1 The king's heart is in the hand of the Lord, as the rivers of water: he turneth it whithersoever he will.
Note, 1. Even the hearts of men are
in God's hand, and not only their goings, as he had said,
2 Every way of a man is right in his own eyes: but the Lord pondereth the hearts.
Note, 1. We are all apt to be partial in
judging of ourselves and our own actions, and to think too
favourably of our own character, as if there was nothing amiss in
it: Every way of a man, even his by-way, is right in his
own eyes. The proud heart is very ingenious in putting a fair
face upon a foul matter, and in making that appear right to itself
which is far from being so, to stop the mouth of conscience. 2. We
are sure that the judgment of God concerning us is according to
truth. Whatever our judgment is concerning ourselves, the Lord
ponders the heart. God looks at the heart, and judges of men
according to that, of their actions according to their principles
and intentions; and his judgment of that is as exact as ours is of
that which we ponder most, and more so; he weighs it in an unerring
balance,
3 To do justice and judgment is more acceptable to the Lord than sacrifice.
Here, 1. It is implied that many deceive
themselves with a conceit that, if they offer sacrifice, that will
excuse them from doing justice, and procure them a dispensation for
their unrighteousness; and this makes their way seem right,
4 An high look, and a proud heart, and the plowing of the wicked, is sin.
This may be taken as showing us, 1. The
marks of a wicked man. He that has a high look and a proud
heart, that carries himself insolently and scornfully towards
both God and man, and that is always ploughing and plotting,
designing and devising some mischief or other, is indeed a wicked
man. The light of the wicked is sin. Sin is the pride,
the ambition, the glory and joy, and the business of wicked
men. 2. The miseries of wicked man. His raised expectations,
his high designs, and most elaborate contrivances and projects, are
sin to him; he contracts guilt in them and so prepares trouble for
himself. The very business of all wicked men, as well as their
pleasure, is nothing but sin; so Bishop Patrick. They do all to
serve their lusts, and have no regard to the glory of God in it,
and therefore their ploughing is sin, and no marvel when
their sacrificing is so,
5 The thoughts of the diligent tend only to plenteousness; but of every one that is hasty only to want.
Here is, 1. The way to be rich. If we would live plentifully and comfortably in the world, we must be diligent in our business, and not shrink from the toil and trouble of it, but prosecute it closely, improving all advantages and opportunities for it, and doing what we do with all our might; yet we must not be hasty in it, nor hurry ourselves and others with it, but keep doing fair and softly, which, we say, goes far in a day. With diligence there must be contrivance. The thoughts of the diligent are as necessary as the hand of the diligent. Forecast is as good as work. Seest thou a man thus prudent and diligent? He will have enough to live on. 2. The way to be poor. Those that are hasty, that are rash and inconsiderate in their affairs, and will not take time to think, that are greedy of gain, by right or wrong, and make haste to be rich by unjust practices or unwise projects, are in the ready road to poverty. Their thoughts and contrivances, by which they hope to raise themselves, will ruin them.
6 The getting of treasures by a lying tongue is a vanity tossed to and fro of them that seek death.
This shows the folly of those that hope to enrich themselves by dishonest practices, by oppressing and over-reaching those with whom they deal, by false-witness-bearing, or by fraudulent contracts, of those that make no scruples of lying when there is any thing to be got by it. They may perhaps heap up treasures by these means, that which they make their treasure; but, 1. They will not meet with the satisfaction they expect. It is a vanity tossed to and fro; it will be disappointment and vexation of spirit to them; they will not have the comfort of it, nor can they put any confidence in it, but will be perpetually uneasy. It will be tossed to and fro by their own consciences, and by the censures of men; let them expect to be in a constant hurry. 2. They will meet with destruction they do not expect. While they are seeking wealth by such unlawful practices they are really seeking death; they lay themselves open to the envy and ill-will of men by the treasures they get, and to the wrath and curse of God, by the lying tongue wherewith they get them, which he will make to fall upon themselves and sink them to hell.
