Proverbs
Proverbs
Proverbs
Selected comments on twenty-two proverbs
Contents
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2
Chapter 1:7 – Wisdom
The fear of the Lord is the beginning [margin: principal part] of knowledge:
but fools despise wisdom and instruction.
T
HE preface has stated the object of this Book of Wisdom. The book itself now opens
with a noble sentence. “There is not,” as Bishop Patrick observes, “such a wise in-
struction to be found in all their books [speaking of Heathen ethics], as the very
first of all in Solomon’s, which he lays as the ground of all wisdom.” 1 The fear of the
Lord is the beginning of knowledge. So Job had pronounced before (Job 28:28). So had the
wise man’s father (Psa 111:10). Such is the weight of this saying, that Solomon again re-
peats it (Pro 9:10). Nay, after having gone round the whole circuit, after having weighed
exactly all the sources of knowledge, his conclusion of the whole matter is this: that the
fear of God in its practical exercise “is the whole of man” (Ecc 12:13; cp. 2 Job 28:12-14, with
28)—all his duty, all his happiness, his first lesson and his last. Thus, when about to in-
struct us from the mouth of God, he begins at the beginning, the principal part. All hea-
then wisdom is but folly. Of all knowledge, the knowledge of God is the principal. There
is no true knowledge without godliness (cp. Deu 4:6, 7).
But what is this fear of the Lord? It is that affectionate reverence, by which the child
of God bends himself humbly and carefully to his Father’s law. His wrath is so bitter, and
his love so sweet; that hence springs an earnest desire to please him, and—because of
the danger of coming short from his own weakness and temptations—a holy watchful-
ness and fear, “that he might not sin against Him” (Heb 12:28, 29). This enters into every
exercise of the mind, every object of life (Pro 23:17). The oldest proficient in the Divine
school seeks a more complete molding into its spirit. The godly parent trains up his fam-
ily under its influence (Gen 18:19; Eph 6:4). The Christian scholar honors it as the begin-
ning, the head, of all his knowledge; at once sanctifying its end, and preserving him from
its most subtle temptations.
Why then do multitudes around us despise wisdom and instruction? Because the be-
ginning of wisdom—the fear of God—is not “before their eyes” (Psa 36:1). They know not
its value. They scorn its obligation. Wise they may be in their own sight. But surely God
here gives them their right name. For fools they must be, to despise such a blessing (Jer
8:9); to rush into willful ruin (Pro 1:22, 24-32; cp. 1Sa 2:25; 1Ki 12:13; Jer 36:22-32); to treasure
up work for despairing repentance (Pro 5:12, 13; 29:1). Good Lord! May thy childlike fear be
my wisdom, my security, my happiness!
1
Preface to his Paraphrase.
2
cp. – compare.
3
Chapter 1:10-16
Stand against Temptation
My son, if sinners entice thee, consent thou not. If they say, Come with us, let us lay wait for
blood; let us lurk privily for the innocent without cause: Let us
swallow them up alive as the grave; and whole as those who go down into
the pit: We shall all precious substance; we shall fill our houses with
spoil: Cast in thy lot among us; let us all have one purse: My son,
walk not thou in the way with them; refrain thy foot from
their path: For their feet run to evil, and make haste
to shed blood.
Let the young hearken to the instruction and law of the godly parent and minister.
3
Who that has the charge of youth does not mourn over the baneful influence of evil
companions? Would that the Lord’s servants were as energetic in His work, as sinners
are in furthering the ends of their master! Almost as soon as Satan became apostate, he
became a tempter. And most successfully does he train his servants in this work. (Pro
16:29; Gen 11:4; Num 31:16; Isa 56:12). If sinners entice thee. This is no uncertain contingen-
cy, “My son”, said the wise son of Sirach, “if thou come to serve the Lord prepare thy
heart for temptation” (Apocrypha 4 Book of Ecclesiasticus 2:1). Yet we have one rule against all
manifold enticements (Pro 7:5-23; cp. Deu 13:6-8; 1Ch 21:1; 1Ki 13:15-19)—Consent thou not.
Consent constitutes the sin. Eve consented, before she plucked the fruit (Gen 3:6); David,
before he committed the act of sin (2Sa 11:2-4; cp. Jos 7:21). Joseph resisted and was saved
(Gen 39:8, 9). Job was sorely tried; “yet in all this, Job sinned not” (Job 1:22; 2:10). If the
temptation prevail, charge it not on God; no—nor on the devil. As the worst he can do,
he can only tempt, he cannot force us, to sin. When he has plied us with his utmost
power, and most subtle artifice, 5 it is at the choice of our own will, whether we yield or
no (see Jam 1:13-15). The habitual resistance of the will clears us of responsibility (cp. Rom
7:14-17, 19, 20, 23). The consent, even if it be not carried out into the act, lays the responsi-
bility at our own door.
The enticement here was to robbery and blood; covetousness leading to murder.
Most fiendish was the plot. The innocent was to be murdered without cause (Gen 4:8; Psa
10:8), swallowed up alive and whole; like Korah and his company, going down into the
pit in their full strength (Num 16:33). The invitation at first was seemingly harmless: only
come with us. Soon the demand rises: Cast in thy lot with us. “But we shall be discov-
ered.” “No,” they reply, “we will do all so cleverly, that there will be no more blood to be
seen, than if the earth swallowed them up; or they died a natural death, and were decent-
3
baneful – life destroying; destructive to well-being.
4
The Apocrypha – books of ancient Hebrew writings, which are not a part of the canon of Scripture, the
inspired Word of God. Many scholars consider them valuable as ancient texts for study.
5
artifice – cunning; trickery.
4
ly buried.” 6 The spoil of precious substance will be found, when our victim is destroyed
(cp. Mat 21:38). Precious substance! Why! This is as large a promise, as that from the
mouth of the Son of God (Pro 8:21). But how can substance be found belonging to a world
of shadows (Psa 39:6)? Much more, how can the fruit of robbery be precious, with the
curse of God (Pro 21:6; Psa 62: 9, 10)?
Not that this horrible plot is usually propounded7 at first. But step by step, unless
the Lord graciously restrains, it may come to this at last. The cover and varnish are here
taken off, to show what sin is in its nature, character, and certain end. What young man
but would shudder and start away from the wickedness, if presented to his imagination
alone? But many a deluded sinner is thus hurried on by the influence of company to
lengths of sin, that he had never contemplated. Other enticements are prepared for the
amiable and the uninitiated, just entering into life; less fearful and obvious, and there-
fore more really dangerous. Such “advantage does Satan get of us…ignorant of his de-
vices” (2Co 2:11)!
Is it safe then to trust in our good resolutions or principles? No—Walk not in the
way with them. The invitation is: Come with us. The warning is Refrain thy foot from
8
their path (Pro 4:14, 15; cp. Psa 1:1). Avoid parleying with them. No one becomes a pro-
9
fligate at once. But “evil communications corrupt good manners” (1Co 15:33). The tender
conscience becomes less sensitive by every compliance. Who can stop himself in the
downhill road? One sin prepares for another, pleads for it, nay, even makes it necessary
for concealment. David committed murder to hide his adultery, and for his covering
charged it upon the providence of God (2Sa 11:4, 17, 25).
Again then, we repeat with all earnestness, Refrain. The path may be strewed 10 with
11
flowers; but it is a path of evil, perhaps of blood. Every step on Satan’s ground deprives
us of the security of the promises of God. Often has ruin followed by not refraining from
the first step (cp. Mar 14:54, 71). The only safety is in flight (Gen 39:10, 12). Run then into
“thy hiding-place, and behind thy shield,” and boldly bid thy tempter “depart from thee”
(Psa 119:114, 115; cp. Mat 4:10). Awful is the thought! There is not a sin that the highest saint
of God may not commit, if trusting in himself. “Thou standest by faith. Be not high-
minded, but fear” (Rom 11:20).
6
Cartwright. But see Gen 4:10; 2Ki 9:26.
7
propounded – put forward for consideration.
8
parleying – having a discussion.
9
profligate – a person with extremely low morals.
10
strewed – scattered on the ground.
11
Pro 1:16; Isa 59:7. An apt illustration of the total depravity of man in the perverted use of the mem-
bers of his body—Rom 3:15.
5
Chapter 2:1-6 – Study the Word
My son, if thou wilt receive my words, and hide my commandments with thee; So that thou in-
cline thine ear unto wisdom, and apply thine heart to understanding; Yea, if thou criest after
knowledge, and liftest up thy voice for understanding;
If thou seekest her as silver, and searchest for her as for hid treasures;
Then shalt thou understand the fear of the Lord, and find the
knowledge of God. For the Lord giveth wisdom: out of his
mouth cometh knowledge and understanding.
Wisdom, having solemnly warned rebellious scorners, now instructs her dutiful chil-
dren. The dark question long before asked—“Where shall wisdom be found?” (Job 28:12,
20, 21)—is now answered. It is here set before us as the fear and knowledge of God (Pro
2:5); a principle of practical godliness (Pro 2:7-9); a preservation from besetting tempta-
tions (Pro 2:10-19); and a guide into the right and safe path (Pro 2:20). Hence follow the se-
curity of its scholars (Pro 2:21), and the certain ruin of its ungodly despisers (Pro 2:22).
The rules for its attainment are such as the simplest comprehension can apply. Care-
fully pondered, and diligently improved, they will furnish a key for the understanding of
the whole Word of God. Let us examine them more distinctly.
