Chapter 2:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Psalms Ecclesiastes
Proverbs 2
Complete Concise
Solomon, having foretold the destruction of those who are
obstinate in their impiety, in this chapter applies himself to those who are
willing to be taught; and, I. He shows them that, if they would diligently use
the means of knowledge and grace, they should obtain of God the knowledge and
grace which they seek (v. 1-9). II. He shows them of what unspeakable advantage
it would be to them. 1. It would preserve them from the snares of evil men (v.
10-15) and of evil women (v. 16-19). 2. It would direct them into, and keep
them in, the way of good men (v. 20-22. So that in this chapter we are taught
both how to get wisdom and how to use it when we have it, that we may neither
seek it, nor receive it in vain.
Verses 1-9
Job had asked, long before this,
Where shall wisdom be found?
Whence cometh wisdom? (Job 28:12, 20) and he had given this general answer
(v. 23),
God knoweth the place of it; but Solomon here goes further, and
tells us both where we may find it and how we may get it. We are here told,
I. What means we must use that we may obtain wisdom.
1. We must closely attend to the word of God, for that is the
word of wisdom,
which is able to make us wise unto salvation, v. 1, 2.
(1.) We must be convinced that the words of God are the fountain and standard of
wisdom and understanding, and that we need not desire to be wiser than they will
make us. We must
incline our ear and
apply our hearts to them, as
to
wisdom or
understanding itself. Many wise things may be found
in human compositions, but divine revelation, and true religion built upon it,
are all wisdom. (2.) We must, accordingly, receive the word of God with all
readiness of mind, and bid it welcome, even the commandments as well as the
promises, without murmuring or disputing.
Speak, Lord, for thy servant hears.
(3.) We must hide them with us, as we do our treasures, which we are afraid of
being robbed of. We must not only receive, but retain, the word of God, and
lodge it in our hearts, that it may be always ready to us. (4.) We must incline
our ear to them; we must lay hold on all opportunities of hearing the word of
God, and listen to it with attention and seriousness, as those that are afraid
of letting it slip. (5.) We must apply our hearts to them, else inclining the
ear to them will stand us in no stead.
2. We must be much in prayer, v. 3. We must
cry after
knowledge, as one that is ready to perish for hunger begs hard for bread.
Faint desires will not prevail; we must be importunate, as those that know the
worth of knowledge and our own want of it. We must cry, as new-born babes, after
the sincere milk of the word. 1 Pt. 2:2. We must
lift our voice for
understanding lift it up to heaven; thence these good and perfect gifts must
be expected, Jam. 1:17; Job 38:34. We must
give our voice to understanding
(so the word is), speak for it, vote for it, submit the tongue to the command of
wisdom. We must consecrate our voice to it; having applied our heart to it, we
must employ our voice in seeking for it. Solomon could write
probatum esta
tried remedy, upon this method; he prayed for wisdom and so obtained it.
3. We must be willing to take pains (v. 4); we must
seek it
as silver, preferring it far before all the wealth of this world, and
labouring in search of it as those who dig in the mines, who undergo great toil
and run great hazards, with indefatigable industry and invincible constancy and
resolution, in pursuit of the ore; or as those who will be rich rise up early,
and sit up late, and turn every stone to get money and fill their treasures.
Thus diligent must we be in the use of the means of knowledge, following on to
know the Lord.
II. What success we may hope for in the use of these means. Our
labour shall not be in vain; for, 1. We shall know how to maintain our
acquaintance and communion with God:
"Thou shalt understand the fear of
the Lord (v. 5), that is, thou shalt know how to worship him aright, shalt
be led into the meaning and mystery of every ordinance, and be enabled to answer
the end of its institution."
Thou shalt find the knowledge of God,
which is necessary to our fearing him aright. It concerns us to understand how
much it is our interest to know God, and to evidence it by agreeable affections
towards him and adorations of him. 2. We shall know how to conduct ourselves
aright towards all men (v. 9):
"Thou shalt understand, by the word
of God,
righteousness, and judgment, and equity, shalt learn those
principles of justice, and charity, and fair dealing, which shall guide and
govern thee in the whole course of thy conversation, shall make thee fit for
every relation, every business, and faithful to every trust. It shall give thee
not only a right notion of justice, but a disposition to practise it, and to
render to all their due; for those that do not do justly do not rightly
understand it." This will lead them in
every good path, for the
scripture will
make the man of God perfect. Note, Those have the best
knowledge who know their duty, Ps. 111:10.
III. What ground we have to hope for this success in our
pursuits of wisdom; we must take our encouragement herein from God only, v. 6-8.
