![](images/minus.gif)
Text -- Proverbs 5:11-23 (NET)
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
![](images/advanced.gif)
Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
![](images/arrow_open.gif)
![](images/information.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Pro 5:14 - -- In how little a time am I now come into remediless misery! Assembly - And that in the congregation of Israel, where I was taught better things.
In how little a time am I now come into remediless misery! Assembly - And that in the congregation of Israel, where I was taught better things.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Pro 5:15 - -- Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee in the sober use of the marriage - bed.
Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee in the sober use of the marriage - bed.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Pro 5:16 - -- Thy children proceeding from thy wife and from thyself. Fountains are here put for rivers flowing from them.
Thy children proceeding from thy wife and from thyself. Fountains are here put for rivers flowing from them.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Pro 5:16 - -- They shall in due time appear abroad to thy comfort, and for the good of others.
They shall in due time appear abroad to thy comfort, and for the good of others.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
With children; for barrenness was esteemed a curse among the Israelites.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Pro 5:19 - -- At all convenient times: for that there may be excess in the marriage - bed is manifest.
At all convenient times: for that there may be excess in the marriage - bed is manifest.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Love her fervently. It is an hyperbolical expression.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Wesley: Pro 5:22 - -- He is in perfect bondage to his lusts, and is neither able nor wiling to set himself at liberty.
He is in perfect bondage to his lusts, and is neither able nor wiling to set himself at liberty.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
From the way of life, and from eternal salvation.
JFB -> Pro 5:11; Pro 5:11; Pro 5:11; Pro 5:12-14; Pro 5:14; Pro 5:15-20; Pro 5:17; Pro 5:18; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:21; Pro 5:22-23; Pro 5:23; Pro 5:23
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
The whole person under incurable disease.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Pro 5:12-14 - -- The ruined sinner vainly laments his neglect of warning and his sad fate in being brought to public disgrace.
The ruined sinner vainly laments his neglect of warning and his sad fate in being brought to public disgrace.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Pro 5:15-20 - -- By figures, in which well, cistern, and fountain [Pro 5:15, Pro 5:18] represent the wife, and rivers of waters [Pro 5:16] the children, men are exhort...
By figures, in which well, cistern, and fountain [Pro 5:15, Pro 5:18] represent the wife, and rivers of waters [Pro 5:16] the children, men are exhorted to constancy and satisfaction in lawful conjugal enjoyments. In Pro 5:16, fountains (in the plural) rather denote the produce or waters of a spring, literally, "what is from a spring," and corresponds with "rivers of waters."
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Other figures for a wife from the well-known beauty of these animals.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Literally, "intoxicated," that is, fully satisfied.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
And He will cause sin to bring its punishment.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
JFB: Pro 5:23 - -- Literally, "in want of instruction," having refused it (compare Job 13:18; Heb 11:24).
Clarke: Pro 5:11 - -- When thy flesh and thy body are consumed - The word שאר shear , which we render body, signifies properly the remains, residue, or remnant of a t...
When thy flesh and thy body are consumed - The word
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:14 - -- I was almost in all evil - This vice, like a whirlpool, sweeps all others into its vortex
I was almost in all evil - This vice, like a whirlpool, sweeps all others into its vortex
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:14 - -- In the midst of the congregation and assembly - In the mydel of the Curche and of the Synagoge - Old MS. Bible. Such persons, however sacred the pl...
In the midst of the congregation and assembly - In the mydel of the Curche and of the Synagoge - Old MS. Bible. Such persons, however sacred the place, carry about with them eyes full of adultery, which cannot cease from sin.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:15 - -- Drink waters out of thine own cistern - Be satisfied with thy own wife; and let the wife see that she reverence her husband; and not tempt him by in...
Drink waters out of thine own cistern - Be satisfied with thy own wife; and let the wife see that she reverence her husband; and not tempt him by inattention or unkindness to seek elsewhere what he has a right to expect, but cannot find, at home.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:16 - -- Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad - Let thy children lawfully begotten be numerous.
Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad - Let thy children lawfully begotten be numerous.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:17 - -- Let them be only thine own - The off-spring of a legitimate connection; a bastard brood, however numerous, is no credit to any man.
Let them be only thine own - The off-spring of a legitimate connection; a bastard brood, however numerous, is no credit to any man.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:18 - -- Let thy fountain be blessed - יהי מקורך ברוך yehi mekorecha baruch . Sit vena tua benedicta. Thy vein; that which carries off streams ...
Let thy fountain be blessed -
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:19 - -- The loving hind and pleasant roe - By אילת aiyeleth , the deer; by יעלה yaalah , the ibex or mountain goat, may be meant
The loving hind and pleasant roe - By
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:19 - -- Let her breasts satisfy thee - As the infant is satisfied with the breasts of its mother; so shouldst thou be with the wife of thy youth.
Let her breasts satisfy thee - As the infant is satisfied with the breasts of its mother; so shouldst thou be with the wife of thy youth.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:21 - -- For the ways of a man - Whether they are public or private, God sees all the steps thou takest in life.
