Proverbs 26:11

11 A foolish person who does the same foolish things again is like a dog that returns to where it has thrown up.

Proverbs 26:11 Meaning and Commentary

Proverbs 26:11

As a dog returneth to his vomit
Who being sick with what he has eaten, casts it up again, and afterwards returns unto it and licks it up; [so] a fool returneth to his folly,
or "repeats" F1 it, time after time, many times, as Ben Melech; or a wicked man turns to his wickedness, who, having had some qualms upon his conscience for sin, for a while forsakes it; but that fit being over, and he forgetting all his former horror and uneasiness, returns to his old course of life: a wicked man is here compared to a dog, as he is elsewhere for his impudence and voraciousness in sinning; and the filthiness of sin is expressed by the vomit of a dog, than which nothing is more nauseous and loathsome; and the apostasy of the sinner, from an external course of righteousness into open profaneness is signified by the return of this creature to it. This is said to be a "true proverb", ( 2 Peter 2:22 ) , where it is quoted and applied.


FOOTNOTES:

F1 (hnwv) "qui iterat", Tigurine version, Michaelis; "iterans", Montanus, Mercerus, Cocceius, Gejerus; "duplicans", Schultens.

Proverbs 26:11 In-Context

9 A proverb in the mouth of a foolish person is like a thorn in the hand of someone who is drunk.
10 Anyone who hires a foolish person or someone who is passing by is like a person who shoots arrows at just anybody.
11 A foolish person who does the same foolish things again is like a dog that returns to where it has thrown up.
12 Do you see a man who is wise in his own eyes? There is more hope for a foolish person than for him.
13 A person who doesn't want to work says, "There's a lion in the road! There's an angry lion wandering in the streets!"
Holy Bible, New International Reader's Version® Copyright © 1995, 1996, 1998 by Biblica.   All rights reserved worldwide.