733 lines
52 KiB
XML
733 lines
52 KiB
XML
<div2 id="Prov.xxxi" n="xxxi" next="Prov.xxxii" prev="Prov.xxx" progress="87.50%" title="Chapter XXX">
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<h2 id="Prov.xxxi-p0.1">P R O V E R B S</h2>
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<h3 id="Prov.xxxi-p0.2">CHAP. XXX.</h3>
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<p class="intro" id="Prov.xxxi-p1">This and the following chapter are an appendix to
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Solomon's proverbs; but they are both expressly called prophecies
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in the <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.1 Bible:Prov.31.1" parsed="|Prov|30|1|0|0;|Prov|31|1|0|0" passage="Pr 30:1,31:1">first verses of
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both</scripRef>, by which it appears that the penmen of them,
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whoever they were, were divinely inspired. This chapter was penned
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by one that bears the name of "Agur Ben Jakeh." What tribe he was
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of, or when he lived, we are not told; what he wrote, being indited
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by the Holy Ghost, is here kept upon record. We have here, I. His
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confession of faith, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.1-Prov.30.6" parsed="|Prov|30|1|30|6" passage="Pr 30:1-6">ver.
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1-6</scripRef>. II. His prayer, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.7-Prov.30.9" parsed="|Prov|30|7|30|9" passage="Pr 30:7-9">ver.
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7-9</scripRef>. III. A caution against wronging servants, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.10" parsed="|Prov|30|10|0|0" passage="Pr 30:10">ver. 10</scripRef>. IV. Four wicked generations,
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<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.5" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.11-Prov.30.14" parsed="|Prov|30|11|30|14" passage="Pr 30:11-14">ver. 11-14</scripRef>. V. Four
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things insatiable (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.6" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.15-Prov.30.16" parsed="|Prov|30|15|30|16" passage="Pr 30:15,16">ver. 15,
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16</scripRef>), to which is added fair warning to undutiful
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children, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.7" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.17" parsed="|Prov|30|17|0|0" passage="Pr 30:17">ver. 17</scripRef>. VI. Four
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things unsearchable, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.8" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.18-Prov.30.20" parsed="|Prov|30|18|30|20" passage="Pr 30:18-20">ver.
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18-20</scripRef>. VII. Four things intolerable, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.9" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.21-Prov.30.23" parsed="|Prov|30|21|30|23" passage="Pr 30:21-23">ver. 21-23</scripRef>. VIII. Four things little and
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wise, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.10" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.24-Prov.30.28" parsed="|Prov|30|24|30|28" passage="Pr 30:24-28">ver. 24-28</scripRef>. IX.
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Four things stately, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p1.11" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.29-Prov.30.33" parsed="|Prov|30|29|30|33" passage="Pr 30:29-33">ver. 29 to the
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end</scripRef>.</p>
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<scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p1.12" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30" parsed="|Prov|30|0|0|0" passage="Pr 30" type="Commentary"/>
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<scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p1.13" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.1-Prov.30.6" parsed="|Prov|30|1|30|6" passage="Pr 30:1-6" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.1-Prov.30.6">
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<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p1.14">The Words of Agur.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p2">1 The words of Agur the son of Jakeh,
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<i>even</i> the prophecy: the man spake unto Ithiel, even unto
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Ithiel and Ucal, 2 Surely I <i>am</i> more brutish than
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<i>any</i> man, and have not the understanding of a man. 3 I
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neither learned wisdom, nor have the knowledge of the holy.
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4 Who hath ascended up into heaven, or descended? who hath gathered
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the wind in his fists? who hath bound the waters in a garment? who
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hath established all the ends of the earth? what <i>is</i> his
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name, and what <i>is</i> his son's name, if thou canst tell?
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5 Every word of God <i>is</i> pure: he <i>is</i> a shield unto them
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that put their trust in him. 6 Add thou not unto his words,
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lest he reprove thee, and thou be found a liar.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p3">Some make <i>Agur</i> to be not the name of
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this author, but his character; he was a <i>collector</i> (so it
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signifies), a gatherer, one that did not compose things himself,
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but collected the wise sayings and observations of others, made
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abstracts of the writings of others, which some think is the reason
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why he says (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p3.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.3" parsed="|Prov|30|3|0|0" passage="Pr 30:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>),
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"<i>I</i> have not <i>learned wisdom</i> myself, but have been a
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scribe, or amanuensis, to other wise and learned men." Note, We
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must not bury our talent, though it be but one, but, as we have
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received the gift, so minister the same, if it be but to collect
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what others have written. But we rather suppose it to be his name,
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which, no doubt, was well known then, though not mentioned
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elsewhere in scripture. <i>Ithiel and Ucal</i> are mentioned,
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either, 1. As the names of his pupils, whom he instructed, or who
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consulted him as an oracle, having a great opinion of his wisdom
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and goodness. Probably they wrote from him what he dictated, as
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Baruch wrote from the mouth of Jeremiah, and by their means it was
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preserved, as they were ready to attest it to be his, for it was
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spoken to them; they were two witnesses of it. Or, 2. As the
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subject of his discourse. <i>Ithiel</i> signifies <i>God with
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me,</i> the application of <i>Immanuel, God with us.</i> The word
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calls him <i>God with us;</i> faith appropriates this, and calls
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him "<i>God with me,</i> who loved me, and gave himself for me, and
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into union and communion with whom I am admitted." <i>Ucal</i>
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signifies <i>the Mighty One,</i> for it is upon one that is mighty
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that help is laid for us. Many good interpreters therefore apply
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this to the Messiah, for to him all the prophecies bear witness,
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and why not this then? It is what Agur spoke concerning <i>Ithiel,
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even</i> concerning <i>Ithiel</i> (that is the name on which the
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stress is laid) <i>with us,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p3.2" osisRef="Bible:Isa.7.14" parsed="|Isa|7|14|0|0" passage="Isa 7:14">Isa.
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vii. 14</scripRef>.</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p4">Three things the prophet here aims
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at:—</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p5">I. To abase himself. Before he makes
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confession of his faith he makes confession of his folly and the
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weakness and deficiency of reason, which make it so necessary that
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we be guided and governed by faith. Before he speaks concerning the
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Saviour he speaks of himself as needing a Saviour, and as nothing
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without him; we must go out of ourselves before we go into Jesus
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Christ. 1. He speaks of himself as wanting a righteousness, and
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having done foolishly, very foolishly. When he reflects upon
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himself he owns, <i>Surely I am more brutish than any man. Every
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man has become brutish,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p5.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.10.14" parsed="|Jer|10|14|0|0" passage="Jer 10:14">Jer. x.
