Chapter 8:
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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 8
Complete Concise
The word of God is two-fold, and, in both senses, is wisdom; for
a word without wisdom is of little value, and wisdom without a word is of little
use. Now, I. Divine revelation is the word and wisdom of God, and that pure
religion and undefiled which is built upon it; and of that Solomon here speaks,
recommending it to us as faithful, and well worthy of all acceptation (v. 1-2).
God, by it, instructs, and governs, and blesses, the children of men. II. The
redeemer is the eternal Word and wisdom, the Logos. He is the Wisdom that speaks
to the children of men in the former part of the chapter. All divine revelation
passes through his hand, and centres in him; but of him as the personal Wisdom,
the second person in the Godhead, in the judgment of many of the ancients,
Solomon here speaks (v. 22-31). He concludes with a repeated charge to the
children of men diligently to attend to the voice of God in his word (v. 32-36).
Verses 1-11
The will of God revealed to us for our salvation is here largely
represented to us as easy to be known and understood, that none may have an
excuse for their ignorance or error, and as worthy to be embraced, that none may
have an excuse for their carelessness and unbelief.
I. The things revealed are easy to be known, for they
belong
to us and to our children (Deu. 29:29), and we need not soar up to heaven,
or dive into the depths, to get the knowledge of them (Deu. 30:11), for they are
published and proclaimed in some measure by the works of the creation (Ps.
19:1), more fully by the consciences of men and the eternal reasons and rules of
good and evil, but most clearly by Moses and the prophets; let them hear them.
The precepts of wisdom may easily be known; for, 1. They are proclaimed aloud
(v. 1):
Does not Wisdom cry? Yes, she cries aloud, and does not spare (Isa.
58:1); she
puts forth her voice, as one in earnest and desirous to be
heard.
Jesus stood and cried, Jn. 7:37. The curses and blessings were
read with a loud voice by the Levites, Deu. 27:14. And men's own hearts
sometimes speak aloud to them; there are clamours of conscience, as well as
whispers. 2. They are proclaimed from on high (v. 2):
She stands in the top
of high places; it was from the top of Mount Sinai that the law was given,
and Christ expounded it in a sermon upon the mount. Nay, if we slight divine
revelation, we
turn away from him that speaks from heaven, a high place
indeed, Heb. 12:25. The adulterous woman spoke in secret, the oracles of the
heathen muttered, but Wisdom speaks openly; truth seeks no corners, but gladly
appeals to the light. 3. They are proclaimed
in the places of concourse,
where multitudes are gathered together, the more the better. Jesus spoke
in
the synagogues and in the temple, whither the Jews always resorted, Jn.
18:20. Every man that passes by on the road, of what rank or condition soever,
may know what is good, and what the Lord requires of him, if it be not his own
fault. There is no speech nor language where Wisdom's voice is not heard; her
discoveries and directions are given to all promiscuously.
He that has ears
to hear, let him hear. 4. They are proclaimed where they are most needed.
They are intended for the guide of our way, and therefore are published
in
the places of the paths, where many ways meet, that travellers may be shown,
if they will but ask, which is the right way, just then when they are at a loss;
thou shalt then
hear the word behind thee, saying, This is the way, Isa.
30:21. The foolish man
known not how to go to the city (Eccl. 10:15), and
therefore Wisdom stands ready to direct him, stands
at the gates, at the
entry of the city, ready to tell him where the seer's house is, 1 Sa.
9:18. Nay, she follows men to their own houses, and cries to them
at the
coming in at the doors, saying,
Peace be to this house; and, if the son
of peace be there, it shall certainly abide upon it. God's ministers are
appointed to testify to people both publicly and from house to house. Their own
consciences follow them with admonitions wherever they go, which they cannot be
out of the hearing of while they carry their own heads and hearts about with
them, which are a law unto themselves. 5. They are directed to the children of
men. We attend to that discourse in which we hear ourselves named, though
otherwise we should have neglected it; therefore Wisdom speaks to us:
"Unto
you, O men! I call (v. 4), not to angels (they need not these instructions),
not to devils (they are past them), not to the brute-creatures (they are not
capable of them), but
to you, O men! who are taught more than the beasts
of the earth and made wiser than the fowls of heaven. To you is this law given,
to you is the word of this invitation, this exhortation sent.
