Proverbs 7:7
the simple.1:4,22,32; 8:5; 14:15,18; 19:25; 22:3; 27:12; Ps 19:7; 119:130Ro 16:18,19the youths. Heb. the sons. void.6:32; 9:4,16; 10:13; 12:11; 19:2; 24:30; Jer 4:22; Mt 15:16Proverbs 7:22-23
straightway. Heb. suddenly. as an.Ac 14:13as a.Dr. Grey, making a slight alteration in the text, renders, "as a dog to the chain, and as a deer, till a dart strike through his liver;" and Dr. Hunt, "Or as a hart boundeth into the toils, till a dart strike through his liver." The LXX., Chaldee, Syriac, and Arabic, concur in this interpretation. The circumstance of the dart, as applied to the deer, is beautiful and proper, which otherwise we are at a loss to dispose of; and this creature, of all others, was the most proper to be noticed on this occasion; for the usual representation which the Egyptians made of a man overthrown by flattery and fair speeches was the picture of a heart captivated and ensnared by the sound of music. the correction.Job 13:27; Jer 20:2; Ac 16:24 a dart.Nu 25:8,9as a bird.1:17; Ec 9:12knoweth.9:18Proverbs 9:16-18
4 Stolen.20:17; 23:31,32; Ge 3:6; Ro 7:8; Jas 1:14,15eaten in secret. Heb. of secrecies.7:18-20; 30:20; 2Ki 5:24-27; Eph 5:12 he.1:7; Ps 82:5; 2Pe 3:5the dead.2:18,19; 5:5; 6:26; 7:27Proverbs 29:1
1 Observations of public government,15 and of private.22 Of anger, pride, thievery, cowardice, and corruption. He, that being often reproved. Heb. a man of reproofs.1:24-31; 1Sa 2:25,34; 1Ki 17:1; 18:18; 20:42; 21:20-231Ki 22:20-23,28,34-37; 2Ch 25:16; 33:10; 36:15-17; Jer 25:3-5Jer 26:3-5; 35:13-16; Zec 1:3-6; Mt 26:21-25; Joh 6:70,71Joh 13:10,11,18,26; Ac 1:18,25hardeneth.2Ch 36:13; Ne 9:29; Isa 48:4; Jer 17:23shall.6:15; 28:18; Isa 30:13,14; Zec 7:11-14; 1Th 5:3
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