Chapter 7:
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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 7
Complete Concise
The scope of this chapter is, as of several before, to warn
young men against the lusts of the flesh. Solomon remembered of what ill
consequence it was to his father, perhaps found himself, and perceived his son,
addicted to it, or at least had observed how many hopeful young men among his
subjects had been ruined by those lusts; and therefore he thought he could never
say enough to dissuade men from them, that "every one may possess his
vessel in sanctification and honour, and not in the lusts of uncleanness."
In this chapter we have, I. A general exhortation to get our minds principled
and governed by the world of God, as a sovereign antidote against this sin (v.
1-5). II. A particular representation of the great danger which unwary young men
are in of being inveigled into this snare (v. 6-23). III. A serious caution
inferred thence, in the close, to take heed of all approaches towards this sin
(v. 24-27). We should all pray, "Lord, lead us not into this temptation."
Verses 1-5
These verses are an introduction to his warning against fleshly
lusts, much the same with that, ch. 6:20, etc., and ending (v. 5) as that did
(v. 24),
To keep thee from the strange woman; that is it he aims at; only
there he had said,
Keep thy father's commandment, here (which comes all
to one),
Keep my commandments, for he speaks to us as unto sons. He
speaks in God's name; for it is God's
commandments that we are to
keep,
his
words, his
law. The word of God must be to us, 1. As that
which we are most careful of. We must keep it as our treasure; we must
lay up
God's commandments with us, lay them up safely, that we may not be robbed
of them by the wicked one, v. 1. We must keep it as our life:
Keep my
commandments and live (v. 2), not only, "Keep them, and you shall live;"
but, "Keep them as you would your life, as those that cannot live without
them." It would be death to a good man to be deprived of the word of God,
for by it he lives, and not
by bread alone. 2. As that which we are most
tender of: Keep
my law as the apple of thy eye. A little thing offends
the eye, and therefore nature has so well guarded it. We pray, with David, that
God would keep us as the apple of his eye (Ps. 17:8), that our lives and
comforts may be precious in his sight; and they shall be so (Zec. 2:8) if we be
in like manner tender of his law and afraid of the least violation of it. Those
who reproach strict and circumspect walking, as needless preciseness, consider
not that the law is to be kept as the apple of the eye, for indeed it is the
apple
of our eye; the law is light; the law in the heart is the eye of the soul.
3. As that which we are proud of and would be ever mindful of (v. 3):
"Bind
them upon thy fingers; let them be precious to thee; look upon them as an
ornament, as a diamond-ring, as the
signet on thy right hand; wear them
continually as thy wedding-ring, the badge of thy espousals to God. Look upon
the word of God as putting an honour upon thee, as an ensign of thy dignity.
Bind
them on thy fingers, that they may be constant memorandums to thee of thy
duty, that thou mayest have them always in view, as that which is
graven upon
the palms of thy hands." 4. As that which we are fond of and are ever
thinking of:
Write them upon the table of thy heart, as the names of the
friends we dearly love, we say, are written in our hearts.
let the word of
God dwell richly in us, and be written there where it will be always at hand
to be read. Where sin was written (Jer. 17:1) let the word of God be written. It
is the matter of a promise (Heb. 8:10,
I will write my law in their hearts),
which makes the precept practicable and easy. 5. As that which we are intimately
acquainted and conversant with (v. 4):
"Say unto wisdom, Thou art my
sister, whom I dearly love and take delight in;
and call understanding
thy kinswoman, to whom thou art nearly allied, and for whom thou hast a pure
affection; call her thy friend, whom thou courtest." We must make the word
of God familiar to us, consult it, and consult its honour, and take a pleasure
in conversing with it. 6. As that which we make use of for our defence and
armour, to keep us
from the strange woman, from sin, that flattering but
destroying thing, that adulteress; particularly from the sin of uncleanness, v.
5. Let the word of God confirm our dread of that sin and our resolutions against
it; let it discover to us its fallacies and suggest to us answers to all its
flatteries.
Verses 6-23
Solomon here, to enforce the caution he had given against the
sin of whoredom, tells a story of a young man that was ruined to all intents and
purposes by the enticements of an adulterous woman. Such a story as this would
serve the lewd profane poets of our age to make a play of, and the harlot with
them would be a heroine; nothing would be so entertaining to the audience, nor
give them so much diversion, as her arts of beguiling the young gentleman and
drawing in the country squire; her conquests would be celebrated as the triumphs
of wit and love, and the comedy would conclude very pleasantly; and every young
man that saw it acted would covet to be so picked up. Thus
fools make a mock
at sin. But Solomon here relates it, and all wise and good men read it, as a
very melancholy story. The impudence of the adulterous woman is very justly
looked upon, by all that have any sparks of virtue in them, with the highest
indignation, and the easiness of the young man with the tenderest compassion;
and the story concludes with sad reflections, enough to make all that read and
hear it afraid of the snares of fleshly lusts and careful to keep at the utmost
distance from them. It is supposed to be a parable, or imagined case, but I
doubt it was too true, and, which is worse, that notwithstanding the warning it
gives of the fatal consequences of such wicked courses it is still too often
true, and the agents for hell are still playing the same game and with similar
success.
