collapse all  

Text -- Proverbs 30:8 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
30:8 Remove falsehood and lies far from me; do not give me poverty or riches, feed me with my allotted portion of bread,
Parallel   Cross Reference (TSK)   ITL  

Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Vanity | Riches | Poverty | MASSA | Greed | Food | Contentment | CONVENIENT | Blessing | Blasphemy | AGUR | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Pro 30:8 - -- All vanity of heart and life; a vain conversation, or a love of the vain things of this world.

All vanity of heart and life; a vain conversation, or a love of the vain things of this world.

Wesley: Pro 30:8 - -- All falsehood and deceit in my words and carriage.

All falsehood and deceit in my words and carriage.

Wesley: Pro 30:8 - -- Moderate and suitable both to my natural necessities, and to that condition of life in which thou hast put me.

Moderate and suitable both to my natural necessities, and to that condition of life in which thou hast put me.

JFB: Pro 30:7-9 - -- A prayer for exemption from wickedness, and the extremes of poverty and riches, the two things mentioned. Contentment is implied as desired.

A prayer for exemption from wickedness, and the extremes of poverty and riches, the two things mentioned. Contentment is implied as desired.

JFB: Pro 30:8 - -- All sorts of sinful acts (Job 11:11; Isa 5:18).

All sorts of sinful acts (Job 11:11; Isa 5:18).

Clarke: Pro 30:8 - -- Remove far from me vanity and lies - 1.    שוא shav , all false shows, all false appearances of happiness, every vain expectation...

Remove far from me vanity and lies -

1.    שוא shav , all false shows, all false appearances of happiness, every vain expectation. Let me not set my heart on any thing that is not solid, true, durable, and eternal

2.    Lies, דבר כזב debar cazab , all words of deception, empty pretensions, false promises, uncertain dependences, and words that Fail; promises which, when they become due, are like bad bills; they are dishonored because they are found to be forged, or the drawer insolvent

From the import of the original, I am satisfied that Agur prays against idolatry, false religion, and false worship of every kind. שוא shau is used for an idol, a false god. Jer 18:15 : "My people have forsaken me; they have burnt incense to Vanity;" לשוא lashshav , "to an Idol."Psa 31:6 : "I have hated them that regard lying Vanities;" הבלי שוא habley shave , "vain Idols."See also Hos 12:11; Jon 2:8. And כזב cazab , a thing that fails or deceives, may well apply to the vain pretensions, false promises, and deceptive religious rites of idolatry. So Jer 15:18 : "Wilt thou be unto me as a liar," כמו אכזב kemo achzob , like the false, failing promises of the false gods; "and as waters that fail;" לא נאמנו lo neemanu , that are not faithful; not like the true God, whose promises never fail. According to this view of the subject, Agur prays

1.    That he may be preserved from idolatry

2.    That he may put no confidence in any words but those pure words of God that never fail them that trust in him

Clarke: Pro 30:8 - -- Give me neither poverty nor riches - Here are three requests 1.    Give me not poverty. The reason is added: Lest, being poor, I shal...

Give me neither poverty nor riches - Here are three requests

1.    Give me not poverty. The reason is added: Lest, being poor, I shall get into a covetous spirit, and, impelled by want, distrust my Maker, and take my neighbour’ s property; and, in order to excuse, hide, or vindicate my conduct, I take the name of my God in vain; תפשתי taphasti , "I catch at the name of God."Or, by swearing falsely, endeavor to make myself pass for innocent. Forswere the name of my God - Old MS. Bible. Coverdale, "deny or apostatize from him.

2.    Give me not riches. For which petition he gives a reason also: Lest I be full, and addict myself to luxurious living, pamper the flesh and starve the soul, and so deny thee, the Fountain of goodness; and, if called on to resort to first principles, I say, Who is Jehovah! Why should I acknowledge, why should I serve him? And thus cast aside all religion, and all moral obligation

3.    The third request is, Feed me with food convenient for me, הטריפני לחם חקי hatripheni leechem chukki ; the meaning of which is, "give me as prey my statute allowance of bread,"i.e., my daily bread, a sufficient portion for each day. There is an allusion made to hunting: "Direct so by thy good providence, that I may each day find sufficient portion to subsist on, as a hunter in the forest prays that he may have good speed."It is the province of a preacher to show the importance and utility of such a prayer, and dilate the circumstances, and expand the reasons, after the commentator has shown the literal sense.