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14</scripRef>. But he that knows his own heart knows so much more
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evil of himself than he does of any other that he cries out,
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"<i>Surely</i> I cannot but think that <i>I am more brutish than
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any man;</i> surely no man has such a corrupt deceitful heart as I
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have. I have acted as one that has <i>not the understanding</i> of
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Adam, as one that is wretchedly degenerated from the knowledge and
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righteousness in which man was at first created; nay, I have not
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the common sense and reason of a man, else I should not have done
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as I have done." Agur, when he was applied to by others as wiser
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than most, acknowledged himself more foolish than any. Whatever
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high opinion others may have of us, it becomes us to have low
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thoughts of ourselves. 2. He speaks of himself as wanting a
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revelation to guide him in the ways of truth and wisdom. He owns
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(<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p5.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.3" parsed="|Prov|30|3|0|0" passage="Pr 30:3"><i>v.</i> 3</scripRef>) "<i>I neither
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learned wisdom</i> by any power of my own (the depths of it cannot
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be fathomed by my line and plummet) <i>nor know I the knowledge of
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the holy</i> ones, the angels, our first parents in innocency, nor
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of the holy things of God; I can get no insight into them, nor make
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any judgment of them, further than God is pleased to make them
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known to me." The natural man, the natural powers, perceive not,
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nay, they <i>receive not, the things of the Spirit of God.</i> Some
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suppose Agur to be asked, as Apollo's oracle was of old, <i>Who was
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the wisest man?</i> The answer is, <i>He that is sensible of his
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own ignorance,</i> especially in divine things. <i>Hoc tantum scio,
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me nihil scire</i>—<i>All that I know is that I know
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nothing.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p6">II. To advance Jesus Christ, and the Father
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in him (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.4" parsed="|Prov|30|4|0|0" passage="Pr 30:4"><i>v.</i> 4</scripRef>): <i>Who
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ascended up into heaven,</i> &c. 1. Some understand this of God
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and of his works, which are both incomparable and unsearchable. He
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challenges all mankind to give an account of the heavens above, of
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the winds, the waters, the earth: "Who can pretend to have
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<i>ascended up to heaven,</i> to take a view of the orbs above, and
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then to have descended, to give us a description of them? Who can
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pretend to have had the command of the winds, to have grasped them
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in his hand and managed them, as God does, or to have bound the
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waves of the sea with a swaddling band, as God has done? Who has
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<i>established the ends of the earth,</i> or can describe the
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strength of its foundations or the extent of its limits? Tell me
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what is <i>the man's name</i> who can undertake to vie with God or
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to be of his cabinet-council, or, if he be dead, what is his name
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to whom he has bequeathed this great secret." 2. Others refer it to
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Christ, to Ithiel and Ucal, the Son of God, for it is the Son's
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name, as well as the Father's, that is here enquired after, and a
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challenge given to any to vie with him. We must now exalt Christ as
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one revealed; they then magnified him as one concealed, as one they
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had heard something of but had very dark and defective ideas of.
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<i>We have heard the fame of him with our ears,</i> but cannot
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describe him (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.28.22" parsed="|Job|28|22|0|0" passage="Job 28:22">Job xxviii.
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22</scripRef>); certainly it is God that has <i>gathered the wind
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in his fists</i> and <i>bound the waters as in a garment;</i> but
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<i>what is his name?</i> It is, <i>I am that I am</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.3" osisRef="Bible:Exod.3.14" parsed="|Exod|3|14|0|0" passage="Ex 3:14">Exod. iii. 14</scripRef>), a name to be adored,
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not to be understood. What is <i>his Son's name,</i> by whom he
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does all these things? The Old-Testament saints expected the
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Messiah to be the <i>Son of the Blessed,</i> and he is here spoken
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of as a person distinct from the Father, but his name as yet
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secret. Note, The great Redeemer, in the glories of his providence
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and grace, can neither be paralleled nor found out to perfection.
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(1.) The glories of the kingdom of his grace are unsearchable and
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unparalleled; for who besides has <i>ascended into heaven and
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descended?</i> Who besides is perfectly acquainted with both
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worlds, and has himself a free correspondence with both, and is
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therefore fit to settle a correspondence between them, as Mediator,
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as Jacob's ladder? He was <i>in heaven</i> in the <i>Father's
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bosom</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.4" osisRef="Bible:John.1.1 Bible:John.1.18" parsed="|John|1|1|0|0;|John|1|18|0|0" passage="Joh 1:1,18">John i. 1,
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18</scripRef>); thence he descended to take our nature upon him;
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and never was there such condescension. In that nature he again
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ascended (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.5" osisRef="Bible:Eph.4.9" parsed="|Eph|4|9|0|0" passage="Eph 4:9">Eph. iv. 9</scripRef>), to
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receive the promised glories of his exalted state; and who besides
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has done this? <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.6" osisRef="Bible:Rom.10.6" parsed="|Rom|10|6|0|0" passage="Ro 10:6">Rom. x. 6</scripRef>.