Solomon was a magistrate, and, as such, inspected the manners of
his subjects, looked often through his casement, that he might see with his own
eyes, and made remarks upon those who little thought his eye was upon them, that
he might know the better how to make the sword he bore a terror to evil-doers.
But here he writes as a minister, a prophet, who is by office a watchman, to
give warning of the approach of the enemies, and especially where they lie in
ambush, that we may not be ignorant of Satan's devices, but may know where to
double our guard. This Solomon does here, where we may observe the account he
gives,
I. Of the person tempted, and how he laid himself open to the
temptation, and therefore must thank himself if it end in his destruction. 1. He
was a
young man, v. 7. Fleshly lusts are called
youthful lusts (2
Tim. 2:22), not to extenuate them as tricks of youth, and therefore excusable,
but rather to aggravate them, as robbing God of the first and best of our time,
and, by debauching the mind when it is tender, laying a foundation for a bad
life ever after, and to intimate that young people ought in a special manner to
fortify their resolutions against this sin. 2. He was a young man
void of
understanding, that went abroad into the world, not principled as he ought
to have been with wisdom and the fear of God, and so ventured to sea without
ballast, without pilot, cord, or compass; he knew not how to depart from evil,
which is the best understanding, Job 28:28. Those become an easy prey to Satan
who, when they have arrived to the stature of men, have scarcely the
understanding of children. 3. He kept bad company. He was a
young man among
the youths, a silly young man
among the simple ones. If, being
conscious of his own weakness, he had associated with those that were older and
wiser than himself, there would have been hopes of him. Christ, at twelve years
old, conversed with the doctors, to set young people an example of this. But, if
those that are simple choose such for their companions as are like themselves,
simple they will still be, and hardened in their simplicity. 4. He was
sauntering, and had nothing to do, but
passed through the street as one
that knew not how to dispose of himself. One of the sins of filthy Sodom was
abundance
of idleness, Eze. 16:49. He went in a starched stately manner, so (it is
said) the word signifies. He appeared to be a nice formal fop, the top of whose
accomplishments was to dress well and walk with a good air; fit game for that
bird of prey to fly at. 5. He was a night-walker, that hated and scorned the
business that is to be done by day-light, from which the evening calls men in to
their repose; and, having fellowship with the unfruitful works of darkness, he
begins to move
in the twilight in the evening, v. 9. And he chooses
the
black and dark night as fittest for his purpose, not the moonlight nights,
when he might be discovered. 6. He steered his course towards the house of one
that he thought would entertain him, and that he might be merry with; he went
near
her corner, the
way to her house (v. 8), contrary to Solomon's
advice (ch. 5:8),
Come not night the door of her house. Perhaps he did
not know it was the way to an infamous house, but, however, it was a way that he
had no business in; and when we have nothing to do the devil will quickly find
us something to do. We must take heed, not only of idle days, but of idle
evenings, lest they prove inlets to temptation.
II. Of the person tempting, not a common prostitute, for she was
a married wife (v. 19), and, for aught that appears, lived in reputation among
her neighbours, not suspected of any such wickedness, and yet, in the
twilight
of the evening, when her husband was abroad, abominably impudent. She is
here described, 1. By her dress. She had the
attire of a harlot (v. 10),
gaudy and flaunting, to set her off as a beauty; perhaps she was painted as
Jezebel, and went with her neck and breasts bare, loose, and
en deshabille.
The purity of the heart will show itself in the modesty of the dress, which
becomes
women professing godliness. 2. By her craft and management. She is
subtle
of heart, mistress of all the arts of wheedling, and knowing how by all her
caresses to serve her own base purposes. 3. By her temper and carriage.
She
is loud and stubborn, talkative and self-willed, noisy and troublesome,
wilful and headstrong, all tongue, and will have her saying, right or wrong,
impatient of check and control, and cannot bear to be counselled, much less
reproved, by husband or parents, ministers or friends. She is a
daughter of
Belial, that will endure no yoke. 4. By her place, not her own house; she
hates the confinement and employment of that; her
feet abide not there
any longer than needs must. She is all for gadding abroad, changing place and
company.
Now is she without in the country, under pretence of taking the
air, now
in the streets of the city, under pretence of seeing how the
market goes. She is here, and there, and every where but where she should be.