My voice is to
the sons of men, who are concerned to receive instruction, and to whom, one
would think, it should be very welcome. It is not, to you, O Jews! only, that
Wisdom cries, nor to you, O gentlemen! not to you, O scholars! but
to you, O
men! O sons of men! even the meanest." 6. They are designed to make
them wise (v. 5); they are calculated not only for men that are capable of
wisdom, but for sinful men, fallen men, foolish men, that need it, and are
undone without it:
"O you simple ones! understand wisdom. Though you
are ever so simple, Wisdom will take you for her scholars, and not only so, but,
if you will be ruled by her, will undertake to give you
an understanding
heart." When sinners leave their sins, and become truly religious, then
the
simple understand wisdom.
II. The things revealed are worthy to be known, well worthy of
all acceptation. We are concerned to hear; for, 1. They are of inestimable
value. They are
excellent things (v. 6),
princely things, so the
word is. Though they are level to the capacity of the meanest, yet there is that
in them which will be entertainment for the greatest. They are divine and
heavenly things, so excellent that, in comparison with them, all other learning
is but children's play. Things which relate to an eternal God, an immortal
soul, and an everlasting state, must needs be
excellent things. 2. They
are of incontestable equity, and carry along with them the evidence of their own
goodness. They are
right things (v. 6),
all in righteousness (v.
8), and
nothing froward or perverse in them. All the dictates and
directions of revealed religion are consonant to, and perfective of, the light
and law of nature, and there is nothing in them that puts any hardship upon us,
that lays us under any undue restraints, unbecoming the dignity and liberty of
the human nature, nothing that we have reason to complain of.
All God's
precepts concerning all things are right. 3. They are of unquestionable
truth. Wisdom's doctrines, upon which her laws are founded, are such as we may
venture our immortal souls upon:
My mouth shall speak truth (v. 7), the
whole truth, and nothing but the truth, for it is a testimony to the world.
Every word of God is true; there are not so much as pious frauds in it, nor are
we imposed upon in that which is told us for our good. Christ is a faithful
witness, is the truth itself;
wickedness (that is, lying)
is an
abomination to his lips. Note, Lying is wickedness, and we should not only
refrain from it, but it should be an abomination to us, and as far from what we
say as from what God says to us. His word to us is
yea, and amen; never
then let ours be
yea and nay. 4. They are wonderfully acceptable and
agreeable to those who take them aright, who understand themselves aright, who
have not their judgments blinded and biassed by the world and the flesh, are not
under the power of prejudice, are taught of God, and whose understanding he has
opened, who impartially
seek knowledge, take pains for it, and have found
it in the enquiries they have hitherto made. To them, (1.) They are all
plain,
and not hard to be understood. If the book is sealed, it is to those who are
willingly ignorant.
If our gospel is hidden, it is hidden to those who are
lost; but to those who
depart from evil, which
is understanding,
who have that
good understanding which those have who
do the
commandments, to them
they are all plain and there is nothing
difficult in them. The way of religion is a highway, and
the way-faring men,
though fools, shall not err therein, Isa. 35:8. Those therefore do a great
wrong to the common people who deny them the use of the scripture under pretence
that they cannot understand it, whereas it is plain for plain people. (2.) They
are all
right, and not hard to be submitted to. Those who discern things
that differ, who know good and evil, readily subscribe to the rectitude of all
Wisdom's dictates, and therefore, without murmuring or disputing, govern
themselves by them.
