John Trapp Complete Commentary - Proverbs 3:2 - 3:2

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John Trapp Complete Commentary - Proverbs 3:2 - 3:2


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Pro_3:2 For length of days, and long life, and peace, shall they add to thee.

Ver. 2. For length of days.] A sweet mercy, and generally desired. {Psa_34:12} Short life is reckoned as a curse, {Psa_89:47} yet in some cases it is a blessing. {1Ki_14:13 Isa_57:1} Wêõìïñïé ïé èåïöéëåéò - God taketh away his from the evil to come, {a} as, when there is a fire in a house or town, men carry out their jewels; but then God makes them up in his cabinet. "They do enter into peace"; their souls go to heaven; "they rest in their beds"; {Isa_57:2} their bodies rest sweetly and safely in the grave till the resurrection of the just. And is not this far better than the longest life here? Length of days may prove a curse, when it brings shame, sorrow, &c., as it did to Cain, Ham, &c.



And peace shall they add to thee.
] Without which to live is nothing else but to lie dying. Rebecca, for want of this, was weary of her life; so was Elijah when he sat under the juniper tree. "All the days of the afflicted are evil." {Pro_15:15} Sõíïéêïõóé, ïõ óõìâéïõóé ; they dwell together; they do not live together, said Themistocles of married folk that agree not. Non ille diu vixit, sed diu fuit, said Seneca of one. And again, Non multum navigavit, sed multum iactatus est; He was tossed much up and down, but sailed not far, as being driven about by contrary winds.



Shall they add to thee.
] Multiplicem pacem significat, saith one. "Peace, peace," as in Isa_26:3
; that is, a multiplied peace; with God, with one’s self, with others; or a renewed continued peace, today, tomorrow, and every day; or a perfect, sheer, pure peace.



{a} Oí öéëåé öåïò, èíçóêåé íåïò . - Dion. Prus. Orat. 28.