Proverbs 26:11

11 sicut canis qui revertitur ad vomitum suum sic inprudens qui iterat stultitiam suam

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 quomodo si spina nascatur in manu temulenti sic parabola in ore stultorum
10 iudicium determinat causas et qui inponit stulto silentium iras mitigat
11 sicut canis qui revertitur ad vomitum suum sic inprudens qui iterat stultitiam suam
12 vidisti hominem sapientem sibi videri magis illo spem habebit stultus
13 dicit piger leaena in via leo in itineribus
The Latin Vulgate is in the public domain.