Receive my words. Let them be “the seed cast into the ground of an honest and good
heart” (Luk 8:15), a heart prepared of God (Pro 16:1). Read the Book of God as one who “sat
at the feet of Jesus, and heard His word” (Luk 10:39). Like the Bereans, “receive it with all
readiness” (Act 17:11); like the Thessalonians, with reverential faith, acknowledging its
supreme authority (1Th 2:13). Hide my commandments with thee. Carry them about with
thee as thy choicest treasure for greater security (Col 3:16, with Mat 13:44); as thy furniture
always at hand for present use (Pro 4:20, 21; 7:3; Job 22:22). Let the heart be the hiding-place
for the treasure (Luk 2:19, 51; Psa 119:11). Satan can never snatch it thence.
But there must be an active, practical habit of attention. 12 Yet to incline the ear, and
apply the heart—“who is sufficient for these things” (2Co 2:16)? Oh, my God! let it be
Thine own work on me—in me. Thou alone canst do it. 13 Let it be with me, as with Thy
Beloved Son: “Waken my ear morning by morning to hear as the learned” (Isa 50:4). So let
me under Thy grace, “incline mine ear, and hear, that my soul may live” (Isa 55:3).
Without this spirit of prayer, there may be attention and earnestness, yet not one
spiritual impression upon the conscience, not one ray of Divine light in the soul. Earthly
wisdom is gained by study; heavenly wisdom by prayer. Study may form a Biblical schol-
12
Pro 22:17; 23:12. The Emperor Constantine stood hours to hear the Word; replying, when asked to
sit, “That he thought it wicked to give negligent ears, when the truth handled was spoken of
God”—Eusebius, De Vita Constantini, Lib. iv. Foxe records of Edward VI, “That never was he pre-
sent at any sermon commonly, but would excerpt them, or note them with his own hand”—Vol. v.
700. Yet Bishop Hooper thought that his royal master’s love for the preached Word needed to be
quickened—Sermon 7th on Jonas.
13
Pro 20:12. “Thou giving me the ear, I have heard, as thou wouldest thy Word to be heard”—Jerome
on Hab 3:2.
6
ar; prayer puts the heart under a heavenly tutorage, and therefore forms the wise and
spiritual Christian. The Word first comes into the ears; then it enters into the heart;
there it is safely hid; thence rises the cry, the lifting up of the voice. Thus, “the entrance
of thy words giveth light; it giveth understanding unto the simple” (Psa 119:130). God
keeps the key of the treasure house in His own hand. “For this He will be enquired of”
(Eze 36:37) to open it unto thee. We look for no other inspiration than Divine grace to
make His Word clear and impressive. Every verse read and meditated on furnishes mate-
rial for prayer. Every text prayed over opens a mine of “unsearchable riches,” with a light
from above, more clear and full than the most intelligent exposition. David (Psa 119:18,
100) and his wise son (1Ki 3:9-12) sought this learning upon their knees; and the most ma-
tured Christian will continue to the find to lift up his voice for a more enlarged
knowledge of God (Eph 1:17, 18).
But prayer must not stand in the stead of diligence. Let it rather give energy to it. 14
The miner’s indefatigable pains; his invincible resolution; his untiring perseverance;
seeking, yea, searching for hid treasures—such must be our searching into the sacred
storehouse. To read instead of “searching the Scriptures,” is only to skim the surface,
15
and gather up a few superficial notions. The rule of success is—Dig up and down the
field; and if the search be discouraging, dig again. The patient industry of perusal and re-
perusal will open the embosomed 16 treasure. “Surely there is a vein for the silver” (Job
28:1). Yet what miner would be content with the first ore? Would he not search deeper
and deeper, until he has possessed himself of the whole; not satisfied with taking away
much, but determined to leave nothing? Thus let us daily explore “the length, and the
breadth, and the depth” of our boundless stores, until we be “filled with all the fulness of
God” (Eph 3:18, 19).
14
Cp. Mat 11:12. “We are all,” says the heavenly Leighton, “too little in the humble seeking and beg-
ging this Divine knowledge; and that is the cause why we are so shallow and small proficients.” “If
thou cry, and lift up thy voice for understanding, search for it as for hid treasures: sit down upon
thy knees and dig for it. That is the best posture, to fall right upon the golden vein, and go deepest
to know the mind of God, in searching the Scriptures, to be directed and regulated in His ways; to
be made skillful in ways of honoring Him, and doing Him service. This neither man nor angels
can teach him, but God alone”—Sermon on Psalm 107:43.
15
Cp. Joh 5:39. “I can speak it by experience,” said a wise man, “that there is little good to be gotten by
reading the Bible cursorily and carelessly. But do it daily and diligently, with attention and affec-
tion; and you shall find such efficacy, as is to be found in no other book that can be named”—
Erasmus’s Preface to Luke. Peter Martyr gives the same testimony, Epistle Dedicatory to Commentary
on Romans. The following relic of our renowned Elizabeth will be read both with interest and prof-
it. It was written on a blank leaf of a black-letter edition of St. Paul’s Epistles, which she used dur-
ing her lonely imprisonment at Woodstock. The volume itself, curiously embroidered by her own
hand, is preserved in the Bodleian: “August. I walk many times into the pleasant fields of the Holy
Scriptures, where I pluck up the goodlisome herbs of sentences by pruning, eat them by reading,
chew them by musing, and lay them up at length in the high seat of memory, by gathering them
together, that so, having tasted their sweetness, I may the less perceive the bitterness of this miser-
able life”—Miss Strickland’s Queens of England, vi.113.
16
embosomed – cherished in one’s bosom or heart.
7
This habit of living in the element of Scripture is invaluable. To be filled from this
Divine treasury; to have large portions of the Word daily passing through the mind; gives
us a firmer grasp and a more suitable and diversified application of it. Yet this profit can
only be fully reaped in retirement. We may read the Scriptures in company. But to
search them, we must be alone with God. Here we learn to apply ourselves wholly to the
Word, and the Word wholly to us. This enriching study gives a purer vein of sound
judgment. The mere reader often scarcely knows where to begin, and he performs the
routine without any definite object. His knowledge therefore must be scanty and ineffec-
tive. Nor is the neglect of this habit less hurtful to the Church. All fundamental errors
and heresies in the Church may be traced to this source—“Ye do err, not knowing the
Scriptures” (Mat 22:29). They are mostly based on partial or disjointed statements of truth.
Truth separated from truth becomes error. But the mind prayerfully occupied in the
search of Divine truth, crying and lifting up the voice, will never fail to discern the two
great principles of godliness: the fear and the knowledge of God. There is no peradven-
ture 17 nor disappointment in this search—Then shalt thou understand. The Lord giveth
wisdom; it cometh out of his mouth. None shall search in vain (Job 32:8; Isa 48:17; 54:13; Jam
1:5, 17; cp. Gen 41:38, 39; Exo 4:12; Dan 1:17). Never has apostasy from the faith been connect-
ed with a prayerful and diligent study of the Word of God.
17
peradventure – uncertainty; doubt.
8
terness” be untouched, he may be a Socialist or a Chartist 18 or revel in some other equal-
ly ruinous course. External wickedness may be exchanged for decent formality. Vagrant
affections may be turned from some object of vanity; yet not fixed upon the Divine cen-
ter of attraction. The mind may be disciplined from utter unprofitableness, only to in-
dulge in the idolatry of talent, or the fascinations of poisoned literature. The folly of the
pride of life may be resisted; yet pride in other of its multiform 19 fruits tenderly cher-
ished. In all these cases, the principle is unsubdued. The forsaken sin only makes way for
some more plausible, but not less deadly passion. The heart, cast into the mold of the
Gospel, is the only cover from those snares within and without (Rom 6:17, 18; 2Co 3:18),
which so imperceptibly, yet so fatally, estrange us from God. Never, till the vital princi-
ple is implanted, is their mischief discerned. Never, till then, does the heart find its
proper object, its true resting-place.
Chapter 2:20-22
Wisdom: Blessings and Warnings
That thou mayest walk in the way of good men, and keep the paths of the
righteous: For the upright shall dwell in the land, and the perfect shall
remain in it; But the wicked shall be cut off from the earth, and
the transgressors shall be rooted out of it.
Here is the consummating blessing of engrafted wisdom. Not only does it deliver
from evil men; but it guides us into the way of good men. Clad with this Divine armor,
thou shalt have courage, like Joseph, to turn thy face from the enchantment of Sin (Gen
39:9, 10), and keep the paths of the righteous, rugged indeed, yet the only paths of rest
and security (Song 1:7, 8; Jer 6:16). Thus shalt thou dwell and remain in the land, as its
original inheritor (Psa 37:9, 11, 22, 29, 34; Mat 5:5); having the best portion in earth, and an
infinitely better portion in heaven; while the wicked and transgressors, though they may
“enjoy the pleasures of sin for a season,” shall be ultimately cut off, rooted out, and
“driven away” into everlasting ruin (Pro 10:30; 14:32; 15:25; Psa 52:5-7; 92:7; Mat 3:10).
And now, what serious reader of this chapter can fail to estimate above all price the
privilege of being early enlisted under the banner of the cross; early taught in the ways,
and disciplined in the school of the Bible; and early led to hide that blessed book in the
heart, as the rule of life, the principle of holiness, the guide to heaven!
Parents, sponsors, teachers of youth, ponder your deep responsibility with unceasing
prayer for special grace and wisdom. Beware of glossing over sins with amiable or palliat-
18
Chartist – member of a British working-class movement for political reform named after the Peo-
ple’s Charter, active from 1838 to 1848.
19
multiform – many and various kinds.
