Proverbs - 23:2



2 put a knife to your throat, if you are a man given to appetite.

Verse In-Depth

Explanation and meaning of Proverbs 23:2.

Differing Translations

Compare verses for better understanding.
And put a knife to thy throat, if it be so that thou have thy soul in thy own power.
And put a knife to your throat, if you have a strong desire for food.
and put a knife to your throat, if, in such a way, you could hold your soul in your own power.

*Minor differences ignored. Grouped by changes, with first version listed as example.


Historical Commentaries

Scholarly Analysis and Interpretation.

i. e., "Restrain thy appetite, eat as if the knife were at thy throat." Others render the words "thou wilt put a knife to thy throat" etc., i. e., "indulgence at such a time may endanger thy very life."

Put a knife to thy throat - Repress thy appetite, and do not be incontinent of speech. Eat, drink, and converse, under a check.

(b) And put a knife to thy throat, if thou [art] a man given to appetite.
(b) Bridle your appetite, as if by force and violence.

And put a knife to thy throat,.... Refrain from too much talk at the table; give not too loose to thy tongue, but bridle it, considering in whose presence thou art; do not use too much freedom, either with the ruler or fellow guests; which, when persons have ate and drank well, they are too apt to do, and sometimes say things offensive to one or the other; it is good for a man to be upon his guard; see Ecclesiastes 5:2. Or restrain thine appetite; deny thyself of some things agreeable, that would lead thee to what might be hurtful, at least if indulged to excess: put as it were a knife unto thine appetite, and mortify it; which is the same as cutting off a right hand, or plucking out a right eye Matthew 5:29. Or while thou art at such a table, at such a sumptuous entertainment, consider thyself as in danger, as if thou hadst a knife at thy throat; and shouldest thou be too free with the food or liquor, it would be as it were cutting thine own throat;
if thou be a man given to appetite; there is then the more danger; and therefore such a person should be doubly on his guard, since he is in the way of temptation to that he is naturally inclined to. Or, "if thou art master of appetite" (r): so the Targum,
"if thou art master of thy soul;''
if thou hast power over it, and the command of it, and canst restrain it with ease; to which agrees the Vulgate Latin version: but the former sense is more agreeable to the Hebrew idiom.
(r) "dominus animae", Vatablus, Mercerus, Michaelis.

put a knife--an Eastern figure for putting restraint on the appetite.

Put a knife - Restrain thine appetite, as if a man stood with a knife at thy throat.

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