7 The robbery of the wicked shall destroy them; because they refuse to do judgment.
See here, 1. The nature of injustice.
Getting money by lying (
8 The way of man is froward and strange: but as for the pure, his work is right.
This shows that as men are so is their way.
1. Evil men have evil ways. If the man be froward, his way
also is strange; and this is the way of most men, such is
the general corruption of mankind. They have all gone aside
(
9 It is better to dwell in a corner of the housetop, than with a brawling woman in a wide house.
See here, 1. What a great affliction it is to a man to have a brawling scolding woman for his wife, who upon every occasion, and often upon no occasion, breaks out into a passion, and chides either him or those about her, is fretful to herself and furious to her children and servants, and, in both, vexatious to her husband. If a man has a wide house, spacious and pompous, this will embitter the comfort of it to him—a house of society (so the word is), in which a man may be sociable, and entertain his friends; this will make both him and his house unsociable, and unfit for enjoyments of true friendship. It makes a man ashamed of his choice and his management, and disturbs his company. 2. What many a man is forced to do under such an affliction. He cannot keep up his authority. He finds it to no purpose to contradict the most unreasonable passion, for it is unruly and rages so much the more; and his wisdom and grace will not suffer him to render railing for railing, nor his conjugal affection to use any severity, and therefore he finds it his best way to retire into a corner of the house-top, and sit alone there, out of the hearing of her clamour; and if he employ himself well there, as he may do, it is the wisest course he can take. Better do so than quit the house, and go into bad company, for diversion, as many, who, like Adam, make their wife's sin the excuse of their own.
10 The soul of the wicked desireth evil: his neighbour findeth no favour in his eyes.
See here the character of a very wicked man. 1. The strong inclination he has to do mischief. His very soul desires evil, desires that evil may be done and that he may have the pleasure, not only of seeing it, but of having a hand in it. The root of wickedness lies in the soul; the desire that men have to do evil, that is the lust which conceives and brings forth sin. 2. The strong aversion he has to do good: His neighbour, his friend, his nearest relation, finds no favour in his eyes, cannot gain from him the least kindness, though he be in the greatest need of it. And, when he is in the pursuit of the evil his heart is so much upon, he will spare no man that stands in his way; his next neighbour shall be used no better than a stranger, than an enemy.
11 When the scorner is punished, the simple is made wise: and when the wise is instructed, he receiveth knowledge.
This we had before (
12 The righteous man wisely considereth the house of the wicked: but God overthroweth the wicked for their wickedness.
1. As we read this verse, it shows why good men, when they come to understand things aright, will not envy the prosperity of evil-doers. When they see the house of the wicked, how full it is perhaps of all the good things of this life, they are tempted to envy; but when they wisely consider it, when they look upon it with an eye of faith, when they see God overthrowing the wicked for their wickedness, that there is a curse upon their habitation which will certainly be the ruin of it ere long, they see more reason to despise them, or pity them, than to fear or envy them. 2. Some give another sense of it: The righteous man (the judge or magistrate, that is entrusted with the execution of justice, and the preservation of public peace) examines the house of the wicked, searches it for arms or for stolen goods, makes a diligent enquiry concerning his family and the characters of those about him, that he may by his power overthrow the wicked for their wickedness and prevent their doing any further mischief, that he may fire the nests where the birds of prey are harboured or the unclean birds.
