
Text -- Proverbs 10:6 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Pro 10:6
Wesley: Pro 10:6 - -- Their own violence or injustice. This may be an allusion to the ancient custom of covering the mouths and faces of condemned malefactors.
Their own violence or injustice. This may be an allusion to the ancient custom of covering the mouths and faces of condemned malefactors.
JFB -> Pro 10:6
JFB: Pro 10:6 - -- Literally, "Praises." The last clause is better: "The mouth of the wicked covereth (or concealeth) violence (or mischievous devices)" to be executed i...
Clarke -> Pro 10:6
Clarke: Pro 10:6 - -- Violence covereth the mouth of the wicked - As blessings shall be on the head of the just, so the violence of the wicked shall cover their face with...
Violence covereth the mouth of the wicked - As blessings shall be on the head of the just, so the violence of the wicked shall cover their face with shame and confusion. Their own violent dealings shall be visited upon them. The mouth forsoth of unpitious men wickidnesse covereth. - Old MS. Bible. "The forehead of the ungodly is past shame, and presumptuous."- Coverdale.
TSK -> Pro 10:6

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Pro 10:6
Barnes: Pro 10:6 - -- Covereth ... - The meaning is perhaps, the violence which the wicked has done is as a bandage over his mouth, reducing him to a silence and sha...
Poole -> Pro 10:6
Poole: Pro 10:6 - -- Blessings are upon the head of the just all sorts of blessings are wished to them by men, and conferred upon them by God. He saith, upon their hea...
Blessings are upon the head of the just all sorts of blessings are wished to them by men, and conferred upon them by God. He saith, upon their head , either to show that these blessings come from above; and that openly, in the sight of the world, so that he can confidently speak of them to God’ s praise, and to his own comfort and honour; or because blessings were commonly pronounced by men with this ceremony, by laying their hands upon the head of the party blessed.
Violence covereth the mouth of the wicked violence (either,
1. Their own violence or injustice, which may be here put for the fruit or punishment of it, as iniquity is oft put for the punishment of iniquity. Or,
2. Violence, or the violent, and injurious, and mischievous practices of others against them, deserved by their own violence committed against others, and inflicted upon them by the curse and righteous judgment of God) shall cover the mouth of the wicked, i.e. shall fall upon them. This phrase of covering their mouth is used, either,
1. With allusion to the ancient custom of covering the mouths and faces of condemned malefactors; of which see Est 7:8 Job 9:24 . Or,
2. To signify that the curse and judgment of God upon them should be so manifestly just, that their mouths should be stopped, and they not be able to speak a word against God, or for themselves. Or,
3. To intimate that God’ s judgment upon them should be public and evident to all that behold them, as any covering put upon a man’ s mouth or face is, as for the same reason the blessings of the just were said to be upon their heads. And the mouth may be put for the face or countenance , by a synecdoche. But this clause is otherwise rendered by divers learned interpreters, the mouth of the wicked covereth (i.e. concealeth or smothereth within itself, and doth not utter that) violence or injury , which he meditateth in his heart, and designeth to do to others, and therefore shall be accursed and miserable. But this suits not so well with the former clause, wherein the blessings of the just are not meant actively, of those blessings which they wish or give to others, but passively, of those blessings which others wish or give to them; and consequently this violence is not understood of that which they do to others, but of that which is done to them by others.
Haydock -> Pro 10:6
Haydock: Pro 10:6 - -- Wicked. Or, as the Hebrew seems to indicate, "the wicked covereth iniquity, by an hypocritical exterior," (Calmet) or, "the injury" (Mont.[Montanus?...
Wicked. Or, as the Hebrew seems to indicate, "the wicked covereth iniquity, by an hypocritical exterior," (Calmet) or, "the injury" (Mont.[Montanus?]) done to another, ( chamas. ; Haydock) "unseasonable, or infinite mourning," Greek: penthos auron. (Septuagint)
Gill -> Pro 10:6
Gill: Pro 10:6 - -- Blessings are upon the head of the just,.... That seeks for righteousness, not by the works of the law, but by faith; that lives by faith upon the ri...
