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Text -- Proverbs 6:6 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 6:6
Wesley: Pro 6:6 - -- This is a distinct precept; and it is for the most part as needless to seek, as hard to find, coherence in the proverbs.
This is a distinct precept; and it is for the most part as needless to seek, as hard to find, coherence in the proverbs.
JFB -> Pro 6:6-8
JFB: Pro 6:6-8 - -- The improvident sluggards usually want sureties. Hence, such are advised to industry by the ant's example.
The improvident sluggards usually want sureties. Hence, such are advised to industry by the ant's example.
Clarke -> Pro 6:6
Clarke: Pro 6:6 - -- Go to the ant, thou sluggard - נמלה nemalah , the ant, is a remarkable creature for foresight, industry, and economy. At the proper seasons the...
Go to the ant, thou sluggard -
Defender -> Pro 6:6
Defender: Pro 6:6 - -- Whatever may have been God's overall purpose in creating different animals, many of them - perhaps all, if we can learn enough about them - can be use...
Whatever may have been God's overall purpose in creating different animals, many of them - perhaps all, if we can learn enough about them - can be used to illustrate important spiritual truths, as in the industrious example of the ant (Job 12:7-10)."
TSK -> Pro 6:6
TSK: Pro 6:6 - -- the ant : The ant has been famous in all ages for its social habits, foresight, economy and industry. Collecting their food at the proper seasons, th...
the ant : The ant has been famous in all ages for its social habits, foresight, economy and industry. Collecting their food at the proper seasons, they bite off the ends of the grain to prevent it from germinating, and lay it up in cells till needed. Pro 1:17; Job 12:7, Job 12:8; Isa 1:3; Mat 6:26
thou : Pro 6:9, Pro 10:26, Pro 13:4, Pro 15:19, Pro 18:9, Pro 19:15, Pro 19:24, Pro 20:4, Pro 21:25, Pro 22:13, Pro 24:30-34; Pro 26:13-16; Mat 25:26; Rom 12:11; Heb 6:12
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 6:6
Barnes: Pro 6:6 - -- The warning against the wastefulness of the prodigal is followed by a warning as emphatic against the wastefulness of sloth. The point of comparison...
The warning against the wastefulness of the prodigal is followed by a warning as emphatic against the wastefulness of sloth. The point of comparison with the ant is not so much the foresight of the insect as its unwearied activity during the appointed season, rebuking man’ s inaction at a special crisis Pro 6:4. In Pro 30:25, the storing, provident habit of the ant is noticed.
Poole -> Pro 6:6
Poole: Pro 6:6 - -- This is another distinct precept; and it is for the most part as needless to seek, as hard to find, coherence in the proverbs and counsels of this b...
This is another distinct precept; and it is for the most part as needless to seek, as hard to find, coherence in the proverbs and counsels of this book.
Her ways her actions and manner of living, especially her diligence and providence, which are the things commended in her, Pro 6:7,8 ; of which naturalists give many instances, as that the ants watch the fittest seasons for all things, that they provide most plentifully against the time of famine, that they never hinder, but always assist, one another in their work, and unite their force together to carry away such things as are too large or heavy for one of them; that they prepare fit cells or repositories for their corn in the ground, and such as the rain cannot easily reach; and if through excessive rain their corn be wet, they bring it forth to be dried; that they bite off the ends of the grains of corn that they may not grow, &c.
Gill -> Pro 6:6
Gill: Pro 6:6 - -- Go to the ant, thou sluggard,.... That art become surety for another, and got into a snare and net, and yet takest no pains to get out. Or this may be...
Go to the ant, thou sluggard,.... That art become surety for another, and got into a snare and net, and yet takest no pains to get out. Or this may be directed, not to the surety, but the debtor; who, through his slothfulness, has contracted debts, and uses no industry to be in a capacity to pay them. Or, it may be, this has no connection with the former; but the wise man proceeds to a new subject, and to dissuade from idleness, which brings ruin on families, and leads to all sin; and, for the instruction of idle and slothful men, proposes the example of the ant, and sends them to it to learn industry of it h;
consider her ways; what diligence and industry it uses in providing its food; which, though a small, weak, feeble creature, yet will travel over flints and stones, climb trees, enter into towers, barns, cellars, places high and low, in search of food; never hinder, but help one another in carrying their burdens; prepare little cells to put their provisions in, and are so built as to secure them from rain; and if at any time their corn is wet, they bring out and dry it, and bite off the ends of it, that it may not grow. These, with others, are taken notice of by Frantzius i; and some of them by Gersom on the place;
and be wise; learn wisdom of it, and be wiser than that, as the Septuagint and Arabic versions: this is a mortification of proud men, that would be reckoned wise, to be sent to so despicable a creature to get wisdom from.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Pro 6:6
NET Notes: Pro 6:6 The sluggard (עָצֵל, ’atsel) is the lazy or sluggish person (cf. NCV “lazy person”; NRSV, NLT “l...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 6:6
Geneva Bible: Pro 6:6 Go to the ( b ) ant, thou sluggard; consider her ways, and be wise:
( b ) If the word of God cannot instruct you, learn from the little ant to labour...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 6:1-35
TSK Synopsis: Pro 6:1-35 - --1 Against suretyship;6 idleness;12 and mischievousness.16 Seven things hateful to God.20 The blessings of obedience.25 The mischiefs of whoredom.
MHCC -> Pro 6:6-11
MHCC: Pro 6:6-11 - --Diligence in business is every man's wisdom and duty; not so much that he may attain worldly wealth, as that he may not be a burden to others, or a sc...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 6:6-11
Matthew Henry: Pro 6:6-11 - -- Solomon, in these verses, addresses himself to the sluggard who loves his ease, lives in idleness, minds no business, sticks to nothing, brings noth...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 6:6-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 6:6-8 - --
As Elihu (Job 35:11) says that God has set the beasts as our teachers, so he sends the sluggard to the school of the ant (steplang7 Ameise ), so na...
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. ...
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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...
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