1. God has wisdom to bestow, v. 6.
The Lord not only is
wise himself, but he
gives wisdom, and that is more than the wisest men
in the world can do, for it is God's prerogative to open the understanding.
All the wisdom that is in any creature is his gift, his free gift, and he gives
it liberally (Jam. 1:5), has given it to many, and is still giving it; to him
therefore let us apply for it.
2. He has blessed the world with a revelation of his will.
Out
of his mouth, by the law and the prophets, by the written word and by his
ministers, both which are his mouth to the children of men,
come knowledge
and understanding, such a discovery of truth and good as, if we admit and
receive the impressions of it, will make us truly knowing and intelligent. It is
both an engagement and encouragement to search after wisdom that we have the
scriptures to search, in which we may find it if we seek it diligently.
3. He has particularly provided that good men, who are sincerely
disposed to do his will, shall have that
knowledge and that
understanding
which are necessary for them, Jn. 7:17. Let them seek wisdom, and they shall
find it; let them ask, and it shall be given them, v. 7, 8. Observe here, (1.)
Who those are that are thus favoured. They are
the righteous, on whom the
image of God is renewed, which consists in righteousness, and those who
walk
uprightly, who are honest in their dealings both with God and man and make
conscience of doing their duty as far as they know it. They are
his saints,
devoted to his honour, and set apart for his service. (2.) What it is that is
provided for them. [1.] Instruction. The means of wisdom are given to all, but
wisdom itself,
sound wisdom, is laid
up for the righteous, laid up
in Christ their head, in whom
are hidden all the treasures of wisdom and
knowledge, and who
is made of God to us wisdom. The same that is the
Spirit of revelation in the word is a Spirit of wisdom in the souls of those
that are sanctified, that wisdom of the prudent which is to understand his way;
and it is sound wisdom, its foundations firm, its principles solid, and its
products of lasting advantage. [2.] Satisfaction. Some read it, He
lays up
substance for the righteous, not only substantial knowledge, but substantial
happiness and comfort, Prov. 8:21. Riches are things that are not, and those
that have them only fancy themselves happy; but what is laid up in the promises
and in heaven for the righteous will make them truly, thoroughly, and eternally
happy. [3.] Protection. Even those who
walk uprightly may be brought into
danger for the trial of their faith, but God is, and will be,
a buckler to
them, so that nothing that happens to them shall do them any real hurt, or
possess them with any terrific apprehensions; they are safe, and they shall
think themselves so.
Fear not, Abraham; I am thy shield. It is their way,
the paths of judgment in which they walk, that the Lord knows, and owns, and
takes care of. [4.] Grace to persevere to the end. If we depend upon God, and
seek to him for wisdom, he will uphold us in our integrity, will enable us to
keep
the paths of judgment, however we may be tempted to turn aside out of them;
for he
preserves the way of his saints, that it be not perverted, and so
preserves them in it safe and blameless to his heavenly kingdom. The assurances
God has given us of his grace, if duly improved, will excite and quicken our
endeavours in doing our duty.
Work out your salvation, for
God works
in you.
Verses 10-22
The scope of these verses is to show, 1. What great advantage
true wisdom will be of to us; it will keep us from the paths of sin, which lead
to ruin, and will therein do us a greater kindness than if it enriched us with
all the wealth of the world. 2. What good use we should make of the wisdom God
gives us; we must use it for our own guidance in the paths of virtue, and for
the arming of us against temptations of every kind. 3. By what rules we may try
ourselves whether we have this wisdom or no. This tree will be known by its
fruits; if we be truly wise, it will appear by our care to avoid all evil
company and evil practices.
This wisdom will be of use to us,
I. For our preservation from evil, from the evil of sin, and,
consequently, from the evil of trouble that attends it.
1. In general (v. 10, 11), "When wisdom has entire
possession of thee, it will
keep thee." And when has it an entire
possession of us? (1.) When it has dominion over us. When it not only fills the
head with notions, but
enters into the heart and has a commanding power
and influence upon that,when it is upon the throne there, and gives law to
the affections and passions,when it
enters into the heart as the
leaven into the dough, to diffuse its relish there, and to change it into its
own imagethen it is likely to do us good. (2.) When we have delight in it,
when knowledge becomes
pleasant to the soul: "When thou beginnest to
relish it as the most agreeable entertainment, and art subject to its rules, of
choice, and with satisfaction,when thou callest the practice of virtue, not a
slavery and a task, but
liberty and
pleasure, and a life of
serious godliness the most comfortable life a man can live in this world,then
thou wilt find the benefit of it." Though its restraints should be in some
respects unpleasant to the body, yet even those must be pleasant to the soul.