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(2.) The glories of the kingdom of his providence are likewise
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unsearchable and unparalleled. The same that reconciles heaven and
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earth was the Creator of both and governs and disposes of all. His
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government of the three lower elements of <i>air, water,</i> and
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<i>earth,</i> is here particularized. [1.] The motions of the air
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are of his directing. Satan pretends to be <i>the prince of the
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power of the air,</i> but even there Christ has <i>all power;</i>
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he <i>rebuked the winds</i> and they obeyed him. [2.] The bounds of
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the water are of his appointing: He <i>binds the waters as in a
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garment; hitherto they shall come, and no further,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p6.7" osisRef="Bible:Job.38.9-Job.38.11" parsed="|Job|38|9|38|11" passage="Job 38:9-11">Job xxxviii. 9-11</scripRef>. [3.] The
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foundations of the earth are of his establishing. He founded it at
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first; he upholds it still. If Christ had not interposed, the
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foundations of the earth would have sunk under the load of the
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curse upon the ground, for man's sin. Who and what is the mighty He
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that does all this? We cannot <i>find out God,</i> nor the <i>Son
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of God, unto perfection. Oh the depth of that knowledge!</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p7">III. To assure us of the truth of the word
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of God, and to recommend it to us, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.5-Prov.30.6" parsed="|Prov|30|5|30|6" passage="Pr 30:5,6"><i>v.</i> 5, 6</scripRef>. Agur's pupils expect to be
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instructed by him in the things of God. "Alas!" says he, "I cannot
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undertake to instruct you; go to the word of God; see what he has
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there revealed of himself, and of his mind and will; you need know
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no more than what that will teach you, and that you may rely upon
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as sure and sufficient. <i>Every word of God is pure;</i> there is
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not the least mixture of falsehood and corruption in it." The words
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of men are to be heard and read with jealousy and with allowance,
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but there is not the least ground to suspect any deficiency in the
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word of God; it is <i>as silver purified seven times</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.12.6" parsed="|Ps|12|6|0|0" passage="Ps 12:6">Ps. xii. 6</scripRef>), without the least dross
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or alloy. <i>Thy word is very pure,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.3" osisRef="Bible:Ps.119.140" parsed="|Ps|119|140|0|0" passage="Ps 119:140">Ps. cxix. 140</scripRef>. 1. It is sure, and therefore
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we must trust to it and venture our souls upon it. God in his word,
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God in his promise, is <i>a shield,</i> a sure protection, to all
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those that put themselves under his protection and <i>put their
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trust in him.</i> The word of God, applied by faith, will make us
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easy in the midst of the greatest dangers, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.4" osisRef="Bible:Ps.46.1-Ps.46.2" parsed="|Ps|46|1|46|2" passage="Ps 46:1,2">Ps. xlvi. 1, 2</scripRef>. 2. It is sufficient, and
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therefore we must not add to it (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.5" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.6" parsed="|Prov|30|6|0|0" passage="Pr 30:6"><i>v.</i> 6</scripRef>): <i>Add thou not unto his
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words,</i> because they are pure and perfect. This forbids the
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advancing of any thing, not only in contradiction to the word of
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God, but in competition with it; though it be under the plausible
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pretence of explaining it, yet, if it pretend to be of equal
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authority with it, it is <i>adding to his words,</i> which is not
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only a reproach to them as insufficient, but opens a door to all
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manner of errors and corruptions; for, that one absurdity being
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granted, that the word of any man, or company of men, is to be
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received with the same faith and veneration as the word of God, a
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thousand follow. We must be content with what God has thought fit
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to make known to us of his mind, and not covet to be <i>wise above
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what is written;</i> for, (1.) God will resent it as a heinous
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affront: "<i>He</i> will <i>reprove thee,</i> will reckon with thee
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as a traitor against his crown and dignity, and lay thee under the
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heavy doom of those that add to his words, or diminish from them,"
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<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p7.6" osisRef="Bible:Deut.4.2 Bible:Deut.12.32" parsed="|Deut|4|2|0|0;|Deut|12|32|0|0" passage="De 4:2,12:32">Deut. iv. 2; xii. 32</scripRef>.
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(2.) We shall run ourselves into endless mistakes: "Thou wilt be
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found a liar, a corrupter of the word of truth, a broacher of
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heresies, and guilty of the worst of forgeries, counterfeiting the
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broad seal of heaven, and pretending a divine mission and
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inspiration, when it is all a cheat. Men may be thus deceived, but
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<i>God is not mocked.</i>"</p>
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</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p7.7" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.7-Prov.30.9" parsed="|Prov|30|7|30|9" passage="Pr 30:7-9" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.7-Prov.30.9">
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<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p7.8">The Prayer of Agur.</h4>
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<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p8">7 Two <i>things</i> have I required of thee;
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deny me <i>them</i> not before I die: 8 Remove far from me
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vanity and lies: give me neither poverty nor riches; feed me with
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food convenient for me: 9 Lest I be full, and deny
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<i>thee,</i> and say, Who <i>is</i> the <span class="smallcaps" id="Prov.xxxi-p8.1">Lord</span>? or lest I be poor, and steal, and take the
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name of my God <i>in vain.</i></p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p9">After Agur's confession and creed, here
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follows his litany, where we may observe,</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p10">I. The preface to his prayer: <i>Two things
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have I required</i> (that is, <i>requested</i>) of thee, O God!
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Before we go to pray it is good to consider what we need, and what
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the things are which we have to ask of God.—What does our case
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require? What do our hearts desire? What would we that God should
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do for us?—that we may not have to seek for our petition and
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request when we should be presenting it. He begs, <i>Deny me not
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before I die.</i> In praying, we should think of dying, and pray
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accordingly. "Lord, give me pardon, and peace, and grace, before I
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die, <i>before I go hence and be no more;</i> for, if I be not
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renewed and sanctified before I die, the work will not be done
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after; if I do not prevail in prayer before I die, prayers
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afterwards will not prevail, no, not <i>Lord, Lord.</i> There is
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none of this wisdom or working in the grave. <i>Deny me not</i> thy
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grace, for, if thou do, I die, I perish; if thou be silent to me,
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<i>I am like those that go down to the pit,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p10.1" osisRef="Bible:Ps.28.1" parsed="|Ps|28|1|0|0" passage="Ps 28:1">Ps. xxviii. 1</scripRef>. <i>Deny me not before I
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die;</i> as long as I continue in the land of the living, let me
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continue under the conduct of thy grace and good providence."</p>
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<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p11">II. The prayer itself. The <i>two
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things</i> he requires are grace sufficient and food convenient. 1.
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Grace sufficient for his soul: "<i>Remove from me vanity and
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lies;</i> deliver me from sin, from all corrupt principles,
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practices, and affections, from error and mistake, which are at the
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bottom of all sin, from the love of the world and the things of it,
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which are all <i>vanity and a lie.</i>" Some understand it as a
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prayer for the pardon of sin, for, when God forgives sin, he
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removes it, he takes it away. Or, rather, it is a prayer of the
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same import with that, <i>Lead us not into temptation.</i> Nothing
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is more mischievous to us than sin, and therefore there is nothing
|
||
which we should more earnestly pray against than that we may <i>do
|
||
no evil.</i> 2. Food convenient for his body. Having prayed for the
|
||
operations of divine grace, he here begs the favours of the divine
|
||
Providence, but such as may tend to the good and not to the
|
||
prejudice of the soul. (1.) He prays that of God's free gift he
|
||
might receive a competent portion of the good things of this life:
|
||
"<i>Feed me with the bread of my allowance,</i> such bread as thou
|
||
thinkest fit to allow me." As to all the gifts of the divine
|
||
Providence, we must refer ourselves to the divine wisdom. Or,
|
||
"<i>the bread that is fit for me,</i> as a man, a master of a
|
||
family, that which is agreeable to my rank and condition in the
|
||
world." For <i>as is the man so is his competency.</i> Our Saviour
|
||
seems to refer to this when he teaches us to pray, <i>Give us this
|
||
day our daily bread,</i> as this seems to refer to Jacob's vow, in
|
||
which he wished for no more than <i>bread to eat and raiment to put
|
||
on.</i> Food convenient for us is what we ought to be content with,
|
||
though we have not dainties, varieties, and superfluities—what is
|
||
for necessity, though we have not for delight and ornament; and it
|
||
is what we may in faith pray for and depend upon God for. (2.) He
|
||
prays that he may be kept from every condition of life that would
|
||
be a temptation to him. [1.] He prays against the extremes of
|
||
abundance and want: <i>Give me neither poverty nor riches.</i> He
|
||
does not hereby prescribe to God, nor pretend to teach him what
|
||
condition he shall allot to him, nor does he pray against poverty
|
||
or riches absolutely, as in themselves evil, for either of them, by
|
||
the grace of God, may be sanctified and be a means of good to us;
|
||
but, <i>First,</i> He hereby intends to express the value which
|
||
wise and good men have for a middle state of life, and, with
|
||
submission to the will of God, desires that that might be his
|
||
state, neither great honour nor great contempt. We must learn how
|
||
to manage both (as St. Paul, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.1" osisRef="Bible:Phil.4.12" parsed="|Phil|4|12|0|0" passage="Php 4:12">Phil. iv.
