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												Verses 1-4Proverbs 3:1-4. My son, forget 
												not my law — My doctrine or 
												counsel; but let thy heart keep, 
												&c. — By diligent meditation and 
												hearty affection. For length of 
												days, &c. — God will add these 
												blessings which he hath promised 
												to the obedient, Deuteronomy 
												8:18; Deuteronomy 30:20; 1 
												Timothy 4:8. Let not mercy and 
												truth forsake thee — That mercy 
												and truth, which are man’s duty. 
												Mercy denotes all benignity, 
												charity, and readiness to do 
												good to others; truth, or 
												faithfulness, respects all those 
												duties which we owe to God or 
												man, on the principles of 
												justice, and to which we are 
												laid under special obligations 
												by the rules of it. Bind them 
												about thy neck — Like a chain, 
												wherewith persons were wont to 
												adorn their necks. Write them 
												upon the table, &c. — In thy 
												mind and heart, in which all 
												God’s commands are to be 
												received and engraven. So shalt 
												thou find favour — That is, 
												obtain acceptance, and good 
												understanding — Whereby to know 
												thy duty, and to discern between 
												good and evil; in the sight of 
												God and man — Grace or favour 
												with God, and that understanding 
												which is good in his sight, that 
												is, which is really and truly 
												good, and which will be 
												acknowledged as such by all 
												truly wise and good men.
 
 
 Verse 5-6
 Proverbs 3:5-6. Trust in the 
												Lord with all thy heart — Wholly 
												and securely rely upon God’s 
												wisdom, power, and goodness, and 
												upon his providence and 
												promises, for direction and help 
												in all thine affairs and 
												dangers. Lean not to thine own 
												understanding — Think not to 
												accomplish thy designs by the 
												strength of thine own 
												understanding, without God’s 
												blessing. Under this one kind of 
												carnal confidence he understands 
												all other kinds, such as 
												confidence in bodily strength, 
												wealth, or friends. In all thy 
												ways — Designs and undertakings, 
												both respecting the things of 
												this life and those of the life 
												to come; acknowledge him — 
												Hebrew, דעהו, know him, namely, 
												practically; or own him, his 
												wisdom, by following his 
												counsels; his power and 
												goodness, by expecting success 
												from him; his sovereignty, by 
												managing all thy affairs in such 
												a manner as to please and 
												glorify him; and he shall direct 
												thy steps — So that thy ways 
												shall be safe and good, and at 
												last have a happy issue.
 
 Verse 7-8
 Proverbs 3:7-8. Be not wise in 
												thine own eyes — Be not puffed 
												up with a vain conceit of thine 
												own wisdom, as if that were 
												sufficient for the conduct of 
												all thine affairs, without 
												direction and assistance from 
												God, or without the advice of 
												others. Fear the Lord, &c. — 
												This he adds, because reverence 
												for, and a dread of, the Divine 
												Majesty, will make a man, when 
												he compares himself with God, 
												little and vile in his own eyes. 
												Reverence God’s wisdom, and 
												despise thine own. It shall be 
												health to thy navel — To thy 
												body, which is signified by one 
												important part of it; and marrow 
												to thy bones — Which is the 
												nourishment and strength of the 
												bones, and a great preserver and 
												prolonger of life, as the decay 
												of it is a chief cause of the 
												weakness, dryness, and decay of 
												the body. The sense of the verse 
												is, This fear of God, or true 
												religion, is not only necessary 
												to the salvation of the soul, 
												but is also calculated to 
												promote the health of the body. 
												For, as it prevents those 
												diseases which are often 
												occasioned by sinful lusts and 
												passion, so it teaches that 
												prudence, temperance, and 
												sobriety, that calmness and 
												composure of mind, that good 
												government of the appetites and 
												passions, which must, in the 
												nature of things, tend to 
												produce a good habit of body; 
												and at the same time it gives us 
												an interest in God’s promises, 
												and places us under the care of 
												his special providence.
 