III. From all this he infers that the right knowledge of those
things, such as transforms us into the image of them, is to be preferred before
all the wealth of this world (v. 10, 11):
Receive my instruction, and not
silver. Instruction must not only be heard, but received. We must bid it
welcome, receive the impressions of it, and submit to the command of it; and
this
rather than choice gold, that is, 1. We must prefer religion before
riches, and look upon it that, if we have the knowledge and fear of God in our
hearts, we are really more happy and better provided for every condition of life
than if we had ever so much silver and gold.
Wisdom is in itself, and
therefore must be in our account,
better than rubies. It will bring us in
a better price, be to us a better portion; show it forth, and it will be a
better ornament than jewels and precious stones of the greatest value. Whatever
we can sit down and wish for of the wealth of this world would, if we had it, be
unworthy to be compared with the advantages that attend serious godliness. 2. We
must be dead to the wealth of this world, that we may the more closely and
earnestly apply ourselves to the business of religion. We must receive
instruction as the main matter, and then be indifferent whether we receive
silver or no; nay, we must not receive it as our portion and reward, as the rich
man in his life-time
received his good things.
Verses 12-21
Wisdom here is Christ,
in whom are hidden all the treasures
of wisdom and knowledge; it is Christ in the word and Christ in the heart,
not only Christ revealed to us, but Christ revealed in us. It is the word of
God, the whole compass of divine revelation; it is God the Word, in whom all
divine revelation centres; it is the soul formed by the word; it is Christ
formed in the soul; it is religion in the purity and power of it. Glorious
things are here spoken of this excellent person, this excellent thing.
I. Divine wisdom gives men good heads (v. 12):
I Wisdom dwell
with prudence, not with carnal policy (the wisdom that is from above is
contrary to that, 2 Co. 1:12), but with true discretion, which serves for the
right ordering of the conversation, that wisdom of the prudent which is to
understand
his way and is in all cases
profitable to direct, the wisdom of the
serpent, not only to guard from harm, but to guide in doing food.
Wisdom
dwells with prudence; for prudence is the product of religion and an
ornament to religion; and there are more
witty inventions found out with
the help of the scripture, both for the right understanding of God's
providences and for the effectual countermining of Satan's devices and the
doing of good in our generation, than were ever discovered by the learning of
the philosophers or the politics of statesmen. We may apply it to Christ
himself; he
dwells with prudence, for his whole undertaking is the
wisdom
of God in a mystery, and in it God
abounds towards us in all wisdom and
prudence. Christ
found out the knowledge of that great
invention,
and a costly one it was to him, man's salvation, by his satisfaction, an
admirable expedient. We had found out many inventions for our ruin; he found out
one for our recovery. The covenant of grace is so well ordered in all things
that we must conclude that he who ordered it
dwelt with prudence.
II. It gives men good hearts, v. 13. True religion, consisting
in
the fear of the Lord, which is the wisdom before recommended, teaches
men, 1. To hate all sin, as displeasing to God and destructive to the soul:
The
fear of the Lord is to hate evil, the evil way, to hate sin as sin, and
therefore to
hate every false way. Wherever there is an awe of God there
is a dread of sin, as an evil, as only evil. 2. Particularly to hate pride and
passion, those two common and dangerous sins. Conceitedness of ourselves,
pride
and arrogancy, are sins which Christ hates, and so do all those who have the
Spirit of Christ; every one hates them in others, but we must hate them in
ourselves.
The froward mouth, peevishness towards others, God hates,
because it is such an enemy to the peace of mankind, and therefore we should
hate it. Be it spoken to the honour of religion that, however it is unjustly
accused, it is so far from making men conceited and sour that there is nothing
more directly contrary to it than pride and passion, nor which it teaches us
more to detest.