9
ing 20 terms. Let young people be always led to look upon vicious habits with horror, as
the most appalling evil. Discipline their vehemence of feeling, and all ill-regulated ex-
citement. Keep out of sight, as far as may be, books calculated to inflame the imagina-
tion. To give impulse to the glowing passion may stimulate the rising corruption to the
most malignant fruitfulness. Oh! What wisdom is needed to guide, to repress, to bring
forth, to develop safely, and to improve fully—the mind, energies, and sensibilities of
youth!
Young man! Beware! Do not flatter thyself for a moment that God will ever wink at
your sinful passions; that He will allow for them, as slips and foibles 21 of youth. They are
the “cords of your own sins,” which, if the power of God’s grace break them not in time,
will “hold” you for eternity (Pro 5:22). Shun then the society of sin, as the infection of the
plague. Keep thy distance from it, as from the pit of destruction. Store thy mind with the
preservative of heavenly wisdom. Cultivate the taste for purer pleasures. Listen to the
22
fatherly, pleading remonstrance, inviting thee to thy rest—“Wilt thou not from this
time cry unto me, ‘My Father! Thou art the guide of my youth?’” (Jer 3:4).
20
palliating – disguising the real enormity of an offense by favorable reprentations; representing an
evil as less than it really is.
21
foibles – weaknesses or failing of character.
22
remonstrance – appeal; request.
23
polar star – guiding or governing principle.
10
foolish notions and false fancies. Human power is his idol. His understanding is his god.
Many would rather be convicted of want 24 of principle than want of talent. Many bring
God’s truth to their own bar and cavil 25 at it, as an excuse for rejecting it. In these and
other ways, man “trusteth to himself, and his heart departeth from the Lord” (Jer 17:5).
This is the history of the fall; the history of man from the fall; the dominant sin of every
unhumbled heart; the lamented and resisted sin of every child of God. Need we advert 26
to it as the sin of youth? How rare is the sight of the “younger submitting unto the el-
der” (1Pe 5:5)! If advice is asked, is it not with the hope of confirming a previously-formed
purpose? In case of a contrary judgment, the young man’s own understanding usually
decides the course.
Great reason then is there for the warning—Lean not to thine own understanding.
Once, indeed, it gave clear unclouded light, as man’s high prerogative, “created in the
image of God” (Gen 1:26; Col 3:10). But now, degraded as it is by the fall (Psa 49:20), and
darkened by the corruption of the heart (Eph 4:18), it must be a false guide. Even in a
prophet of God it proved a mistaken counselor (2Sa 7:2-5). Yet though we refuse to lean to
it, to follow it may be implicit trust in the Lord; because it is a trust in His Divine power,
enlightening it, as His lamp for our direction. The Christian on his knees, as if he cast
his understanding away, confesses himself utterly unable to guide his path. But see him
in his active life. He carefully improves his mind. He conscientiously follows its dictates.
Thus practical faith strengthens—not destroys—its power; invigorates—not super-
sedes—exertion (cp. Gen 32:9-20; Neh 2:4-20; 4:9).
It is therefore our plain duty not to neglect our understanding, but to cultivate it dil-
igently in all its faculties. In a world of such extended knowledge, ignorance is the fruit
of sloth, dissipation,27 or misguided delusion. But lean not to thine understanding.
Lean—trust in the Lord. Self-dependence is folly (Pro 28:26), rebellion (Jer 2:13; 9:23), ruin
(Gen 3:5, 6; Isa 47:10, 11). “The great folly of man in trials,” as Dr. Owen justly remarks, “is
leaning to or upon his own understanding and counsels. What is the issue of it? When-
ever in our trials we consult our own understandings, hearken to self-reasonings,
though they seem to be good, and tending to our preservation; yet the principle of living
28
by faith is stifled, and we shall in the issue be cast down by our own counsels.”
Next, let our confidence be uniform: In all thy ways acknowledge him. Take one step
at a time, every step under Divine warrant and direction (cp. Eze 18:21-23; Neh 1:11). Ever
plan for yourself in simple dependence on God. 29 It is nothing less than self-idolatry to
conceive that we can carry on even the ordinary matters of the day without His counsel.
He loves to be consulted. Therefore, take all thy difficulties to be resolved by Him. Be in
24
want – lack.
25
cavil – to object or find fault without good reason.
26
advert – turn one’s attention to; pay attention.
27
dissipation – overindulgence in the pursuit of pleasure.
28
John Owen, Treatise on Temptation, chapter 8. Cp. Job 18:7; Hos 10:8.
29
Jam 4:15. If the Lord will—as Fuller remarks with his pithy quaintness—“a parenthesis, and yet the
most important part of the sentence.”
11
the habit of going to Him in the first place—before self-will, self-pleasing, 30 self-wisdom,
human friends, convenience, expediency. 31 Before any of these have been consulted, go
to God at once. Consider no circumstances too clear to need His direction. 32 In all thy
ways, small as well as great; in all thy concerns, personal or relative, temporal or eternal,
let Him be supreme. Who of us has not found the unspeakable “peace” of bringing to
God matters too minute or individual to be entrusted to the most confidential ear? 33
Abraham thus acknowledged God. Wheresoever he pitched a tent for himself, there was
always an altar for God (Gen 12:7; 13:18). In choosing a wife for his son, there was a singu-
lar absence of worldliness. No mention was made of riches, honor, beauty; only of what
concerned the name and honor of his God (Gen 24:1-8; cp. also his servant, verses 12-27). Thus
did the wise man’s father in all his ways acknowledge God, asking counsel of Him in all
34
his difficulties, and never disappointed.
Now if we be weaned from the idolatry of making our bosom our oracle, and our
heart our counselor; if in true poverty of spirit we go every morning to our Lord, as
knowing not how to guide ourselves for this day; our eye constantly looking upward for
35
direction (Psa 5:3; 143:8-10; 25:4, 5), the light will come down. He shall direct thy paths.
We want no new revelations or visible tokens (such as Exo 13:21, 22). Study the Word with
prayer. Mark the Divine Spirit shedding light upon it. Compare it with the observation of
the providences of the day (Psa 107:43); not judging by constitutional bias 36 (a most doubt-
ful interpreter), but pondering with sober, practical, reverential faith. Let the will be
kept in a quiet, subdued, cheerful readiness, to move, stay, retreat, turn to the right
hand or to the left, at the Lord’s bidding; always remembering that is best which is least
our own doing, and that a pliable spirit ever secures the needful guidance (cp. Psa 32:8, 9;
Isa 48:17, 18; with 30:21). We may “be led,” for the exercise of our faith, “in a way that we
know not” (Isa 42:16; 50:10)—perhaps a way of disappointment, or even of mistake! Yet no
step well prayed over will bring ultimate regret. Though the promise will not render us
infallible; our very error will be overruled for deeper humiliation and self-knowledge;
and thus even this mysterious direction will in the end be gratefully acknowledged—“He
led me forth in the right way” (Psa 107:7).
30
See the awful hypocrisy and judgment of asking counsel of God under this deadly influence: Jer
42:1-3, 19-22; Eze 14:1-6.
31
expediency – adherence to self-serving means.
32
See the evil consequence of this inconsiderate neglect: Jos 9:14.
33
Phi 4:6, 7. “In every thing.”
34
1Sa 23:9-11; 30:6-8; 2Sa 2:1; 5:19. Compare the smarting rod from the neglect of this godly habit,
1Sa 27:1 with 29.
35
Mat 6:22. Cp. Psa 32:8; 34:5; Neh 1:4-11; 2:4-8. Sir M. Hale left it on record, when nearly eighty
years old, as his experience, that whenever he had committed his way simply and unreservedly to
the Lord, He had always directed his path.
36
constitutional bias – personal inclination or tendency; how one feels about a matter.
12
Chapter 3:11, 12 – Chastening
My son, despise not the chastening of the Lord; neither be weary of his
correction; For whom the Lord loveth he correcteth; even as
a father the son in whom he delighteth.
Prosperity and adversity in their wise mixture and proportion, form our present con-
dition. Each is equally fruitful in opportunity of honoring the Lord; in prosperity—by
the full consecration of our substance (Pro 3:9, 10); in adversity—by a humble and cheer-
ful submission to its dispensation. “In prosperity it is well to expect the rod; and suppose
it be His pleasure, let it not make thee either doubt of His gracious Providence, or out of
impatience take any unlawful course to remove it from thee.” 37 His “exhortation,” the
Apostle reminds us, “speaketh to us as unto children.” 38 And indeed, under no character
does He approach so near to us, and endear Himself so closely to us, as that of a Father.
Most precious at all times, especially under correction, is the privilege of adoption—My
son.
Nowhere, indeed, are our corruptions so manifest, or our graces so shining, as under
the rod. We need it as much as our daily bread. Children of God are still children of Ad-
am; with Adam’s will, pride, independence, and waywardness. And nothing more distinc-
tively requires Divine teaching and grace, than how to preserve in our behavior the just
mean between hardness and despondency; neither despising the chastening of the Lord,
39
nor being weary of His correction.
Too often, while we guard against an error on the right hand, we forget one not less
hurtful on the left; like the man, who, in guarding against the precipice on the one side,
rushes into some fearful hazard on the other. The middle path is the right path. Doubt-
40
less the Lord means His chastening to be felt (2Sa 15:26. Psa 39:10, 11). A leviathan iron-
heartedness (Job 41:24-29; Jer 5:3) is the stubbornness of the flesh, not the triumph of the
spirit; a frame most offensive to Him, and most unseemly for the reception of His gra-
cious discipline. To be as though no pain was felt or cared for; sullenly to “kick against
the pricks” (Act 9:5; cp. Pro 19:3), and to dare God to do His worst—this is, indeed, to des-
pise His chastening. 41 But pride will lift up the head, stiff and unbending: many a stroke
does it require to bring it down.
37
Bishop Patrick.
