The Expositor's Bible: The Book Of Proverbs - BestLightNovel.com
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[609] Prov. xix. 12.
[610] Prov. xvi. 15.
[611] Prov. xx. 28.
[612] Prov. xxi. 1.
[613] Prov. xiv. 35.
[614] Prov. xxix. 14.
[615] Prov. xxv. 2-5.
[616] Prov. xxv. 6, 7.
[617] Prov. x.x.x. 31.
[618] Prov. xx. 2.
[619] Prov. xxiv. 21, 22.
[620] The LXX. of xxiv. 23, which adds a pa.s.sage not appropriate to Christ, "Whosoever is delivered up to him shall be crushed. For if his temper be exasperated, he consumes men, sinews and all, and crunches their bones, and burns them up as a flame, so that they are uneatable to the young of eagles."
[621] Prov. xxviii. 15, 16.
[622] Prov. xi. 15. The image from steering survives in our own governor (gubernator).
[623] Prov. xx. 18.
[624] Prov. xv. 22.
[625] See 1 Kings xvi. 7.
[626] Prov. x.x.x. 22.
[627] Prov. xvii. 7.
[628] Prov. xxviii. 2.
[629] Prov. xxviii. 12.
[630] Prov. xiv. 28.
[631] Prov. xxix. 2.
[632] Prov. xxix. 4.
[633] Prov. xxix. 12. _Cf._ Ecclesiasticus x. 2: "As the judge of the people is himself, so are his officers; and what manner of man the ruler of the city is, such are they also that dwell therein."
[634] Prov. xxiii. 1-3. _Cf._ the Eastern adage, "Dainties of a king burn the lips." It was a common occurrence at the court of Pope Alexander VI. to invite an obnoxious person to the Papal table and there dispose of him by means of poisoned food.
[635] Prov. x.x.xi. 8, 9.
[636] Luke xix. 38.
[637] Prov. xxix. 25, 26.
XXVI.
_THE FOOL._
"As snow in summer, and as rain in harvest, so honour is not seemly for a fool....
A whip for the horse, a bridle for the a.s.s, and a rod for the back of fools.
Answer not a fool according to his folly, lest thou also be like unto him.
Answer a fool according to his folly, lest he be wise in his own conceit.
He that sendeth a message by the hand of a fool cutteth off his own feet, and drinketh in damage.
The legs of the lame hang loose: so is a parable in the mouth of fools.
As a bag of gems in a heap of stones, so is he that giveth honour to a fool.
As a thorn that goeth up into the hand of a drunkard, so is a parable in the mouth of fools.
As an archer that woundeth all, so is he that hireth the fool and he that hireth them that pa.s.s by.
As a dog that returneth to his vomit, so is a fool that repeateth his folly.
Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit? there is more hope of a fool than of him."--PROV. xxvi. 1, 3-12.
This pa.s.sage points out certain characteristics of the fool, a term which occurs so frequently in the book of Proverbs that we must try to conceive clearly what is to be understood by it. The difficulty of forming a distinct conception arises from the fact that there are three different words, with different shades of meaning, all rendered by the one English expression, fool or folly. For want of carefully distinguis.h.i.+ng these delicate varieties of the original, some of the proverbs appear in English tautological and almost meaningless. We must try then to separate and to understand these several terms.
The Hebrew word which most frequently occurs in the book to designate fool, ??????, together with its derivative, which is the usual word for folly, ????????, signifies weakness. We are to think of that ignorant, inconsiderate, sanguine, and self-confident temper which eschews counsel, which will have its own way, which declines to be governed by reason, which forms fond expectations and baseless hopes, and which is always sure that everything will turn out according to its wish, though it takes no means to secure the desired result.
Perhaps the simplest way of describing the habit of mind and the type of character intended by the Hebrew is to use the word _infatuation_.
This would not do as a translation in all the pa.s.sages where it occurs, but it will serve to point out the underlying idea.
The word which comes next in frequency, ???????,--the word used uniformly throughout the particular pa.s.sage before us,--has at its root the notion of grossness, the dull and heavy habit of one whose heart has waxed fat, whose ears are slow to hear, and whose higher perceptions and n.o.bler aspirations have succ.u.mbed to the sensual and earthly nature. We have to think of moral, as well as mental, stupidity, of insensibility to all that is true and good and pure. The fool in this sense is such a dullard that he commits wickedness without perceiving it,[638] and utters slanders almost unconsciously;[639] he does not know when to be silent;[640] whatever is in him quickly appears,[641] but when it is known it is very worthless;[642] nor has he the sense to get wisdom, even when the opportunity is in his hand;[643] his best advantages are quickly wasted and he is none the better.[644] Perhaps the English word which best fits the several suggestions of the Hebrew one is _senseless_.
The third term, ?????, occurs only four times in the book. It is derived from a verb signifying to fade and wither. It describes the inward shrinking and shrivelling of a depraved nature, the witlessness which results from wickedness. It contains in itself a severer censure than the other two. Thus "He that begetteth a _senseless_ man (???????) doeth it to his sorrow, but the father of the _bad fool_ (?????) hath no joy."[645] In the one case there is trouble enough, in the other there is nothing but trouble. Thus it is one of the four things for which the earth trembles when a man of this kind is filled with meat.[646] This third character is sketched for us in the person of Nabal, whose name, as Abigail says, is simply the Hebrew word for fool in its worst sense, which fits exactly to its bearer. But dismissing this type of folly which is almost synonymous with consummate wickedness, of which indeed it is the outcome, we may turn to the distinction we have drawn between infatuation and senselessness in order to explain and understand some of the Proverbs in which the words occur.
First of all we may notice how difficult it is to get rid of the folly of infatuation: "Though thou shouldest bray a person possessed of it in a mortar with a pestle among bruised corn, yet will it not depart from him."[647] "It is bound up in the heart of a child,"[648] and the whole object of education is to get it out; but if childhood pa.s.ses into manhood, and the childish wilfulness, self-confidence, and irrationality are not expelled, the case is well-nigh hopeless. Correction is practically useless; "He must be a thorough fool," it has been said, "who can learn nothing from his own folly;" but that is precisely the condition of the infatuated people we are considering; the only correction of their infatuation is a further increase of it.[649] The reason is practically choked; the connection between cause and effect is lost: thus every ill consequence of the rash act or of the vicious habit is regarded as a misfortune instead of a fault. The wretched victim of his own folly reviles fortune, nature, men, and even G.o.d, and will not recognise that his worst enemy is himself. Thus, while the wise are always learning and growing rich from experience, "the infatuation of senseless men is infatuation still."[650] It is this which makes them so hopeless to deal with; their vexation being quite irrational, and always refusing to recognise the obvious facts, is worse than a heavy stone or the piled-up overweight of sand for others to bear.[651] If a wise man has a case with such a person, the ill-judged fury and the misplaced laughter alike make it impossible to arrive at any sound settlement.[652]