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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB -> Pro 7:26-27
Even the mightiest fail to resist her deathly allurements.
Clarke: Pro 7:26 - -- For she hath cast down many wounded: yea, many strong men have been slain by her - That is, such like women have been the ruin of many. חללים ...
For she hath cast down many wounded: yea, many strong men have been slain by her - That is, such like women have been the ruin of many.

Clarke: Pro 7:27 - -- Her house is the way to hell - שאול sheol , the pit, the grave, the place of the dead, the eternal and infernal world. And they who, through su...
Her house is the way to hell -
TSK: Pro 7:26 - -- Pro 6:33; Jdg 16:21; 2Sa 3:6-8, 2Sa 3:27, 2Sa 12:9-11; 1Ki 11:1, 1Ki 11:2; Neh 13:26; 1Co 10:8; 2Co 12:21; 1Pe 2:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 7:26
Barnes: Pro 7:26 - -- The house of the harlot is now likened to a field of battle strewn with the corpses of the many slain.
The house of the harlot is now likened to a field of battle strewn with the corpses of the many slain.
Poole: Pro 7:26 - -- Strong men men that excel others, either,
1. In bodily strength, upon which they presume, which yet is wasted, and by degrees ruined, by these cours...
Strong men men that excel others, either,
1. In bodily strength, upon which they presume, which yet is wasted, and by degrees ruined, by these courses. Or,
2. In wisdom, and fortitude, and resolution; whereby he implies how much more necessary it is for a weak and foolish young man to use all possible care and diligence to avoid this mischief.

Poole: Pro 7:27 - -- To hell or; to the grave ; for the word is used in both senses; and this sense seems better to agree both with the foregoing and following words. Al...
To hell or; to the grave ; for the word is used in both senses; and this sense seems better to agree both with the foregoing and following words. Although, without repentance, hell will certainly be their portion, and their first death will be followed by the second.
Haydock: Pro 7:26 - -- Her. Solomon gave a melancholy proof of this, as well as David, and Amnon. (Calmet)
Her. Solomon gave a melancholy proof of this, as well as David, and Amnon. (Calmet)

Death. There can be no precaution too great, chap. ii. 18. (Calmet)
Gill: Pro 7:26 - -- For she hath cast down many wounded,.... Wounded in their name, character, and reputation; in their bodies by diseases; and in their souls by guilt, s...
For she hath cast down many wounded,.... Wounded in their name, character, and reputation; in their bodies by diseases; and in their souls by guilt, shame, and horror, through a compliance with her sinful lusts: these she "cast down" from the honours they were possessed of, from the health they enjoyed, and from the peace and tranquillity of mind they formerly felt within them. And not a single person, as the young man instanced in, or a few only, but "many"; great multitudes, hundreds and thousands, and those not weak, and foolish, and inconstant, as he might be thought to be; but such as were "great" m and mighty, as the word also signifies; men of great riches, and wisdom, and courage; as soldiers n, mighty men of war, such as wound and kill others; which seems the true sense of the word here used: and therefore none ought to trust in themselves, nor trust themselves in her company, nor in the least decline to her ways; and especially such as are weak and unskilful, and ignorant of her devices, as the "children" here addressed;
yea, many strong men have been slain by her; men famous for martial exploits, as Samson and others, have been overcome by her: some of great fortitude of mind have not been able to withstand her, she has prevailed over them; and others of robust constitutions have been weakened by diseases, contracted through incontinency with her; and some have suffered death by her means, either from her husband, or her gallants, or the civil magistrate: and of these there have been "innumerable" instances; so the word o for "strong men" sometimes signifies; and so it is here rendered in the Septuagint and Arabic versions, "and innumerable are they whom she has slain". All the world have wondered after the whore of Rome; kings of the earth and mighty men have committed fornication with her; high and low, rich and poor, have been ruined by her; thousands have gone to hell by her means; and some of the sycophants of Rome have even said, that if the pope of Rome should send thousands to hell, of which they seem themselves to be conscious, no one should say to him, What dost thou?

Gill: Pro 7:27 - -- Her house is the way to hell,.... Or "ways" p; the broad highway to it; either to the grave, as "sheol" often signifies; or to hell itself, the place ...
Her house is the way to hell,.... Or "ways" p; the broad highway to it; either to the grave, as "sheol" often signifies; or to hell itself, the place of the damned: to go into her house, and commit wickedness with her, is to take a step to destruction, a large stride towards hell; and, if grace prevent not, will bring a man thither. Who would go into such a house, and much less dwell there, which is the very suburbs of hell?
going down to the chambers of death; to enter her chamber, to step into her bed, howsoever decked and adorned, entertaining and inviting it is, not only leads to the chambers of the grave, as the Targum; but to the lowest and innermost parts of hell; the apartments of the second death, the lot of all unclean and idolatrous persons, without repentance and faith. The Phoenicians called Pluto, the god of hell, by the name of Moth q, a word similar to this used here; and so those chambers are no other than the chambers of hell. Plautus r also calls the gate of a whore's house the gate of hell; which agrees with the first clause of the verse.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 7:27 “Chambers” is a hypocatastasis, comparing the place of death or the grave with a bedroom in the house. It plays on the subtlety of the tem...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 7:26
Geneva Bible: Pro 7:26 For she hath cast down many wounded: yea, many ( i ) strong [men] have been slain by her.
( i ) Neither wit nor strength can deliver them who fall in...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 7:1-27
TSK Synopsis: Pro 7:1-27 - --1 Solomon persuades to a sincere and kind familiarity with wisdom.6 In an example of his own experience, he shews,10 the cunning of a harlot;22 and th...
MHCC -> Pro 7:6-27
MHCC: Pro 7:6-27 - --Here is an affecting example of the danger of youthful lusts. It is a history or a parable of the most instructive kind. Will any one dare to venture ...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 7:24-27
Matthew Henry: Pro 7:24-27 - -- We have here the application of the foregoing story: " Hearken to me therefore, and not to such seducers (Pro 7:24); give ear to a father, and not ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 7:26-27
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 7:26-27 - --
The admonition, having its motive in that which goes before, is now founded on the emphatic finale:
26 For many are the slain whom she hath caused ...
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...

Constable: Pro 6:20--8:1 - --7. Further warnings against adultery 6:20-7:27
This extended warning against one of life's most ...
