Proverbs 17:12 - John Trapp Complete Commentary

Bible Comments

Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man, rather than a fool in his folly.

Ver. 12. Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man.] A bear is a fierce and fell creature, the she ear especially, as Aristotle notes, but most of all when robbed of her whelps, which she licketh into form, and loveth without measure. To meet her in this rage is to meet death in the face; and yet that danger may be sooner shifted and shunned than a furious fool set upon mischief. Such were the primitive persecutors, not sparing those Christians whom bears and lions would not meddle with. Such a one was our bloody Bonner, who in five years' time took and roasted three hundred martyrs, most of them within his own walk and diocese. a Such another was that merciless Minerius, one of the Pope's captains, who destroyed twenty-two towns of the innocent Merindelians in France, together with the inhabitants; and being entreated for some few of them that escaped in their shirts to cover their nakedness, he sternly answered that he knew what he had to do, and that not one of them should escape his hands, but he would send them to hell to dwell among devils. b

a Acts and Mon.

b Ibid.

Proverbs 17:12

12 Let a bear robbed of her whelps meet a man, rather than a fool in his folly.