38
Heb 12:5. We must not overlook the Apostle’s testimony to the Divine inspiration of the Book,
showing the instruction throughout to be the teaching of our Heavenly Father to His beloved chil-
dren.
39
The philosopher’s definition is striking and accurate, but infinitely above his own practical stand-
ard—“Non sentire mala tua, non est hominis; et non ferre, non est viri”—(It is inhuman not to feel thine
afflictions, and unmanly not to bear them)—Seneca, Consol. ad Polyb, c. 36.
40
leviathan – the name of some sea-creature of enormous size mentioned in the Bible; therefore, huge,
monstrous.
41
Compare Pharaoh—Exo 7:23; Jehoram—2Ki 6:31; Ahaz—2Ch 28:22; Israel—Isa 1:5. Zep 3:2. Cp.
Job 15:25, 26.
13
Yet, alas! this is not the sin only of the ungodly. Often do we see the child of God in
an undutiful spirit (Job 5:17; Heb 12:6), caring little whether his Father smiles or frowns.
The chastening is lightly passed over. He considers only second causes, or immediate
instruments (Amo 3:6). He is irritated by looking at the rod, rather than at the hand that
inflicts it (2Ch 16:10-12). He shrinks from searching into the cause. He disregards his Fa-
ther’s loving voice and purpose. Hence there is no softening humiliation (Psa 32:3, 4); no
“acceptance of the punishment of iniquity” (Lev 26:41, 43); no child-like submission; no
exercise of faith in looking for support. Is not this to despise the chastening of the Lord?
But while some despise the hand of God as light, others “faint” under it as heavy (Heb
12:5; Psa 38:2, 3; 39:10). They are weary of His correction. Beware of yielding to heartless
despondency, or fretful impatience (Psa 73:14; 77:7-10). Resist hard and dishonorable
thoughts of God (Gen 42:36; Jdg 6:13; Jon 4:9). Their very admission spreads destruction.
Very apt are we to judge amiss of our Father’s dealings 42 to neglect present duty; to cher-
ish a morbid brooding over our sorrows (Job 6:1-16); to forget our title and privilege of
adoption (Heb 12:5); or in obstinate grief to “refuse to be comforted” with the “hope of the
end” (Psa 77:2; cp. Jer 29:11; 31:15-17). And is not this to be weary of His correction?
But these rules imply much more than their negative meaning. Instead of despising,
reverence the chastening of the Lord. Let it be a solemn remembrance to thee, that thou
art under thy Father’s correction (Lam 3:28, 29; Mic 7:9). Receive it then in good part. In-
stead of being weary of it, hang upon His chastening hand, and pour thy very soul into
His bosom (1Sa 1:10-15). Kiss the rod (Job 34:31, 32; 1Pe 5:6). Acknowledge its humbling, but
enriching, benefit (Psa 119:67-71). Expect a richer blessing from sustaining grace, than
from the removal of the deprecated 43 affliction (2Co 12:7-10).
After all we must add, that chastening is a trial to the flesh (Heb 12:11); yet overruled
by wonder-working wisdom and faithfulness to an end above and contrary to its nature.
This very rod was sent in love to the soul. Perhaps we were living at ease, or in heartless
backsliding. The awakening voice called us to our Bible and to prayer. Thus eyeing God
in it, we see it to be love, not wrath; receiving, not casting out. We might perhaps have
wished it a little altered; that the weight had been shifted, and the cross a little
smoothed, where it pressed upon the shoulder. But now that our views are cleared, we
discern blessing enough to swallow up the most poignant smart. We see the “needs-be,”
for our preservation from imminent danger (cp. Pro 1:32; Psa 55:19), and for “the trial of our
faith” (1Pe 1:7). We come to an unhesitating verdict in favor of the absolute perfection of
the dispensation (Psa 51:4; 119:75). Faith understands the reasons of the discipline (1Pe 1:6,
7); acknowledges it as a part of His gracious providence (Deu 8:2, 15, 16), and the provision
of His everlasting covenant (Psa 89:30-32); waits to see the end of the Lord (Jam 5:11); and
meanwhile draws its main support from the seal of adoption.
For indeed it is the declared test of our legitimacy (Heb 12:7, 8; Rev 3:19). He corrects
whom he loves, the son in whom he delighteth. His discipline is that of the family, not of
the school, much less of the prison. He corrects His children, not as criminals, but as
42
Pro 24:10. Isa 40:27-31. Cp. 1Sa 27:1; 1Ki 19:4; Job 3:1-3; Jer 20:14-18.
43
deprecated – prayed against.
14
those whom He beholds without spot, “made accepted in the Beloved” (Eph 1:6). Nor is
there caprice, 44 as too often with an earthly father in his chastisement (Heb 12:10). It is
wisdom in the spirit of love. “He rejoiceth over his child to do him good” (Jer 32:41); yet as
a wise and affectionate father, He would not suffer him to be ruined for want of correc-
tion (Pro 13:24; Deu 8:5). It is correction—this is for your humbling. It is only correction—
this is your consolation. The intolerable sting of penal infliction is removed. Here then
the child has rest indeed? 45 The rod is now meekly, yea, thankfully borne, because it is in
the hand of One supreme in wisdom, as in love, who knows what is our need, and how to
apply the discipline. He chooses the fittest time (Isa 30:18; 1Pe 5:6), the surest yet gentlest
means, the most considerate measure (Isa 27:7, 8; Jer 30:11; Lam 3:31-33), the most effective
instruments. And, comparing our affliction with our sin, is not the marvel that it is so
light? (Ezr 9:13; Psa 103:10; Lam 3:39). Have we not more than deserved it all? “I love the rod
of my heavenly Father,” exclaimed the saintly Fletcher, “How gentle are the stripes I
46
feel! How heavy those I deserve!” “O God, I have made an ill use of Thy mercies, if I
have not learnt to be content with Thy correction.” 47
Should he then at any dark season ask, “If it be so, why am I thus?” (Gen 25:22); you
48
are thus, because this is your Father’s training discipline for heaven. He loves thee so
well, that He will bestow all pains upon thee. He will melt thee in His furnace that He
may stamp thee with His image (Isa 27:9, 48:10; Zec 13:9; Mal 3:3). He would make thee “par-
take of His holiness” (Heb 12:10), that thou mightest partake of His happiness. But unless
thou enter into His mind, thou wilt, so far as thou canst, defeat His purpose and lose the
benefit—a loss never to be told (cp. Jer 6:8). Look then well into the dispensation (Job 10:2;
Psa 139:23, 24; Ecc 7:14; Lam 3:40). Every rod is thy Father’s messenger; and He will not bear
to have His messenger despised. Be anxious to “hear the rod, and who hath appointed it”
(Mic 6:9), well knowing that “the Lord hath not done without cause all that He hath done”
(Eze 14:23). Be more concerned to have it sanctified than removed; yea, above all things
deprecate its removal, until it has fully wrought its appointed work (Isa 4:4). We can but
admire that considerate dispensation, which uses these “light afflictions” (2Co 4:17) as the
means of deliverance from the most deadly evil. Should flesh and blood rebel; should the
earthly tabernacle shake with “the blow of His hand” (Psa 39:10, as above): yet shalt thou
bless Him throughout eternity, that even by this crushing discipline, He should accom-
plish His most merciful purpose.
Meanwhile, give Him unlimited confidence; and if some steps of the way are hid, wait
and “see the end” (Job 23:8-10; Jam 5:11). Watch for the first whispers of His will, the first
intimation of His Providence, the guidance of His eye (Psa 32:8, 9). Many a stroke will thus
be saved to thy peace and quietness. This indeed is a golden opportunity, requiring for its
44
caprice – sudden change of mind without apparent or adequate motive; whim.
45
1Sa 3:18; 2Sa 15:25; 16:10, 11; Psa 39:9; Job 1:21; Isa 39:8. Cp. Joh 18:11. The heathen philosopher
has accurately drawn the line—“Chastisement is on the sufferer’s account. Vengeance is for the sat-
isfaction of him that inflicts it”—Aristotle de Rhetor b. i. c. 10.
46
Life of Rev. H. Venn, pp. 238, 584.
47
Bishop Hall.
48
Job 33:14-29; 36:8-10; Heb 12:7, 8, as above—the term refers to the education of children.
15
due improvement much study, prayer, and retirement. No communion is so close, so
endearing, so fruitful, as with a chastening God. Never is Christ more precious to us, His
love never more sweet, than in the midst—yea, in the very form, of chastening. Never
have we so full a manifestation of the Divine character (Psa 119:75) and perfections. What
we have before learnt in theory, we here learn experimentally; and what we have before
imperfectly understood, is here more fully revea1ed. 49 With regard to the full weight and
duration of the trial, and all its minute circumstances, successively so bitter and pierc-
ing, we may ask, “Which of them could be spared?” It is quite clear as to the whole time,
the whole weight, the whole number and variety of circumstances, that all and each
were as necessary as any part. Where cou1d we have stopped, without making that stop
fatal to the great end? What does it all mean, but the Lord holding to His determination
to save us; all the thoughts of His heart, every exercise of His power, centering in this
purpose of His sovereign mercy?
Chapter 3:35
The Inheritance of the Wise
The wise shall inherit glory: but shame shall be the promotion of fools.
