John Gill Commentary Proverbs 7:6

John Gill Commentary

Proverbs 7:6

1697–1771
Reformed Baptist
John Gill
John Gill

John Gill Commentary

Proverbs 7:6

1697–1771
Reformed Baptist
SCRIPTURE

"For at the window of my house I looked forth through my lattice;" — Proverbs 7:6 (ASV)

For at the window of my house
This is either an historical account of a matter of fact known to Solomon, or a parable made by him, setting forth the cunning artifices of an harlot, the folly and weakness of a young man ensnared, and the ruin he is brought into by her. As Solomon was a public magistrate, he is here represented as a private observer of the behaviour of his subjects, as sitting in his palace at a window, at the small windows of it, as the Targum, near to which was an harlot's house; for they generally get about the courts of princes, where they make their prey.

I looked through my casement
or "lattice" F3 ; the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic versions understand this of the harlot looking out of the window of her house and through the casement, when she spied a young man, as follows; but this agrees not with the Hebrew text, which carries it to Solomon.

Though a greater than he may be designed, the omniscient God, who looks through the windows and lattice of heaven, and beholds all the actions of the children of men; those that are most private, and done in the dark; and Christ the Son of God, whose "eyes [are] like unto a flame of fire", to look through all the darkness of Popery, represented by the Thyatirian church state; into all the intrigues of the Romish harlot, and behold all the follies of those that commit fornication with her, (Revelation 2:18) .


FOOTNOTES:

  • F3: (ybnva deb) "per cancellum meum", Montanus; "per cancellos", Tigurine version, Michaelis.