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												Verse 1Proverbs 22:1. A good name — A 
												good reputation among wise and 
												good men; is rather to be chosen 
												than great riches — That is, we 
												should be more careful to pursue 
												that course of life, and do 
												those things, by which we may 
												obtain and retain a good name, 
												than that way and those things 
												by which we may raise and 
												increase a great estate. For 
												great riches bring great cares 
												with them, and expose men to 
												danger, but add no real value to 
												a man. A fool and a knave may 
												have great riches, but a good 
												name, which supposes a man to be 
												wise and honest, redounds to the 
												glory of God, and gives a man a 
												greater opportunity of doing 
												good. By great riches we may 
												relieve men’s bodily wants; but, 
												by a good name, we may recommend 
												religion to them; and loving 
												favour — Hebrew חן שׂוב, good 
												grace, or favour; that is, an 
												interest in the esteem and 
												affections of all about us, or 
												hearty love and kindness from 
												them; rather than silver and 
												gold — Is a blessing much more 
												to be prized than the possession 
												of abundance of gold and silver.
 
 Verse 2
 Proverbs 22:2. The rich and the 
												poor meet together — “The world 
												doth not consist all of rich, 
												nor all of poor; but they are 
												mixed together, and have need 
												one of another; and will agree 
												well, and not clash one against 
												another, if they both consider 
												that there is one Lord, who is 
												the Creator of both; and hath, 
												by his providence, ordered their 
												inequality for their mutual 
												good.”
 
 Verse 3
 Proverbs 22:3. A prudent man 
												foreseeth the evil, &c. — “He 
												whose long experience and 
												observation of things hath made 
												him cautious and circumspect, 
												foresees a calamity before it 
												come, and withdraws himself from 
												the danger into a place of 
												safety; but an incautious and 
												credulous person never foresees 
												any danger, but goes on securely 
												in his accustomed track, till it 
												overtake him.” Thus Bishop 
												Patrick. But in foreseeing 
												temporal calamities, and 
												discerning the methods by which 
												we may escape them, as Mr. Scott 
												justly observes, we can seldom 
												proceed beyond probability, in 
												either respect; but, in the 
												concerns of the soul, faith 
												foresees the evil coming upon 
												sinners in the eternal state, 
												and discerns Jesus Christ, as 
												the refuge from this impending 
												storm, and the penitent and 
												believing soul flees to him, 
												hides himself in him, and is 
												safe, as Noah in the ark. But 
												the careless and unbelieving go 
												on, without concern, till they 
												lift up their eyes in hell, 
												being in torments.
 
 Verse 4
 Proverbs 22:4. By humility — 
												Hebrew, עקב ענוה, because of 
												humility; or, as some render the 
												expression, the reward of 
												humility, that reward which God 
												has graciously promised, and 
												will confer on humility, which 
												is a grace of great price in his 
												eyes, Isaiah 57:15; James 4:6; 
												and the fear of the Lord — By 
												which he distinguishes true and 
												Christian humility from 
												counterfeit and merely moral 
												humility: for the former arises 
												from a deep sense of God’s 
												greatness, purity, and 
												perfection, compared with our 
												meanness, impurity, and manifold 
												imperfections, whereas this 
												latter is quite of another 
												nature, and proceeds from other 
												sources; are riches, and honour, 
												and life — The comforts of this 
												life, and the happiness of the 
												next, both which are promised to 
												godliness: see on Proverbs 
												15:33.
 
 Verse 5
 Proverbs 22:5. Thorns and snares 
												are in the way of the froward — 
												The wicked, by their evil 
												practices, expose themselves to 
												many dangers, and occasions both 
												of sin and mischief: he that 
												keeps his soul — That takes heed 
												to himself, and to his actions, 
												and to the saving of his soul; 
												shall be far from them — Will 
												avoid the society of such 
												froward persons; or rather, by 
												that circumspection shall 
												preserve himself from those 
												thorns and snares to which the 
												froward are exposed.
 
 Verse 6
 Proverbs 22:6. Train up — 
												Hebrew, חנךְ, initiate, or 
												instruct; a child in the way he 
												should go — Or, according to his 
												way, that is, in that course or 
												manner of life which thou 
												wouldest have him to choose and 
												follow. Or, as some render the 
												clause, in the beginning of his 
												way, that is, in his tender 
												years, as soon as he is capable 
												of receiving instruction, the 
												Hebrew על פי דרכו, signifying, 
												literally, in the mouth of his 
												way, and the mouth being often 
												put for the beginning or 
												entrance of a place or thing. 
												And when he is old, he will not 
												depart from it — Namely, not 
												easily and ordinarily. The 
												impressions made in his childish 
												years will remain, unless some 
												extraordinary cause occur to 
												erase them. “Instruct a child,” 
												says Bishop Patrick, “as soon as 
												ever he is capable, and season 
												his mind with the principles of 
												virtue before he receive other 
												impressions, and it is most 
												likely they will grow up with 
												him; so that when he is older he 
												will not forsake them, but 
												retain them as long as he 
												lives.”
 