III. It has a great influence upon public affairs and the
well-governing of all societies, v. 14. Christ, as God, has strength and wisdom;
wisdom and might are his; as Redeemer, he is
the wisdom of God and the power
of God. To all that are his he is made of God both
strength and
wisdom;
in him they are laid up for us, that we may both know and do our duty. He is the
wonderful counsellor and gives that grace which alone is
sound wisdom. He
is understanding itself, and
has strength for all those that
strengthen themselves in him. True religion gives men the best counsel in all
difficult cases, and helps to make their way plain. Wherever it is, it is
understanding,
it has
strength; it will be all that to us that we need, both for
services and sufferings. Where the word of God dwells richly it makes a man
perfect
and
furnishes him thoroughly for every good word and work. Kings,
princes, and judges, have of all men most need of wisdom and strength, of
counsel and courage, for the faithful discharge of the trusts reposed in them,
and that they may be blessings to the people over whom they are set. And
therefore Wisdom says,
By me kings reign (v. 15, 16), that is, 1. Civil
government is a divine institution, and those that are entrusted with the
administration of it have their commission from Christ; it is a branch of his
kingly office that
by him kings reign; from him to whom all judgment is
committed their power is derived. They reign by him, and therefore ought to
reign for him. 2. Whatever qualifications for government any kings or princes
have they are indebted to the grace of Christ for them; he gives them the spirit
of government, and they have nothing, no skill, no principles of justice, but
what he endues them with.
A divine sentence is in the lips of the king;
and kings are to their subjects what he makes them. 3. Religion is very much the
strength and support of the civil government; it teaches subjects their duty,
and so
by it kings reign over them the more easily; it teaches kings
their duty, and so
by it kings reign as they ought; they
decree
justice, while they
rule in the fear of God. Those rule well whom
religion rules.
IV. It will make all those happy, truly happy, that receive and
embrace it.
1. They shall be happy in the love of Christ; for he it is that
says,
I love those that love me, v. 17. Those that
love the Lord Jesus
Christ in sincerity shall be beloved of him with a peculiar distinguishing
love: he will
love them and manifest himself to them.
2. They shall be happy in the success of their enquiries after
him:
"Those that seek me early, seek an acquaintance with me and an
interest in me, seek me
early, that is, seek me earnestly, seek me first
before any thing else, that begin betimes in the days of their youth to seek me,
they shall find what they seek." Christ shall be theirs, and they shall be
his. He never said,
Seek in vain.
3. They shall be happy in the wealth of the world, or in that
which is infinitely better. (1.) They shall have as much riches and honour as
Infinite Wisdom sees good for them (v. 18); they are
with Christ, that
is, he has them to give, and whether he will see fit to give them to us must be
referred to him. Religion sometimes helps to make people rich and great in this
world, gains them a reputation, and so increases their estates; and the riches
which Wisdom gives to her favourites have these two advantages:[1.] That they
are
riches and righteousness, riches honestly got, not by fraud and
oppression, but in regular ways, and riches charitably used, for alms are called
righteousness. Those that have their wealth from God's blessing on
their industry, and that have a heart to do good with it, have
riches and
righteousness. [2.] That therefore they are
durable riches. Wealth
gotten by vanity will soon be diminished, but that which is well got will wear
well and will be left to the children's children, and that which is well spent
in works of piety and charity is put out to the best interest and so will be
durable; for the friends made by
the mammon of unrighteousness when we fail
will receive us into everlasting habitations, Lu. 16:9. It will be found
after many days, for the days of eternity. (2.) They shall have that which is
infinitely better, if they have not riches and honour in this world (v. 19):
"My
fruit is better than gold, and will turn to a better account, will be of
more value in less compass,
and my revenue better than the
choicest
silver, will serve a better trade." We may assure ourselves that not
only Wisdom's products at last, but her income in the mean time, not only her
fruit, but her revenue, is more valuable than the best either of the possessions
or of the reversions of this world.
4. They shall be happy in the grace of God now; that shall be
their guide in the good way, v. 20. This is that fruit of wisdom which is
better
than gold, than fine gold, it
leads us in the way of righteousness,
shows us that way and goes before us in it, the way that God would have us walk
in and which will certainly bring us to our desired end. It leads
in the
midst of the paths of judgment, and saves us from deviating on either hand.