When it has come to this, with us,
discretion shall preserve us and keep
us. God keeps
the way of his saints (v. 8), by giving them discretion to
keep out of harm's way, to keep themselves that the wicked one touch them not.
Note, A principle of grace reigning in the heart will be a powerful preservative
both against corruptions within and temptations without, Eccl. 9:16, 18.
2. More particularly, wisdom will preserve us,
(1.) From men of corrupt principles, atheistical profane men,
who make it their business to debauch young men's judgments, and instil into
their minds prejudices against religion and arguments for vice: "It will
deliver
thee from the way of the evil man (v. 12), and a blessed deliverance it will
be, as from the very jaws of death,
from the way in which he walks, and
in which he would persuade thee to walk." The enemy is spoken of as one (v.
12), an
evil man, but afterwards as many (v. 13); there is a club, a gang
of them, that are in confederacy against religion, and join hand in hand for the
support of the devil's kingdom and the interests of it. [1.] They have a
spirit of contradiction to that which is good: They
speak froward things;
they say all they can against religion, both to show their own enmity to it and
to dissuade others from it. They are advocates for Satan; they plead for Baal,
and
pervert the right ways of the Lord. How peevishly will profane wits
argue for sin, and with what frowardness will they carp at the word of God!
Wisdom will keep us either from conversing with such men or at least from being
ensnared by them. [2.] They are themselves apostates from that which is good,
and such are commonly the most malicious and dangerous enemies religion has,
witness Julian (v. 13):
They leave the paths of uprightness, which they
were trained up in and had set out in, shake off the influences of their
education, and break off the thread of their hopeful beginnings,
to walk in
the ways of darkness, in those wicked ways which hate the light, in which
men are led blindfold by ignorance and error, and which lead men into utter
darkness. The ways of sin are ways of darkness, uncomfortable and unsafe; what
fools are those that leave the plain, pleasant, lightsome paths of uprightness,
to walk in those ways! Ps. 82:5; 1 Jn. 2:11. [3.] They take a pleasure in sin,
both in committing it themselves and in seeing others commit it (v. 14): They
rejoice
in an opportunity
to do evil, and in the accomplishment and success of
any wicked project. It is sport to fools to do mischief; nor is any sight more
grateful to them than to see
the frowardness of the wicked, to see those
that are hopeful drawn into the ways of sin, and then to see them hardened and
confirmed in those ways. They are pleased if they can discern that the devil's
kingdom gets ground (see Rom. 1:32), such a height of impiety have they arrived
at. [4.] They are resolute in sin (v. 15): Their
ways are crooked, a
great many windings and turnings to escape the pursuit of their convictions and
break the force of them; some sly excuse, some subtle evasion or other, their
deceitful hearts furnish them with, for the strengthening of their hands in
their wickedness; and in the crooked mazes of that labyrinth they secure
themselves from the arrests of God's word and their own consciences; for they
are
froward in their paths, that is, they are resolved to go on in them,
whatever is said against it. Every wise man will shun the company of such as
these.
(2.) From women of corrupt practices. The former lead to
spiritual wickednesses, the lusts of the unsanctified mind; these lead to
fleshly
lusts, which defile the body, that living temple, but withal
war against
the soul. The adulteress is here called
the strange woman, because no
man that has any wisdom or goodness in him will have any acquaintance with her;
she is to be shunned by every Israelite as if she were a heathen, and a stranger
to that sacred commonwealth. A strange woman indeed! utterly estranged from all
principles of reason, virtue, and honour. It is a great mercy to be delivered
from the allurements of the adulteress, considering, [1.] How false she is. Who
will have any dealings with those that are made up of treachery? She is a
strange woman; for,
First, She is false to him whom she entices. She
speaks fair, tells him how much she admires him above any man, and what a
kindness she has for him; but she
flatters with her words; she has no
true affection for him, nor any desire of his welfare, any more than Delilah had
of Samson's. All she designs is to pick his pocket and gratify a base lust of
her own.
Secondly, She is false to her husband, and violates the sacred
obligation she lies under to him. He was
the guide of her youth; by
marrying him she chose him to be so, and submitted herself to his guidance, with
a promise to attend him only, and forsake all others. But she has
forsaken
him, and therefore it cannot be thought that she should be faithful to any one
else; and whoever entertains her is partaker with her in her falsehood.