 Verse 8
 Proverbs 22:8. He that soweth 
												iniquity — Or, unrighteousness; 
												he, whose common practice it is 
												to wrong or oppress others; 
												shall reap vanity — Or trouble, 
												or misery, as the word 
												אוןcommonly signifies, and as 
												many here render it. The 
												mischief which he hath done to 
												others shall be returned to 
												himself by God’s righteous 
												sentence; and the rod of his 
												anger shall fail — That power 
												which he used with fury and 
												cruelty shall be taken from him.
 
 Verse 9
 Proverbs 22:9. He that hath a 
												bountiful eye — Hebrew, a good 
												eye. He who looks upon the wants 
												and miseries of others with 
												compassion and kindness: as an 
												evil eye is put for one that 
												beholds others with envy and 
												unmercifulness; shall be blessed 
												— Both by God and men.
 
 Verse 10
 Proverbs 22:10. Cast out the 
												scorner — Avoid all society and 
												conversation with him who 
												neither fears God nor reverences 
												man, but scorns all admonitions, 
												and minds only the pleasing of 
												himself, and the gratifying of 
												his own lusts, which is the 
												chief cause of most contentions; 
												and strife and reproach shall 
												cease — The strife and reproach 
												wherewith he is wont to load 
												those that either oppose or 
												admonish him.
 
 Verse 11
 Proverbs 22:11. He that loveth 
												pureness of heart — Who is 
												plain-hearted or sincere, and 
												abhors dissimulation; whose 
												heart is so free from guile that 
												he places his pleasure in the 
												integrity of his mind, and the 
												purity of his conscience; for 
												the grace of his lips — For 
												those gracious speeches which 
												naturally and commonly flow from 
												a pure heart, or whose discourse 
												is gracious and sincere; the 
												king shall be his friend — The 
												greatest men will, or should, 
												desire, and highly prize the 
												acquaintance and advice of such 
												persons, rather than of 
												dissemblers and flatterers, with 
												whom they are too generally 
												surrounded.
 
 Verse 12
 Proverbs 22:12. The eyes of the 
												Lord preserve knowledge — God, 
												by the watchful eye of his 
												providence, maintains and 
												defends men of knowledge, or 
												wise and good men, such as the 
												last verse spoke of, whose 
												hearts are pure, and speeches 
												gracious. Not only shall the 
												king be their friend, as he said 
												there, but God also, which he 
												adds here. And he overthroweth 
												the words of the transgressor — 
												Their false and flattering 
												speeches, whereby they designed 
												and expected to gain the favour 
												and friendship of great men, 
												which are opposed to the sincere 
												and gracious speeches of good 
												men, implied in the first clause 
												of this verse, and expressed in 
												the foregoing verse.
 
 Verse 13
 Proverbs 22:13. The slothful man 
												saith — Alleges as his excuse to 
												them who upbraid him with 
												idleness, or persuade him to 
												diligence; There is a lion 
												without — There are extreme 
												dangers and invincible 
												difficulties in my way; I shall 
												be slain — By that lion, or some 
												other way; in the streets — This 
												is added to show the 
												ridiculousness of his excuse; 
												for lions abide in the woods, or 
												fields, not in the streets of 
												towns or cities.
 
 Verse 14
 Proverbs 22:14. The mouth of 
												strange women — Their fair and 
												flattering speeches, wherewith 
												they entice men into sin, as is 
												observed Proverbs 7:21, into 
												which it is easy to fall, but 
												out of which it is hard, if not 
												impossible, to be rescued. For 
												it is a rare thing for any 
												person, who has once entered 
												into a course of lewdness: to 
												recover himself from it, 
												Proverbs 2:19. He that is 
												abhorred of the Lord — Namely, 
												in a high and singular manner; 
												who by his former impieties, and 
												contempt of God and his grace, 
												hath provoked God to leave him 
												to his own heart’s lusts, and to 
												punish one sin with another; 
												shall fall therein — And, 
												without a miracle of grace, 
												shall perish everlastingly.
 
