The Wicked and the Righteous

281 The wicked are edgy with guilt, ready to run off even when no one's after them; Honest people are relaxed and confident, bold as lions.

2 When the country is in chaos, everybody has a plan to fix it - But it takes a leader of real understanding to straighten things out.

3 The wicked who oppress the poor are like a hailstorm that beats down the harvest.

4 If you desert God's law, you're free to embrace depravity; if you love God's law, you fight for it tooth and nail.

5 Justice makes no sense to the evilminded; those who seek God know it inside and out.

6 It's better to be poor and direct than rich and crooked.

7 Practice God's law - get a reputation for wisdom; hang out with a loose crowd - embarrass your family.

8 Get as rich as you want through cheating and extortion, But eventually some friend of the poor is going to give it all back to them.

9 God has no use for the prayers of the people who won't listen to him.

10 Lead good people down a wrong path and you'll come to a bad end; do good and you'll be rewarded for it.

11 The rich think they know it all, but the poor can see right through them.

12 When good people are promoted, everything is great, but when the bad are in charge, watch out!

13 You can't whitewash your sins and get by with it; you find mercy by admitting and leaving them.

Matthew Henry's Commentary on Proverbs 28:1-13

Commentary on Proverbs 28:1

(Read Proverbs 28:1)

Sin makes men cowards. Whatever difficulties the righteous meet in the way of duty, they are not daunted.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:2

(Read Proverbs 28:2)

National sins disturb the public repose.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:3

(Read Proverbs 28:3)

If needy persons get opportunities of oppressing, their extortion will be more severe than that of the more wealthy.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:4

(Read Proverbs 28:4)

Wicked people strengthen one another in wicked ways.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:5

(Read Proverbs 28:5)

If a man seeks the Lord, it is a good sign that he understands much, and it is a good means of understanding more.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:6

(Read Proverbs 28:6)

An honest, godly, poor man, is better than a wicked, ungodly, rich man; has more comfort in himself, and is a greater blessing to the world.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:7

(Read Proverbs 28:7)

Companions of riotous men not only grieve their parents, but shame them.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:8

(Read Proverbs 28:8)

That which is ill got, though it may increase much, will not last long. Thus the poor are repaid, and God is glorified.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:9

(Read Proverbs 28:9)

The sinner at whose prayers God is angry, is one who obstinately refuses to obey God's commands.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:10

(Read Proverbs 28:10)

The success of ungodly men is their own misery.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:11

(Read Proverbs 28:11)

Rich men are so flattered, that they think themselves superior to others.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:12

(Read Proverbs 28:12)

There is glory in the land when the righteous have liberty.

Commentary on Proverbs 28:13

(Read Proverbs 28:13)

It is folly to indulge sin, and excuse it. He who covers his sins, shall not have any true peace. He who humbly confesses his sins, with true repentance and faith, shall find mercy from God. The Son of God is our great atonement. Under a deep sense of our guilt and danger, we may claim salvation from that mercy which reigns through righteousness unto eternal life, by Jesus Christ our Lord.