|
||
12</scripRef>), but rather wish to be always between both.
|
||
<i>Optimus pecuniæ modus qui nec in paupertatem cedit nec procul à
|
||
paupertate discedit—The best condition is that which neither
|
||
implies poverty nor yet recedes far from it.</i> Seneca.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> He hereby intimates a holy jealousy he had of
|
||
himself, that he could not keep his ground against the temptations
|
||
either of an afflicted or a prosperous condition. Others may
|
||
preserve their integrity in either, but he is afraid of both, and
|
||
therefore grace teaches him to pray against riches as much as
|
||
nature against poverty; but <i>the will of the Lord be done.</i>
|
||
[2.] He gives a pious reason for his prayer, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.9" parsed="|Prov|30|9|0|0" passage="Pr 30:9"><i>v.</i> 9</scripRef>. He does not say, "<i>Lest I be
|
||
rich,</i> and cumbered with care, and envied by my neighbours, and
|
||
eaten up with a multitude of servants, or, <i>lest I be poor</i>
|
||
and trampled on, and forced to work hard and fare hard;" but,
|
||
"<i>Lest I be rich</i> and sin, or <i>poor</i> and sin." Sin is
|
||
that which a good man is afraid of in every condition and under
|
||
every event; witness Nehemiah (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.6.13" parsed="|Prov|6|13|0|0" passage="Pr 6:13"><i>ch.</i> vi. 13</scripRef>), <i>that I should be
|
||
afraid, and do so, and sin. First,</i> He dreads the temptations of
|
||
a prosperous condition, and therefore even deprecates that: <i>Lest
|
||
I be full and deny thee</i> (as Jeshurun, who <i>waxed fat and
|
||
kicked,</i> and <i>forsook God who made him,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.4" osisRef="Bible:Deut.32.15" parsed="|Deut|32|15|0|0" passage="De 32:15">Deut. xxxii. 15</scripRef>), and say, as Pharaoh in his
|
||
pride, <i>Who is the Lord, that I should obey his voice?</i>
|
||
Prosperity makes people proud and forgetful of God, as if they had
|
||
no need of him and were therefore under no obligation to him.
|
||
<i>What can the Almighty do for them?</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.5" osisRef="Bible:Job.22.17" parsed="|Job|22|17|0|0" passage="Job 22:17">Job xxii. 17</scripRef>. And therefore they will do
|
||
nothing for him. Even good men are afraid of the worst sins, so
|
||
deceitful do they think their own hearts to be; and they know that
|
||
the greatest gains of the world will not balance the least guilt.
|
||
<i>Secondly,</i> He dreads the temptations of a poor condition, and
|
||
for that reason, and no other, deprecates that: <i>Lest I be poor
|
||
and steal.</i> Poverty is a strong temptation to dishonesty, and
|
||
such as many are overcome by, and they are ready to think it will
|
||
be their excuse; but it will not bear them out at God's bar any
|
||
more than at men's to say, "I stole because I was poor;" yet, if a
|
||
man <i>steal for the satisfying of his soul when he is hungry,</i>
|
||
it is a case of compassion (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p11.6" osisRef="Bible:Prov.6.30" parsed="|Prov|6|30|0|0" passage="Pr 6:30"><i>ch.</i>
|
||
vi. 30</scripRef>) and what even those that have some principles of
|
||
honesty in them may be drawn to. But observe why Agur dreads this,
|
||
not because he should endanger himself by it, "Lest I steal, and be
|
||
hanged for it, whipped or put in the stocks, or sold for a
|
||
bondman," as among the Jews poor thieves were, who had not
|
||
wherewithal to make restitution; but lest he should dishonour God
|
||
by it: "<i>Lest I should steal, and take the name of my God in
|
||
vain,</i> that is, discredit my profession of religion by practices
|
||
disagreeable to it." Or, "Lest I steal, and, when I am charged with
|
||
it, forswear myself." He <i>therefore</i> dreads one sin, because
|
||
it would draw on another, for the way of sin is downhill. Observe,
|
||
He calls God <i>his God,</i> and <i>therefore</i> he is afraid of
|
||
doing any thing to offend him because of the relation he stands in
|
||
to him.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p11.7" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.10-Prov.30.14" parsed="|Prov|30|10|30|14" passage="Pr 30:10-14" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.10-Prov.30.14">
|
||
<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p11.8">Four Wicked Generations.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p12">10 Accuse not a servant unto his master, lest he
|
||
curse thee, and thou be found guilty. 11 <i>There is</i> a
|
||
generation <i>that</i> curseth their father, and doth not bless
|
||
their mother. 12 <i>There is</i> a generation <i>that
|
||
are</i> pure in their own eyes, and <i>yet</i> is not washed from
|
||
their filthiness. 13 <i>There is</i> a generation, O how
|
||
lofty are their eyes! and their eyelids are lifted up. 14
|
||
<i>There is</i> a generation, whose teeth <i>are as</i> swords, and
|
||
their jaw teeth <i>as</i> knives, to devour the poor from off the
|
||
earth, and the needy from <i>among</i> men.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p13">Here is, I. A caution not to abuse other
|
||
people's servants any more than our own, nor to make mischief
|
||
between them and their masters, for it is an ill office, invidious,
|
||
and what will make a man odious, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p13.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.10" parsed="|Prov|30|10|0|0" passage="Pr 30:10"><i>v.</i> 10</scripRef>. Consider, 1. It is an injury to
|
||
the servant, whose poor condition makes him an object of pity, and
|
||
therefore it is barbarous to add affliction to him that is
|
||
afflicted: <i>Hurt not a servant with thy tongue</i> (so the margin
|
||
reads it); for it argues a sordid disposition to smite any body
|
||
secretly with the scourge of the tongue, especially a servant, who
|
||
is not a match for us, and whom we should rather protect, if his
|
||
master be severe with him, than exasperate him more. 2. "It will
|
||
perhaps be an injury to thyself. If a servant be thus provoked,
|
||
perhaps he will curse thee, will accuse thee and bring thee into
|
||
trouble, or give thee an ill word and blemish thy reputation, or
|
||
appeal to God against thee, and imprecate <i>his</i> wrath upon
|
||
thee, who is the patron and protector of oppressed innocency."</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p14">II. An account, upon occasion of this
|
||
caution, of some wicked generations of men, that are justly
|
||
abominable to all that are virtuous and good. 1. Such as are
|
||
abusive to their parents, give them bad language and wish them ill,
|
||
call them bad names and actually injure them. <i>There is a
|
||
generation</i> of such; young men of that black character commonly
|
||
herd together, and irritate one another against their parents. A
|
||
<i>generation of vipers</i> those are who curse their natural
|
||
parents, or their magistrates, or their ministers, because they
|
||
cannot endure the yoke; and those are near of kin to them who,
|
||
though they have not yet arrived at such a pitch of wickedness as
|
||
to curse their parents, yet do not bless them, cannot give them a
|
||
good word, and will not pray for them. 2. Such as are conceited of
|
||
themselves, and, under a show and pretence of sanctity, hide from
|
||
others, and perhaps from themselves too, abundance of reigning
|
||
wickedness in secret (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.12" parsed="|Prov|30|12|0|0" passage="Pr 30:12"><i>v.</i>
|
||
12</scripRef>); they are <i>pure in their own eyes,</i> as if they
|
||
were in all respects such as they should be. They have a very good
|
||
opinion of themselves and their own character, that they are not
|
||
only righteous, but <i>rich and increased with goods</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.2" osisRef="Bible:Rev.3.17" parsed="|Rev|3|17|0|0" passage="Re 3:17">Rev. iii. 17</scripRef>), and yet <i>are not
|
||
cleansed from their filthiness,</i> the filthiness of their hearts,
|
||
which they pretend to be the best part of them. They are, it may
|
||
be, swept and garnished, but they are not washed, nor sanctified;
|
||
as the Pharisees that within were <i>full of all uncleanness,</i>
|
||
<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.3" osisRef="Bible:Matt.23.25-Matt.23.26" parsed="|Matt|23|25|23|26" passage="Mt 23:25,26">Matt. xxiii. 25, 26</scripRef>. 3.
