and afraid to appear publicly; of which See Poole "Pr...
Men hide themselves men, i.e. righteous men, as appears from the following clause, are ashamed and afraid to appear publicly; of which See Poole "Pro 28:12" .
The righteous increase they who were righteous do now again appear in public, and being advanced to that power which the wicked rulers have lost, they use their authority to encourage and promote righteousness, and to punish unrighteousness, whereby the number of wicked men is diminished, and the righteous are multiplied.
Haydock -> Pro 28:28
Haydock: Pro 28:28 - -- Men. Septuagint, "the just groan," and all are under "apprehensions." (Calmet)
Men. Septuagint, "the just groan," and all are under "apprehensions." (Calmet)
Gill: Pro 28:26 - -- He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool,.... Since the thoughts and imaginations of the thoughts of the heart are only evil, and that continually;...
He that trusteth in his own heart is a fool,.... Since the thoughts and imaginations of the thoughts of the heart are only evil, and that continually; they are vain and vague, sinful and corrupt; the affections are inordinate, the conscience defiled, the understanding darkened, and the will perverse; there is no good thing in it, nor any that comes out of it, but all the reverse; it is deceitful and desperately wicked: he must be a fool, and not know the plague of his heart, that trusts in it; and even for a good man to be self-confident, and trust to the sincerity of his heart, as Peter did, or to the good frame of the heart, as many do, is acting a foolish part; and especially such are fools as the Scribes and Pharisees, who trusted in themselves that they were righteous, and despised others, when a man's best righteousness is impure and imperfect, and cannot justify him in the sight of God; it is moreover a weak and foolish part in men to trust to the wisdom and counsel of their heart, to lean to their own understanding, even it, things natural and civil, and not to ask wisdom of God, or take the advice of men, and especially it, things religious and sacred; see Pro 3:5;
but whoso walketh wisely; as he does who walks according to the rule of the divine word; who makes the testimonies of the Lord his counsellors; who consults with his sacred writings, and follows the directions of them; who walks as he has Christ for his pattern and example, and makes the Spirit of God his guide, and walks after him, and not after the flesh; who walks with wise men, and takes their advice in all matters of moment, not trusting to his own wisdom and knowledge; who walks as becomes the Gospel of Christ, and in all the ordinances of it; who walks inoffensively to all men, and so in wisdom towards them that are without, and in love to them who are within; who walks circumspectly, not as fools, but as wise, redeeming the time;
he shall be delivered; he shall be delivered from the snares of his own deceitful heart, which he will not trust; and from the temptations of Satan; and from all afflictions and troubles he meets with in the way; and from a final and total falling away; and from eternal death and destruction: "he shall be saved", as some versions render it, even with an everlasting salvation. The Targum is,
"he shall be protected from evil.''

Gill: Pro 28:27 - -- He that giveth unto the poor shall not lack,.... That gives alms unto them, relieves them in their distress, supplies them with money, food, or clothe...
He that giveth unto the poor shall not lack,.... That gives alms unto them, relieves them in their distress, supplies them with money, food, or clothes, and does it cheerfully, largely, and liberally, as the case requires; such an one shall not want any good thing; he shall not be the poorer for what he gives; he shall not miss it, nor his substance be diminished; he shall not come to poverty and want, yea, he shall be enriched, and his substance increased, for more is intended than is expressed. Jarchi interprets this of a wise man not restraining doctrine from a disciple, but giving it to him liberally;
but he that hideth his eyes; that is, from the poor, as the Targum and Syriac version add; that does not care to see his person, to behold his miseries, or know his case, lest his heart should be moved with compassion, and should draw out anything from him; see Isa 58:7. Such an one
shall have many a curse; not only from the poor he hardens himself against, but from other persons, who observe his miserable and covetous disposition; and from the Lord himself, who abhors such persons, and curses their very blessings now, and will bid them depart from him as accursed persons hereafter.

Gill: Pro 28:28 - -- When the wicked rise, men hide themselves,.... When wicked men are raised to places of power and authority, rich men hide themselves, lest they should...
When the wicked rise, men hide themselves,.... When wicked men are raised to places of power and authority, rich men hide themselves, lest they should become a prey to them; and good men hide themselves, that they may not be put to death by them; or as ashamed to behold their evil actions; See Gill on Pro 28:12;
but when they perish; wicked men, either by a natural or violent death; or perish as to their authority and power, being turned out of their places:
the righteous increase; such who before hid themselves appear, and, being put into the places of the wicked, encourage truth and righteousness, by which means the number of good men is multiplied; and which is a great happiness to a nation, and shows the usefulness and advantage that good magistrates are of unto it.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 28:26 The verb form יִמָּלֵט (yimmalet) is the Niphal imperfect; the form means “to escape.” In ...

NET Notes: Pro 28:27 The text does not specify the nature or the source of the curses. It is natural to think that they would be given by the poor who are being mistreated...

NET Notes: Pro 28:28 The two clauses have parallel constructions: They both begin with infinitives construct with prepositions functioning as temporal clauses, followed by...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 28:1-28
MHCC: Pro 28:26 - --A fool trusts to his own strength, merit, and righteousness. And trusts to his own heart, which is not only deceitful above all things, but which has ...

MHCC: Pro 28:27 - --A selfish man not only will not look out for objects of compassion, but will look off from those that call for his attention.

MHCC: Pro 28:28 - --When power is put into the hands of the wicked, wise men decline public business. If the reader will go diligently over this and the other chapters, i...
Matthew Henry: Pro 28:26 - -- Here is, 1. The character of a fool: He trusts to his own heart, to his own wisdom and counsels, his own strength and sufficiency, his own merit a...

Matthew Henry: Pro 28:27 - -- Here is, 1. A promise to the charitable: He that gives to the poor shall himself be never the poorer for so doing; he shall not lack. If he have...

Matthew Henry: Pro 28:28 - -- This is to the same purport with what we had, Pro 28:12. 1. When bad men are preferred, that which is good is clouded and run down. When power is pu...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 28:26 - --
The following proverb assumes the בטח of the foregoing:
(Note: We take the opportunity of remarking that the tendency to form together certain ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 28:27 - --
27 He that giveth to the poor suffereth no want;
But he that covereth his eyes meeteth many curses.
In the first line the pronoun לּו , referri...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 28:28 - --
The following proverb resembles the beginnings Pro 28:2, Pro 28:12. The proverbs Pro 28:28; Pro 29:1-3, form a beautiful square grasp, in which the ...
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...