Thirdly,
She is false to God himself: She
forgets the covenant of her God, the
marriage-covenant (v. 17), to which God is not only a witness, but a party, for,
he having instituted the ordinance, both sides vow to him to be true to each
other. It is not her husband only that she sins against, but her God, who
will
judge whoremongers and adulterers because they despise the oath and break
the covenant, Eze. 17:18; Mal. 2:14. [2.] How fatal it will prove to those that
fall in league with her, v. 18, 19. Let the sufferings of others be our
warnings. Take heed of the sin of whoredom; for,
First, The ruin of those
who are guilty of it is certain and unavoidable, if they do not repent. It is a
sin that has a direct tendency to the killing of the soul, the extinguishing of
all good affections and dispositions in it, and the exposing of it to the wrath
and curse of God and the sword of his justice. Those that live in forbidden
pleasures are dead while they live. Let discretion preserve every man, not only
from the evil woman, but from the evil house, for the
house inclines to
death; it is in the road that leads directly to eternal death;
and her
paths unto Rephaim, to the
giants (so some read it), the sinners of
the old world, who, living in luxury and excess of riot, were cut down out of
time, and their foundation was overthrown with a flood. Our Lord Jesus deters us
from sinful pleasures with the consideration of everlasting torments which
follow them.
Where the worm dies not, nor is the fire quenched. See Mt.
5:28, 29.
Secondly, Their repentance and recovery are extremely
hazardous:
None, or next to none,
that go unto her, return again.
It is very rare that any who are caught in this snare of the devil recover
themselves, so much is the heart hardened, and the mind blinded, by the
deceitfulness of this sin. Having once lost their
hold of the paths of life,
they know not how to take hold of them again, but are perfectly besotted and
bewitched with those base lusts. Many learned interpreters think that this
caution against the
strange woman, besides the literal sense, is to be
understood figuratively, as a caution, 1. Against idolatry, which is spiritual
whoredom. Wisdom will keep thee from all familiarity with the worshippers of
images, and all inclination to join with them, which had for many ages been of
such pernicious consequence to Israel and proved so to Solomon himself. 2.
Against the debauching of the intellectual powers and faculties of the soul by
the lusts and appetites of the body. Wisdom will keep thee from being captivated
by the carnal mind, and from subjecting the spirit to the dominion of the flesh,
that notorious adulteress which
forsakes its guide, violates the
covenant
of our God, which
inclines to death, and which, when it has got an
undisturbed dominion, makes the case of the soul desperate.
II. This wisdom will be of use to guide and direct us in that
which is good (v. 20):
That thou mayest walk in the way of good men. We
must avoid the way of the
evil man, and the
strange woman, in
order that we may walk in good ways; we must
cease to do evil, in order
that we may
learn to do well. Note, 1. There is a way which is peculiarly
the way of good men, the way in which good men, as such, and as far as they have
really been such, have always walked. 2. It will be our wisdom to walk in that
way, to ask for the good old way and walk therein, Jer. 6:16; Heb. 6:12; 12:1.
And we must not only walk in that way awhile, but we must keep it, keep in it,
and never turn aside out of it:
The paths of the righteous are the paths
of life, which all that are wise, having taken hold of, will keep their hold of.
"That thou mayest imitate those excellent persons, the patriarchs and
prophets (so bishop Patrick paraphrases it), and be preserved in
the paths of
those righteous men who followed after them." We must not only choose
our way in general by the good examples of the saints, but must also take
directions from them in the choice of our particular paths; observe the track,
and go forth by the footsteps of the flock. Two reasons are here given why we
should thus choose:(1.) Because men's integrity will be their
establishment, v. 21. It will be the establishment, [1.] Of their persons:
The
upright shall dwell in the land, peaceably and quietly, as long as they
live; and their uprightness will contribute to it, as it settles their minds,
guides their counsels, gains them the good-will of their neighbours, and
entitles them to God's special favour. [2.] Of their families:
The perfect,
in their posterity,
shall remain in it. They shall dwell and remain for
ever in the heavenly Canaan, of which the earthly one was but a type. (2.)
Because men's iniquity will be their destruction, v. 22. See what becomes of
the
wicked, who choose the way of
the evil man; they
shall be cut off,
not only from heaven hereafter and all hopes of that, but
from the earth
now, on which they set their affections, and in which they lay up their
treasure. They think to take root in it, but they and their families
shall be
rooted out of it, in judgment to them, but in mercy to the earth. There is a
day coming which
shall leave them neither root nor branch, Mal. 4:1. Let
that wisdom then
enter into our hearts, and be
pleasant to our souls,
which will keep us out of a way that will end thus.
Chapter 2:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 Psalms Ecclesiastes
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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