|
||
Such as are haughty and scornful to those about them, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.4" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.13" parsed="|Prov|30|13|0|0" passage="Pr 30:13"><i>v.</i> 13</scripRef>. He speaks of them with
|
||
amazement at their intolerable pride and insolence: "<i>Oh how
|
||
lofty are their eyes!</i> With what disdain do they look upon their
|
||
neighbours, as not worthy to be set with the dogs of their flock!
|
||
What a distance do they expect every body should keep; and, when
|
||
they look upon themselves, how do they strut and vaunt like the
|
||
peacock, thinking they make themselves illustrious when really they
|
||
make themselves ridiculous!" There is a generation of such, on whom
|
||
he that <i>resists the proud</i> will pour contempt. 4. Such as are
|
||
cruel to the poor and barbarous to all that lie at their mercy
|
||
(<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.5" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.14" parsed="|Prov|30|14|0|0" passage="Pr 30:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>); their teeth
|
||
are iron and steel, <i>swords and knives,</i> instruments of
|
||
cruelty, with which they <i>devour the poor</i> with the greatest
|
||
pleasure imaginable, and as greedily as hungry men cut their meat
|
||
and eat it. God has so ordered it that the <i>poor we shall always
|
||
have with us,</i> that they shall <i>never cease out of the
|
||
land;</i> but there are those who, because they hate to relieve
|
||
them, would, if they could, abolish them <i>from the earth, from
|
||
among men,</i> especially God's poor. Some understand it of those
|
||
who wound and ruin others by slanders and false accusations, and
|
||
severe censures of their everlasting state; their tongues, and
|
||
their teeth too (which are likewise organs of speech), are <i>as
|
||
swords and knives,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p14.6" osisRef="Bible:Ps.57.4" parsed="|Ps|57|4|0|0" passage="Ps 57:4">Ps. lvii.
|
||
4</scripRef>.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p14.7" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.15-Prov.30.17" parsed="|Prov|30|15|30|17" passage="Pr 30:15-17" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.15-Prov.30.17">
|
||
<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p14.8">Four Things Unsearchable.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p15">15 The horseleach hath two daughters,
|
||
<i>crying,</i> Give, give. There are three <i>things that</i> are
|
||
never satisfied, <i>yea,</i> four <i>things</i> say not, <i>It
|
||
is</i> enough: 16 The grave; and the barren womb; the earth
|
||
<i>that</i> is not filled with water; and the fire <i>that</i>
|
||
saith not, <i>It is</i> enough. 17 The eye <i>that</i>
|
||
mocketh at <i>his</i> father, and despiseth to obey <i>his</i>
|
||
mother, the ravens of the valley shall pick it out, and the young
|
||
eagles shall eat it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p16">He had spoken before of those that devoured
|
||
the poor (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p16.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.14" parsed="|Prov|30|14|0|0" passage="Pr 30:14"><i>v.</i> 14</scripRef>),
|
||
and had spoken of them last, as the worst of all the four
|
||
generations there mentioned; now here he speaks of their
|
||
insatiableness in doing this. The temper that puts them upon it is
|
||
made up of cruelty and covetousness. Now those are <i>two
|
||
daughters</i> of the <i>horse-leech,</i> its genuine offspring,
|
||
that still cry, "<i>Give, give,</i> give more blood, give more
|
||
money;" for the bloody are still blood-thirsty; being drunk with
|
||
blood, they add thirst to their drunkenness, and will seek it yet
|
||
again. Those also that <i>love silver</i> shall never <i>be
|
||
satisfied with silver.</i> Thus, while from these two principles
|
||
they are devouring the poor, they are continually uneasy to
|
||
themselves, as David's enemies, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p16.2" osisRef="Bible:Ps.59.14-Ps.59.15" parsed="|Ps|59|14|59|15" passage="Ps 59:14,15">Ps.