For the ways of a man - Whether they are public or private, God sees all the steps thou takest in life.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:22 - -- He shall be holden with the cords of his sins - Most people who follow unlawful pleasures, think they can give them up whenever they please; but sin...
He shall be holden with the cords of his sins - Most people who follow unlawful pleasures, think they can give them up whenever they please; but sin repeated becomes customary; custom soon engenders habit; and habit in the end assumes the form of necessity; the man becomes bound with his own cords, and so is led captive by the devil at his will.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Clarke: Pro 5:23 - -- He shall die without instruction - This is most likely, and it is a general case; but even these may repent and live.
He shall die without instruction - This is most likely, and it is a general case; but even these may repent and live.
TSK: Pro 5:11 - -- thou : Pro 7:23; Deu 32:29; Jer 5:31; Rom 6:21; Heb 13:4; Rev 21:8, Rev 22:15
when : Num 5:27; 1Co 5:4, 1Co 5:5
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:12 - -- How : Pro 1:7, Pro 1:22, Pro 1:29, Pro 1:30, Pro 15:5; Psa 50:17, Psa 73:22; Zec 7:11-14; Joh 3:19, Joh 3:20
and my : Pro 1:25, Pro 6:23, Pro 12:1, Pr...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:16 - -- thy : Deu 33:28; Psa 68:26; Isa 48:21
dispersed : Gen 24:60; Jdg 12:9; Psa 127:3, Psa 128:3
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:19 - -- as the : Son 2:9, Son 4:5, Son 7:3, Son 8:14
satisfy thee : Heb. water thee, Pro 5:15
be thou ravished always with her love : Heb. err thou always in ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:20 - -- with : Pro 2:16-19, Pro 6:24, Pro 7:5, Pro 22:14, Pro 23:27, Pro 23:28, Pro 23:33; 1Ki 11:1
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:21 - -- Pro 15:3; 2Ch 16:9; Job 31:4, Job 34:21; Psa 11:4, Psa 17:3, Psa 139:1-12; Jer 16:17; Jer 17:10, Jer 23:24, Jer 32:19; Hos 7:2; Heb 4:13; Rev 2:18, Re...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
TSK: Pro 5:22 - -- His : Pro 1:18, Pro 1:31, Pro 11:3, Pro 11:5; Psa 7:15, Psa 7:16, Psa 9:15; Jer 2:19; Hos 4:11-14; Gal 6:7, Gal 6:8
holden : Ecc 7:26
sins : Heb. sin,...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Pro 5:11 - -- Yet one more curse is attendant on impurity. Then, as now, disease was the penalty of this sin.
Yet one more curse is attendant on impurity. Then, as now, disease was the penalty of this sin.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:12 - -- More bitter than slavery, poverty, disease, will be the bitterness of self-reproach, the hopeless remorse that worketh death.
More bitter than slavery, poverty, disease, will be the bitterness of self-reproach, the hopeless remorse that worketh death.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:14 - -- The conscience-stricken sinner had been "almost"given up to every form of evil in the sight of the whole assembly of fellow-townsmen; "almost,"there...
The conscience-stricken sinner had been "almost"given up to every form of evil in the sight of the whole assembly of fellow-townsmen; "almost,"therefore, condemned to the death which that assembly might inflict Lev 20:10; Deu 22:22. The public scandal of the sin is brought in as its last aggravating feature.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:15 - -- The teacher seeks to counteract the evils of mere sensual passion chiefly by setting forth the true blessedness of which it is the counterfeit. The ...
The teacher seeks to counteract the evils of mere sensual passion chiefly by setting forth the true blessedness of which it is the counterfeit. The true wife is as a fountain of refreshment, where the weary soul may quench its thirst. Even the joy which is of the senses appears, as in the Song of Solomon, purified and stainless (see Pro 5:19 marginal reference).
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:16 - -- Wedded love streams forth in blessing on all around, on children and on neighbors and ill the streets, precisely because the wife’ s true love ...
Wedded love streams forth in blessing on all around, on children and on neighbors and ill the streets, precisely because the wife’ s true love is given to the husband only.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:19 - -- Better, "A loving hind (is she) and pleasant roe."As in the whole circle of Arab and Persian poetry the antelope and the gazelle are the chosen imag...
Better, "A loving hind (is she) and pleasant roe."As in the whole circle of Arab and Persian poetry the antelope and the gazelle are the chosen images of beauty, so they served with equal fitness for the masculine and feminine types of it. (Compare the names Tabitha and Dorcas Act 9:36.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:21 - -- One more warning. The sin is not against man, nor dependent on man’ s detection only. The secret sin is open before the eyes of Yahweh. In the ...
One more warning. The sin is not against man, nor dependent on man’ s detection only. The secret sin is open before the eyes of Yahweh. In the balance of His righteous judgment are weighed all human acts.
Pondereth - Note the recurrence of the word used of the harlot herself (see Pro 1:6 note): she ponders not, God does.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Barnes: Pro 5:23 - -- The end of the sensual life: to "die without instruction,"life ended, but the discipline of life fruitless; to "go astray,"as if drunk with the grea...