In
medio virtusVirtue lies in the midst. Christ by his Spirit guides
believers into all truth, and so
leads them in the way of righteousness,
and they
walk after the Spirit.
5. They shall be happy in the glory of God hereafter, v. 21.
Therefore
Wisdom
leads in the paths of righteousness, not only that she may keep
her friends in the way of duty and obedience, but that she may
cause them to
inherit substance and may
fill their treasures, which cannot be done
with the things of this world, nor with any thing less than God and heaven. The
happiness of those that love God, and devote themselves to his service, is
substantial and satisfactory. (1.) It is substantial; it is substance itself. It
is a happiness which will subsist of itself, and stand alone, without the
accidental supports of outward conveniences. Spiritual and eternal things are
the only real and substantial things. Joy in God is substantial joy, solid and
well-grounded. The promises are their bonds, Christ is their surety, and both
substantial. They
inherit substance; that is, their inheritance hereafter
is substantial; it is a weight of glory; it is substance, Heb. 10:34. All their
happiness they have as heirs; it is grounded upon their sonship. (2.) It is
satisfying; it will not only fill their hands, but
fill their treasures,
not only maintain them, but make them rich. The things of this world may fill
men's bellies (Ps. 17:14), but not their treasures, for they cannot in them
secure to themselves
goods for many years; perhaps they may be deprived
of them
this night. But let the treasures of the soul be ever so
capacious there is enough in God, and Christ, and heaven, to fill them. In
Wisdom's promises believers have goods laid up, not for days and years, but
for eternity; her fruit therefore
is better than gold.
Verses 22-31
That it is an intelligent and divine person that here speaks
seems very plain, and that it is not meant of a mere essential property of the
divine nature, for Wisdom here has personal properties and actions; and that
intelligent divine person can be no other than the Son of God himself, to whom
the principal things here spoken of wisdom are attributed in other scriptures,
and we must explain scripture by itself. If Solomon himself designed only the
praise of wisdom as it is an attribute of God, by which he made the world and
governs it, so to recommend to men the study of that wisdom which belongs to
them, yet the Spirit of God, who indited what he wrote, carried him, as David
often, to such expressions as could agree to no other than the Son of God, and
would lead us into the knowledge of great things concerning him. All divine
revelation is
the revelation of Jesus Christ, which God gave unto him,
and here we are told who and what he is, as God, designed in the eternal
counsels to be the Mediator between God and man. The best exposition of these
verses we have in the first four verses of St. John's gospel.
In the
beginning was the Word, etc. Concerning the Son of God observe here,
I. His personality and distinct subsistence, one with the Father
and of the same essence, and yet a person of himself, whom
the Lord possessed
(v. 22),
who was set up (v. 23),
was brought forth (v. 24, 25),
was
by him (v. 30), for he was
the express image of his person, Heb. 1:3.
II. His eternity; he was begotten of the Father, for
the Lord
possessed him, as his own Son, his beloved Son, laid him in his bosom; he
was
brought forth as the only-begotten of the Father, and this
before
all worlds, which is most largely insisted upon here. The Word was eternal,
and had a being before the world, before the beginning of time; and therefore it
must follow that it was from eternity.
The Lord possessed him in the
beginning of his way, of his eternal counsels, for those were
before his
works. This way indeed had no beginning, for God's purposes in himself are
eternal like himself, but God speaks to us in our own language. Wisdom explains
herself (v. 23):
I was set up from everlasting. The Son of God was, in
the eternal counsels of God, designed and advanced to be the wisdom and power of
the Father, light and life, and all in all both in the creation and in the
redemption of the world. That he
was brought forth as to his being, and
set
up as to the divine counsels concerning his office, before the world was
made, is here set forth in a great variety of expressions, much the same with
those by which the eternity of God himself is expressed. Ps. 90:2,
Before the
mountains were brought forth. 1.
