Proverbs - 6:26



26 For a prostitute reduces you to a piece of bread. The adulteress hunts for your precious life.

Verse In-Depth

Explanation and meaning of Proverbs 6:26.

Differing Translations

Compare verses for better understanding.
For by means of a whorish woman a man is brought to a piece of bread: and the adulteress will hunt for the precious life.
For on account of a harlot a man is brought to a piece of bread; And the adulteress hunteth for the precious life.
For the price of a harlot is scarce one loaf: but the woman catcheth the precious soul of a man.
for by means of a whorish woman a man is brought to a loaf of bread, and another's wife doth hunt for the precious soul.
For on account of a whorish woman a man is brought to a piece of bread: and the adulteress hunteth for the precious life.
For by means of a lewd woman a man is brought to a piece of bread: and the adulteress will hunt for the precious life.
For a harlot consumeth unto a cake of bread, And an adulteress the precious soul hunteth.
For a loose woman is looking for a cake of bread, but another man's wife goes after one's very life.
For on account of a harlot a man is brought to a loaf of bread, But the adulteress hunteth for the precious life.
For the price of a prostitute is only one loaf. Yet the woman seizes the precious soul of a man.

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


Historical Commentaries

Scholarly Analysis and Interpretation.

The two forms of evil bring, each of them, their own penalty. By the one a man is brought to such poverty as to beg for "a piece of bread" (compare 1-Samuel 2:36): by the other and more deadly sin he incurs a peril which may affect his life. The second clause is very abrupt and emphatic in the original; "but as for a man's wife; she hunts for the precious life."

By means of a whorish woman - In following lewd women, a man is soon reduced to poverty and disease. The Septuagint gives this a strange turn: timh gar pornhv, osh kai enov artou. "For the price or hire of a whore is about one loaf." So many were they in the land, that they hired themselves out for a bare subsistence. The Vulgate, Syriac, and Arabic, give the same sense. The old MS. Bible has it thus: The price forsothe of a strumpet is unneth oon lof: the woman forsothe taketh the precious liif of a mam. The sense of which is, and probably the sense of the Hebrew too, While the man hires the whore for a single loaf of bread; the woman thus hired taketh his precious life. She extracts his energy, and poisons his constitution. In the first clause אשה זונה ishshah zonah is plainly a prostitute; but should we render אשת esheth, in the second clause, an adulteress? I think not. The versions in general join אשת איש esheth ish, together, which, thus connected, signify no more than the wife of a man; and out of this we have made adulteress, and Coverdale a married woman. I do not think that the Old MS. Bible gives a good sense; and it requires a good deal of paraphrase to extract the common meaning from the text. Though the following verses seem to countenance the common interpretation, yet they may contain a complete sense of themselves; but, taken in either way, the sense is good, though the construction is a little violent.

For by means of a whorish woman a man is brought to a piece of bread,.... To be glad of one, and to beg for one, for the least morsel; it is expressive of the extreme poverty and want which harlots bring men to, who strip them of all their substance, and then send them going to get their bread as they can; thus the prodigal, having spent his substance with harlots, was so reduced as to desire the husks which swine ate, Luke 15:13; so spiritual fornication or idolatry leaves men without bread for their souls, brings them into spiritual poverty, and even to desperation and death;
and the adulteress will hunt for the precious life; or "soul" (n); not content with his precious substance, his jewels, his gold and silver; having stripped him of his goods and livelihood, though some think that is here intended; she lays snares for him, and draws him into those evils which bring him into the hands of her husband, who avenges himself by slaying the adulterer; or into the hands of the civil magistrate, by whom this sin of adultery was punished with death; nay, is the occasion of the ruin of his precious and immortal soul to all eternity: the precious souls of men are part of the wares of antichrist, Revelation 18:13.
(n) "animam", Pagninus, Montanus, &c.

The supplied words give a better sense than the old version: "The price of a whore is a piece of bread."
adulteress--(Compare Margin), which the parallel and context (Proverbs 6:29-35) sustain. Of similar results of this sin, compare Proverbs 5:9-12.
will hunt--alluding to the snares spread by harlots (compare Proverbs 7:6-8).
precious life--more valuable than all else.

*More commentary available at chapter level.


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