 Verse 9-10
 Proverbs 3:9-10. Honour the Lord 
												with thy substance — Lay out thy 
												estate, not to please thyself, 
												but to glorify God; and with the 
												first-fruits of all thy increase 
												— Or, with the chief, or best; 
												which answers to the 
												first-fruits under the law. So 
												shall thy barns be filled with 
												plenty — This is not the way to 
												diminish thy estate, as covetous 
												and profane persons allege, but 
												rather to increase it.
 
 Verse 11-12
 Proverbs 3:11-12. My son, 
												despise not the chastening of 
												the Lord — Either by making 
												light of it, or not being duly 
												affected with it, or by 
												accounting it an unnecessary 
												thing; but rather esteem it a 
												privilege and favour from God. 
												Neither be weary of his 
												correction — Neither think it 
												tedious or hard, but endure it 
												with patience and cheerfulness. 
												For whom the Lord loveth he 
												correcteth — Afflictions are not 
												calamities, but benefits and 
												comforts, because they are 
												testimonies of God’s love, which 
												is infinitely more desirable 
												than any evil can be terrible. 
												They show God’s design, desire, 
												and care to purge us from our 
												sins, and make us fit for his 
												presence and kingdom. These two 
												verses seem to be here inserted 
												in the midst of his 
												commendations of wisdom, to 
												remove an objection against the 
												excellence and happiness of wise 
												or pious men, taken from those 
												many afflictions to which such 
												persons are frequently exposed, 
												the reason of which he here 
												gives.
 
 Verses 13-15
 Proverbs 3:13-15. Happy is the 
												man — Notwithstanding all his 
												afflictions; that findeth wisdom 
												— Which supposes his diligent 
												searching for it, expressed 
												Proverbs 2:4. And the man that 
												getteth — Hebrew, יפיק, that 
												draweth out, understanding — 
												Which expression implies two 
												things: 1st, That man hath it 
												not naturally in himself, but 
												must have it from another, even 
												from God and his word; 2d, That 
												men should labour for it as 
												those labour that dig and draw 
												forth metals out of the earth. 
												For the merchandise of it, &c. — 
												It is more necessary and 
												advantageous, because it is so, 
												not only for this short life, 
												but also for the future and 
												everlasting life, in which gold 
												and silver bear no price. All 
												the things thou canst desire are 
												not to be compared to her — For 
												true worth and usefulness.
 
 Verses 16-18
 Proverbs 3:16-18. Length of days 
												is in her right hand — Wisdom is 
												here represented as a great and 
												generous princess, distributing 
												gifts to her subjects. She holds 
												forth in her right hand the 
												great blessing of health and 
												length of days unto all those 
												who will walk in the way to 
												which she points; and it was but 
												just to place this in her right 
												hand, that is, to give it the 
												precedence, because it was the 
												chief promise of the law, and, 
												indeed, unless when affliction 
												is necessary for our 
												chastisement, trial, or 
												purification, the most desirable 
												of all earthly blessings. After 
												this follow wealth and 
												reputation, which he places in 
												her left hand, as inferior 
												blessings, but which proceed 
												also from her gift. Spiritually 
												considered, these blessings 
												refer to eternity, and the 
												glories of heaven. Her ways are 
												ways of pleasantness — Are 
												exceeding delightful, namely, to 
												those who know them and walk in 
												them; whose judgment is 
												certainly to be preferred before 
												the contrary opinion of ungodly 
												men, who are grossly ignorant of 
												them, and professed enemies to 
												them. Observe, reader, the 
												enjoyments and entertainments of 
												sense are not to be compared to 
												the pleasures which gracious 
												souls have in communion with God 
												and doing good. And all her 
												paths are peace — Produce a 
												blessed tranquillity in a man’s 
												mind and conscience, with 
												confidence and cheerfulness in 
												all conditions, and the joy 
												which arises from a full 
												persuasion that all things shall 
												work for good here, and from a 
												lively hope of eternal rest with 
												God hereafter. There is not only 
												peace in the end, but peace in 
												the way; and not only in the way 
												of religion in general, but in 
												all the particular paths of that 
												way; in all the several acts, 
												instances, and duties of it: one 
												does not imbitter what another 
												sweetens, as it is with the 
												allays of this world; but they 
												are all peace; not only sweet, 
												but safe, and full of quietness, 
												assurance, and consolation, 
												Isaiah 32:17. She is a tree of 
												life — She is a certain pledge 
												and means of everlasting life 
												and happiness; to them that lay 
												hold upon her — That eagerly 
												pursue after her, and, when they 
												overtake her, gladly apprehend 
												and embrace her, as the Hebrew 
												word here used signifies. He 
												alludes to the tree of life in 
												paradise, mentioned Genesis 2:9; 
												Genesis 3:22, all right to eat 
												of which was lost by the fall, 
												and he here intimates that the 
												wisdom of which he speaks is the 
												only thing that can restore the 
												life to us then lost. Happy is 
												every one that retaineth her — 
												That holds her fast, and is 
												constantly resolved not to 
												forsake her.
 