TSK: Pro 30:8 - -- Remove : Pro 21:6, Pro 22:8, Pro 23:5; Psa 62:9, Psa 62:10, Psa 119:29, Psa 119:37; Ecc 1:2; Isa 5:18, Isa 59:4; Joh 2:8; Act 14:15 feed : Gen 28:20, ...

collapse all
Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Pro 30:8 - -- The order of the two requests is significant. The wise man’ s prayer is first and chiefly, "truth in the inward parts,"the removal of all forms...

The order of the two requests is significant. The wise man’ s prayer is first and chiefly, "truth in the inward parts,"the removal of all forms of falsehood, hollowness, hypocrisy.

Neither poverty ... - The evil of the opposite extremes of social life is that in different ways they lead men to a false standard of duty, and so to that forgetfulness of God which passes into an absolute denial.

Food convenient for me - literally, "give me for food the bread of my appointed portion."The prayer foreshadows that which we have been taught by the Divine Wisdom: "Give us, day by day, our daily bread."

Poole: Pro 30:8 - -- Remove far from me from my heart, and from the course of my life. This is the first of Agur’ s petitions. Vanity either, 1. All vain and fals...

Remove far from me from my heart, and from the course of my life. This is the first of Agur’ s petitions.

Vanity either,

1. All vain and false opinions concerning God, or the things of God; all unbelief, idolatry, or misbelief. Or,

2. All vanity of heart and life; a vain conversation, an affectation of the vain things of this world, as riches, pleasures, or honours, the bewitching power and sad effects whereof he had observed in others, and feared in himself, as the following request implies.

Lies all falsehood and deceit in my words and carriage towards God or men.

Give me neither poverty nor riches: this is his second request, which may seem to have some reference to the former, poverty being commonly the occasion and temptation to the sin of lying, and riches being the great occasions and enticements to vanity. Thus, as his first petition was against the sins themselves, so this latter is against the occasions of them.

Food convenient for me moderate, and suitable both to my natural necessities, and to that estate and condition of life in which thou hast put me, and to that work and service which thou hast for me to do. And this mediocrity of estate is so amiable, that it hath been oft desired by wise heathens, as more eligible than a state of the greatest plenty and glory.

Haydock: Pro 30:8 - -- Words, which are so opposite to thine, ver. 5. --- Riches. The former often prompts men to deceive, the latter to grow proud and forget God.

Words, which are so opposite to thine, ver. 5. ---

Riches. The former often prompts men to deceive, the latter to grow proud and forget God.

Gill: Pro 30:8 - -- Remove far from me vanity and lies,.... This is the "first" request, to be preserved from sin, in general; which is a vain, lying, and deceitful thing...

Remove far from me vanity and lies,.... This is the "first" request, to be preserved from sin, in general; which is a vain, lying, and deceitful thing; promising pleasure, profit, liberty, and impunity, which it does not give. Agur desires to have vain thoughts removed out of his mind, vain words from his mouth, and vain actions from his life and conversation; to have his eyes turned from beholding vanity, and his feet from walking in it; and his affections taken off from the vain things of the world, the lusts, pleasures, profits, and honours of it; as well as to be kept from all errors and false doctrines, which are lies in hypocrisy; with which men that lie in wait to deceive would, if it were possible, deceive the very elect: Agur conscious of his own weakness, and proneness to evil, desires the Lord would not lead him into temptation, but deliver him from all evil, doctrinal and practical. Some understand this of the forgiveness of sin; which is sometimes expressed by a putting or removing it away, 2Sa 7:13, Psa 103:12;

give me neither poverty nor riches; this is the "second" request, not to be extremely poor nor too rich; but to be in a middle state between both, neither rich nor poor; which Horace b calls the golden mean, and which Agur wisely judged to be the happiest state; most free from care, least liable to temptation, and the best situation to serve the Lord in: a like wish was made by Theognis c, I neither love to be rich,