This is the last contrast drawn to restrain our envy at the prosperity of the wicked
(Pro 3:31).It carries us forward to the coming day, when all shall “discern” in the full light
of eternity (Mal 3:18). The wise—the heirs of glory, are identified with the lowly (Pro 3:34;
11:2)—the heirs of grace. Self-knowledge, the principle of lowliness, is the very substance
of wisdom. Their inheritance also is one—grace and glory (Psa 84:11). For what higher
glory can there be than the grace, which “hath redeemed” a vile worm of the earth, “and
made him a king and priest unto God” (Rev 5:9, 10)? Oh! Let the redeemed cherish honor-
able thoughts of their present glory. Be careful to clear it from the defilement and deg-
radation of the world’s dust, and enjoy it in adoring praise to Him, who hath chosen thee
to this so undeserved grace (Rev 1:5, 6).
49
Job 42:5. Compare the Apostle’s most instructive and encouraging exposition, Hebrews 12. There is
some slight variation between Hebrews 12:6, and verse 12. The one describes the mode and subject
of the chastening. The other shows the Father’s delight in His chastened child. Some by inverting
the first clause, verse 12, grossly pervert the meaning, and conclude themselves to be the Lord’s
children, because they are afflicted. But though every child is corrected, not everyone that is cor-
rected is a child. The same hand—but not the same character—gives the stroke, to the godly and
the ungodly. The scourge of the Judge is widely different from the rod of the Father. Cp. 1Sa
28:15-20 with 2Sa 12:13, 14; Pro 1:26; Isa 1:24 with Jer 31:18-20; Hos 11:7, 8; also Isa 27:7-9. Nor
is it chastening, but the endurance of chastening, according to the rules prescribed, that seals our
adoption, Heb 12:7.
16
But who can tell the glory of the after inheritance—not like this world’s glory, the
shadow of a name; but real, solid, “an infinite gain, in the exchange of dross 50 for down-
weight of pure gold.” 51 All occasion of sin and temptation is shut out forever. “The tree of
knowledge shall be without enclosure. There shall be neither lust, nor forbidden fruit;
no withholding of desirable knowledge, nor affectation of undesirable. The glorified spir-
its touch nothing that can defile, and defile nothing they touch.” 52 But after all, the glory
of this glory will be communion and likeness with our Lord—“to be with him,” “to be-
hold His glory” (Joh 17:24; 1Jo 3:2). We need not pry too minutely. Thus much is clear. The
value of our inheritance is beyond all price; its happiness unspeakable; its security un-
changeable; its duration eternity. The wise shall inherit glory. “They that be wise shall
shine as the brightness of the firmament for ever and ever” (Dan 12:3; Mat 13:43).
Oh! Will not the fools then discover the vanity of this world’s glory, too late to make
a wise choice? Shame is their present fruit (Pro 13:18; 10:9). Honor even now sits unseemly
upon them (Pro 26:1). But “what fruit will eternity bring” of those things, whereof they
will then “be ashamed” (Rom 6:21)? Truly shame will be their promotion. Their fame will
be infamous, their disgrace conspicuous; lifting them up, like Haman upon his elevated
gallows (Est 7:9), a gazing-stock to the world. How solemn and complete will be the great
separation for eternity! “And many of them that sleep in the dust of the earth shall
awake, some to everlasting life, and some to shame and everlasting contempt” (Dan 12:2).
50
dross – worthless matter from metals which is thrown off in the process of melting.
51
Leighton on 1Pe 5:10.
52
John Howe’s The Blessedness of the Righteous. Pro 5:11.
53
Reformers’ Notes.
17
the frenzied vow of the enemies of Paul (Acts 23:12); and many a plot in after ages against
the Church—all vividly portray this unwearied wickedness.
Yet if we be preserved from this undisguised malignity, what are all the allurements
for every rank and circumstance of life, but the more subtle poison of the murderer? A
light-minded young person pours into his companion’s ear—simple and inexperienced
in the ways of sin—perhaps filthy conversation; or presents before him images of lascivi-
54
ousness. What but a rooted principle of grace can save his unsuspecting victim? Or
again, the venomous infidel, intent upon “spoiling” (Col 2:8) his fellow-creature of his
most precious treasure, drops into his bosom the repetition of the first lie (Gen 3:4). No
principle appears to be given up, no fundamental doctrine denied; yet the foundation of
an unwavering confidence is shaken to pieces. And is not this mischief and violence, as
the murderer’s stab?
55
Surely then it is mercy, that forbids needless intercourse with the evil man (Eph
5:11). With a constitution prone to evil, when the alternative is, whether we shall shun or
dare the danger, can we doubt our path? The whole Scripture is on the side of caution, to
hazard nothing, except on a plain call of Providence. “Because we are free, we may not
56
run wild.” Half our virtue we owe to being out of the way of temptation. Observe how
the wise man heaps up his words: Enter not into the path—no, not so much as set thy
foot into it. If some accident throws thee into it, go not on in it; avoid it with detesta-
tion. 57 Pass not by it, lest thou shouldest unwittingly turn in (Pro 5:8). Not only avoid it
when near, but avoid nearness to it. It is like living in the atmosphere of contagion, 58 in
the midst of virulent and fatal disease. The earnest repetition of the warning shows at
once the imminence of the danger, and the certainty of the injury. The world around us
is the action of mind upon mind. We are continually, through the medium of inter-
course, molding ourselves by other minds, and other minds by our own. Intercourse
with the ungodly must, therefore, be fraught with fatal contamination (1Co 15:33; Psa
106:35; Pro 22:24, 25). The occasions, the company, the borders of temptation—all must be
avoided (Pro 9:10, 15; Gen 2:16, 17; 3:6).
Young people are apt to plead with those who have the charge of their best interests,
“What harm is there in this or that path?” Apart from other evils, this is plain. It is a con-
tagious atmosphere. You are drinking in poison. It is far more easy to shun the occasion
of sin, than the sin when the occasion presents it; to resist the beginnings, than the pro-
gress, of sin. There must, therefore, be no tampering with it; no trial of strength, to see
how far our resolutions will keep us. Let the examples of Lot (Gen 13:10-13; 14:12), Dinah
(Gen 34:1, 2), Solomon (1Ki 11:1-5), Peter (Mat 26:58, 69-74), warn us how far only the en-
trance into the path of the wicked may carry us; lengths that we could never have con-
templated in prospect without horror. It may appear an harmless outset. But how far on?
The entrance is fatally connected with the next step onward. The frightful extent of the
54
lasciviousness – wantonness; indulgence of sensual desires.
55
intercourse – communication, commerce, connection.
56
Bishop Joseph Hall’s Contemplations on the New Testament, B. xv. 3.
57
Edward Leigh’s Critica Sacra. See Cartwright.
58
contagion – disease carrying matter which is exhaled from a sick person.
18
probability of falling might make the boldest tremble. Those at least, that know their
own corruption and weakness, will shrink back, where you tread lightly. Here and there,
indeed, there may be some special miracle of preservation. But no one comes out of the
path without hurt (2Ch 18:1-3; 19:2; 20:35-37); and the general issue is an open door to ruin.
To pretend to dread sin without fearing temptation, is self-delusion. Satan has too
nearly allied them for us to separate them. The evil company is loved, then the evil of the
59
company. To pray not to be led into temptation; yet not to watch, that we enter not into
it (Mat 6:13; 26:41)—is practically to contradict our prayers; to mock our God, by asking
for what we do not heartily wish. “Walk then with God and with His people, separate
from an ungodly world” (Pro 9:6; 2Co 6:17). Yet do not presume upon safety, even in sepa-
ration from the ungodly. The whole tempting world may be presented to your imagina-
tion. The unsearchable deceitfulness of the heart may bear fearfully upon you. The
tempter may in solitude, as with our Lord, put forth his special power (Mat 4:1). Walk
closely with God in secret, and He will spread His almighty covering over you for your
security. Avoid fellowship with them, who hinder your fellowship with God (Psa 119:63,
114, 115; also 17:4; 26:4, 5).
59
Eusebius mentions a young man, whom St. John committed to the special charge of the Bishop of
Ephesus; but who by evil company was drawn away to be a captain of robbers, until St. John went
after him and brought him back, B. iii. c. 20. Augustine’s recollections of his youthful theft was,
“By myself alone I would not have done it. It was the company that I loved, with whom I did it.”
He adds, when they said, “Come, let us go and do it, I was ashamed not to be as shameless as
they”—Confessions, Lib. ii. 8, 9.
60
Pro 4:18. See the same contrast drawn by our Lord, Mat 6:22, 23. Schultens considers the original to
express increasing darkness, answering to the increasing light of the opposite path. Cp. Job 15:23.
19
fence (Rom 9:32, 33; 1Pe 2:8). Would they but listen to the merciful warning of their Lord—
“Yet a little time the light is with you: walk while ye have the light, lest darkness come
upon you; for he that walketh in darkness knoweth not whither he goeth” (Joh 12:35, 36).
Chapter 6:16-19
Seven Things the Lord Hates
These six things doth the Lord hate; yea, seven are an abomination unto him:
[margin: of his soul] A proud look, a lying tongue, and hands that shed
innocent blood, An heart that deviseth wicked imaginations, feet
that be swift in running to mischief, A false witness that
speaketh lies, and he that soweth discord
among brethren.