 Verse 19-20
 Proverbs 3:19-20. The Lord by 
												wisdom, &c. — From human wisdom, 
												or wisdom attainable by man, of 
												which Solomon had hitherto 
												treated, he now digresses to 
												divine; thereby insinuating that 
												it ought not to seem strange 
												that he had said so much in 
												praise of wisdom, and had so 
												vehemently exhorted men to seek 
												it, since all the works of God 
												are effected by it; and that his 
												readers might understand that he 
												did not call them to the 
												imitation of men, subject to 
												errors and vices like 
												themselves, but to the imitation 
												of the divine wisdom. Although 
												Christ be the wisdom of God, and 
												the power of God, 1 Corinthians 
												1:24; and although all things 
												were made by him, and without 
												him was not any thing made that 
												was made, yet it does not appear 
												that Solomon speaks of him here, 
												but rather of that divine 
												perfection of wisdom which is 
												the fountain of wisdom in man. 
												Observe, reader, the effects 
												which we call natural, are the 
												productions of the Creator’s 
												sovereign wisdom, who formed at 
												the beginning, and who hath 
												preserved ever since, the 
												universe of things, with that 
												connected chain of causes and 
												effects with which we are 
												surrounded. By his knowledge the 
												depths are broken up — The great 
												abyss of waters mixed with, and 
												contained in, the bowels of the 
												earth, breaks forth into 
												fountains and rivers for the use 
												of men and beasts: which is 
												justly remembered here as an 
												illustrious effect of divine 
												wisdom, by which the earth was 
												made habitable and the waters 
												serviceable. And the clouds drop 
												down dew — Under which rain is 
												comprehended, as being of the 
												same nature and use.
 
 Verse 21-22
 Proverbs 3:21-22. My son, let 
												them not depart, &c. — Let me 
												prevail with thee to keep these 
												good instructions before the 
												eyes of thy mind continually. 
												Constantly and seriously 
												meditate upon them, and thereby 
												thou wilt attain and retain 
												sound wisdom and discretion. So 
												shall they be life unto thy soul 
												— To thee, or thy person. They 
												shall prolong thy life, and make 
												it life indeed, namely, wise, 
												holy, and happy: whereas a 
												foolish, sinful, and miserable 
												life is reputed a kind of death, 
												and is often so called. Thus 
												Moses says to Israel, He 
												(namely, God) is thy life, and 
												the length of thy days, 
												Deuteronomy 30:20. Or Solomon 
												here means, They shall be life 
												to thy soul, properly so called. 
												They shall quicken, delight, and 
												save thy soul. And grace to thy 
												neck — They shall be like a 
												beautiful chain or ornament 
												about thy neck, as above, 
												Proverbs 3:3, and Proverbs 1:9.
 