Before the earth was, and that was
made
in the beginning, before man was made; therefore the second Adam had
a being before the first, for the first Adam was
made of the earth, the
second had a being
before the earth, and therefore is
not of the
earth, Jn. 3:31. 2. Before the sea was (v. 24),
when there were no depths
in which the waters were gathered together,
no fountains from which those
waters might arise, none of that deep on which the Spirit of God moved for the
production of the visible creation, Gen. 1:2. 3. Before the mountains were, the
everlasting mountains, v. 25. Eliphaz, to convince Job of his inability to judge
of the divine counsels, asks him (Job 15:7),
Wast thou made before the hills?
No, thou wast not. But
before the hills was the eternal Word
brought
forth. 4. Before the habitable parts of the world, which men cultivate, and
reap the profits of (v. 26),
the fields in the valleys and plains, to
which the mountains are as a wall, which are
the highest part of the dust of
the world; the
first part of the dust (so some), the atoms which
compose the several parts of the world;
the chief or principal part of the
dust, so it may be read, and understood of man, who was made of the dust of
the ground and is dust, but is the principal part of the dust, dust enlivened,
dust refined. The eternal Word had a being before man was made, for
in him
was the life of men.
III. His agency in making the world. He not only had a being
before the world, but he was present, not as a spectator, but as the architect,
when the world was made. God silenced and humbled Job by asking him,
"Where
wast thou when I laid the foundations of the earth? Who hath laid the measures
thereof? (Job 38:4, etc.). Wast thou that eternal Word and wisdom, who was
the prime manager of that great affair? No; thou art of yesterday." But
here the Son of God, referring, as it should seem, to the discourse God had with
Job, declares himself to have been engaged in that which Job could not pretend
to be a witness of and a worker in, the creation of the world.
By him God
made the worlds, Eph. 3:9; Heb. 1:2; Col. 1:16. 1. When, on the first day of
the creation, in the very beginning of time, God said,
Let there be light,
and with a word produced it, this eternal Wisdom was that almighty Word: Then
I
was there, when he prepared the heavens, the fountain of that light, which,
whatever it is here, is there substantial. 2. He was no less active when, on the
second day, he stretched out the firmament, the vast expanse, and
set
that as
a compass upon the face of the depth (v. 27), surrounded it on
all sides with that canopy, that curtain. Or it may refer to the exact order and
method with which God framed all the parts of the universe, as the workman marks
out his work with his line and compasses. The work in nothing varied from the
plan of it formed in the eternal mind. 3. He was also employed in the third day's
work, when the
waters above the heavens, were gathered together by
establishing
the clouds above, and those under the heavens by
strengthening the
fountains of the deep, which send forth those waters (v. 28), and by
preserving the bounds of the sea, which is the receptacle of those waters, v.
29. This speaks much the honour of this eternal Wisdom, for by this instance God
proves himself a God greatly to be feared (Jer. 5:22) that
he has placed the
sand for the bound of the sea, that the dry land might continue to appear
above water, fit to be a habitation for man; and thus he has
appointed the
foundation of the earth. How able, how fit, is the Son of God to be the
Saviour of the world, who was the Creator of it!
IV. The infinite complacency which the Father had in him, and he
in the Father (v. 30):
I was by him, as one brought up with him. As by an
eternal generation he was brought forth of the Father, so by an eternal counsel
he was brought up with him, which intimates, not only the infinite love of the
Father to the Son, who is therefore called
the Son of his love (Col.
1:13), but the mutual consciousness and good understanding that were between
them concerning the work of man's redemption, which the Son was to undertake,
and about which the
counsel of peace was between them both, Zec. 6:13. He
was
alumnus patristhe Father's pupil, as I may say, trained up from
eternity for that service which in time, in the fulness of time, he was to go
through with, and is therein taken under the special tuition and protection of
the Father; he is
my servant whom I uphold, Isa. 42:1. He did what he saw
the Father do (Jn. 5:19), pleased his Father, sought his glory, did according to
the commandment he received from his Father, and all this
as one brought up
with him. He was
daily his Father's delight (my elect, in whom my soul
delighteth, says God, Isa. 43:1), and he also
rejoiced always before him.