The end of the sensual life: to "die without instruction,"life ended, but the discipline of life fruitless; to "go astray,"as if drunk with the greatness of his folly (the same word is used as for "ravished"in Pro 5:19, see marg.), even to the end. This is the close of what might have gone on brightening to the perfect day Pro 4:18.
Poole: Pro 5:11 - -- Thou mourn at the last bitterly bewail thy own madness and misery when it is too late.
Thy flesh and thy body thy flesh, even thy body; the particl...
Thou mourn at the last bitterly bewail thy own madness and misery when it is too late.
Thy flesh and thy body thy flesh, even thy body; the particle and being put expositively.
Consumed by those manifold diseases which filthy and inordinate lusts bring upon the body, of which physicians give a very large and sad catalogue, and the bodies of many adulterers give full proof.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:12 - -- How have I hated instruction! oh what a mad beast have I been, to hate and slight the fair warnings which were given me, and against mine own knowled...
How have I hated instruction! oh what a mad beast have I been, to hate and slight the fair warnings which were given me, and against mine own knowledge, to run headlong into this pit of destruction! which are not the words of a true penitent mourning for and turning from his sin, but only of a man who is grieved for the sad effects of his delightful lusts, and tormented with the horror of his own guilty conscience.
My heart despised reproof I did with my whole heart abhor all admonitions.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:13 - -- Of my teachers of my parents, and friends, and ministers, who faithfully and seasonably informed me of those mischiefs and miseries which now I feel....
Of my teachers of my parents, and friends, and ministers, who faithfully and seasonably informed me of those mischiefs and miseries which now I feel.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:14 - -- I was almost in all evil Oh what a miserable man am I! There is scarce any misery, in respect of estate, or body, or soul, into which I am not alread...
I was almost in all evil Oh what a miserable man am I! There is scarce any misery, in respect of estate, or body, or soul, into which I am not already plunged. The words also are and may well be rendered thus, In a moment I am come into all evil . In how little a time, and for what short and momentary pleasures, am I now come into extreme and remediless misery!
In the midst of the congregation and assembly: I, who designed and expected to enjoy my lusts with secrecy and impunity, am now made a public example and shameful spectacle to all men, and that in the congregation of Israel, where I was taught better things, and where such actions are most infamous and hateful.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:15 - -- This metaphor contained here, and Pro 5:16-18 , is to be understood either,
1. Of the free and lawful use of a man’ s estate, both for his own...
This metaphor contained here, and Pro 5:16-18 , is to be understood either,
1. Of the free and lawful use of a man’ s estate, both for his own comfort, and for the good of others. Or rather,
2. Of the honest use of matrimony, as the proper remedy against these filthy practices. This best suits with the whole context, both foregoing and following; and thus it is explained in the end of Pro 5:18 . So the sense is, Content thyself with those delights which God alloweth thee, with the sober use of the marriage bed. Why shouldst thou ramble hither and thither, trespassing against God and men, to steal their waters, which thou mightest freely take out of thine own cistern or well. The ground of the metaphor is this, that waters were scarce and precious in those countries, and therefore men used to make cisterns and wells for their own private use. And the same metaphor of
waters and of a pit , or well , is applied to things of this nature elsewhere, as Pro 23:27 Isa 48:1 51:1 .
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:16 - -- Thy fountains thy children proceeding from thy wife, called thy fountain , Pro 5:18 , and from thyself, as the Israelites are said to come from the ...
Thy fountains thy children proceeding from thy wife, called thy fountain , Pro 5:18 , and from thyself, as the Israelites are said to come from the fountain of Israel, Deu 33:28 Psa 68:26 . Compare Isa 51:1 . And fountains are here put for rivers flowing from them, as it is explained in the next clause, and as it is Psa 104:10 , by a metonymy of the cause for the effect. And this title may be the more fitly given to children, because as they are rivers in respect of their parents, so when they grow up, they also become fountains to their children.
Be dispersed abroad they shall be multiplied, and in due time appear abroad in the world to thy comfort and honour, and for the good of others; whereas whores are commonly barren, and men are ashamed to own the children of whoredom.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:17 - -- Hereby thou mayst be secured, that thou dost not father and leave thine estate to other men’ s children; whereas the parents of harlots’ ...
Hereby thou mayst be secured, that thou dost not father and leave thine estate to other men’ s children; whereas the parents of harlots’ children are common or uncertain.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:18 - -- Thy fountain thy wife, as the next clause explains it.
Be blessed she shall be blessed with children; for barrenness was esteemed a curse and repro...
Thy fountain thy wife, as the next clause explains it.
Be blessed she shall be blessed with children; for barrenness was esteemed a curse and reproach, especially among the Israelites. Or rather, she shall be a blessing and a comfort to thee, as it follows, and not a curse and a snare, as a harlot will be.
Rejoice with the wife seek not to harlots for that delight which God alloweth thee to take with thy wife. So here he explains the foregoing metaphor, and applies it to his present design.
