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E.W. Bullinger

E.W. Bullinger's Companion Bible Notes - Proverbs 6:11

poverty = need. There are six words rendered poor or poverty in Proverbs: (1) rush = in want of necessaries of life (Proverbs 6:11 ; Proverbs 10:4 , Proverbs 10:15 ; Proverbs 13:7 , Proverbs 13:8 , Proverbs 13:18 , Proverbs 13:23 ; Proverbs 14:20 ; Proverbs 17:5 ; Proverbs 18:23 ; Proverbs 19:1 , Proverbs 19:7 , Proverbs 19:22 ; Proverbs 22:2 , Proverbs 22:7 ; Proverbs 24:34 ; Proverbs 28:3 , Proverbs 28:6 , Proverbs 28:19 , Proverbs 28:27 ; Proverbs 29:13 ; Proverbs 30:8 ; Proverbs 31:7 ).... read more

E.W. Bullinger

E.W. Bullinger's Companion Bible Notes - Proverbs 6:12

naughty person. Hebrew a man of Belial = a worthless person. Like Anglo-Saxon na (= no, or not) and wiht (= a thing) = a thing of naught: i.e. worthless. wicked. Hebrew. 'aven. App-44 . froward = perverse. Same word as in Proverbs 4:24 ; Proverbs 11:20 ; Proverbs 17:20 ; Proverbs 22:5 . Not the same as elsewhere in Proverbs. read more

E.W. Bullinger

E.W. Bullinger's Companion Bible Notes - Proverbs 6:14

Frowardness = Deceitfulness. See note on Proverbs 2:12 . The same word as in Proverbs 2:12 , Proverbs 2:14 ; Proverbs 8:13 ; Proverbs 10:31 , Proverbs 10:32 ; Proverbs 16:28 , Proverbs 16:30 . Not the same as elsewhere in Proverbs. soweth = casteth forth [as seed]. read more

James Burton Coffman

Coffman Commentaries on the Bible - Proverbs 6:12

WARNING AGAINST DECEITFUL MEN; THINGS GOD HATES (THE ELEVENTH DISCOURSE)"A worthless person, a man of iniquity,Is he that walketh with a perverse mouth;That winketh with his eyes, that speaketh with his feet,That maketh signs with his fingers;In whose heart is perverseness,Who deviseth evil continually,Who soweth discord.Therefore shall his calamity come suddenly;On a sudden shall he be broken, and that without remedy.There are six things which Jehovah hateth;Yea, seven which are an abomination... read more

Thomas Coke

Thomas Coke Commentary on the Holy Bible - Proverbs 6:11

Proverbs 6:11. As one that travelleth— Dr. Grey would render this verse, So shall thy poverty come as one that travelleth, and thy want [shall overtake thee speedily] as a post, or messenger. See Jeremiah 51:31. Lord Bacon upon this proverb distinguishes between the poverty which comes as a traveller, and the want which comes as an armed man. The shipwreck of fortune falls upon prodigals, or such as are careless of their estates, by insensible degrees at the first; with soft silent paces, like... read more

Thomas Coke

Thomas Coke Commentary on the Holy Bible - Proverbs 6:12

Proverbs 6:12. A naughty person— In the Hebrew a man of Belial, with a froward mouth, Houbigant renders, distorting his mouth. The LXX read, Walketh in ways that are not right. A froward, or distorted mouth, signifies a speech void of truth, fidelity, and honesty. read more

Thomas Coke

Thomas Coke Commentary on the Holy Bible - Proverbs 6:13

Proverbs 6:13. He winketh— It is a remark of St. Ambrose, that the mein and gesture of the body are an image of the mind; and he was so delicate upon this subject, that he would not ordain the son of one of his particular friends, because the young man's air and manner were by no means conformable to clerical gravity. The motion of the body is as it were the voice of the soul. Ovid says, Verba superciliis, fine voce silentia dicant; Verba leges digitis, verba notata mero. See his Amor. 1: and... read more

Thomas Coke

Thomas Coke Commentary on the Holy Bible - Proverbs 6:14

Proverbs 6:14. Frowardness is in his heart, &c.— Pravo corde architectatur malum, as one translation has it: he does not do mischief by chance or negligently, but deliberates how he may do it with most success; he builds it commodiously and speciously to the eye, that it may invite men to inhabit it: there is no industry nor art wanting to make it prosper, and yield a good harvest. read more

Robert Jamieson; A. R. Fausset; David Brown

Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible - Proverbs 6:11

11. and the fruits of their self-indulgence and indolence presented. as . . . travelleth—literally, "one who walks backwards and forwards," that is, a highwayman. armed man—that is, one prepared to destroy. read more

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