Man conceives of God in his heart as “such a one as himself” (Psa 50:21), looking with
indifference at sin. Here therefore Solomon names six, yea, seven (cp. Pro 30:15-18) abom-
inations (most of them mentioned in the preceding list) which the Lord hateth—a
proud look, 61 a lying tongue, 62 a blood-stained hand. 63 And, lest we should think that He
“looketh only on the outward appearance” (1Sa 16:7), the heart, active in devising wicked-
64
ness, is brought out; and its ready organ, the feet swift in running to mischief (Pro 1:16;
Isa 59:7; Rom 3:15). How hateful also is the false witness (Zec 8:17), surely reserved by Him
for judgment! (Pro 19:5; Zec 5:4; Mal 3:5). Let the self-willed separatist remember the double
stamp (Pro 6:14, 19) upon him that soweth discord among brethren. If the heavenly “dew
descends upon the brethren that dwell together in unity” (Psa 133), a withering blast will
fall on those who, mistaking prejudice for principle, “cause divisions” for their own self-
ish ends (Rom 16:17, 18). Fearful is the Lord’s mark upon them: “sensual, having not the
Spirit.” 65 If we cannot attain unity of opinion, “perfectly joined together in the same
61
Pro 8:13; 30:13; Psa 18:27; Isa 2:12; Jer 50:31. See also the examples of Pharaoh—Exo 9:16; Ham-
an—Est 7:10; Nebuchadnezzar—Dan 4:28-33; Herod—Act 12:21-23.
62
Pro 12:22; Psa 5:6; Rev 21:8. Gehazi—2Ki 5:25-27. Ananias and Sapphira—Act 5:1-10.
63
Gen 9:6. Cain—4:8-12. Manasseh—2Ki 21:15, 16. Specially the murderers of his dear Son—Mat
23:31-38.
64
Ahithophel – 2Sa 16:20-23; 17:23; Mic 2:1; 2Pe 2:14.
65
Jud 19; 1Co 3:3, 4. Let the wisdom of experience given by an accurate observer of himself and the
Church, be seriously pondered—“I am much more sensible of the evil of schism, separating hu-
mor, gathering parties, and making several sects in the Church, than I was heretofore. For the ef-
fects have shown us more of the mischiefs. I am much more sensible, how prone many young
professors are to spiritual pride, self-conceitedness, unruliness, and division, and so prove [to be]
the grief of their teachers, and firebrands in the Church. I am much more sensible than heretofore
of the breadth, length, and depth of the radical, universal, odious sin of selfishness, and the excel-
lency and necessity of self-denial…and of loving our neighbor as ourselves”—Richard Baxter’s
Narrative of the Most Memorable Passages of His Life and Times.
20
mind, and in the same judgment” (1Co 1:10); at least let us cultivate unity of spirit—
“Whereto we have already attained, let us walk by the same rule; let us mind the same
thing” (Phi 3:16).
21
reserve only the dregs 66 and sweepings of life for your Savior (Mal 1:8)? Every day you lose
a world of happiness; you bind a chain of sin; you take a step to hell. Come, then, and
answer the call that is drawing you to Him who is worthy of all (1Sa 3:9; Psa 32:8; Jer 3:4).
Never will you regret that you have come too soon. But many have been the sorrowing
cries: Lord, “I have loved thee too late!” (Mat 25:6-12; Luk 13:24, 25). Come then, by His help,
and in dependence on His grace, make Him your first, your present choice. Lay claim by
faith to this promise to early seekers, and you shall find.
Chapter 10:30
The Righteous and the Wicked
The righteous shall never be removed: but the wicked shall not inhabit the earth.
The frailty of our present condition, common to all (Ecc 9:2, 11), was not in the wise
man’s eye; but the state of the two classes as in the purpose and mind of God. His way is
strength to the upright. The righteous, walking steadily in the way, shall never be re-
moved (Psa 15; 37:22; 112:6; 125:1; 2Pe 1:5-11). “They enjoy in this life by faith and hope their
68
everlasting life.” “No weapon that is formed against them shall prosper. The mountains
shall depart, and the little hills shall be removed: but my loving-kindness shall not de-
66
dregs – the basest or least desirable portion.
67
irremediable – that which cannot be corrected or remedied.
68
Reformers’ Notes.
22
part from thee; neither shall the covenant of my peace be removed; saith the Lord that
hath mercy on thee” (Isa 54:10). Is not this a confidence that earth nor hell can never
shake (Rom 8:38, 39)?
The wicked—have they any such confidence? So far from being never removed, they
shall never inhabit! They have no title, like the righteous (Mat 5:5; 1Co 3:22), as sons and
heirs, to the blessings of earth; no hope or interest in the land, of which the earth is the
type (Psa 37:29). Often are they cut off from inhabiting the one (Pro 10:27; 2:22; Psa 37:22; Eze
33:24-26). Never will they be suffered to inhabit the other (1Co 6:9; Rev 21:27). As our char-
acter is, so is our hope and prospect. We gain or lose both worlds.
69
religious professor – one who claims to be religious, but is not a true believer.
23
(Jam 5:7, 8). But whenever vouchsafed 70 or however delayed, it is a sure reward. Right-
eousness is the seed; happiness is the harvest. The reward indeed is not from cause, but
of consequence; not of debt, but of grace depending upon a free promise; mercifully yet
surely linked with Christian perseverance (Ecc 11:6; Hos 10:12; 1Co 15:58; Gal 6:7, 8). It must
however be true righteousness—not according to man’s profession, but according to the
Divine standard. A routine of duties may skirt the borders of religion, at the utmost dis-
tance from the Spirit of God, and equally remote from the vital principle of the heart.
But righteousness not only “delivereth from death” (Pro 11:4) (a special mercy even with
the loss of all) (Gen 19:16; Jer 45:5), but it tendeth to life (Pro 10:16; Isa 3:10; Rom 2:7; Gal 6:8);
full of living enjoyment, of infinite, eternal pleasure. What importance then attaches to
every godly principle! All have reference to eternity. If righteousness be our main end,
God will make it our best friend; nor will He, as the world has done, reward us with ci-
71
phers instead of gold. Who will not love and serve Thee when “in keeping thy com-
mandments there is a sure reward” (Psa 19:11; 37:3-6; Isa 32:17)? Irresistible will be the
conviction of the wicked at the last: “Had I but sown righteousness in the service of God,
it would have been infinitely happy for me for eternity!” But inconceivably joyous will be
the great consummation to the righteous: “Behold, I come quickly, and my reward is
with me to give every man as according as his work shall be” (Rev 22:12).
70
vouchsafed – conferred or bestowed.
71
cipher – the arithmetic numeral 0; something of no value.
24
that hearkens to His counsel! Whom does He ever disappoint? Whom does He “up-
braid” 72 (Jam 1:5)?
72
upbraid – to reprove sharply; to scold.
25
The slothful spirit brings a man under bondage. “He is perpetually needing counsel
of others, and hanging upon it.” 73 In the grand concern he is the slave of his own lust; in
the worst service, under the most degrading tyranny; “wicked” because “slothful,” and
“cast out and condemned as an unprofitable servant” (Mat 25:26-30). Christian Professor!
Tremble at this responsibility of doing nothing, of living for thine own indulgence; ne-
glecting the great object of life—the only object that tells upon eternity.
Chapter 17:22
Merry Heart; Broken Spirit
A merry heart doeth good like a medicine; but a broken spirit drieth the bones.
This is not true of all merriment. The wise man justly describes the loud and noisy
mirth of fools to be, no medicine, but “madness,” 74 a transient flash, not an abiding
source of enjoyment. Probably this merriment here means nothing more than cheerful-
ness, which, in its proper measure, on proper subjects, and at a proper time, is a legiti-
mate pleasure especially belonging to religion. Our Lord thus made a merry heart by His
message of Divine forgiveness (Mat 9:2-7); and this doubtless was a more healing medicine
to the paralytic than the restoration of his limbs. If I be a pardoned sinner, an accepted
child of God, what earthly trouble can sink me? “And at midnight Paul and Silas prayed,
and sang praises unto God: and the prisoners heard them” (Act 16:25). The martyrs “glori-
fied God in the fire.” They were “tortured, not accepting deliverance, that they might ob-
tain a better resurrection” (Heb 11:35). All earthly enjoyments are now doubly blest with
heavenly sunshine (Ecc 9:7-9).
There is also the Christian flow of natural spirits. For when consecrated to the Lord,
they become a means of enjoyment, not only to ourselves (Pro 15:13), but to those around
us. Often has the mourning saint been encouraged, often also has the worldling been
75
convicted, by a brother’s cheerful words or looks. To the former it has been a medicine;
to the latter a lesson.
A broken spirit in an evangelical sense is God’s precious gift, stamped with His spe-
cial honor, and always constituting an acceptable service. But here it describes a brood-
ing spirit of despondency, always looking at the dark side; and, if connected with religion
(which is not always the case), flowing from narrow and perverted views, a spurious 76
humility centering in self. The influence drieth up the bones. The bodily system is sensi-
bly affected. “It contracts and enfeebles the animal spirits; preys on our strength; eats
73
Dathe in loco. “The slothful shall become subservient to others”—French and Skinner’s Translation
of Proverbs, with notes, 1831. Cp. Pro 10:4; 11:29.
74
Ecc 2:2; cp. 1Sa 25:36, 37.
75
Pro 12:25; Ecc 8:1.
76
spurious – not true or genuine; counterfeit.
26
out the vigor of the constitution. The radical moisture is consumed; and the unhappy
subject of this passion droops like a flower in the scorching heat of summer.” 77
Not less baneful 78 is its influence upon the spiritual system. Hard thoughts of God are
induced, as if He had forsaken, neglected, or forgotten us. From doubting, the soul
comes to chilling fear, thence to gloomy despondency. The power of the telescope fails in
bringing distant objects nigh. Hence, the present hold of the grand object is feeble. The
hope of future enjoyment is dark. Distance too often lessens communication. Prayer is
less frequently or powerfully sent up. The answers therefore, and the supplies of cheer-
ing grace from this source, are more scanty. Thus, we are not only weakened in comfort,
but cut short in strength. The mind is clothed in sable. 79 The chariot’s wheels are taken
off, so that we drag heavily (Exo 14:28). Discontent, and a querulous 80 unbelieving sadness,
take possession of the soul, and wholly unfit us for the service of God.