"nor desire it; but to live on a little, having no evil;''

so Martial d. Both riches and poverty are of God; men are rich or poor, as the Lord pleases; he suffers poverty in some, and gives riches to others: Agur deprecates both, as having their separate, peculiar, snares and temptations; though no doubt this request was made with submission to the will of God; and not as considering either of them as evils in themselves, but as they might be attended with bad consequences, and what is next mentioned being more eligible;

feed me with food convenient for me; not merely what was agreeable to his palate, suitable to his constitution, and sufficient for nature; nor for him personally, but for his family also; and what was proper and suitable to the condition and circumstances in which he was, and to the rank and quality he held, whether in a more private or in a more public capacity. Some render it, "the food of my allowance" e; what is allotted and appointed for me It seems to be the same which Job calls his "necessary food", and Christ "our daily bread": it takes in both food and raiment, which having, men should be contented with; see Job 23:12. The allusion seems to be to the stated measure of food allowed to servants by the day, or rather by the month, called "demensum", and which was but small and scanty f; yet with this Agur could be content.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Pro 30:8 Agur requested an honest life (not deceitful) and a balanced life (not self-sufficient). The second request about his provision is clarified in v. 9.

expand all
Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Pro 30:1-33 - --1 Agur's confession of his faith.7 The two points of his prayer.10 The meanest are not to be wronged.11 Four wicked generations.15 Four things insatia...

MHCC: Pro 30:7-9 - --Agur wisely prayed for a middle state, that he might be kept at a distance from temptations; he asked daily bread suited to his station, his family, a...

Matthew Henry: Pro 30:7-9 - -- After Agur's confession and creed, here follows his litany, where we may observe, I. The preface to his prayer: Two things have I required (that i...

Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 30:7-9 - -- In what now follows, the key-note struck in Pro 30:1 is continued. There follows a prayer to be kept in the truth, and to be preserved in the middle...

Constable: Pro 30:1--31:31 - --V. TWO DISCOURSES BY OTHER WISE MEN chs. 30--31 Chapters 30 and 31 form a distinct section in Proverbs because n...

Constable: Pro 30:1-33 - --A. The Wisdom of Agur ch. 30 The most distinctive features of Agur's proverbs are his numerical style of...

Constable: Pro 30:2-9 - --2. Wisdom about God 30:2-9 Agur began with three declarations. The subject of each is God. 30:2-4 Behind this ironical section one can perhaps imagine...

expand all
Introduction / Outline

JFB: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE NATURE AND USE OF PROVERBS.--A proverb is a pithy sentence, concisely expressing some well-established truth susceptible of various illustrations ...

TSK: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The wisdom of all ages, from the highest antiquity, has chosen to compress and communicate its lessons in short, compendious sentences, and in poetic ...

TSK: Proverbs 30 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Pro 30:1, Agur’s confession of his faith; Pro 30:7, The two points of his prayer; Pro 30:10, The meanest are not to be wronged; Pro 30:...

Poole: Proverbs 30 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 30 Agur’ s prophecy, Pro 30:1 ; wherein he acknowledgeth his own ignorance, Pro 30:2,3 . The purity of God’ s word, with the happ...

MHCC: Proverbs (Book Introduction) The subject of this book may be thus stated by an enlargement on the opening verses. 1. The Proverbs of Solomon, the son of David, king of Israel. 2. ...

Matthew Henry: Proverbs (Book Introduction) An Exposition, With Practical Observations, of The Proverbs We have now before us, I. A new author, or penman rather, or pen (if you will) made use o...

Matthew Henry: Proverbs 30 (Chapter Introduction) This and the following chapter are an appendix to Solomon's proverbs; but they are both expressly called prophecies in the first verses of both, by...

Constable: Proverbs (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew Bible is "The Proverbs of Solo...

Constable: Proverbs (Outline) Outline I. Discourses on wisdom chs. 1-9 A. Introduction to the book 1:1-7 ...

Constable: Proverbs Proverbs Bibliography Aitken, Kenneth T. Proverbs. Philadelphia: Westminster Press, 1986. Alden...

Haydock: Proverbs (Book Introduction) THE BOOK OF PROVERBS. INTRODUCTION. This book is so called, because it consists of wise and weighty sentences, regulating the morals of men; and...

Gill: Proverbs (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO PROVERBS This book is called, in some printed Hebrew copies, "Sepher Mishle", the Book of Proverbs; the title of it in the Vulgate ...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


TIP #35: Tell your friends ... become a ministry partner ... use the NET Bible on your site. [ALL]
created in 0.08 seconds
powered by
bible.org - YLSA