|
||
lix. 14, 15</scripRef>. Now, for the further illustration of
|
||
this,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p17">I. He specifies four other things which are
|
||
insatiable, to which those devourers are compared, which say not,
|
||
<i>It is enough,</i> or <i>It is wealth.</i> Those are never rich
|
||
that are always coveting. Now these four things that are always
|
||
craving are, 1. The grave, into which multitudes fall, and yet
|
||
still more will fall, and it swallows them all up, and returns
|
||
none, <i>Hell and destruction are never full,</i> <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p17.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.27.20" parsed="|Prov|27|20|0|0" passage="Pr 27:20"><i>ch.</i> xxvii. 20</scripRef>. When it comes
|
||
to our turn we shall find the grave ready for us, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p17.2" osisRef="Bible:Job.17.1" parsed="|Job|17|1|0|0" passage="Job 17:1">Job xvii. 1</scripRef>. 2. The <i>barren
|
||
womb,</i> which is impatient of its affliction in being barren, and
|
||
cries, as Rachel did, <i>Give me children.</i> 3. The <i>parched
|
||
ground</i> in time of drought (especially in those hot countries),
|
||
which still soaks in the rain that comes in abundance upon it and
|
||
in a little time wants more. 4. The <i>fire,</i> which, when it has
|
||
consumed abundance of fuel, yet still devours all the combustible
|
||
matter that is thrown into it. So insatiable are the corrupt
|
||
desires of sinners, and so little satisfaction have they even in
|
||
the gratification of them.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p18">II. He adds a terrible threatening to
|
||
disobedient children (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p18.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.17" parsed="|Prov|30|17|0|0" passage="Pr 30:17"><i>v.</i>
|
||
17</scripRef>), for warning to the first of those four wicked
|
||
generations, that curse their parents (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p18.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.11" parsed="|Prov|30|11|0|0" passage="Pr 30:11"><i>v.</i> 11</scripRef>), and shows here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p19">1. Who they are that belong to that
|
||
generation, not only those that curse their parents in heat and
|
||
passion, but, (1.) Those that <i>mock</i> at them, though it be but
|
||
with a scornful eye, looking with disdain upon them because of
|
||
their bodily infirmities, or looking sour or dogged at them when
|
||
they instruct or command, impatient at their checks and angry at
|
||
them. God takes notice with what eye children look upon their
|
||
parents, and will reckon for the leering look and the casts of the
|
||
evil eye as well as for the bad language given them. (2.) Those
|
||
that <i>despise to obey</i> them, that think it a thing below them
|
||
to be dutiful to their parents, especially to the <i>mother,</i>
|
||
they scorn to be controlled by her; and thus she that bore them in
|
||
sorrow in greater sorrow bears their manners.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p20">2. What their doom will be. Those that
|
||
dishonour their parents shall be set up as monuments of God's
|
||
vengeance; they shall be hanged in chains, as it were, for the
|
||
birds of prey to pick out their eyes, those eyes with which they
|
||
looked so scornfully on their good parents. The dead bodies of
|
||
malefactors were not to hang all night, but before night the ravens
|
||
would have picked out their eyes. If men do not punish undutiful
|
||
children, God will, and will load those with the greatest infamy
|
||
that conduct themselves haughtily towards their parents. Many who
|
||
have come to an ignominious end have owned that the wicked courses
|
||
that brought them to it began in a contempt of their parents'
|
||
authority.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p20.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.18-Prov.30.23" parsed="|Prov|30|18|30|23" passage="Pr 30:18-23" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.18-Prov.30.23">
|
||
<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p20.2">Four Things Little and Wise.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p21">18 There be three <i>things which</i> are too
|
||
wonderful for me, yea, four which I know not: 19 The way of
|
||
an eagle in the air; the way of a serpent upon a rock; the way of a
|
||
ship in the midst of the sea; and the way of a man with a maid.
|
||
20 Such <i>is</i> the way of an adulterous woman; she
|
||
eateth, and wipeth her mouth, and saith, I have done no wickedness.
|
||
21 For three <i>things</i> the earth is disquieted, and for
|
||
four <i>which</i> it cannot bear: 22 For a servant when he
|
||
reigneth; and a fool when he is filled with meat; 23 For an
|
||
odious <i>woman</i> when she is married; and an handmaid that is
|
||
heir to her mistress.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p22">Here is, I. An account of four things that
|
||
are unsearchable, <i>too wonderful</i> to be fully known. And
|
||
here,</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p23">1. The first three are natural things, and
|
||
are only designed as comparisons for the illustration of the last.
|
||
We cannot trace, (1.) <i>An eagle in the air.</i> Which way she has
|
||
flown cannot be discovered either by the footstep or by the scent,
|
||
as the way of a beast may upon ground; nor can we account for the
|
||
wonderful swiftness of her flight, how soon she has gone beyond our
|
||
ken. (2.) <i>A serpent upon a rock.</i> The way of a serpent in the
|
||
sand we may find by the track, but not of a serpent upon the hard
|
||
rock; nor can we describe how a serpent will, without feet, in a
|
||
little time creep to the top of a rock. (3.) <i>A ship in the midst
|
||
of the sea.</i> The leviathan indeed <i>makes a path to shine after
|
||
him, one would think the deep to be hoary</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p23.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.41.32" parsed="|Job|41|32|0|0" passage="Job 41:32">Job xli. 32</scripRef>), but a ship leaves no mark
|
||
behind it, and sometimes it is so tossed upon the waves that one
|
||
would wonder how it lives at sea and gains its point. The kingdom
|
||
of nature is full of wonders, marvellous things which the God of
|
||
nature does, <i>past finding out.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p24">2. The fourth is a mystery of iniquity,
|
||
more unaccountable than any of these; it belongs to the depths of
|
||
Satan, that deceitfulness and that desperate wickedness of the
|
||
heart which none can know, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p24.1" osisRef="Bible:Jer.17.9" parsed="|Jer|17|9|0|0" passage="Jer 17:9">Jer. xvii.
