
Text -- Proverbs 31:5 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
JFB: Pro 31:3-9 - -- Succinct but solemn warnings against vices to which kings are peculiarly tempted, as carnal pleasures and oppressive and unrighteous government are us...
Succinct but solemn warnings against vices to which kings are peculiarly tempted, as carnal pleasures and oppressive and unrighteous government are used to sustain sensual indulgence.

Mental and bodily resources for health and comfort.

JFB: Pro 31:3-9 - -- Literally, "to the destroying of kings," avoid destructive pleasures (compare Pro 5:9; Pro 7:22, Pro 7:27; Hos 4:11).

JFB: Pro 31:4-5 - -- Stimulants enfeeble reason, pervert the heart, and do not suit rulers, who need clear and steady minds, and well-governed affections (compare Pro 20:1...

They give unrighteous decisions against the poor.
Clarke -> Pro 31:5
Clarke: Pro 31:5 - -- Lest they drink, and forget the law - When they should be administering justice, they are found incapable of it; or, if they go into the judgment-se...
Lest they drink, and forget the law - When they should be administering justice, they are found incapable of it; or, if they go into the judgment-seat, may pervert justice.
TSK -> Pro 31:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Poole -> Pro 31:5
Poole: Pro 31:5 - -- Forget the law the laws of God, by which they are to govern themselves and their kingdoms.
Pervert the judgment of any of the afflicted; which may ...
Forget the law the laws of God, by which they are to govern themselves and their kingdoms.
Pervert the judgment of any of the afflicted; which may easily be done by a drunken judge, because drunkenness deprives a man of the use of reason; by which alone men can distinguish between right and wrong, and withal stirs up those passions which incline him both to precipitation and partiality.
Haydock -> Pro 31:5
Haydock: Pro 31:5 - -- Poor. Solon condemned to death, at Athens, the prince who should get drunk; and the Areopagites excluded from their assembly a judge who had dined i...
Poor. Solon condemned to death, at Athens, the prince who should get drunk; and the Areopagites excluded from their assembly a judge who had dined in a tavern. (Laertius 1.; Atheneus xiii. 2.)
Gill -> Pro 31:5
Gill: Pro 31:5 - -- Lest they drink, and forget the law,.... The law of God by Moses, which the kings of Israel were obliged to write a copy of, and read over daily, to i...
Lest they drink, and forget the law,.... The law of God by Moses, which the kings of Israel were obliged to write a copy of, and read over daily, to imprint it on their minds, that they might never forget it, but always govern according to it, Deu 17:18; or the law of their ancestors, or what was made by themselves, which through intemperance may be forgotten; for this sin stupefies the mind and hurts the memory, and makes men forgetful;
and pervert the judgment of any of the afflicted; a king on the throne, or a judge on the bench, drunk, must be very unfit for his office; since he must be incapable of attending to the cause before him, of taking in the true state of the case; and, as he forgets the law, which is his rule of judgment, so he will mistake the point in debate, and put one thing for another; and "change" g and alter, as the word signifies, the judgment of the afflicted and injured person, and give the cause against him which should be for him; and therefore it is of great consequence that kings and judges should he sober. A certain woman, being undeservedly condemned by Philip king of Macedon, when drunk, said,
"I would appeal to Philip, but it shall be when he is sober;''
which aroused him; and, more diligently examining the cause, he gave, a more righteous sentence h.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Pro 31:1-31
TSK Synopsis: Pro 31:1-31 - --1 Lemuel's lesson of chastity and temperance.6 The afflicted are to be comforted and defended.10 The praise and properties of a good wife.
MHCC -> Pro 31:1-9
MHCC: Pro 31:1-9 - --When children are under the mother's eye, she has an opportunity of fashioning their minds aright. Those who are grown up, should often call to mind t...
Matthew Henry -> Pro 31:1-9
Matthew Henry: Pro 31:1-9 - -- Most interpreters are of opinion that Lemuel is Solomon; the name signifies one that is for God, or devoted to God; and so it agrees well enough...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Pro 31:4-5
Keil-Delitzsch: Pro 31:4-5 - --
Hence there now follows a warning against drunkenness, not unmediated by the reading למחות :
4 It is not for kings, O Lemuel,
Not for kings ...
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 31:1-31 - --B. The Wisdom of Lemuel ch. 31
Some commentators have regarded only the first nine verses of this chapte...