 Verse 23
 Proverbs 3:23. Then shalt thou 
												walk in thy way — Manage all thy 
												employments and concerns safely, 
												securely, or confidently, 
												without danger or fear, casting 
												thy care on God, in the 
												discharge of thy duty. And thy 
												foot shall not stumble — At 
												those stumbling-blocks, trials, 
												and temptations, at which 
												heedless sinners commonly 
												stumble, and by which they fall. 
												Thy natural life, and all that 
												belongs to it, shall be under 
												the protection of God’s 
												providence; thy spiritual life, 
												and all its interests, under the 
												protection of his grace; so that 
												thou shalt be kept from falling 
												into sin or trouble. Wisdom 
												shall direct thee into and keep 
												thee in the right way, as far as 
												may be from temptation, and will 
												enable thee to walk in it with 
												holy security, and thou shalt 
												find the way of duty to be the 
												way of safety.
 
 Verses 24-26
 Proverbs 3:24-26. When thou 
												liest down thou shalt not be 
												afraid — Of fire, or thieves, or 
												any of the terrors of the 
												darkness, knowing that when thou 
												and all thy friends are asleep, 
												yet He that keepeth Israel, and 
												every true-born Israelite, 
												neither slumbers nor sleeps, and 
												that to him thou hast committed 
												thyself, and taken shelter under 
												the shadow of his wings. Yea, 
												thou shalt lie down — And shalt 
												not need to sit up to keep 
												guard; and, being laid down, 
												thou shalt sleep, and not have 
												thine eyes held waking by care 
												or fear; and thy sleep shall be 
												sweet — Refreshing to thee, not 
												being disturbed by any alarms 
												from without, or apprehensions 
												from within. The way to have a 
												good night is to sleep with a 
												good conscience; and the sleep, 
												as of the labouring man, so of 
												the wise and godly man, is 
												sweet. Be not afraid — That is, 
												thou shalt not be afraid. For 
												that it is a promise seems most 
												probable from the context; only, 
												for greater emphasis, it is 
												delivered in the form of a 
												precept; as if he had said, I 
												require thee not to be afraid; 
												it is both thy duty and 
												privilege; of sudden fear — For 
												sudden and unexpected evils are 
												most frightful and grievous; and 
												fear is here put for the evils 
												feared. Neither of the 
												desolation of the wicked — Which 
												befalls them, when the Lord 
												cometh out of his place to 
												punish the inhabitants of the 
												earth for their iniquity; and 
												thou mayest be ready to fear, 
												lest thou shouldst be involved 
												in the common calamity; but fear 
												not, for God will then hide thee 
												in his chambers, Isaiah 
												26:20-21. For the Lord shall be 
												thy confidence — A sufficient 
												and sure ground of confidence; 
												and shall keep thy foot from 
												being taken — In the snares 
												either of sin or of mischief.
 
 Verse 27-28
 Proverbs 3:27-28. Withhold not 
												good — Do not deny it, but 
												readily and cheerfully impart 
												it; from them to whom it is due 
												— Hebrew, מבעליו, literally, 
												from the lords, or owners of it: 
												which some refer to the 
												restitution of goods gained 
												unjustly; but the connection 
												requires that we understand the 
												clause in a more extensive 
												sense. The good here spoken of 
												must be considered as being 
												applicable to any thing that is 
												good, either counsel, comfort, 
												reproof, or the good things of 
												the present life. And by the 
												lords, or owners of it, we must 
												understand those who have any 
												kind of right to it, whether by 
												the law of justice and equity, 
												or by the great and sovereign 
												law of love, which God hath 
												written on the hearts of men by 
												nature, and hath frequently and 
												solemnly enjoined in his word. 
												So that this place not only 
												commands the payment of just 
												debts, and the restitution of 
												things taken from others by 
												fraud or violence, or of things 
												committed to our trust; but it 
												obliges every man, according to 
												his ability and opportunity, to 
												pity and relieve such as are in 
												real want or misery, and to do 
												all the good in his power, 
												temporal or spiritual, to his 
												fellow-creatures. Say not, &c. — 
												The preceding verse forbade the 
												denial, and this forbids the 
												delay of this duty; unto thy 
												neighbour — Unto any man, as the 
												word neighbour is commonly used 
												in Scripture; Go, and come again 
												to-morrow, and I will give — 
												Namely, what is thy due, in the 
												manner before expressed, or what 
												thou needest; for the word נתן, 
												here used, is generally meant of 
												free or charitable gifts, and 
												not of debts due in justice or 
												equity.
 