This may be understood either, 1. Of the infinite delight which the persons of
the blessed Trinity have in each other, wherein consists much of the happiness
of the divine nature. Or, 2. Of the pleasure which the Father took in the
operations of the Son, when he
made the world; God saw every thing that
the Son made,
and, behold, it was very good, it pleased him, and
therefore his Son was
daily, day by day, during the six days of the
creation, upon that account,
his delight, Ex. 39:43. And the Son also did
himself
rejoice before him in the beauty and harmony of the whole
creation, Ps. 104:31. Or, 3. Of the satisfaction they had in each other, with
reference to the great work of man's redemption. The Father delighted in the
Son, as Mediator between him and man, was well-pleased with what he proposed
(Mt. 3:17), and
therefore loved him because he undertook to
lay down
his life for the sheep; he put a confidence in him that he would go through
his work, and not fail nor fly off. The Son also
rejoiced always before him,
delighted to do his will (Ps. 40:8), adhered closely to his undertaking, as one
that was well-satisfied in it, and, when it came to the setting to, expressed as
much satisfaction in it as ever, saying,
Lo, I come, to do
as in the
volume of the book it is written of me.
V. The gracious concern he had for mankind, v. 31. Wisdom
rejoiced,
not so much in the rich products of the earth, or the treasures hid in the
bowels of it, as
in the habitable parts os it, for her
delights were
with the sons of men; not only in the creation of man is it spoken with a
particular air of pleasure (Gen. 1:26),
Let us make man, but in the
redemption and salvation of man. The Son of God was
ordained, before the
world, to that great work, 1 Pt. 1:20. A remnant of the sons of men were
given him to be brought, through his grace, to his glory, and these were those
in whom his delights were. His church was the habitable part of his earth, made
habitable for him,
that the Lord God might dwell even
among those
that had been rebellious; and this he rejoiced in, in the prospect of seeing his
seed. Though he foresaw all the difficulties he was to meet with in his work,
the services and sufferings he was to go through, yet, because it would issue in
the glory of his Father and the salvation of those sons of men that were given
him, he looked forward upon it with the greatest satisfaction imaginable, in
which we have all the encouragement we can desire to come to him and rely upon
him for all the benefits designed us by his glorious undertaking.
Verses 32-36
We have here the application of Wisdom's discourse; the design
and tendency of it is to bring us all into an entire subjection to the laws of
religion, to make us wise and good, not to fill our heads with speculations, or
our tongues with disputes, but to rectify what is amiss in our hearts and lives.
In order to this, here is,
I. An exhortation to hear and obey the voice of Wisdom, to
attend and comply with the good instructions that the word of God gives us, and
in them to discern the voice of Christ, as the sheep know the shepherd's
voice.
1. We must be diligent
hearers of the word; for how can
we believe in him of whom we have not heart?
"Hearken unto me, O you
children!" v. 32. "Read the word written, sit under the word
preached, bless God for both, and hear him in both speaking to you." Let
children age, and what they hearken to then, it is likely, they will be so
seasoned by as to be governed by all their days. Let Wisdom's children justify
Wisdom by hearkening to her and show themselves to be indeed her children. We
must hear Wisdom's words, (1.) Submissively, and with a willing heart (v. 33):
"Hear instruction, and refuse it not, either as that which you need
not or as that which you like not; it is offered you as a kindness, and it is at
your peril if you refuse it." Those that reject the counsel of God reject
it against themselves, Lu. 7:30. "Refuse it not now, lest you should not
have another offer." (2.) Constantly, and with an attentive ear. We must
hear Wisdom so as to
watch daily at her gates, as beggars to receive an
alms, as clients and patients to receive advice, and to wait as servants, with
humility, and patience, and ready observance,
at the posts of her doors.