Most watchful therefore should we be against this withering influence. Allow not the
imagination to dwell needlessly in gloom. Constitutional temperament will have its in-
fluence. External things act upon the body, and through the body upon the mind. We are
some of us creatures even of weather, not the same on a misty as on a bright day. There
is much in our physical economy rather within the province of the physician than the
minister; much perhaps that we may be inclined too hastily to censure in a brother,
when a more accurate knowledge would open our sympathy. When outward and inward
troubles unite, what wonder if the vessel, like Paul’s ship “where two seas met” (Act
81
27:41), give way? Yet, let it be remembered, that every indulgence increases the evil; and
that allowed prevalence may end in a fixed melancholy.
Turn and see what materials can be gathered for resistance to this ruinous evil, and
for inducing a well-regulated cheerfulness. “Why am not I at this moment utterly over-
whelmed with distress? How seldom, if ever, am I in pain all over at the same time! How
faithfully do our greatest supports combine with our greatest trials” (2Co 1:5)! Surely, in
these recollections some excitement of pleasurable feeling might be directed into the
channel of gratitude to God! How many rays of collected mercy shine from the great
center of joy!
But to come more immediately to the Gospel, unquestionably there is abundant mat-
ter for the deepest humiliation. No words can adequately describe the shame that we
ought to feel for our insensibility, even on account of one single act of infinite love. Yet
the Gospel encourages humiliation, not despondency. It deals in the realities, not of woe
and despair, but of hope, peace, and joy. Its life and glory is He that “bindeth up the bro-
77
Bp. Horne’s Sermon on a Merry Heart. Our English proverb is, “Dry sorrow drinks the blood”—
sorrow that cannot weep!
78
baneful – ruinous; harmful.
79
sable – black clothing, as a symbol of mourning.
80
querulous – complaining; grumbling.
81
Pro 12:25; 15:13; Job 30:30; Psa 32: 3, 4; 102:3-5; 119:83. Compare Apocrypha Book of Ecclesiasticus
30:22; 38:18. (The Apocrypha is sometimes quoted from as literature without advocating its inspi-
ration.) Ovid’s beautiful lines, Lib. i. ex Ponto. This mixture of bodily and mental anguish formed
the completeness of our Lord’s sufferings. Psa 22:15; 59:3.
27
ken-hearted” (Isa 61:1), who “will not break the bruised reed” (Isa 42:3), or crush under His
feet “the prisoners of hope” (Zec 9:12).
If then, Christian, you believe the Gospel to be “glad tidings” (Luk 1:19; 8:1), shew that
you believe it, by lighting up your face with a smile; not by “bowing down the head as a
bulrush,” and as it were, “spreading sackcloth and ashes under you” (Isa 58:5). Shew that
it is the daylight of your soul; that you really find its ways to be “pleasantness and peace”
(Pro 3:17); that you believe their joys, not because you have read and heard of them, but
because you have tasted them. If they are happy, be happy in them. “Lie not against the
truth,” by suffering your countenance to induce the belief that religion is a habit of in-
veterate 82 and incurable gloom. Joy is indeed a forbidden fruit to the ungodly (Hos 9:1).
But let it be the adorning of thy profession. 83 It is a sin against thy God to be without it
(Deu 28:47). The gloom of the servant reflects unjustly upon the Master, as if thou
“knewest him, that he was an hard man” (Mat 25:24). Resist then all sorrow that suggests
such dishonorable thoughts of Him. Disparage not his heavenly comfort by laying undu-
ly to heart his counter-balancing afflictions. No cloud can cover you, but the “bow may
be seen in the cloud” (Gen 9:13-16). And in all this world’s afflictions, one beam of His love
might scatter all the clouds and fill the heart with “joy unspeakable and full of glory”
(1Pe 1:8). “Let the Lord then be magnified, which hath pleasure,” not in the misery, but
in “the prosperity of His servants” (Psa 35:27). He giveth liberty to be cheerful, and ground
to be cheerful, and He will give thee an heart to be cheerful with animated gladness.
After all, however, let each be careful to cultivate a just and even balance. Liveliness
needs a guard, lest it should degenerate into levity. Be much in secret with God. Cherish
a solemn, reverential spirit before the throne of grace. Christian joy is a deeply serious
thing. The froth and lightness that passes for it deserves not the name. The carnal ele-
ment must be destroyed, to introduce the heaven-born principle that comes from God
and maintains communion with Him.
Yet on the other a grave temperament must be resisted, lest it should sink into mor-
bid depression. Gloom is not the portion, and ought not to stamp the character, of the
children of God. It may often be a conflict with a man’s own self, either in body or mind.
But yet a little while, and, instead of the broken spirit which drieth up the bones, our
spirits will be so high that another body must be formed to contain them. Meanwhile
Christian discipline on both sides will be the principle of enlarged happiness and steady
consistency.
82
inveterate – long established; deep-rooted.
83
Isa 52:1, 2; 60:1.
28
Chapter 20:6 – Self-Deceit
Most men will proclaim [to] everyone his own goodness;
but a faithful man who can find?
This shows us the heart’s deceitfulness and pride. Hear a man’s own estimate of him-
self, and we need no further proof of his want of self-knowledge (Pro 16:2). Even the un-
godly proclaims his own goodness. “Jehu took no heed to walk in the way of the Lord.”
Still, said he, “Come, see my zeal for the Lord” (2Ki 10:16, 19-31). Absalom, while treason
was at work within, “stole the hearts” of the people by his loud pretensions to goodness
(2Sa 15:1-6). The whole nation, while given up to all manner of iniquity, boasted of its in-
tegrity (Jer 2:23, 35; cp. Rom 2:17-23). The Pharisee proclaimed his goodness at the corner of
the streets (Mat 6:1, 2, 5, 16; 23:5; cp. Pro 27:2), yea, even in the presence of his God (Luk 18:11-
12). Such is the blindness of a self-deceiving heart! Oh Lord, teach me to remember,
“That which is highly esteemed among men is abomination in the sight of God” (Luk
16:15).
After all, however, does not this glass, honestly used, exhibit more resemblance to
our own features than we readily admit? We all condemn the open boasting of the Phari-
see. But too often we eagerly catch at the good opinion of the world. Contrivance is
made to gain a shadowy prize! A seeming backwardness is only in order that others may
bring us forward. 84 Care is taken that it be known that we were the authors, or at least,
that we had a considerable part in some work, that might raise our name in the Church.
Sometimes we are too ready to take a degree of credit to ourselves which we do not hon-
85
estly deserve, while we shrink from real reproach and obloquy for the Gospel’s sake.
In opposition to this self-complacent goodness, Solomon, an accurate observer of
human nature, exclaims almost in despondency, A faithful man—as a parent, a reprover,
an adviser, one “without guile”—who can find (Mic 7:1, 2)? Look close; view thyself in the
glass of the Word (Psa 101:6). Does thy neighbor or thy friend find thee faithful to him?
What does our daily intercourse witness? Is not the attempt to speak what is agreeable
often made at the expense of truth? Are not professions of regard sometimes utterly in-
consistent with our real feelings? In common life, where gross violations are restrained,
a thousand petty offences are allowed that break down the wall between sin and duty,
and, judged by the Divine standard, are indeed guilty steps upon forbidden ground. Nev-
er let it be forgotten that the sound influence of the social virtues can only be main-
tained by the graces of the Gospel. Never let the Christian professor deem moral
integrity to be a low attainment. The man of God bursts forth into fervent praise for
[God’s provision of] upholding grace in his path (Psa 41:11, 12). For indeed, what can bring
greater honor to God, than the proof manifested in the conduct of His people, that their
daily transactions are animated with the soul of integrity, that their word is unchangea-
84
backwardness – unwillingness, reluctance; forward – to the front.
85
obloquy – censorious speech, reproachful language.
29
ble? Never does godliness shine more brightly than in “shewing all good fidelity” in all
things (Tit 2:10).
86
Fuller’s Harmony of Scripture.
30
Chapter 28:13 – Confession
He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso
confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy.
God and man each cover sin; God, in free unbounded grace (Psa 85:2); man, in shame
and hypocrisy. The sinners here contrasted are chargeable with the same guilt. But how
opposite are the remedies adopted and their several results! The contrast is not between
great sins and small, but between sins covered, and sins confessed and forsaken. Whoso
covereth the smallest sin shall not prosper. Whoso confesseth and forsaketh the greatest
shall find mercy. “Love covereth” our neighbor’s sins (Pro 10:12); pride, our own. The
proud sinner naturally wishes to be thought better than he is. His sin must have some
cover. 87 He must at least give it a good name (Isa 5:20). He would cover it, if possible, from
himself; putting it out of mind; banishing all serious thoughts; stifling conviction; and
then trying to persuade himself that he is happy. To escape evil consequences, a lie is
resorted to. 88 Or if the facts are too plain to be denied, [he may say,] “The worst part is
unfounded. We were not in it so much as our neighbor.” Ignorance, good—or at least
not bad—intentions, custom, necessity, strong temptation, sudden surprisal, the first
offence; constitutional infirmity; even the decrees of God89—one or more are pleaded in
palliation. 90 Or to save our honor—rather our pride—the blame must be shifted on an-
other. 91 Even God Himself is made accountable—a secret but daring charge, carrying
with it its own self-contradiction! Indignantly He challenges the proof, and lays the sin
at the right door (Isa 50:1; Jam 1:13). More commonly, but most wrongfully, it is laid upon
Satan. The most of his power is that he is a tempter. And no claim could he have ever
established, had not we willingly sold ourselves to his service. Our father Adam, again,
must bear the burden. Must our “teeth be set on edge” for the “sour grapes which he
ate” (Eze 18:2)? Must the unborn children be held responsible for the inheritance, which
their father lost? But it was the nature that sinned, of which we are a component part.