13 Whoso stoppeth his ears at the cry of the poor, he also shall cry himself, but shall not be heard.
Here we have the description and doom of an
uncharitable man. 1. His description: He stops his ears at the
cry of the poor, at the cry of their wants and miseries (he
resolves to take no cognizance of them), at the cry of their
requests and supplications—he resolves he will not so much as give
them the hearing, turns them away from his door, and forbids them
to come near him, or, if he cannot avoid hearing them, he will not
need them, nor be moved by their complaints, no be prevailed with
by their importunities; he shuts up the bowels of his
compassion, and that is equivalent to the stopping of his ears,
14 A gift in secret pacifieth anger: and a reward in the bosom strong wrath.
Here is, 1. The power that is commonly found to be in gifts. Nothing is more violent than anger. O the force of strong wrath! And yet a handsome present, prudently managed, will turn away some men's wrath when it seemed implacable, and disarm the keenest and most passionate resentments. Covetousness is commonly a master-sin and has the command of other lusts. Pecuniæ obediunt omnia—Money commands all things. Thus Jacob pacified Esau and Abigail David. 2. The policy that is commonly used in giving and receiving bribes. It must be a gift in secret and a reward in the bosom, for he that takes it would not be thought to covet it, nor known to receive it, nor would he willingly be beholden to him whom he has been offended with; but, if it be done privately, all is well. No man should be too open in giving any gift, nor boast of the presents he sends; but, if it be a bribe to pervert justice, that is so scandalous that those who are fond of it are ashamed of it.
15 It is joy to the just to do judgment: but destruction shall be to the workers of iniquity.
Note, 1. It is a pleasure and satisfaction to good men both to see justice administered by the government they live under, right taking place and iniquity suppressed, and also to practise it themselves, according as their sphere is. They not only do justice, but do it with pleasure, not only for fear of shame, but for love of virtue. 2. It is a terror to wicked men to see the laws put in execution against vice and profaneness. It is destruction to them; as it is also a vexation to them to be forced, either for the support of their credit or for fear of punishment, to do judgment themselves. Or, if we take it as we read it, the meaning is, There is true pleasure in the practice of religion, but certain destruction at the end of all vicious courses.
16 The man that wandereth out of the way of understanding shall remain in the congregation of the dead.
Here is, 1. The sinner upon his ramble: He wanders out of the way of understanding, and when once he has left that good way he wanders endlessly. The way of religion is the way of understanding; those that are not truly pious are not truly intelligent; those that wander out of this way break the hedge which God has set, and follow the conduct of the world and the flesh; and they go astray like lost sheep. 2. The sinner at his rest, or rather his ruin: He shall remain (quiescet—he shall rest, but not in pace—in peace) in the congregation of the giants, the sinners of the old world, that were swept away by the deluge; to that destruction the damnation of sinners is compared, as sometimes to the destruction of Sodom, when they are said to have their portion in fire and brimstone. Or in the congregation of the damned, that are under the power of the second death. There is a vast congregation of damned sinners, bound in bundles for the fire, and in that those shall remain, remain for ever, who are shut out from the congregation of the righteous. He that forsakes the way to heaven, if he return not to it, will certainly sink into the depths of hell.