 Verse 15
 Proverbs 22:15. Foolishness is 
												bound in the heart of a child — 
												Is fixed and settled there, as 
												being born with him, and rooted 
												in his very nature; but the rod, 
												&c., shall drive it far from him 
												— The smart of punishment will 
												make him weary of his sin, and 
												watchful against it. “Ignorance, 
												weakness, inclination to evil, 
												corruption of heart,” says 
												Calmet, “are maladies which 
												accompany all men from their 
												birth; education, instruction, 
												correction,” to which we must 
												add divine grace, earnestly 
												asked of God, and received, 
												“cure them, or diminish, very 
												much, their ill effects.”
 
 Verse 16
 Proverbs 22:16. He that 
												oppresseth the poor — That 
												extorts what is not due to him 
												from his poor tenants and 
												neighbours, invades their 
												rights, and takes advantage of 
												their ignorance, or want of 
												experience, or necessity, to 
												increase his riches; and he that 
												giveth to the rich — That vainly 
												and prodigally casts away his 
												estate on those who do not need 
												it, or gives it to them with an 
												evil design, as that they may 
												assist him in oppressing the 
												poor, or, at least, not hinder 
												him in it; shall surely come to 
												want — Of the necessaries of 
												life. God will punish him with 
												poverty for his double and 
												heinous sin. This exposition is 
												given on the ground of our 
												translation. But the vulgar 
												Latin, which Luther and some 
												others follow, evidently gives a 
												more exact and literal 
												interpretation of the Hebrew 
												text, thus: He that oppresseth 
												the poor that he may increase 
												his riches, gives to the rich 
												only for poverty, or, to 
												empoverish himself. According to 
												this; says Bishop Patrick, the 
												paraphrase should be, “Such is 
												the just providence of Almighty 
												God, that he who, to enlarge his 
												own estate or power, oppresses 
												the poor by violence or deceit, 
												shall meet with the like 
												extortion from others more 
												powerful than himself; and 
												thereby be reduced to as poor a 
												condition as those whom he 
												oppressed.”
 
 Verse 17-18
 Proverbs 22:17-18. Bow down 
												thine ear, &c. — From the 
												beginning of the tenth chapter 
												to this place, the instructions 
												of wisdom are delivered in short 
												sentences, and proverbs properly 
												so called; which have seldom any 
												connection one with another, or 
												such as is not easily discerned: 
												but here another form of speech 
												begins and continues unto chap. 
												25.; and therefore it may not 
												unfitly be called, The Second 
												Part of the Book of Proverbs. In 
												this part we have various 
												exhortations and precepts, which 
												are all delivered in the 
												imperative mood, and 
												comprehended each in two, three, 
												or more verses connected 
												together. In which alteration, 
												it is probable, Solomon 
												consulted the weakness of his 
												reader, who, if he were weary of 
												the preceding sententious way of 
												instruction, might be relieved, 
												refreshed, and awakened unto new 
												attention by varying the form of 
												writing. — Bishop Patrick. Hear 
												the words of the wise — Of wise 
												and holy men of God. And apply 
												thy heart unto my knowledge — 
												The knowledge of God, and of thy 
												several duties which I am here 
												delivering to thee. Thirst after 
												it, and give thyself up to the 
												diligent study of it. For it is 
												a pleasant thing if thou keep 
												them — Namely, the words of the 
												wise; within thee — Hebrew, in 
												thy belly, that is, in thy 
												heart; if thou receive them in 
												love, and retain them in thy 
												memory, so as to have them ready 
												for use upon all occasions. They 
												shall be fitted in thy lips — 
												Fitly expressed; or, shall be 
												disposed, or ordered, as 
												יכנוsignifies. The sense seems 
												to be, When thou hast got them 
												into thy heart, thou wilt be 
												able and ready to discourse 
												pertinently and profitably of 
												them.
 