She
lies in wait at every corner, to pick up such as she can make a prey
of. Virtue is a penance to those to whom home is a prison.
III. Of the temptation itself and the management of it. She met
the young spark. Perhaps she knew him; however she knew by his fashions that he
was such a one as she wished for; so she
caught him about the neck and
kissed
him, contrary to all the rules of modesty (v. 13), and waited not for his
compliments or courtship, but
with an impudent face invited him not only
to
her house, but to
her bed.
1. She courted him to sup with her (v. 14, 15):
I have
peace-offerings with me. Hereby she gives him to understand, (1.) Her
prosperity, that she was compassed about with so many blessings that she had
occasion to offer peace-offerings, in token of joy and thankfulness; she was
before-hand in the world, so that he needed not fear having his pocket picked.
(2.) Her profession of piety. She had been to-day at the temple, and was as well
respected there as any that worshipped in the courts of the Lord. She had paid
her vows, and, as she thought, made all even with God Almighty, and therefore
might venture upon a new score of sins. Note, The external performances of
religion, if they do not harden men against sin, harden them in it, and embolden
carnal hearts to venture upon it, in hopes that when they come to count and
discount with God he will be found as much in debt to them for their
peace-offerings and their vows as they to him for their sins. But it is sad that
a show of piety should become the shelter of iniquity (which really doubles the
shame of it, and makes it more exceedingly sinful) and that men should baffle
their consciences with those very things that should startle them. The Pharisees
made long prayers, that they might the more plausibly carry on their covetous
and mischievous provisions. The greatest part of the flesh of the
peace-offerings was by the law returned back to the offerers, to feast upon with
their friends, which (if they were peace-offerings of thanksgiving) was to be
all eaten
the same day and
none of it left until the morning, Lev.
7:15. This law of charity and generosity is abused to be a colour for gluttony
and excess: "Come," says she, "come home with me, for I have good
cheer enough, and only want good company to help me off with it." It was a
pity that the peace-offerings should thus become, in a bad sense, sin-offerings,
and that what was designed for the honour of God should become the food and fuel
of a base lust. But this is not all. (4.) To strengthen the temptation, [1.] She
pretends to have a very great affection for him above any man:
"Therefore,
because I have a good supper upon the table,
I came forth to meet thee,
for no friend in the world shall be so welcome to it as thou shalt, v. 15. Thou
art he whom I came on purpose to seek, to
seek diligently, came myself,
and would not send a servant." Surely he cannot deny her his company when
she put such a value upon it, and would take all this pains to obtain the favour
of it. Sinners take pains to do mischief, and are as the roaring lion himself;
they
go about seeking to devour, and yet pretend they are seeking to
oblige. [2.] She would have it thought that Providence itself countenanced her
choice of him for her companion; for how quickly had she found him whom she
sought!
2. She courted him to lie with her. They will sit down to eat
and drink, and then rise up to play, to play the wanton, and there is a bed
ready for them, where he shall find that which will be in all respects agreeable
to him. To please his eye, it is
decked with coverings of tapestry and
carved
works, exquisitely fine; he never saw the like. To please his touch, the
sheets are not of home-spun cloth; they are far-fetched and dear bought; they
are of
fine linen of Egypt, v. 16. To gratify his smell, it is
perfumed
with the sweetest scents, v. 17. Come, therefore, and
let us take our fill of
love, v. 18. Of
love, does she say? Of
lust she means, brutish
lust; but it is a pity that the name of love should be thus abused. True love is
from heaven; this is from hell. How can those pretend to solace themselves and
love one another who are really ruining themselves and one another?
3. She anticipated the objection which he might make of the
danger of it. Is she not another man's wife, and what if her husband should
catch them in adultery, in the very act? he will make them pay dearly for their
sport, and where will the solace of their love be then? "Never fear,"
says she, "the
good man is not at home" (v. 19); she does not
call him her
husband, for she
forsakes the guide of her youth and
forgets
the covenant of her God; but "the
good man of the house, whom I
am weary of." Thus Potiphar's wife, when she spoke of her husband, would
not call him so, but
he, Gen. 39:14. It is therefore with good reason
taken notice of, to Sarah's praise, that she spoke respectfully of her
husband, calling him
lord. She pleases herself with this that he is not
at home, and therefore she is melancholy if she have not some company, and
therefore whatever company she has she may be free with them, for she is from
under his eye, and he shall never know. But will he not return quickly? No:
"he has
gone a long journey, and cannot return on a sudden; he
appointed
the day of his return, and he never comes home sooner than he says he will.
