-
CHAPTER VI
_Exhortations against becoming surety for others_, 1-5;
_against idleness, from the example of the ant_, 6-11;
_description of a worthless person_, 12-15;
_seven things hateful to God_,...
-
SURETY - The “pledge,” or security for payment, which, for
example, David was to bring back from his brothers 1 Samuel 17:18. So
the word was used in the primitive trade transactions of the early
Isra...
-
CHAPTER 6
_ 1. The surety (Proverbs 6:1)_
2. The sluggard (Proverbs 6:6)
3. The naughty, good-for-nothing person (Proverbs 6:12)
4. The strange woman ...
-
A section totally dissimilar from the rest of this division of Pr. It
consists of four short subsections
Proverbs 6:1 against suretyship, Proverbs 6:6 against sloth, Proverbs
6:12 against talebearing,...
-
MY SON. See note on Proverbs 1:8.
IF. This word should be supplied at the beginning of each line in
Proverbs 6:2, as well as in Proverbs 6:1.
FRIEND. neighbour.
STRICKEN THY HAND. Idiom for making....
-
_be surety_ Better, ART BECOME SURETY, R.V.
The frequent mention of suretiship in this Book, and the strong terms
of warning and reprobation in which it is invariably spoken of, accord
well with what...
-
Eleventh Address. Chap. 6. Proverbs 6:1. _The Surety_
"From the solemn principle announced at the close of the last chapter
(Proverbs 6:23) the teacher passes … to illustrate the truth by
three exampl...
-
MY SON, IF THOU BE SURETY— This and the ten following verses contain
precepts oeconomical. The wise man recommends first, not to become
surety for another; and, secondly, to avoid idleness: he inculca...
-
CHAPTER 6
TEXT Proverbs 6:1-11
1.
My son, if thou art become surety for thy neighbor,
If thou hast striken thy hands for a stranger;
2.
Thou art snared with the words of thy mouth,
Thou art tak...
-
My son, if thou be surety for thy friend, if thou hast stricken thy
hand with a stranger,
Proverbs 6:1.-Warning against suretiship (Proverbs 6:1); against
indolence, by the example of the ant (Prov...
-
6:1 friend, (e-10) Or 'neighbour.' so in ver. 3....
-
DISSUASIVES FROM HURTFUL THINGS
Proverbs 6:1 are inserted here from some other collection, and contain
warnings against suretyships (1-5), sloth (6-11), falseness (12-15),
evils which the Lordhates (1...
-
The surety appears to have taken the creditor's hand in the presence
of witnesses: cp. 2 Kings 10:15....
-
In this poem, Solomon compares our mistakes to a hunter’s trap. When
a hunter works, he may build traps. He hides his traps so that animals
will not see them. He hopes that the animals will fall into...
-
LESSONS ABOUT WISDOM
PROVERBS
_KEITH SIMONS_
CHAPTER 6
V1 My son, follow this advice when you make a mistake.
Perhaps you promised to pay a neighbour’s debt....
-
VI.
(i)._ Ninth Discourse:_ — _Against Suretyship_ (Proverbs 6:1).
(1) IF THOU BE SURETY FOR THY FRIEND. — When the Mosaic Law was
instituted, commerce had not been taken up by the Israelites, and th...
-
בְּ֭נִי אִם ־עָרַ֣בְתָּ לְ רֵעֶ֑ךָ
תָּקַ֖עְתָּ...
-
CHAPTER 7
CERTAIN EXAMPLES OF THE BINDING CHARACTER OF OUR OWN ACTIONS
"The surety the sluggard and the worthless person." Proverbs 6:1;
Proverbs 6:6; Proverbs 6:12
FROM the solemn principle announc...
-
AVOID SURETYSHIP AND SLOTH
Proverbs 6:1
A young man, being entreated by his friend to go bond for him,
consents, in an easy-going way to become his surety. He promises to be
responsible for the other...
-
The parental exhortations are continued. In this section they are
directed against suretyship, indolence, the evil man, and certain
specific things which Jehovah hates. The warnings against becoming
s...
