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Proverbs 19:18 - Exposition

Chasten thy son while there is hope; or. seeing that there is hope. Being still young and impressionable, and not confirmed in bad habits, he may be reformed by judicious chastisement. The same expression occurs in Job 11:18 ; Jeremiah 31:16 . "For so he shall be well hoped of" ( εὔελπις ), Septuagint (comp. Proverbs 23:13 ). And let not thy soul spare for his crying. "It is better," says a German apothegm, "that the child weep than the father." But the rendering of the Authorized Version is not well established, and this second clause is intended to inculcate moderation in punishment. Vulgate, Ad interfectionem autem ejus ne ponas animam tuam; Revised Version. Set not thine heart on his destruction. Chastise him duty and sufficiently, but not so heavily as to occasion his death, which a father had no right to do. The Law enjoined the parents who had an incorrigibly bad son to bring him before the judge or the eiders, who alone had the power of life and death, and might in certain cases order the offender to be stoned ( Deuteronomy 21:18 , etc.). Christianity recommended moderation in punishment (see Ephesians 6:4 ; Colossians 3:21 ). Septuagint, "Be not excited in the mind to despiteful treatment ( εἰς ὕβριν );" i.e. be not led away by passion to unseemly acts or words, but reprove with gentleness, while you are firm and uncompromising in denouncing evil. This is much the same advice as that given by the apostle in the passages just cited.

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