The Two Paths
Proverbs 4:13
Take fast hold of instruction; let her not go: keep her; for she is your life.


I. THE PATH OF THE WICKED. Bad men are here described in such terms as imply a very wretched state of society. They delight in acts of violence and plunder. Such men form the criminal classes. There are other evil-doers who are much more dangerous, because their evil-doing is not so criminal, is not usually of a sort that exposes them to the penalties of the law. One feature of bad men is pointed out. They cannot rest unless they do mischief to some one. There are men who take an intense pleasure in corrupting their juniors and making them as bad as themselves. One of the chief pleasures of sin lies in making others sinful, just as, on the other hand, one of the chief pleasures of goodness is making others good. The tempter prefers the form of the serpent, and does his evil work subtly, slyly, stealthily. Yet the wicked are blind, blinded sometimes by ignorance, sometimes by passion. They do not see what their true interest is.

II. THE PATH OF THE JUST. "As the shining light." By the "just" we are to understand the good man; not a man altogether free from sin, but one who, though far from faultless, sincerely desires and earnestly strives to live in all things according to the will of God. The word "just" signifies "commanded." A just man is a commanded man, a man whom God commands, a man who acts according to God's commandments. The just man is something more than a man who is true, honest, fair in his treatment of his fellow-men. The just man is he who, to the full extent of the knowledge of God's will, obeys it, or does his best to obey it, and so is a commended man. The path of the just is the just man's course of life. We have a description of a good man's life in its character, its progress, its perfection. Light in Scripture bears several meanings. It means knowledge in relation to the mind, holiness in relation to the conscience, happiness in relation to the heart. The life of a just man is a life of growing knowledge, holiness, and happiness. "Unto the perfect day." What is the perfect day? Never seen or experienced by Christians in this world. A poor idea of the perfect day that man must have who thinks that he has already attained to it. The difference between day and night is due to this, that the portion of the earth on which we live turns towards or from the sun. And it is the turning of our souls towards Him who is the Sun of Righteousness that makes our night of ignorance and sorrow turn into the day of knowledge and goodness and happiness.

(Hugh Stowell Brown.)



Parallel Verses
KJV: Take fast hold of instruction; let her not go: keep her; for she is thy life.

WEB: Take firm hold of instruction. Don't let her go. Keep her, for she is your life.




The Hold-Fast Religion
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