Of thy youth which thou didst marry in her and thine own youthful days, with whom therefore in all reason and justice thou art still to satisfy thyself, even when she is old. Or he mentions youth , because that is the season in which men are most prone to unclean practices, against which men are commonly fortified by the infirmities of old age.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:19 - -- As the loving hind or, as the beloved hind , Heb. the hind of loves ; as amiable and delightful as the hinds are, either,
1. To their males, the h...
As the loving hind or, as the beloved hind , Heb. the hind of loves ; as amiable and delightful as the hinds are, either,
1. To their males, the harts; or,
2. To princes and great men, who used to make them tame and familiar, and to take great delight in them, as hath been noted by many writers; of which see my Latin Synopsis.
Her breasts i.e. her loves and embraces, expressed by lying between the breasts, Son 1:13 ; Compare Eze 23:3,8,21 .
At all times at all convenient times; for that there may be excess in the use of the marriage bed is manifest, not only from many scriptures, but from the light of nature, and the consent of wise and sober heathens, who have laid restraints upon men in this particular. A man may be drunk with his own wine, and intemperate with his own wife. Or, in all ages and conditions. Do not only love her when she is young and beautiful, but also when she is old and deformed.
Be thou ravished love her fervently. It is an hyperbolical expression.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:20 - -- Why wilt thou destroy and damn thyself for those delights which thou mayst enjoy without sin or danger?
Why wilt thou destroy and damn thyself for those delights which thou mayst enjoy without sin or danger?
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:21 - -- Before the eyes of the Lord God sees all thy filthy actions, though done with all possible cunning and secrecy. He taketh an exact account of all the...
Before the eyes of the Lord God sees all thy filthy actions, though done with all possible cunning and secrecy. He taketh an exact account of all their doings, that he may recompense them according to the kinds, degrees, numbers, and aggravations of all their unchaste actions.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:22 - -- In vain doth he think to disentangle himself from his lusts by repenting when he grows in years, and to escape punishments; for he is in perfect bon...
In vain doth he think to disentangle himself from his lusts by repenting when he grows in years, and to escape punishments; for he is in perfect bondage to his lusts, and is neither able nor willing to set himself at liberty; and if he do escape the rage of a jealous husband, and the sentence of the magistrate, yet he shall be infallibly overtaken by the righteous judgment of God.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Poole: Pro 5:23 - -- Without instruction because he neglected instruction. Or, without correction or amendment . He shall die in his sins, and not repent of them, as he ...
Without instruction because he neglected instruction. Or, without correction or amendment . He shall die in his sins, and not repent of them, as he designed and hoped to do before his death.
In the greatness of his folly through his stupendous folly, whereby he cheated himself with hopes of repentance or impunity, and exposed himself to endless torments for the momentary pleasures of sinful lusts.
Go astray from God, and from the way of life, and from eternal salvation.
Haydock: Pro 5:11 - -- Body. He alludes to a shameful disease, the just punishment of intemperance, Ecclesiasticus xix. 3.
Body. He alludes to a shameful disease, the just punishment of intemperance, Ecclesiasticus xix. 3.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:14 - -- Evil. Infirm and worn out, having lost my reputation, &c. (Calmet) ---
Though I lived among the faithful, I was under no restraint. (Menochius)
Evil. Infirm and worn out, having lost my reputation, &c. (Calmet) ---
Though I lived among the faithful, I was under no restraint. (Menochius)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:15 - -- Well. Live comfortably on your own property, (Cajetan) with your own wife. (Calmet)
Well. Live comfortably on your own property, (Cajetan) with your own wife. (Calmet)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:16 - -- Waters. Mayst thou have a numerous offspring, (ver. 10.) and be liberal. Many copies of the Septuagint, &c., have a negation, with Aquila, "let not...
Waters. Mayst thou have a numerous offspring, (ver. 10.) and be liberal. Many copies of the Septuagint, &c., have a negation, with Aquila, "let not thy," &c., (Calmet) though it my be read with and interrogation, "are the waters of thy fountain to be?" &c. (De Dieu) ---
By not means. Origen (in Numbers xii.) acknowledges both readings. (Calmet) ---
Good instructions must be given to those who are well disposed, but not to scoffers, or obstinate infidels. (Worthington) ---
Husbands are exhorted to be content with their own wives, (ver. 15, 20.) so that the negative particle seems to be here wanting, as it is, chap. vi. 17., in Manuscript 60, (Kennicott) and chap. xiv. 33. (Septuagint, &c.) (Capellus)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:17 - -- Thee. Stick to thy own wife. In a moral sense, let those who instruct others, take care not to neglect themselves.
Thee. Stick to thy own wife. In a moral sense, let those who instruct others, take care not to neglect themselves.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:18 - -- Vein. Thou shalt have a numerous progeny, Psalm lxvii. 28., and Isaias xlviii. 1. (Calmet)
Vein. Thou shalt have a numerous progeny, Psalm lxvii. 28., and Isaias xlviii. 1. (Calmet)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:19 - -- Love. This is spoken by way of permission, and to withdraw people from unlawful connections, Ecclesiastes ii. 1., and 1 Corinthians vii. 29. (Calme...