|
||
9</scripRef>. It is twofold:—(1.) The cursed arts which a vile
|
||
adulterer has to debauch a maid, and to persuade her to yield to
|
||
his wicked and abominable lust. This is what a wanton poet wrote a
|
||
whole book of, long since, <i>De arte amandi—On the art of
|
||
love.</i> By what pretensions and protestations of love, and all
|
||
its powerful charms, promises of marriage, assurances of secresy
|
||
and reward, is many an unwary virgin brought to sell her virtue,
|
||
and honour, and peace, and soul, and all to a base traitor; for so
|
||
all sinful lust is in the kingdom of love. The more artfully the
|
||
temptation is managed the more watchful and resolute ought every
|
||
pure heart to be against it. (2.) The cursed arts which a vile
|
||
adulteress has to conceal her wickedness, especially from her
|
||
husband, from whom she treacherously departs; so close are her
|
||
intrigues with her lewd companions, and so craftily disguised, that
|
||
it is as impossible to discover her as to track an <i>eagle in the
|
||
air.</i> She eats the forbidden fruit, after the similitude of
|
||
Adam's transgression, and then <i>wipes her mouth,</i> that it may
|
||
not betray itself, and with a bold and impudent face says, <i>I
|
||
have done no wickedness.</i> [1.] To the world she denies the fact,
|
||
and is ready to swear it that she is as chaste and modest as any
|
||
woman, and never did the wickedness she is suspected of. Those are
|
||
the works of darkness which are industriously kept from coming to
|
||
the light. [2.] To her own conscience (if she have any left) she
|
||
denies the fault, and will not own that that <i>great
|
||
wickedness</i> is any wickedness at all, but an innocent
|
||
entertainment. See <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p24.2" osisRef="Bible:Hos.12.7-Hos.12.8" parsed="|Hos|12|7|12|8" passage="Ho 12:7,8">Hos. xii. 7,
|
||
8</scripRef>. Thus multitudes ruin their souls by calling evil good
|
||
and out-facing their convictions with a self-justification.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p25">II. An account of four things that are
|
||
intolerable, that is, four sorts of persons that are very
|
||
troublesome to the places where they live and the relations and
|
||
companies they are in; the earth is <i>disquieted for them,</i> and
|
||
groans under them as a burden it cannot bear, and they are all much
|
||
alike:—1. <i>A servant</i> when he is advanced, and entrusted
|
||
with power, who is, of all others, most insolent and imperious;
|
||
witness Tobiah the servant, the Ammonite, <scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p25.1" osisRef="Bible:Neh.2.10" parsed="|Neh|2|10|0|0" passage="Ne 2:10">Neh. ii. 10</scripRef>. 2. <i>A fool,</i> a silly, rude,
|
||
boisterous, vicious man, who when he has grown rich, and is
|
||
partaking of the pleasures of the table, will disturb all the
|
||
company with his extravagant talk and the affronts he will put upon
|
||
those about him. 3. An ill-natured, cross-grained, <i>woman,</i>
|
||
when she gets a husband, one who, having made herself odious by her
|
||
pride and sourness, so that one would not have thought any body
|
||
would ever love her, yet, if at last she be married, that
|
||
honourable estate makes her more intolerably scornful and spiteful
|
||
than ever. It is a pity that that which should sweeten the
|
||
disposition should have a contrary effect. A gracious woman, when
|
||
she is married, will be yet more obliging. 4. An old maid-servant
|
||
that has prevailed with her mistress, by humouring her, and, as we
|
||
say, getting the length of her foot, to leave her what she has, or
|
||
is as dear to her as if she was to be her heir, such a one likewise
|
||
will be intolerably proud and malicious, and think all too little
|
||
that her mistress gives her, and herself wronged if any thing be
|
||
left from her. Let those therefore whom Providence has advanced to
|
||
honour from mean beginnings carefully watch against that sin which
|
||
will most easily beset them, pride and haughtiness, which will in
|
||
them, of all others, be most insufferable and inexcusable; and let
|
||
them humble themselves with the remembrance of the rock out of
|
||
which they were hewn.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p25.2" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.24-Prov.30.28" parsed="|Prov|30|24|30|28" passage="Pr 30:24-28" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.24-Prov.30.28">
|
||
<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p25.3">Four Things Little and Wise.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p26">24 There be four <i>things which are</i> little
|
||
upon the earth, but they <i>are</i> exceeding wise: 25 The
|
||
ants <i>are</i> a people not strong, yet they prepare their meat in
|
||
the summer; 26 The conies <i>are but</i> a feeble folk, yet
|
||
make they their houses in the rocks; 27 The locusts have no
|
||
king, yet go they forth all of them by bands; 28 The spider
|
||
taketh hold with her hands, and is in kings' palaces.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p27">I. Agur, having specified four things that
|
||
seem great and yet are really contemptible, here specifies four
|
||
things that are little and yet are very admirable, great in
|
||
miniature, in which, as bishop Patrick observes, he teaches us
|
||
several good lessons; as, 1. Not to admire bodily bulk, or beauty,
|
||
or strength, nor to value persons or think the better of them for
|
||
such advantages, but to judge of men by their wisdom and conduct,
|
||
their industry and application to business, which are characters
|
||
that deserve respect. 2. To admire the wisdom and power of the
|
||
Creator in the smallest and most despicable animals, in an ant as
|
||
much as in an elephant. 3. To blame ourselves who do not act so
|
||
much for our own true interest as the meanest creatures do for
|
||
theirs. 4. Not to despise the weak things of the world; there are
|
||
those that are <i>little upon the earth,</i> poor in the world and
|
||
of small account, and yet <i>are exceedingly wise,</i> wise for
|
||
their souls and another world, and those <i>are exceedingly wise,
|
||
wiser than their neighbours.</i> Margin, <i>They are wise, made
|
||
wise</i> by the special instinct of nature. All that are wise to
|
||
salvation are made wise by the grace of God.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p28">II. Those he specifies are, 1. The
|
||
<i>ants,</i> minute animals and very weak, and yet they are very
|
||
industrious in gathering proper food, and have a strange sagacity
|
||
to do it in the summer, the proper time. This is so great a piece
|
||
of wisdom that we may learn of them to be wise for futurity,
|
||
<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p28.1" osisRef="Bible:Prov.6.6" parsed="|Prov|6|6|0|0" passage="Pr 6:6"><i>ch.</i> vi. 6</scripRef>. When the
|
||
ravening <i>lions lack, and suffer hunger,</i> the laborious ants
|
||
have plenty, and know no want. 2. The <i>conies,</i> or, as some
|
||
rather understand it, the Arabian mice, field mice, weak creatures,
|
||
and very timorous, yet they have so much wisdom as to <i>make their
|
||
houses in the rocks,</i> where they are well guarded, and their
|
||
feebleness makes them take shelter in those natural fastnesses and
|
||
fortifications. Sense of our own indigence and weakness should
|
||
drive us to him that is a <i>rock higher than we</i> for shelter
|
||
and support; there let us make our habitation. 3. The
|
||
<i>locusts;</i> they are little also, and <i>have no king,</i> as
|
||
the bees have, but <i>they go forth all of them by bands,</i> like
|
||
an army in battle-array; and, observing such good order among
|
||
themselves, it is not any inconvenience to them that they <i>have
|
||
no king.</i> They are called God's <i>great army</i> (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p28.2" osisRef="Bible:Joel.2.25" parsed="|Joel|2|25|0|0" passage="Joe 2:25">Joel ii. 25</scripRef>); for, when he pleases,
|
||
he musters, he marshals them, and wages war by them, as he did upon
|
||
Egypt. <i>They go forth all of them gathered together</i> (so the
|
||
margin); sense of weakness should engage us to keep together, that
|
||
we may strengthen the hands of one another. 4. The <i>spider,</i>
|
||
an insect, but as great an instance of industry in our houses as
|
||
the ants are in the field. Spiders are very ingenious in weaving
|
||
their webs with a fineness and exactness such as no art can pretend
|
||
to come near: They <i>take hold with their hands,</i> and spin a
|
||
fine thread out of their own bowels, with a great deal of art; and
|
||
they are not only in poor men's cottages, but in <i>kings'
|
||
palaces,</i> notwithstanding all the care that is there taken to
|
||
destroy them. Providence wonderfully keeps up those kinds of
|
||
creatures, not only which men provide not for, but which every
|
||
man's hand is against and seeks the destruction of. Those that will
|
||
mind their business, and <i>take hold</i> of it <i>with their
|
||
hands,</i> shall be <i>in kings' palaces;</i> sooner or later, they
|
||
will get preferment, and may go on with it, notwithstanding the
|
||
difficulties and discouragements they meet with. If one well-spun
|
||
web be swept away, it is but making another.</p>
|
||
</div><scripCom id="Prov.xxxi-p28.3" osisRef="Bible:Prov.30.29-Prov.30.33" parsed="|Prov|30|29|30|33" passage="Pr 30:29-33" type="Commentary"/><div class="Commentary" id="Bible:Prov.30.29-Prov.30.33">
|
||
<h4 id="Prov.xxxi-p28.4">Four Things Majestic and
|
||
Stately.</h4>
|
||
<p class="passage" id="Prov.xxxi-p29">29 There be three <i>things</i> which go well,
|
||
yea, four are comely in going: 30 A lion <i>which is</i>
|
||
strongest among beasts, and turneth not away for any; 31 A
|
||
greyhound; an he goat also; and a king, against whom <i>there
|
||
is</i> no rising up. 32 If thou hast done foolishly in
|
||
lifting up thyself, or if thou hast thought evil, <i>lay</i> thine
|
||
hand upon thy mouth. 33 Surely the churning of milk bringeth
|
||
forth butter, and the wringing of the nose bringeth forth blood: so
|
||
the forcing of wrath bringeth forth strife.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p30">Here is, I. An enumeration of four things
|
||
which are majestic and stately in their going, which look great:—
|
||
1. <i>A lion,</i> the king of beasts, because <i>strongest among
|
||
beasts.</i> Among beasts it is strength that gives the
|
||
pre-eminence, but it is a pity that it should do so among men,
|
||
whose <i>wisdom</i> is their honour, not their <i>strength</i> and
|
||
<i>force.</i> The lion <i>turns not away,</i> nor alters his pace,
|
||
for fear of any pursuers, since he knows he is too hard for them.