 Verse 29
 Proverbs 3:29. Devise not evil, 
												&c. — Any thing injurious or 
												hurtful; against thy neighbour — 
												Against any child of man. Having 
												commanded the doing of good, 
												(Proverbs 3:27-28,) he here 
												forbids the doing or designing 
												any evil. Seeing he dwelleth 
												securely by thee — Relying upon 
												thy integrity: do not, 
												therefore, deceive his trust, 
												and cause him to repent of the 
												confidence which he places in 
												thee, which would be an iniquity 
												hateful even to heathen.
 
 Verses 30-32
 Proverbs 3:30-32. Strive not — 
												Either by words before the 
												magistrate, or otherwise by 
												thine actions; with a man 
												without cause — Without just and 
												necessary cause; if he have done 
												thee no harm — Whereby it is 
												clearly implied, that, in case 
												of injury, a man may, by all 
												lawful means, defend himself. 
												Envy thou not the oppressor — 
												For his impunity and success in 
												his wicked designs, and the 
												wealth which he gains by 
												unrighteous practices; and 
												choose none of his ways — For 
												what men envy in others they 
												seek to obtain for themselves. 
												For the froward — Or, perverse, 
												who walks in crooked and sinful 
												paths, as the oppressor last 
												mentioned, opposed to the 
												upright man, who is called 
												right, or straight, Proverbs 
												29:27; is an abomination to the 
												Lord — And therefore, sooner or 
												later, must be miserable. But 
												his secret is with the righteous 
												— They are his friends and 
												favourites, to whom he 
												familiarly imparts, as men use 
												to do to their friends, his mind 
												and counsels, or his secret 
												favours and comforts, to which 
												other men are strangers.
 
 Verses 33-35
 Proverbs 3:33-35. The curse of 
												the Lord is in the house, &c. — 
												Not only upon his own person, 
												but upon his posterity, and upon 
												all his domestic concerns. But 
												he blesseth the habitation — 
												Hebrew, נוה, the cottage, or 
												sheepcot, that is, the dwelling, 
												however mean; of the just — The 
												blessing of God is upon him, his 
												house and family, and all his 
												concerns. Surely he scorneth the 
												scorners — He will expose to 
												scorn and contempt all proud and 
												insolent sinners, who make a 
												mock at sin, (Proverbs 14:9,) 
												and at God and religion, and who 
												despise all counsels and means 
												of amendment: for those that 
												exalt themselves shall certainly 
												be abased. But he giveth grace 
												unto the lowly — Namely, favour, 
												both with himself and with men, 
												as this phrase is often used. 
												The LXX. render this verse, The 
												Lord resisteth the proud, but 
												giveth grace to the lowly; and 
												St. Peter and St. James have 
												quoted it according to them, 1 
												Peter 5:5; James 4:6. The wise 
												shall inherit glory — Shall 
												enjoy it, not only for a season, 
												as wicked men often do, but as 
												an inheritance, constantly and 
												for ever; but shame shall be the 
												promotion of fools — Instead of 
												that glory which they greedily 
												seek, they shall meet with 
												nothing but ignominy. The 
												reading in the margin, Shame 
												exalteth the fools, or, as some 
												render the clause, The elevation 
												of fools shall turn to their 
												confusion, seems more agreeable 
												to the Hebrew: that is, the more 
												they have been elevated, “the 
												more their folly shall be known, 
												and their fall become more 
												fatal.”
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