Blessings are upon the head of the just,.... That seeks for righteousness, not by the works of the law, but by faith; that lives by faith upon the righteousness of Christ, and is justified by it, made, accounted, and reckoned just through it; and, in consequence of his faith, does justly, and lives soberly, righteously, and godly: upon his "head", who is Christ, blessings are; for he is "the head of every such man", 1Co 11:3; not the pope of Rome, but Christ, is head of the church; he is the representative and federal head of all the elect, both in eternity and time; he is a political head to them, as a king is to his subjects; an economical one, as the husband is the head of the wife, a father the head of his family, and a master the head of his servants; and he is in such sense a head to them as a natural head is to its body; he is of the same nature with them, superior to them, a perfect, only, everliving, and everlasting head. Upon him all the blessings of grace and goodness are; his people are blessed with them in him, their head, Eph 1:3; and from him they descend to them, the members of his body, just as the oil on Aaron's head ran down his beard to the skirts of his garments. So in an ancient writing of the Jews y, this passage being mentioned, it is asked, Who is the head of the righteous? The answer is, the middle pillar; by whom they seem to mean a middle person, the Mediator, the Messiah. Or else, a part being put for the whole, the meaning is, that blessings are upon the persons of righteous ones, as the word is used in Pro 11:26; the Targum renders it,
"the heads of the righteous.''
All covenant blessings, spiritual ones, such as are blessings indeed, solid and substantial, irreversible, and for ever; particularly a justifying righteousness, from whence they are denominated just; pardon of sin, peace of soul, every sanctifying grace, the blessing of adoption, and a right to eternal life: these being said to be on the "head" of them, may denote that they come from above, and descend in a way of grace upon them; that they are visible and manifest; that they reside, continue, and remain upon them; that they are as an ornament and crown unto them; and that they are a security of them that no wrath and vengeance can fall upon them. The Septuagint, Vulgate Latin, and Arabic versions, read, "the blessing of the Lord is upon the head of the just"; and such are all the blessings before mentioned;
but violence covereth the mouth of the wicked; that is, either his violent dealings are open and manifest, and are a scandal to him, as well as entail a curse on him; or rather the fruit and effect of his violence and oppression, the punishment due thereunto, is so righteously inflicted on him, that his mouth is stopped, and he has not one word to say against the just judgments of God upon him, for his violent usage of men, whether here or hereafter; see Psa 107:42. Some render the words, "the mouth of the wicked covereth violence" z; palliates and excuses it, and calls it by another name; or hides and conceals that which is in the heart, and does not utter it; see Pro 10:18. The Targum is,
"in the mouth of the wicked rapine is covered;''
as a sweet morsel under their tongue, though in the end bitterness.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Pro 10:6 The syntax of this line is ambiguous. The translation takes “the mouth of the wicked” as the nominative subject and “violence”...
Geneva Bible -> Pro 10:6
Geneva Bible: Pro 10:6 Blessings [are] upon the head of the just: but violence covereth the mouth of ( c ) the wicked.
( c ) When their wickedness is discovered, they will ...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 10:1-32
TSK Synopsis: Pro 10:1-32 - --1 From this chapter to the five and twentieth are sundry observations of moral virtues, and their contrary vices.
MHCC -> Pro 10:6
Matthew Henry -> Pro 10:6
Matthew Henry: Pro 10:6 - -- Here is, 1. The head of the just crowned with blessings, with the blessings both of God and man. Variety of blessings, abundance of blessings, s...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 10:6
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 10:6 - --
There now follow two proverbs regarding the blessings and the curses which come to men, and which flow forth from them. Here, however, as throughout...
Constable -> Pro 10:1--22:17; Pro 10:1-14
Constable: Pro 10:1--22:17 - --II. COUPLETS EXPRESSING WISDOM 10:1--22:16
Chapters 1-9, as we have seen, contain discourses that Solomon eviden...
