Proverbs 3:5
_(with Proverbs 27:1)_
I. The precept, "Lean not unto thine own understanding" is one in
which, with advancing years, we are well disposed to acquiesce. One
who has grown older, and who has really profited by the experience of
life, must often have found cause to revise his own judgme... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:6
A characteristic of the Old Testament Scriptures, which results from
the genius of the Hebrew language, is specially observable in the Book
of Proverbs. Instead of the copious, versatile, precise, and in so
many respects unrivalled, instrument which the Greek wields when
expressing his... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:7
I. The text may be paraphrased and expanded thus: God has taught you
by various ways by your own experience and that of others; above all,
by the warnings of conscience and the voice of revelation what is
right and what is wrong. Do not set yourself above this teaching, or
think to be... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:11
I. Affliction acts as a dyke against the overflow of evil; it
incessantly restrains and thrusts it back. Sin finds its limit in
suffering; passion strikes against pain as a fatal bourne, where it
perishes; lust is quenched in disgust; and death is there to say to
the raging waves of o... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:12
_(with 1 Corinthians 15:55)_
In the case of a saint, his afflictions and death fall to be
considered: (1) as they have a respect to himself, and (2) as they
have a respect to his neighbours and friends.
I. As they have a respect to himself. (1) The design of a saint's
afflictions may... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:17
_(with John 16:33)_
I. Religion, regarded as a theory of a perfect state, is right in
pronouncing itself a way of pleasantness and a path of peace. If a man
could but walk perfectly in the way of religion he would be perfectly
happy. But man is not born into an ideal state, into a pe... [ Continue Reading ]
Proverbs 3:32
I. Consider the intimacy between God and man implied in this promise.
To whom is it that we open our confidence, and explain our most secret
purposes and objects? It is not to the stranger, of whom perhaps we
know nothing but his mere name and title; not to those who have
already sligh... [ Continue Reading ]