17 He that loveth pleasure shall be a poor man: he that loveth wine and oil shall not be rich.
Here is an argument against a voluptuous
luxurious life, taken from the ruin it brings upon men's temporal
interests. Here is 1. The description of an epicure: He loves
pleasure. God allows us to use the delights of sense soberly
and temperately, wine to make glad the heart and put vigour
into the spirits, and oil to make the face to shine and
beautify the countenance; but he that loves these, that sets his
heart upon them, covets them earnestly, is solicitous to have all
the delights of sense wound up to the height of pleasurableness, is
impatient of every thing that crosses him in his pleasures,
relishes these as the best pleasures, and has his mouth by them put
out of taste for spiritual delights, he is an epicure,
18 The wicked shall be a ransom for the righteous, and the transgressor for the upright.
This intimates, 1. What should be done by
the justice of men: The wicked, that are the troublers of a
land, ought to be punished, for the preventing and turning away of
those national judgments which otherwise will be inflicted and in
which even the righteous are many times involved. Thus when Achan
was stoned he was a ransom for the camp of righteous
Israel; and the seven sons of Saul, when they were hanged, were
a ransom for the kingdom of righteous David. 2. What
is often done by the providence of God: The righteous is
delivered out of trouble, and the wicked comes in his stead,
and so seems as if he were a ransom for him,
19 It is better to dwell in the wilderness, than with a contentious and an angry woman.
Note, 1. Unbridled passions embitter and
spoil the comfort of all relations. A peevish angry wife makes her
husband's life uneasy, to whom she should be a comfort and a meet
help. Those cannot dwell in peace and happiness that cannot dwell
in peace and love. Even those that are one flesh, if they be not
withal one spirit, have no joy of their union. 2. It is better to
have no company than bad company. The wife of thy covenant is thy
companion, and yet, if she be peevish and provoking, it is
better to dwell in a solitary wilderness, exposed to
wind and weather, than in company with her. A man may better enjoy
God and himself in a wilderness than among quarrelsome relations
and neighbours. See
20 There is treasure to be desired and oil in the dwelling of the wise; but a foolish man spendeth it up.
Note, 1. Those that are wise will increase
what they have and live plentifully; their wisdom will teach them
to proportion their expenses to their income and to lay up for
hereafter; so that there is a treasure of things to be
desired, and as much as needs be desired, a good stock of all
things convenient, laid up in season, and particularly of
oil, one of the staple commodities of Canaan,
21 He that followeth after righteousness and mercy findeth life, righteousness, and honour.
See here, 1. What it is to make religion
our business; it is to follow after righteousness and mercy,
not to content ourselves with easy performances, but to do our duty
with the utmost care and pains, as those that are pressing forward
and in fear of coming short. We must both do justly and love mercy,
and must proceed and persevere therein; and, though we cannot
attain to perfection, yet it will be a comfort to us if we aim at
it and follow after it. 2. What will be the advantage of doing so:
Those that do follow after righteousness shall find
righteousness; God will give them grace to do good, and they
shall have the pleasure and comfort of doing it; those that make
conscience of being just to others shall have the pleasure and
comfort of doing it; those that make conscience of being just to
others shall be justly dealt with by others and others shall be
kind to them. The Jews followed after righteousness, and did
not find it, because they sought amiss,
22 A wise man scaleth the city of the mighty, and casteth down the strength of the confidence thereof.
Note, 1. Those that have power are apt to promise themselves great things from their power. The city of the mighty thinks itself impregnable, and therefore its strength is the confidence thereof, what it boasts of and trust in, bidding defiance to danger. 2. Those that have wisdom, though they are so modest as not to promise much, often perform great things, even against those that are so confident of their strength, by their wisdom. Good conduct will go far even against great force; and a stratagem, well managed, may effectually scale the city of the mighty and cast down the strength it had such a confidence in. A wise man will gain upon the affections of people and conquer them by strength of reason, which is a more noble conquest than that obtained by strength of arms. Those that understand their interest will willingly submit themselves to a wise and good man, and the strongest walls shall not hold out against him.
23 Whoso keepeth his mouth and his tongue keepeth his soul from troubles.
Note, 1. It is our great concern to keep our souls from straits, being entangled in snares and perplexities, and disquieted with troubles, that we may preserve the possession and enjoyment of ourselves and that our souls may be in frame for the service of God. 2. Those that would keep their souls must keep a watch before the door of their lips, must keep the mouth by temperance, that no forbidden fruit go into it, no stolen waters, that nothing be eaten or drunk to excess; they must keep the tongue also, that no forbidden word go out of the door of the lips, no corrupt communication. By a constant watchfulness over our words we shall prevent abundance of mischiefs which an ungoverned tongue runs men into. Keep thy heart, and that will keep thy tongue from sin; keep thy tongue, and that will keep thy heart from trouble.