See here what a good house Wisdom keeps, for every day is dole-day; what a good
school, for every day is lecture-day. While we have God's works before our
eyes, and his word in our hand, we may be every day hearing Wisdom, and learning
instruction from her. See here what a dutiful and diligent attendance is
required of all Christ's disciples; they must
watch at the gates. [1.]
We must lay hold on all opportunities of getting knowledge and grace, and must
get into, and keep in, a constant settled course of communion with God. [2.] We
must be very humble in our attendance on divine instructions, and be glad of any
place, even the meanest, so we may but be within hearing of them, as David, who
would gladly be a door-keeper in the house of God. [3.] We must raise our
expectations of these instructions, and hearken to them with care, and patience,
and perseverance, must watch and wait, as Christ's hearers, that
hanged on
him to hear him, as the word in the original is (Lu. 19:48) and (ch. 21:38)
came
early in the morning to hear him.
2. We must be conscientious
doers of the work, for we are
blessed only in our deed. It is not enough to hearken unto Wisdom's
words, but we must
keep her ways (v. 32), do every thing that she
prescribes, keep within the hedges of her ways, and not transgress them, keep in
the tracks of her ways, proceed and persevere in them.
"Hear instruction
and be wise; let it be a means to make you wise in ordering your
conversation." What we know is known in vain if it do not make us wise, v.
33.
II. An assurance of happiness to all those that do hearken to
Wisdom. They are blessed, v. 32, and again v. 34. Those are blessed that watch
and wait at Wisdom's gates; even their attendance there is their happiness; it
is the best place they can be in. Those are blessed that wait there, for they
shall not be put to wait long; let them continue to knock awhile and it shall be
opened to them. They are seeking Wisdom, and they shall find what they seek. But
will it make them amends if they do find it? Yes (v. 35):
Whoso finds me
finds life, that is, all happiness, all that good which he needs or can
desire. He finds life in that grace which is the principle of spiritual life and
the pledge of eternal life. He
finds life, for he shall
obtain favour
of the Lord, and
in his favour is life. If the king's favour is
towards a wise son, much more the favour of the King of kings. Christ is Wisdom,
and he that finds Christ, that obtains an interest in him, he
finds life;
for Christ is life to all believers.
He that has the Son of God has life,
eternal life, and he
shall obtain favour of the Lord, who is well-pleased
with all those that are in Christ; nor can we obtain God's favour, unless we
find Christ and be found in him.
III. The doom passed upon all those that reject Wisdom and her
proposals, v. 36. They are left to ruin themselves, and Wisdom will not hinder
them, because they have set at nought all her counsel. 1. Their crime is very
great; they
sin against Wisdom, rebel against its light and laws, thwart
its designs, and by their folly offend it. They
sin against Christ; they
act in contempt of his authority, and in contradiction to all the purposes of
his life and death. This is construed into hating Wisdom, hating Christ; they
are his enemies, who will not have him to reign over them. What can appear worse
than hating him who is the centre of all beauty and fountain of all goodness,
love itself? 2. Their punishment will be very just, for they wilfully bring it
upon themselves. (1.) Those that offend Christ do the greatest wrong to
themselves; they
wrong their own souls; they wound their own consciences,
bring a blot and stain upon their souls, which renders them odious in the eyes
of God, and unfit for communion with him; they deceive themselves, disturb
themselves, destroy themselves. Sin is a wrong to the soul. (2.) Those that are
at variance with Christ are in love with their own ruin:
Those that hate me
love death; they love that which will be their death, and put that from them
which would be their life. Sinners die because they will die, which leaves them
inexcusable, makes their condemnation the more intolerable, and will for ever
justify God when he judges.
O Israel! thou hast destroyed thyself.
Chapter 8:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
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