Love. This is spoken by way of permission, and to withdraw people from unlawful connections, Ecclesiastes ii. 1., and 1 Corinthians vii. 29. (Calmet)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Haydock: Pro 5:22 - -- Ropes. "Evil habits unrestrained induce a necessity," (St. Augustine, Confessions viii. 5.) though not absolute. (Haydock) ---
The libertine think...
Ropes. "Evil habits unrestrained induce a necessity," (St. Augustine, Confessions viii. 5.) though not absolute. (Haydock) ---
The libertine thinks he can get free as soon as he pleases; not being aware of the chains which he is forging for himself. (Calmet) ---
Sin requires punishment. (Menochius)
Gill: Pro 5:11 - -- And thou mourn at the last,.... Or roar as a lion, as the word s signifies; see Pro 19:12; expressing great distress of mind, horror of conscience, an...
And thou mourn at the last,.... Or roar as a lion, as the word s signifies; see Pro 19:12; expressing great distress of mind, horror of conscience, and vehement lamentations; and yet not having and exercising true repentance, but declaring a worldly sorrow, which worketh death. This mourning is too late, and not so much on account of the evil of sin as the evil that comes by it; it is when the man could have no pleasure from it and in it; when he has not only lost his substance by it, but his health also, the loss of both which must be very distressing: it is at the end of life, in his last days; in his old age, as the Syriac version, when he can no longer pursue his unclean practices;
when thy flesh and thy body are consumed; either in the time of old age and through it, as Gersom; or rather by diseases which the sin of uncleanness brings upon persons, which affixes the several parts of it; the brain, the blood, the liver, the back, and loins, and reins; and even all the parts of it, expressed by flesh and body. This may express the great tribulation such shall be cast into that commit adultery with the Romish Jezebel, Rev 2:22.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:12 - -- And say, how have I hated instruction,.... To live virtuously, and avoid the adulterous woman; this he says, as wondering at his stupidity, folly, and...
And say, how have I hated instruction,.... To live virtuously, and avoid the adulterous woman; this he says, as wondering at his stupidity, folly, and madness, that he should hate and abhor that which was so much his interest to have observed. Gersom interprets it of the instruction of the law; but it is much better to understand it of the instruction of the Gospel; which the carnal mind of man is enmity unto, and which they are so stupid as to abhor; when it is of so much usefulness to preserve from error and heresy, superstition, will worship, and idolatry;
and my heart despised reproof; for following the whorish woman; and which was secretly despised in the heart, and heartily too, if not expressed with the mouth: it is one part of the Gospel ministry to reprove for false doctrine and false worship, though it generally falls under the contempt of the erroneous and idolatrous.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:13 - -- And have not obeyed the voice of my teachers,.... Parents, tutors, masters, and ministers of the word; neither regarded the advice of parents, nor the...
And have not obeyed the voice of my teachers,.... Parents, tutors, masters, and ministers of the word; neither regarded the advice of parents, nor the instructions of tutors, nor the commands of masters, nor the sermons of ministers: these are all lost on some persons; they are proof against them all; these make no impressions upon them, and are of no use to them;
nor inclined mine ear to them that instructed me! or to my masters, as the Targum and Vulgate Latin version; turned away the ear from them, stopped it to them, and would not hear what they had to say; at least would not receive it, and act according to it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:14 - -- I was almost in all evil,.... Scarce a sin but he was guilty of; contempt of private and public instructions, the instructions of parents and minister...
I was almost in all evil,.... Scarce a sin but he was guilty of; contempt of private and public instructions, the instructions of parents and ministers of the Gospel, and following lewd women, commonly lead to the commission of all other sins, even the most atrocious. Some understand this, not of the evil of sin, but of the evil of punishment; and that the sense is, that there is scarce any calamity, distress, or misery, that a man can be in, but his profaneness and lewdness had brought him into; and he was just upon the brink of hell itself: and so Jarchi paraphrases it,
"there was but a step between me and hell.''
Aben Ezra observes, that the past is put for the future, "I shall be"; and then the meaning is, in a little or in a short time I shall be in complete misery; and so they are the words of one under consciousness of sin, despairing of mercy;
in the midst of the congregation and the assembly; that is, either be despised and neglected the instructions which were given in a public manner; or he committed all the evil he did openly; not only in company with wicked men, which he frequented, but even in the presence and before the people of God; yea, before the civil magistrates, the great sanhedrim, which is sometimes designed by the last word here used: or when he was in the house of God, attending public worship, his eyes were full of adultery, and his heart of impure lusts; and neither place, service, nor people of God, where he was, commanded any awe and reverence in him, nor in the least restrained his unclean thoughts and wanton desires; and which is mentioned as an aggravation of guilt. Or else the sense is, that his calamities and miseries were as public as his crimes; he was made a public example of, and all the people were witnesses of it; which served to spread his infamy, and make his punishment the more intolerable: both the sins and punishment of those that commit fornication with the whore of Rome will be public and manifest, Rev 18:5.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:15 - -- Drink waters out of thine own cistern,.... Arguments being used to dissuade from conversation with an adulterous woman, taken from the disgrace, disea...