We “were in his loins” (Heb 7:10) at the time, and therefore we share his responsibility.
Our own personal sin has ratified the deed by our own free and repeated consent. All
these attempted transfers are vain coverings. Conscience bears witness to the truth that
no man takes harm but from himself.
87
Cicero stamps confession of wickedness as disgraceful and dangerous (turpis et periculosa, Cont.
Verrem, Lib. iii). Thus does Heathen morality develop the pride of the depraved nature.
88
Cain, Gen 4:9; Rachel, Gen 31:34, 35; Joseph’s brethren, Gen 37:31-35; David, 2Sa 11:15, 25; the
adulteress, Pro 30:20. Cp. Jer 2:23; Peter, Mat 26:70; Ananias and Sapphira, Act 5:1-8. Is not this a
sad propensity in children? The first offence may be trifling. But the fear of punishment induces a
lie. Another lie is necessary to cover the first. Every step adds to sin.
89
Jer 7:10. Compare Calvin’s Institute of the Christian Religions, b. iii. c. xxiii. § 12-14.
90
palliation – attempt to alleviate an offense by excuses or favorable representation.
91
Adam and Eve, Gen 3:12, 13. Cp. Job 31:33. Aaron, Exo 32:21-24; Saul, 1Sa 15:20, 21; Pilate, Mat
27:24-26.
31
But even this admitted, man with ceaseless ingenuity still attempts to frame a cover
for his sin. Some supposed good deeds are put forth as a compensation (Mic 6:6, 7). And by
balancing good and evil respectively against each other, he hopes to establish some pre-
ponderance in his favor. Yet all these fig-leaf coverings for his nakedness (Gen 3:7) only
shew his determination to hold his sin; and his pride of heart, which would rather hide it
from God himself, than to submit to receive free mercy as a self-condemned sinner.
These attempts however to cover sin shall not prosper. The voice of an offended God
summoned Adam from his hiding-place to receive his sentence (Gen 3:9). “The voice of
Abel’s blood cried from the ground,” and the murderer became “a fugitive and a vaga-
bond in the earth” (Gen 4:10-12). Conscience lashed Joseph’s brethren with the sin of bye-
gone days (Gen 42:21). Saul’s covering his sin cost him his kingdom (1Sa 15:21, 23). “The
leprosy of Naaman clave to Gehazi and his seed for ever” (2Ki 5:27) The proud accusers of
their fellow-sinner were “convicted by their own conscience” (Joh 8:9). “There is no dark-
ness, nor shadow of death, where the workers of iniquity may hide themselves” (Job
34:22). Their darkest deed is wrought in the open face of an all-seeing God, and “set in the
light of His countenance” (Job 34:21; Psa 90:8), to “be proclaimed upon the house-tops” be-
fore the assembled world (Luk 12:2, 3; Ecc 12:14; 1Co 4:5).
This unsuccessful attempt to cover sin, while it adds to the guilt (Isa 30:1), is fraught
with misery (Isa 28:20). The love of sin struggles with the power of conscience. The door
of access to God is barred (Psa 66:18). Christian confidence is clouded (Psa 32:3, 4); and, un-
less Sovereign mercy interpose, it must end in the sting of “the never-dying worm” (Isa
66:24; Mar 9:44-48). The covering of the disease precludes the possibility of the cure. Only
the penitent confessor can be the pardoned sinner.
Long indeed is the struggle, ere every false cover is cut off; ere the heartless general
confession—“We are all sinners”—is exchanged for the deep-felt personal acknowledg-
ment, giving glory to God: “Thus and thus have I done. Behold, I am vile. What shall I
answer thee? I will lay mine hand upon my mouth” (Jos 7:19, 20; Job 40:4). But glorious is
the divine victory over pride and sullenness, when this first act of repentance, this first
step of return (Luk 15:17, 18), is heartily accomplished. God needs not confession for His
own information. But He demands it for our good. It brings no claim on His mercy. But
92
it is a meetness for the reception of it. Christ has fully satisfied the claims of justice.
But the claims must be acknowledged in the humble acceptance of the benefit. The mer-
cy is ready; but the sinner must sue it out—“Only acknowledge thine iniquity” (Jer 3:13).
Our yearning Father is “waiting” for this moment, “that He may be gracious” (Luk 15:20;
Hos 5:15). There is no further keeping of anger. He shall have mercy, instant reconcilia-
93
tion. Words may be few, while the heart is full. With David it was but a single sentence;
but the closet workings of his heart witnessed to the enlargement and ingenuousness 94
92
meetness – suitability, conformity.
93
Psa 32:5. Compare similar examples, 2Ch 33:12, 13; Jer 31:18-20; Jon 3:5-10; Luk 15:21-24; 23:40-
43. See also the promises: Lev 26:40-42; 2Ch 7:14; Job 33:27, 28; Isa 1:16-18; 55:7; Eze 18:21, 22;
1Jo 1:9.
94
ingenuousness – sincerity.
32
of his sorrow. 95 Thus man confesses the debt; God crosses it out from His book; and
sweet is the penitent’s song—“Blessed is he, whose sin is covered” (Psa 32:1). The dying
thief confesses, and the condemned malefactor is crowned with life eternal (Luk 23:43).
But we must not overlook the distinctive feature of this confession. It is not that of
Pharaoh, extorted on the rack (Exo 9:27, 34); or of Saul and Judas (2Sa 24:16, 17; Mat 27:4, 5),
the stinging of remorse; or of the Pharisees and Sadducees (Mat 22:16), mere formal pro-
fession; or of the harlot (Pro 7:14), a cover for sin. Penitent faith confesses in the act of
laying the hand upon the great sacrifice (Lev 16:21), and hence draws strength of purpose
to forsake all that has been here confessed. For while the hypocrite confesses without
forsaking,96 the hearty forsaking is here the best proof of the sincere confessing.
And this first act of the penitent is matured into the daily habit of the saint. The fur-
ther we advance, the deeper will be the tone of confession (Job 40:4; 42:6; Eze 16:63). The
moment sin is seen to be sin, let it be laid on the Surety’s 97 Head. Every moment of un-
confessed sin adds to its burden and guilt. The thought of a nature estranged from God,
a heart full of corruption; sins of youth and age, before and after conversion; against
light and conviction, knowledge and love; the sins of our very confessions, their defile-
ment, coldness, and too often self-righteous tendency—all supply abundant material for
98
abasing acknowledgment. Plead the greatness, not the smallness of our sin. Never
deem any sin so trifling, as not to need the immediate application of the blood of atone-
ment. Genuine conviction gives no rest, until by the believing apprehension of this rem-
edy the peace of God is firmly fixed in the conscience. As Bunyan 99 so accurately
pictured—not at the wicket-gate, but at the sign of the cross, did the Christian find the
grave of sin. Here it is lost, forgotten, never found (Jer 50:20).
This evangelical humiliation lays the only solid ground for practical godliness. It is a
sorrow full of joy and not less full of holiness. No Achan will be reserved (Jos 7:1); no Agag
spared (1Sa 15:20); no right hand or right eye favored (Mar 6:17-20; 9:43-48). It will not be
“the unclean spirit going out, and returning to his house with sevenfold influence” (Mar
12:43, 44); or the man, who leaves his home, but forsakes it not, all his heart and joy being
still there. Here the forsaking will be without the thought of returning; yea, with the
fixed determination never to return (Job 34:32). It will not be the exchange of one path in
the broad road for another more attractive; but the relinquishment of the whole road
with all its bypaths. The inner principles as well as the outer walk; “the unrighteous
thoughts,” no less than “the wicked ways” will be forsaken heartily and forever (Isa 55:7).
95
2Sa 12:13 with Psa 51. See also his tender dread of covering sin: Psa 139:1, 23, 24.
96
Pharaoh and Saul, as above.
97
Surety – one who undertakes to be responsible for another, especially one who assumes responsibili-
ties or debts of another; hence, spoken of Christ, Heb 7:22.
98
Psa 25:11 with Luk 18:11. Cp. Isa 43:24-26.
99
John Bunyan (1628-1688): author of Pilgrim’s Progress, the classic allegorical book in which the main
character, Christian, begins seeking after God to forgive his guilty burden of sin by entering through a
narrow gate, and finds the burden completely removed when he comes to the Cross.
33
Bridge’s Proverbs is “The best work on the Proverbs. While explaining the passage
in hand, he sets other portions of the Word in new lights.”—C.H. Spurgeon
“While other parts of Scripture show us the glory of our high calling, this book may
instruct us in all minuteness of detail how to “walk worthy” of it (Col 1:10). We see
the minuteness of our Christian obligations; that there is not a temper, a look, a
word, a movement, the most important action of the day, the smallest relative duty,
in which we do not either deface or adorn the image of our Lord, and the profession
of His name. Surely if the book conduced to no other end, it tends to humble even
the most consistent servant of God, in consciousness of countless failures. The
whole book is a mirror for us all, not only to show our defects, but also [as] a
guidebook and directory for godly conduct.”—Charles Bridges, from the Preface, 1846
______________________________
Charles Bridges (1794-1869) was one of the leaders of the evangelical movement
in the Church of England in the mid-1800s. He was Vicar of Old Newton, Suffolk,
from 1823 to 1849, and later of Weymouth and Hinton Martell in Dorset. Bridges is
known for both literary work such as The Christian Ministry and his expositions,
which include Ecclesiastes and Psalm 119 as well as Proverbs.