Proverbs 4 - Dummelow's Commentary on the Bible

Bible Comments
  • Proverbs 4:1-27 open_in_new

    Ancestral Wisdom. The Two Paths

    In Proverbs 4:1-9 the teacher lays stress on the fact that his instruction is a repetition of his father's. No teaching was thought valuable save that which was handed down from one generation to another. The best pupil was the one who was 'a cemented cistern which loses not a drop.' Proverbs 4:10-19 might be called the doctrine of the two paths, the two ways of life. 20-27 enjoin strict attention to instruction and to conduct.

  • Proverbs 4:7 open_in_new

    Lit. 'The beginning of wisdom is, get wisdom' (RM). When we feel our deficiency we shall make a start. Socrates was the wisest of the Greeks because he felt that he was not wise. And with all, etc.] Read, 'Yea, with all thou hast gotten' (RV): cp. Matthew 13:45; Matthew 13:46.

  • Proverbs 4:12 open_in_new

    His life is like a broad road in which are no obstacles to trip up the unwary.

    16, 17. There were many rapacious officials whose appetite for oppression grew with what it fed on.