Drink waters out of thine own cistern,.... Arguments being used to dissuade from conversation with an adulterous woman, taken from the disgrace, diseases, poverty, and distress of mind on reflection, it brings a man to; the wise man proceeds to direct to marriage, as a proper antidote against it: take a wife and cleave to her, and enjoy all the pleasures and comforts of a marriage state. As every man formerly had his own cistern for the reception of water for his own use, 2Ki 18:31; so every man should have his own wife, and but one: and as drinking water quenches thirst, and allays heat; so the lawful enjoyments of the marriage bed quench the thirst of appetite, and allay the heat of lust; for which reason the apostle advises men to marry and not burn, 1Co 7:9; and a man that is married should be content with his own wife, and not steal waters out of another cistern. The allusion may be to a law, which, Clemens of Alexandria t says, Plato had from the Hebrews; which enjoined husbandmen not to take water from others to water their lands, till they themselves had dug into the earth, called virgin earth, and found it dry and without water;
and running waters out of thine own well; the pure, chaste, and innocent pleasures of the marriage state, are as different from the embraces of an harlot, who is compared to a deep ditch and a narrow pit, Pro 23:27; as clear running waters of a well or fountain from the dirty waters of a filthy puddle; see Pro 9:17. Some interpret these words, and what follows, of persons enjoying with contentment the good things of life they have for the support of themselves and families; and of a liberal communication of them to the relief of proper objects; but not to spend their substance on harlots. Jarchi understands by the "cistern", the law of Moses: but it may be better applied to the Scriptures in general, from whence all sound doctrine flows, to the comfort and refreshment of the souls of men; and from whence all doctrine ought to be fetched, and not elsewhere.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:16 - -- Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad,.... Or "shall abound", as the Targum; that is, streams of water from fountains; which Aben Ezra interprets of a...
Let thy fountains be dispersed abroad,.... Or "shall abound", as the Targum; that is, streams of water from fountains; which Aben Ezra interprets of a multitude of children, namely, that are lawfully begotten: the "fountains" are the man and his wife in lawful marriage; the streams are their offspring lawfully procreated by them; which may be said to be "dispersed abroad", when being grown up they are disposed of in marriage in other families, and so become fountains to others, and public blessings;
and rivers of waters in the streets; meaning a numerous posterity as before; and such as a man is not ashamed publicly to own, whereas he is ashamed of such as are unlawfully begotten; but these are to his honour in the streets, and for public good; and particularly to those to whom they are given in marriage; see Isa 48:1. Jarchi interprets this of multiplying disciples, and of teaching them the law publicly, and of getting a name thereby; but it might be interpreted much better of spreading the doctrines of the Gospel, and of the public ministry and profession of that, for the good of others.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:17 - -- Let them be only thine own, and not strangers' with thee. Or "they shall be thine own" u, as the Targum; meaning not the cistern, the well, or the wif...
Let them be only thine own, and not strangers' with thee. Or "they shall be thine own" u, as the Targum; meaning not the cistern, the well, or the wife, but the fountains and rivers, or the children; by a man's cleaving to his own wife, who is a chaste and virtuous woman, he is satisfied that the children he has by her are his own, and not another's; whereas if he has to do with a common harlot, it is uncertain whose children they are, she prostituting herself to many: it may be applied to the peculiar possession and steadfast retention of the truths of the Gospel, in opposition to all divers and strange doctrines propagated by others; see Rev 2:25.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:18 - -- Let thy fountain be blessed,.... Thy wife; make her happy by keeping to her and from others; by behaving in a loving, affable, and respectful manner t...
Let thy fountain be blessed,.... Thy wife; make her happy by keeping to her and from others; by behaving in a loving, affable, and respectful manner to her; by living comfortably with her, and providing well for her and her children: or reckon her a happiness, a blessing that God has bestowed; or
"thy fountain shall be blessed,''
as the Targum; that is, with a numerous offspring, which was always reckoned a blessedness, and was generally the happiness of virtuous women, when harlots were barren;
and rejoice with the wife of thy youth; taken to be a wife in youth, and lived with ever since; do not despise her, nor divorce her, even in old age, but delight in her company now as ever; carry it not morosely and churlishly to her, but express a joy and pleasure in her; see Ecc 9:9. Jarchi interprets this of the law learned in youth; but it might be much better interpreted of the pure apostolic church of Christ, "the beulah", to whom her sons are married, Isa 62:4; to whom they should cleave with delight and pleasure, and not follow the antichristian harlot.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:19 - -- Let her be as the loving hind and pleasant roe,.... That is, the wife of youth; let her always appear to thee as amiable and lovely as these creature...
