Click here for the entire series and the outline.
Click here for previous sermon.
Click here for next sermon.
1. Pro 6:20 – “My son, keep thy father’s commandment, and forsake not the law of thy mother:”
- Solomon begins a new line of instruction in this verse.
- He is reiterating what he had previously taught his son in Pro 1:8.
- This verse begins a reminder about the importance of his instruction to his son (Pro 6:20-23).
- And in a general application, these verses are God’s instruction to us His sons.
- Solomon will then proceed from the broader exhortation to keep God’s commandments and live by them to the specific instruction to avoid the strange woman / adulteress (Pro 6:24-35).
- My son, keep thy father’s commandment,
- This is the 14th of 23 instances in the book of Proverbs where Solomon besought his son to hearken unto his wisdom by saying “my son.”
- He exhorts his son to keep his commandment.
- Keep – I. Early senses (with gen. in OE., afterwards with simple obj.). 1. To seize, lay hold of; to snatch, take. Obs. 2. To try to catch or get; to seek after. Obs. 3. To take in, receive, contain, hold. Obs. 4. To take in with the eyes, ears, or mind; to take note of, mark, behold, observe. Obs. II. Transitive uses (in early use also intr.). * To have regard, pay attention to, observe. 11. trans. To pay attention or regard to; to observe, stand to, or dutifully abide by (an ordinance, law, custom, practice, covenant, promise, faith, a thing prescribed or fixed, as a treaty, truce, peace, a set time or day; see further under the ns.).
- He didn’t merely ask his son to listen to what he was saying and consider it.
- He told him to pay attention to, observe, stand to, and dutifully abide by the instruction he was giving him.
- Commandment n. – 1. An authoritative order or injunction; a precept given by authority.
- He didn’t say, “My son, consider my suggestion, request, or plead.”
- He told him to dutifully abide by his authoritative order.
- Fathers (and mothers) ought to command their children to do what they want them to do, not ask, beg, or suggest them to do so (Gen 18:19).
- Parents that do not command their children, or are not heeded by them when they do, are failures (Gen 19:14).
- In that Solomon was a prophet speaking under the inspiration of God (2Pe 1:21), his words are also God’s words given to us His sons and daughters (Heb 12:5-7 c/w Pro 3:11-12).
- If we love God we must keep His commandments (Joh 14:15, 21).
- If we are only hearers of the word and not doers, we deceive our own selves that we are the followers of the Lord (Jam 1:22).
- and forsake not the law of thy mother:
- Mothers also play a significant role in the training of children.
- The mother is supposed to “guide the house” which means that she should be laying down the law when the father is away at work (1Ti 5:14).
- Law – I. A rule of conduct imposed by authority. 1. a. The body of rules, whether proceeding from formal enactment or from custom, which a particular state or community recognizes as binding on its members or subjects. (In this sense usually the law.) †Also, in early use, a code or system of rules of this kind.
- Children should obey their mothers as well as their fathers (Col 3:20).
- Children should not forsake the law of their mother.
- Forsake – 1. trans. To deny (an accusation, an alleged fact, etc.). Obs. 2. To decline or refuse (something offered). c. To refuse respect or obedience to (a command, duty, etc.); to disregard. Also, to neglect (to do something). Obs.
- A mother nor a father should allow children to be disobedient or disrespectful to their mother.
- We should follow Solomon’s advice even though he himself did not.
- His mother (Pro 31:1), warned him to “give not thy strength unto women, nor thy ways to that which destroyeth kings” (Pro 31:3).
- Sadly, Solomon forsook the law of his mother (1Ki 11:4; Neh 13:26).
- But truth is truth even when it comes from a hypocrite.