|
||
Herein <i>the righteous are bold as a lion,</i> that they <i>turn
|
||
not away</i> from their duty for fear of any difficulty they meet
|
||
with in it. 2. <i>A greyhound</i> that is girt in the loins and fit
|
||
for running; or (as the margin reads it) <i>a horse,</i> which
|
||
ought not to be omitted among the creatures that <i>are comely in
|
||
going,</i> for so he is, especially when he is dressed up in his
|
||
harness or trappings. 3. <i>A he-goat,</i> the comeliness of whose
|
||
going is when he goes first and leads the flock. It is the
|
||
comeliness of a Christian's going to go first in a good work and to
|
||
lead others in the right way. 4. <i>A king,</i> who, when he
|
||
appears in his majesty, is looked upon with reverence and awe, and
|
||
all agree that <i>there is no rising up against</i> him; none can
|
||
vie with him, none can contend with him, whoever does it, it is at
|
||
his peril. And, if <i>there is no rising up</i> against an earthly
|
||
prince, <i>woe to him</i> then <i>that strives with his Maker.</i>
|
||
It is intended that we should learn courage and fortitude in all
|
||
virtuous actions from the <i>lion</i> and <i>not to turn away for
|
||
any</i> difficulty we meet with; from the <i>greyhound</i> we may
|
||
learn quickness and despatch, from the <i>he-goat</i> the care of
|
||
our family and those under our charge, and from <i>a king</i> to
|
||
have our children in subjection with all gravity, and from them all
|
||
to <i>go well,</i> and to order the steps of our conversation so as
|
||
that we may not only be safe, but <i>comely, in going.</i></p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p31">II. A caution to us to keep our temper at
|
||
all times and under all provocations, and to take heed of carrying
|
||
our resentments too far upon any occasion, especially when there is
|
||
<i>a king</i> in the case, <i>against whom there is no rising
|
||
up,</i> when it is a ruler, or one much our superior, that is
|
||
offended; nay, the rule is always the same.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p32">1. We must bridle and suppress our own
|
||
passion, and take shame to ourselves, whenever we are justly
|
||
charged with a fault, and not insist upon our own innocency: If we
|
||
have <i>lifted up ourselves,</i> either in a proud conceit of
|
||
ourselves or a peevish opposition to those that are over us, if we
|
||
have transgressed the laws of our place and station, we have
|
||
therein <i>done foolishly.</i> Those that magnify themselves over
|
||
others or against others, that are haughty and insolent, do but
|
||
shame themselves and betray their own weakness. Nay, if we have but
|
||
<i>thought evil,</i> if we are conscious to ourselves that we have
|
||
harboured an ill design in our minds, or it has been suggested to
|
||
us, we must <i>lay our hand upon our mouth,</i> that is, (1.) We
|
||
must humble ourselves for what we have done amiss, and even lie in
|
||
the dust before God, in sorrow for it, as Job did, when he repented
|
||
of what he had said foolishly (<scripRef id="Prov.xxxi-p32.1" osisRef="Bible:Job.40.4" parsed="|Job|40|4|0|0" passage="Job 40:4"><i>ch.</i> xl. 4</scripRef>, <i>I will lay my hand upon
|
||
my mouth</i>), and as the convicted leper, who <i>put a covering
|
||
upon his upper lip.</i> If we have <i>done foolishly,</i> we must
|
||
not stand to it before men, but by silence own our guilt, which
|
||
will be the best way of appeasing those we have offended. 2. We
|
||
must keep the evil thought we have conceived in our minds from
|
||
breaking out in any evil speeches. Do not give the evil thought an
|
||
<i>imprimatur—a license;</i> allow it not to be published; but
|
||
<i>lay thy hand upon thy mouth;</i> use a holy violence with
|
||
thyself, if need be, and enjoin thyself silence; as Christ
|
||
<i>suffered not the evil spirits to speak.</i> It is bad to think
|
||
ill, but it is much worse to speak it, for that implies a consent
|
||
to the evil thought and a willingness to infect others with it.</p>
|
||
<p class="indent" id="Prov.xxxi-p33">2. We must not irritate the passions of
|
||
others. Some are so very provoking in their words and conduct that
|
||
they even <i>force wrath,</i> they make those about them angry
|
||
whether they will or no, and put those into a passion who are not
|
||
only not inclined to it, but resolved against it. Now this
|
||
<i>forcing of wrath brings forth strife,</i> and where that <i>is
|
||
there is confusion and every evil work.</i> As the violent
|
||
agitation of the cream fetches all the good out of the milk, and
|
||
the hard <i>wringing of the nose</i> will extort blood from it, so
|
||
this <i>forcing of wrath</i> wastes both the body and spirits of a
|
||
man, and robs him of all the good that is in him. Or, as it is in
|
||
<i>the churning of milk and the wringing of the nose, that</i> is
|
||
done by force which otherwise would not be done, so the spirit is
|
||
heated by degrees with strong passions; one angry word begets
|
||
another, and that a third; one passionate debate makes work for
|
||
another, and so it goes on till it ends at length in irreconcilable
|
||
feuds. Let nothing therefore be said or done with violence, but
|
||
every thing with softness and calmness.</p>
|
||
</div></div2> |