Let her be as the loving hind and pleasant roe,.... That is, the wife of youth; let her always appear to thee as amiable and lovely as these creatures are; or let her be loved by thee as these are by princes and great men w, who used to keep them tame, keep them clean, wash, comb them, and adorn them, and play with them; or rather, as these creatures are loving to their mates, let thy love be single, chaste, pure, and fervent, as theirs; see Son 2:9. The pure church of Christ is very different from the apostate church of Rome; the one is compared to a loving and lovely creature, innocent and chaste; the other to a cruel and savage beast, Rev 13:1;
let her breasts satisfy thee at all times; even as it were to be inebriated therewith, and so as not to seek out elsewhere to strange women for satisfaction; see Son 1:13. The church's breasts are the ordinances of the Gospel, which are said to be like young roes, and afford great pleasure, satisfaction, and refreshment to true believers, Son 4:5;
and be thou ravished always with her love; greatly delighted with it, both in loving her and being loved by her; and let this always continue in old age as well as in youth; or now as well as formerly, and not for a short time, but for continuance: or, "err thou always in her love" x; if any error is committed by thee, let it be on the side of love, in loving her too much; better err in loving her than in loving a strange woman.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:20 - -- And why wilt thou, my son, be ravished with a strange woman,.... Or "err with her" y; after all those inconveniences and miseries that follow upon a c...
And why wilt thou, my son, be ravished with a strange woman,.... Or "err with her" y; after all those inconveniences and miseries that follow upon a conversation with a harlot, and all those advantages of a marriage state set before thee; why wilt thou be, so foolish and mad as to have a fondness for an harlot and dote upon her, and neglect entering into a marriage state, or forsake the wife of youth? and yet though things are so clearly stated and aptly represented, and the expostulation made in the most tender and affectionate manner; it is suggested as if after all it would not be attended unto, but a harlot be preferred to a wife of youth, a filthy beast to a loving hind, and dirty puddles of water in a ditch to running streams from a well or fountain;
and embrace the bosom of a stranger? that is not thy wife; a description of unlawful love and impure embraces, which are dissuaded from.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:21 - -- For the ways of a man are before the eyes of the Lord,.... Both good and bad; the ways of a chaste and virtuous man, who cleaves to his own wife and ...
For the ways of a man are before the eyes of the Lord,.... Both good and bad; the ways of a chaste and virtuous man, who cleaves to his own wife and shuns the harlot, which are approved of by the Lord; and the ways of a lewd man, all the impure thoughts, desires, and contrivances of his mind, and all the steps he takes to commit lewdness, and all the filthy actions he is guilty of, these are all open and naked to the omniscient God: the adulterer seeks the twilight, and flatters himself with secrecy, not considering that the eye of God is upon him; there are many, that, were their filthy actions known to men, they would be ashamed of them; and this consideration greatly deters from them, and puts them upon secret ways of committing them; much more should the consideration of the divine omniscience weigh with them to avoid them; which is the argument here made use of;
and he pondereth all his goings; he not only sees them, but takes notice of them, and observes them, and ponders them in his mind, and lays them up there, in order to bring to an account for them hereafter; yea, he weighs them in the balance of justice, and will proportion the punishment unto them, according to the rules of it; when it must go ill with those that follow such lewd practices, Heb 13:4.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:22 - -- His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself,.... As in a snare or net, as Gersom observes; in which the adulterer is so entangled that he cannot ...
His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself,.... As in a snare or net, as Gersom observes; in which the adulterer is so entangled that he cannot extricate himself; he may fancy that when he grows old his lusts will be weakened, and he shall be able to get clear of them, and have repentance for them, but he will find himself mistaken; he will become but more and more hardened by them and confirmed in them, and will have neither will nor power to repent of them, and shake off those shackles with which he is bound: and it may be understood of the guilt and punishment of his sins; that the horrors of a guilty conscience shall seize him, there will be no need of any others to arrest him, these will do that office; or diseases shall come upon him for his sins, and bring him to the dust of death, and so to everlasting destruction;
and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins; which he has been all his life committing and twisting together, and made as it were cords of, which by constant practice become strong as such; with the guilt of which he is bound as a malefactor, and will be brought to justice, being reserved in these cords, as the angels that sinned in their chains, unto the judgment of the great day; the phrase denotes the strength of sin, the impotency of man to get rid of it, and the sure and inevitable ruin that comes by it.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Gill: Pro 5:23 - -- He shall die without instruction,.... Into the evil of sin, and the danger he is in, and so without repentance for it; for instruction is the means of...
He shall die without instruction,.... Into the evil of sin, and the danger he is in, and so without repentance for it; for instruction is the means of repentance, and productive of it when blessed, Jer 31:19; but it is but just that those who have hated and rejected it in health and life, that when they come to die should have none given them about the evil of sin, the danger of their state, and the way of salvation; or rather "because of instruction" z; because they would not bear and receive, but neglected, rejected, and despised it, so Aben Ezra and Ben Gersom; or "without correction" a, or discipline and amendment by it;
and in the greatness of his folly he shall go astray; being left to the exceeding great folly of his mind, he shall continue to go astray as he has done from God and his good ways, from the precepts of his law, and the rules of his word; going after his own heart's lusts, which will drown him in perdition. This "folly" may be understood either of his fornication and adultery, which is egregious folly; or of his imagining that he should be able to repent of sin when he pleased, and free himself from the bondage of it, and escape the punishment due unto it.