24 Proud and haughty scorner is his name, who dealeth in proud wrath.
See here the mischief of pride and haughtiness. 1. It exposes men to sin; it makes them passionate, and kindles in them the fire of proud wrath. They are continually dealing in it, as if it were their trade to be angry, and they had nothing so much to do as to barter passions and exchange bitter words. Most of the wrath that inflames the spirits and societies of men is proud wrath. Men cannot bear the least slight, nor in any thing to be crossed or contradicted, but they are out of humour, nay, in a heat, immediately. It likewise makes them scornful when they are angry, very abusive with their tongues, insolent towards those above them and imperious towards all about them. Only by pride comes all this. 2. It exposes men to shame. They get a bad name by it, and every one calls them proud and haughty scorners, and therefore nobody cares for having any thing to do with them. If men would but consult their reputation a little and the credit of their profession, which suffers with it, they would not indulge their pride and passion as they do.
25 The desire of the slothful killeth him; for his hands refuse to labour. 26 He coveteth greedily all the day long: but the righteous giveth and spareth not.
Here we have, 1. The miseries of the
slothful, whose hands refuse to labour in an honest calling,
by which they might get an honest livelihood. They are as fit for
labour as other men, and business offers itself, to which they
might lay their hands and apply their minds, but they will not;
herein they fondly think they do well for themselves, see
27 The sacrifice of the wicked is abomination: how much more, when he bringeth it with a wicked mind?
Sacrifices were of divine institution; and
when they were offered in faith, and with repentance and
reformation, God was greatly honoured by them and well-pleased in
them. But they were often not only unacceptable, but an
abomination, to God, and he declared so, which was an
indication both that they were not required for their own sakes and
that there were better things, and for effectual, in reserve, when
sacrifice and offering should be done away. They were an
abomination, 1. When they were brought by wicked men, who
did not, according to the true intent and meaning of sacrificing,
repent of their sins, mortify their lusts, and amend their lives.
Cain brought his offering. Even wicked men may be found in the
external performances of religious worship. Many can freely give
God their beasts, their lips, their knees, who would not give him
their hearts; the Pharisees gave alms. But when the person is an
abomination, as every wicked man is to God, the performance
cannot but be so; even when he brings it diligently; so some
read the latter part of the verse. Though their offerings are
continually before God (
28 A false witness shall perish: but the man that heareth speaketh constantly.
Here is, 1. The doom of a false witness. He who, for favour to one side or malice to the other, gives in a false evidence, or makes an affidavit of that which he knows to be false, or at least does not know to be true, if it be discovered, his reputation will be ruined. A man may tell a lie perhaps in his haste; but he that gives a false testimony does it with deliberation and solemnity, and it cannot but be a presumptuous sin, and a forfeiture of man's credit. But, though he should not be discovered, he himself shall be ruined; the vengeance he imprecated upon himself, when he took the false oath, will come upon him. 2. The praise of him that is conscientious: He who hears (that is, obeys) the command of God, which is to speak every man truth with his neighbour, he who testifies nothing but what he has heard and knows to be true, speaks constantly (that is, consistently with himself); he is always in the same story; he speaks in finem—to the end; people will give credit to him and hear him out; he speaks unto victory; he carries the cause, which the false witness shall lose; he shall speak to eternity. What is true is true eternally. The lip of truth is established for ever.
29 A wicked man hardeneth his face: but as for the upright, he directeth his way.
Here is, 1. The presumption and impudence
of a wicked man: He hardens his face—brazens it, that he
may not blush—steels it, that he may not tremble when he commits
the greatest crimes; he bids defiance to the terrors of the law and
the checks of his own conscience, the reproofs of the word and the
rebukes of Providence; he will have his way and nothing shall
hinder him,
30 There is no wisdom nor understanding nor counsel against the Lord. 31 The horse is prepared against the day of battle: but safety is of the Lord.
The designing busy part of mankind are
directed, in all their counsels and undertakings, to have their eye
to God, and to believe, 1. That there can be no success against
God, and therefore they must never act in opposition to him, in
contempt of his commands, or in contradiction to his counsels.
Though they think they have wisdom, and
understanding, and counsel, the best politics and
politicians, on their side, yet, if it be against the Lord,
it cannot prosper long; it shall not prevail at last. He that sits
in heaven laughs at men's projects against him and his anointed,
and will carry his point in spite of them,