mh_parser/scraps/Prov_17_16.html
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<p>Two things are here spoken of with astonishment:—1. Gods great goodness to foolish man, in putting <i>a price into his hand to get wisdom</i>, to get knowledge and grace to fit him for both worlds. We have rational souls, the means of grace, the strivings of the Spirit, access to God by prayer; we have time and opportunity. He that has a good estate (so some understand it) has advantages thereby of getting wisdom by purchasing instruction. Good parents, relations, ministers, friends, are helps to get wisdom. It is <i>a price</i>, therefore of value, a talent. It is <i>a price in the hand</i>, in possession; <i>the word is nigh thee</i>. It is a price for getting; it is for our own advantage; it is for getting wisdom, the very thing which, being fools, we have most need of. We have reason to wonder that God should so consider our necessity, and should entrust us with such advantages, though he foresaw we should not make a right improvement of them. 2. Mans great wickedness, his neglect of Gods favour and his own interest, which is very absurd and unaccountable: <i>He has no heart to it</i>, not to the wisdom that is to be got, nor to the price in the use of which it may be got. <i>He has no heart</i>, no skill, nor will, nor courage, to improve his advantages. He has set his heart upon other things, so that he has no heart to his duty or the great concerns of his soul. Wherefore should a price be thrown away and lost upon one so undeserving of it?</p>