He
has taken a bag of money with him, either," (1.) "To trade with,
to buy goods with and he will not return till he has laid it all out. It is a
pity that an honest industrious man should be thus abused, and advantage taken
of his absence, when it is upon business, for the good of his family." Or,
(2.) "To spend and revel with." Whether justly or not, she insinuates
that he was a bad husband; so she would represent him, because she was resolved
to be a bad wife, and must have that for an excuse; it is often groundlessly
suggested, but is never a sufficient excuse. "He follows his pleasures, and
wastes his estate abroad" (says she), "and why should not I do the
same at home?"
IV. Of the success of the temptation. Promising the young man
every thing that was pleasant, and impunity in the enjoyment, she gained her
point, v. 21. It should seem, the youth, though very simple, had no ill design,
else a word, a beck, a wink, would have served, and there would have been no
need of all this harangue; but though he did not intend any such thing, nay, had
something in his conscience that opposed it, yet
with her much fair speech
she caused him to yield. His corruptions at length triumphed over his
convictions, and his resolutions were not strong enough to hold out against such
artful attacks as these, but
with the flattery of her lips she forced him;
he could not stop his ear against such a charmer, but surrendered himself her
captive. Wisdom's maidens, who plead her cause, and have reason on their side,
and true and divine pleasures to invite men to, have a deaf ear turned to them,
and with all their rhetoric cannot compel men to come in, but such is the
dominion of sin in the hearts of men that its allurements soon prevail by
falsehood and flattery. With what pity does Solomon here look upon this foolish
young man, when he sees him follow the adulterous woman! (1.) He gives him up
for gone; alas! he is undone. he goes to the slaughter (for houses of
uncleanness are slaughter-houses to precious souls); a dart will presently
strike
through his liver; going without his breast-plate, he will receive his death's
wound, v. 23. It is his life, his precious life, that is thus irrecoverably
thrown away, he is perfectly lost to all good; his conscience is debauched; a
door is opened to all other vices, and this will certainly end in his endless
damnation. (2.) That which makes his case the more piteous is that he is not
himself aware of his misery and danger; he goes blindfold, nay, he goes laughing
to his ruin. The ox thinks he is led to the pasture when he is led to the
slaughter;
the fool (that is, the drunkard, for, of all sinners,
drunkards are the greatest fools) is led
to the correction of the stocks,
and is not sensible of the shame of it, but goes to it as if he were going to a
play. The
bird that
hastes to the snare looks only at the bait,
and promises herself a good bit from that, and considers not that
it is for
her life. Thus this unthinking unwary young man dreams of nothing but the
pleasures he shall have in the embraces of the harlot, while really he is
running headlong upon his ruin. Though Solomon does not here tell us that he put
the law in execution against this base harlot, yet we have no reason to think
but that he did, he was himself so affected with the mischief she did and had
such an indignation at it.
Verses 24-27
We have here the application of the foregoing story:
"Hearken
to me therefore, and not to such seducers (v. 24); give ear to a father, and
not to an enemy." 1. "Take good counsel when it is given you.
Let
not thy heart decline to her ways (v. 25); never leave the paths of virtue,
though strait and narrow, solitary and up-hill, for the way of the adulteress,
though green, and broad, and crowded with company. Do not only keep thy feet
from those ways, but let not so much as thy heart incline to them; never harbour
a disposition this way, nor think otherwise than with abhorrence of such wicked
practices as these. Let reason, and conscience, and the fear of God ruling in
the heart, check the inclinations of the sensual appetite. If thou goest in her
paths, in any of the paths that lead to this sin, thou goest astray, thou art
out of the right way, the safe way; therefore take heed,
go not astray,
lest thou wander endlessly." 2. "Take fair warning when it is given
you." (1.) "Look back, and see what mischief this sin has done. The
adulteress has been the ruin not of here and there one, but she has
cast down
many wounded." Thousands have been undone, now and for ever, by this
sin; and those not only the weak and simple youths, such as he was of whom he
had now spoken, but
many strong men have been slain by her, v. 26.
Herein, perhaps, he has an eye especially to Samson, who was slain by this sin,
and perhaps to David too, who by this sin entailed a sword upon his house,
though so far the Lord took it away that he himself should not die. These were
men not only of great bodily strength, but of eminent wisdom and courage, and
yet their fleshly lusts prevailed over them.
Howl, fir-trees, if the cedars
be shaken. Let him that thinks he stands take heed lest he fall. (2.)
"Look forward with an eye of faith, and see what will be in the end of it,"
v. 27. Her house, though richly decked and furnished, and called a
house of
pleasure, is the
way to hell; and her chambers are the stair-case
that goes down to the
chambers of death and everlasting darkness. The cup
of fornication must shortly be exchanged for the cup of trembling; and the
flames of lust, if not quenched by repentance and mortification, will burn to
the lowest hell. Therefore
stand in awe and sin not.
Chapter 7:
| 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
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Proverbs
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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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