Proverbs - 6:27



27 Can a man scoop fire into his lap, and his clothes not be burned?

Verse In-Depth

Explanation and meaning of Proverbs 6:27.

Differing Translations

Compare verses for better understanding.
Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned?
Can a man hide fire in his bosom, and his garments not burn?
Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his garments not be burned?
Doth a man take fire into his bosom, And are his garments not burnt?
May a man take fire to his breast without burning his clothing?
Would a man be able to conceal fire in his bosom, so that his garments would not burn?

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


Historical Commentaries

Scholarly Analysis and Interpretation.

Can a man take fire - These were proverbial expressions, the meaning of which was plain to every capacity.

(n) Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned?
(n) Meaning, that she will never cease till she has brought you to begging, and then seek your destruction.

Can a man take fire in his bosom,.... A whore is compared to fire, and is so called by the poets (o); and it is a saying of Pythagoras,
"it is a like thing to fall into fire and into a woman (p);''
the Hebrew words "esh", "fire", and "ishah", "a woman", have some affinity in sound; and the phrase of taking it "into the bosom" fitly expresses the impure embraces of a harlot;
and his clothes not be burned? he cannot, it is impossible; and equally vain is it to think that a man can commit whoredom and it not be known, or he not hurt by it in his name and substance, or in his body, soul, and life.
(o) Plauti Bacehides, Acts. 4. Sc. 9. v. 15. "Accede ad ignem hunc", Terent. Eunuehus, Acts. 1. Sc. 2. v. 5. (p) , apud Maximum, Eclog. c. 39.

The guilt and danger most obvious.

The moral necessity of ruinous consequences which the sin of adultery draws after it, is illustrated by examples of natural cause and effect necessarily connected:
27 Can one take fire in his bosom
And his clothes not be burned?
28 Or can any one walk over burning coals
And his feet not be burned?
29 So he that goeth to his neighbour's wife,
No one remains unpunished that toucheth her.
We would say: Can any one, without being, etc.; the former is the Semitic "extended (paratactic)
(Note: The παρατακτικὸς χρόνος denotes the imperfect tense, because it is still extended to the future.)
construction." The first אישׁ has the conjunctive Shalsheleth. חתה signifies to seize and draw forth a brand or coal with the fire-tongs or shovel (מחתּה, the instrument for this); cf. Arab. khât, according to Lane, "he seized or snatched away a thing;" the form יחתּה is Kal, as יחנה (vid., Khler, De Tetragammate, 1867, p. 10). חיק (properly indentation) is here not the lap, but, as Isaiah 40:11, the bosom.

*More commentary available at chapter level.


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