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Pro 5:11; Pro 5:11; Pro 5:11; Pro 5:11; Pro 5:13; Pro 5:13; Pro 5:13; Pro 5:13; Pro 5:14; Pro 5:14; Pro 5:14; Pro 5:15; Pro 5:16; Pro 5:17; Pro 5:17; Pro 5:18; Pro 5:18; Pro 5:18; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:19; Pro 5:20; Pro 5:20; Pro 5:21; Pro 5:21; Pro 5:21; Pro 5:21; Pro 5:22; Pro 5:22; Pro 5:22; Pro 5:22; Pro 5:22; Pro 5:23; Pro 5:23; Pro 5:23
NET Notes: Pro 5:11 Heb “in the finishing of your flesh and your body.” The construction uses the Qal infinitive construct of כָּל...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:14 The text uses the two words “congregation and assembly” to form a hendiadys, meaning the entire assembly.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:15 Paul Kruger develops this section as an allegory consisting of a series of metaphors. He suggests that what is at issue is private versus common prope...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:16 The verb means “to be scattered; to be dispersed”; here the imperfect takes a deliberative nuance in a rhetorical question.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:17 The point is that what is private is not to be shared with strangers; it belongs in the home and in the marriage. The water from that cistern is not t...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:18 Or “in the wife you married when you were young” (cf. NCV, CEV); Heb “in the wife of your youth” (so NIV, NLT). The genitive f...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:19 The verb שָׁגָה (shagah) means “to swerve; to meander; to reel” as in drunkenness; it signifies a stag...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:20 Heb “foreigner” (so ASV, NASB), but this does not mean that the woman is non-Israelite. This term describes a woman who is outside the mor...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:21 Heb “all his”; the referent (the person mentioned in the first half of the verse) has been specified in the translation for clarity.
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:22 The Hebrew is structured chiastically: “his own iniquities will capture the wicked, by the cords of his own sin will he be held.”
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
NET Notes: Pro 5:23 The verb שָׁגָה (shagah, “to swerve; to reel”) is repeated in a negative sense. If the young man is no...
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:14 I was almost in all evil in the midst of the congregation and ( g ) assembly.
( g ) Although I was faithfully instructed in the truth, yet I almost f...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:15 Drink waters out of ( h ) thine own cistern, and running waters out of thine own well.
( h ) He teaches us sobriety exhorting us to live of our own l...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:17 Let them be only ( i ) thine own, and not strangers' with thee.
( i ) Distribute them not to the wicked and infidels, but reserve them for yourself, ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:18 Let thy ( k ) fountain be blessed: and rejoice with the wife of thy ( l ) youth.
( k ) Your children who will come from you in great abundance showin...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:21 For the ways of man [are] before the ( m ) eyes of the LORD, and he pondereth all his goings.
( m ) He declares that unless a man joins to his wife b...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Geneva Bible: Pro 5:23 He shall ( n ) die without instruction; and in the greatness of his folly he shall go astray.
( n ) Because he will not give ear to God's word and be...
![](images/cmt_minus_head.gif)
expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 5:1-23
TSK Synopsis: Pro 5:1-23 - --1 Solomon exhorts to wisdom.3 He shews the mischief of whoredom and riot.15 He exhorts to contentedness, liberality, and chastity.22 The wicked are ov...
Maclaren -> Pro 5:22
Maclaren: Pro 5:22 - --The Cords Of Sin
His own iniquities shall take the wicked himself, and he shall be holden with the cords of his sins.'--Proverbs 5:22.
In Hosea's ten...
MHCC -> Pro 5:1-14; Pro 5:15-23
MHCC: Pro 5:1-14 - --Solomon cautions all young men, as his children, to abstain from fleshly lusts. Some, by the adulterous woman, here understand idolatry, false doctrin...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
MHCC: Pro 5:15-23 - --Lawful marriage is a means God has appointed to keep from these destructive vices. But we are not properly united, except as we attend to God's word, ...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 5:1-14; Pro 5:15-23
Matthew Henry: Pro 5:1-14 - -- Here we have, I. A solemn preface, to introduce the caution which follows, Pro 5:1, Pro 5:2. Solomon here addresses himself to his son, that is, to ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Matthew Henry: Pro 5:15-23 - -- Solomon, having shown the great evil that there is in adultery and fornication, and all such lewd and filthy courses, here prescribes remedies again...
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:7-11 - --
The eighth discourse springs out of the conclusion of the seventh, and connects itself by its reflective מעליה so closely with it that it appe...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:12-14 - --
The poet now tells those whom he warns to hear how the voluptuary, looking back on his life-course, passes sentence against himself.
12 And thou sa...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:15-17 - --
The commendation of true conjugal love in the form of an invitation to a participation in it, is now presented along with the warning against non-co...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:18-20 - --
With Pro 5:18 is introduced anew the praise of conjugal love. These three verses, Pro 5:18-21, have the same course of thought as Pro 5:15-17.
18 L...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 5:21-23 - --
That the intercourse of the sexes out of the married relationship is the commencement of the ruin of a fool is now proved.
21 For the ways of every...
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. ...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
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...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Pro 5:1-23 - --5. Warnings against unfaithfulness in marriage ch. 5
Chapters 5-7 all deal with the consequences...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)
Constable: Pro 5:7-14 - --The price of unfaithfulness 5:7-14
The price of unfaithfulness is so high that it is unr...
![](images/cmt_minus.gif)