
Text -- Proverbs 3:12 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 3:11-12; Pro 3:12
JFB: Pro 3:11-12 - -- The true intent of afflictions considered; they do not contradict the assertion of the blessed state of the pious (Job 5:17; Heb 12:5-6).
The true intent of afflictions considered; they do not contradict the assertion of the blessed state of the pious (Job 5:17; Heb 12:5-6).

JFB: Pro 3:12 - -- Or receiveth as denoting reconciliation regarding the offense which produced chastisement.
Or receiveth as denoting reconciliation regarding the offense which produced chastisement.
Clarke -> Pro 3:12
Clarke: Pro 3:12 - -- Whom the Lord loveth - To encourage thee to bear correction, know that it is a proof of God’ s love to thee; and thereby he shows that he treat...
Whom the Lord loveth - To encourage thee to bear correction, know that it is a proof of God’ s love to thee; and thereby he shows that he treats thee as a father does his son, even that one to whom he bears the fondest affection
The last clause the Septuagint translate
TSK -> Pro 3:12

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 3:12
Barnes: Pro 3:12 - -- The first distinct utterance of a truth which has been so full of comfort to many thousands; it is the summing up of all controversies (compare Joh ...
The first distinct utterance of a truth which has been so full of comfort to many thousands; it is the summing up of all controversies (compare Joh 9:2) as to the mystery of suffering. The apostle writing to the Hebrews can find no stronger comfort Heb 12:6 than this; the Church, in her visitation service, has no truer message for the sufferer.
Poole -> Pro 3:12
Poole: Pro 3:12 - -- Afflictions are not infelicities, but benefits and comforts, because their are testimonies of God’ s love, which is infinitely more desirable t...
Afflictions are not infelicities, but benefits and comforts, because their are testimonies of God’ s love, which is infinitely more desirable than any evil can be terrible. They show God’ s purpose, and desire, and care to purge us from our sins, and to make us fit for his presence and kingdom. This and the former verse seem to be here inserted in the midst of his commendations of wisdom, to remove an objection against the excellency and happiness of wise or pious men, taken from those many calamities to which such persons are frequently exposed, the reason of which providence he here giveth.
Haydock -> Pro 3:12
Haydock: Pro 3:12 - -- And as. Septuagint, "but he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth," as St. Paul quotes this passage, Hebrews xii. 6. The verb is now wanting in Heb...
And as. Septuagint, "but he scourgeth every son whom he receiveth," as St. Paul quotes this passage, Hebrews xii. 6. The verb is now wanting in Hebrew, or ceab; "as a father" may signify " scourgeth, in piel, (Menochius) with i prefixed. (Calmet)
Gill -> Pro 3:12
Gill: Pro 3:12 - -- For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth,.... This is a reason why the children of God should not despise corrections, nor be weary of them; since they ...
For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth,.... This is a reason why the children of God should not despise corrections, nor be weary of them; since they spring from love, are given in love, nor is there any abatement of it in them: when the Lord chastens and corrects, he does not take away his lovingkindness from them; yea, it is because he loves them that therefore he thus deals with them; wherefore they ought to be patiently bore, and kindly taken by them;
even as a father the son in whom he delighteth; as a father chastens and corrects his son, whom he dearly loves, and has the greatest pleasure in, so the Lord chastens and corrects his people; see Deu 8:5. There is such a relation subsisting between them as that of father and son, which flows from the inexpressible love of God to them; and which is a love of complacency and delight in them, and is invariable and unchangeable, and continues the same under all their afflictions; as appears by what he does for them in them, and by the issue of them; he knows their souls in adversity, and chooses them in the furnace of affliction; he pays love visits to them, and comforts them under all their tribulation; he sympathizes with them, and supports them; he makes their bed in their affliction, and delivers out of it, or takes them to himself: the issue is always his own glory, and their good.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 3:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Pro 3:1-35 - --1 Sundry exhortations.13 The gain of wisdom.27 Exhortation to beneficence, etc.33 The different state of the wicked and upright.
Maclaren -> Pro 3:11-24
Maclaren: Pro 3:11-24 - --The Gifts Of Heavenly Wisdom
My son, despise not the chastening of the Lord; neither be weary of His correction: 12. For whom the Lord loveth He corr...
MHCC -> Pro 3:7-12
MHCC: Pro 3:7-12 - --There is not a greater enemy to the fear of the Lord in the heart, than self-conceit of our own wisdom. The prudence and sobriety which religion teach...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 3:7-12
Matthew Henry: Pro 3:7-12 - -- We have here before us three exhortations, each of them enforced with a good reason: - I. We must live in a humble and dutiful subjection to God an...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 3:11-12
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 3:11-12 - --
The contrast here follows. As God should not be forgotten in days of prosperity, so one should not suffer himself to be estranged from Him by days o...
Constable: Pro 1:1--9:18 - --I. DISCOURSES ON WISDOM chs. 1--9
Verse one introduces both the book as a whole and chapters 1-9 in particular. ...

Constable: Pro 1:8--8:1 - --B. Instruction for Young People 1:8-7:27
The two ways (paths) introduced in 1:7 stretch out before the r...