 Verses 19-21
 Proverbs 22:19-21. That thy 
												trust may be in the Lord — That, 
												knowing God, and his word and 
												promises, thou mayest cheerfully 
												and confidently trust in him, 
												which is the only way to thy 
												safety and happiness. I have 
												made known to thee this day — 
												More fully than ever before; in 
												this day of light and knowledge; 
												in this thy day, the day of thy 
												merciful visitation; excellent 
												things — שׁלישׁים, princely 
												things, or leading things, 
												“words fit for a prince to 
												speak,” says Bishop Patrick, 
												“and the best men of the world 
												to hear, and therefore truly 
												excellent.” Many of the ancient 
												versions, however, read 
												three-fold things, in which they 
												are followed by Schultens and 
												Grotius: the Jews distinguishing 
												philosophy into three branches, 
												morality, physics, and divinity; 
												and Solomon having written in 
												all those branches, as appears 
												from 1 Kings 4., although most 
												of his writings are lost. But, 
												as the Hebrew word above quoted 
												always signifies great captains, 
												generals, nobles, or the best 
												sort of musical instruments, “I 
												look upon this,” namely, that 
												first given, says the bishop, 
												“the most proper interpretation 
												of it.” In counsels and 
												knowledge — Counsels to direct 
												thy practice, and knowledge to 
												inform thy mind. That I may make 
												thee know the certainty, &c. — 
												That I may teach thee, not 
												false, or vain, or uncertain 
												things, like the teachers of the 
												heathen nations; but the true 
												and infallible oracles of God; 
												that thou mightest answer the 
												words of truth — That, being 
												instructed by me, thou mayest be 
												able to give true, solid, and 
												satisfactory answers; to them 
												that send unto thee — Namely, 
												for thy advice in great and 
												difficult matters. Or, to those 
												that send thee, that is, that 
												employ thee in any business of 
												moment, whereof they expect an 
												account from thee.
 
 Verse 22-23
 Proverbs 22:22-23. Rob not the 
												poor, &c. — Thus, after the 
												preceding solemn preface, among 
												the principal rules of life 
												which he was about to lay down, 
												he first commends this, not to 
												be injurious to poor people; 
												especially by oppressing them in 
												a form of justice: as if he had 
												said, Never abuse thy power to 
												the spoiling of him who is in a 
												mean condition; because he is 
												poor — And unable to resist 
												thee, or to revenge himself upon 
												thee. Do not take advantage of 
												his poverty. Or, this clause may 
												be considered as an argument 
												against robbing him; as if he 
												had said, Because he is a fitter 
												object for thy pity and charity, 
												than for thy injustice and 
												cruelty; it is base and inhuman 
												to crush such a person. Neither 
												oppress the afflicted in the 
												gate — In the place of judgment, 
												or under pretence of justice; 
												and much less in other ways, 
												where there is no colour of 
												justice. For the Lord will plead 
												their cause — Which he hath in a 
												peculiar manner undertaken to 
												do; and will spoil the soul of 
												those that spoiled them — Will 
												take away not only their goods, 
												but their lives too. So fully 
												will he recompense their 
												wickedness to them.
 
 Verse 24-25
 Proverbs 22:24-25. Make no 
												friendship with an angry man — 
												“As there is nothing more 
												necessary than a friend, so a 
												principal point of wisdom 
												consists in the choice of him; 
												concerning which, observe this 
												rule among others, not to enter 
												into any familiarity with a man 
												prone to anger;” and with a 
												furious man thou shalt not go — 
												Shalt not associate, or be 
												intimate; lest thou learn his 
												ways — Lest thou be infected by 
												his example, or provoked by his 
												wrath to return the like to him; 
												and get a snare to thy soul — 
												Some mischief, which is often 
												the effect of unbridled rage; or 
												an occasion of, or temptation to 
												sin, being led either to imitate 
												him, or to neglect performing 
												that great and important duty of 
												a friend, the giving faithful 
												and seasonable admonition and 
												reproof, which thou mayest be 
												induced to omit because of his 
												furious temper.
 
 Verse 26-27
 Proverbs 22:26-27. Be not of 
												them that are sureties for debts 
												— Namely, rashly or 
												unnecessarily. Why should he 
												take away thy bed, &c. — Why 
												wilt thou put thyself into the 
												hands of such a man, who will 
												exact the debt from thee without 
												compassion? For though God did 
												not allow the practice of taking 
												and keeping a poor person’s bed, 
												or necessary clothing, (see 
												Exodus 22:26-27,) yet covetous 
												creditors would frequently do 
												it.
 
 Verse 28
 Proverbs 22:28. Remove not the 
												ancient landmark — Whereby the 
												lands of several possessors were 
												distinguished and divided. Do 
												not enrich thyself with the 
												injury of other men: do not 
												invade the rights of others.
 
 Verse 29
 Proverbs 22:29. Seest thou a man 
												diligent in his business — 
												Hebrew, מהיר, expeditious, as 
												the word properly signifies; one 
												of quick despatch, vigorous and 
												speedy in executing what hath 
												been well and wisely contrived. 
												He shall not stand before mean 
												men — He is fit to be employed 
												in the affairs of the greatest 
												princes.
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