-
Hand. Agreements were made by shaking hands, Isaias lxii. 8.
(Xenophon, Anab. iii.) --- Stranger. Septuagint, "enemy." He will
presently be such, or thy friend's creditor will soon lay hold on
thee. B...
-
CONTENTS
Under the similitude of a surety Solomon opens this chapter, with
shewing the consequence of such engagements. He follows up the chapter
with divers cautions, which are founded in much wisdo...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 1 THROUGH 9.
There are two very distinct parts in this book. The first nine Chapter
s, which give the great general principles; and the proverbs, properly
so...
-
MY SON, IF THOU BE SURETY FOR THY FRIEND,.... To another; hast engaged
thyself by promise or bond, or both, to pay a debt for him, if he is
not able, or if required; or hast laid thyself under obligat...
-
My son, if thou be surety for thy friend, [if] thou hast stricken thy
hand with a stranger,
Ver. 1. _My son, if thou be surety._] The wise man, having exhorted
his son to marry, rather than burn, and...
-
_My son, if thou be surety for_, or _to, thy friend_ Namely, rashly
and unadvisedly, without considering for whom, or how the thou dost
oblige thyself, or how thou shalt discharge the debt if occasion...
-
WARNING AGAINST FOOLISH SURETYSHIP, IDLENESS, AND MALICE...
-
My son, if thou be surety for thy friend, pledging himself or giving
security for the debts of another, IF THOU HAST STRICKEN THY HAND WITH
A STRANGER, giving his hand to any neighbor in need, to any...
-
1-5 If we live as directed by the word of God, we shall find it
profitable even in this present world. We are stewards of our worldly
substance, and have to answer to the Lord for our disposal of it;...
-
PROVERBS CHAPTER 6 A dehortation against suretiship, PROVERBS 6:1. The
danger of it, PROVERBS 6:2; and the way of delivery, PROVERBS 6:3.
Sluggards reproved by a similitude of the ant,...
-
Proverbs 6:1 son H1121 surety H6148 (H8804) friend H7453 shaken H8628
(H8804) hands H3709 stranger H2114 ...
-
IF HIS SON HAS BECOME SURETY FOR ANOTHER HE SHOULD SEEK TO OBTAIN
RELEASE FROM HIS OBLIGATION AT ALL COSTS (PROVERBS 6:1).
To become a surety is to guarantee to pay someone else's debts if that
person...
-
CONTENTS: Caution against rash suretiship, slothfulness, forwardness,
and whoredom.
CHARACTERS: God, Solomon, his son.
CONCLUSION: Suretiship is to be avoided, because by it poverty and
ruin are ofte...
-
Proverbs 6:1. _If thou be surety for thy friend._ If charity has
gained an ascendancy over the judgment, prepare to perform thy
covenant. To aid a friend in poverty is a generous deed, it is lending
w...
-
_If thou be surety for thy friend._
SOCIAL SURETYSHIPS
The principles of domestic, social, and political economy in the Bible
are far more wise, as well as righteous, than can be found in human
book...
-
PROVERBS—NOTE ON PROVERBS 6:1 SECURITY. Promising to pay someone
else’s debt if he does not pay it is described as a trap in which
one’s life is endangered. A person should not put himself in a
positi...
-
CRITICAL NOTES,—
Proverbs 6:1. With a stranger, rather, “for” a stranger.
PROVERBS 6:3. WHEN THOU ART COME, rather, “for thou hast come.”
HUMBLE THYSELF, literally “let thyself be trodden under foot...
-
EXPOSITION
PROVERBS 6:1
The sixth chapter embraces four distinct discourses, each of which is
a warning. The subjects treated of are
(1) suretyship (Proverbs 6:1);
(2) sloth ...
-
Now let us turn to Proverbs, chapter 6. The first part of the Proverbs
is exhortation to my son. It's just good fatherly advice to sons. And
chapter 6 continues in these exhortations that are opened b...
-
Genesis 43:9; Genesis 44:32; Genesis 44:33; Hebrews 7:22; Job 17:3;...