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1. Pro 7:19 – “For the goodman is not at home, he is gone a long journey:”
- For the goodman is not at home,
- Goodman n. – 1. = good man. Sometimes used as a vague title of dignity or a respectful form of address. Obs. The master or male head of a household or other establishment; the host (of an inn), the keeper (of a prison). b. A householder in relation to his wife; a husband.
- The goodman was the strange woman’s husband.
- Up to this point it would have been possible for the young man think that this woman was not married.
- She could have been a single woman with her own house.
- Any fool should have known that she was a whore based on her words and actions, but he might not have known she was an adulteress.
- But now there is no doubt that she is an evil, unfaithful woman.
- She tells him that the goodman is not at home.
- This is obviously a suggestive comment.
- If the goodman would have known what was going to happen when he was gone, he likely would have stayed at home and not suffered the wife-thief to enter his house (Luk 12:39).
- he is gone a long journey:
- To alleviate any concern of getting caught, she assures him that her husband won’t be back for a while.
- The fact that the woman would commit adultery as soon as her husband leaves on a trip should have been ironclad proof that she was an evil woman.
- Even a fool should have known to run from any woman who would do such a thing.