Proverbs Chapter 20 verse 6 Holy Bible

ASV Proverbs 20:6

Most men will proclaim every one his own kindness; But a faithful man who can find?
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BBE Proverbs 20:6

Most men make no secret of their kind acts: but where is a man of good faith to be seen?
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DARBY Proverbs 20:6

Most men will proclaim every one his own kindness; but a faithful man who shall find?
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KJV Proverbs 20:6

Most men will proclaim every one his own goodness: but a faithful man who can find?
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WBT Proverbs 20:6


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WEB Proverbs 20:6

Many men claim to be men of unfailing love, But who can find a faithful man?
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YLT Proverbs 20:6

A multitude of men proclaim each his kindness, And a man of stedfastness who doth find?
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Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 6. - Most men will proclaim every one his own goodness; chesed, "kindness," "mercy," "liberality," as in Proverbs 19:22. So Ewald and others, Hitzig and Kamphausen translate, "Many a man one names his dear friend;" Delitzsch and Nowack prefer, "Most men meet a man who is gracious to them;" i.e. it is common enough to meet a man who seems benevolent and well disposed. Vulgate, "Many men are called merciful;" Septuagint, "Man is a great thing, and a merciful man is a precious thing." The renderings of most modern commentators imply the statement that love and mercy are common enough, at least in outward expression. The Authorized Version pronounces that men are ready enough to parade and boast of their liberality, like the hypocrites who were said proverbially to sound a trumpet when they performed their almsdeeds (Matthew 6:2). Commenting on the Greek rendering of the clause given above, St. Chrysostom observes, "This is the true character of man to be merciful; yea, rather the character of God to show mercy... Those who answer not to this description, though they partake of mind, and are never so capable of knowledge, the Scripture refuses to acknowledge them as men, but calls them dogs, and horses, and serpents, and foxes, and wolves, and if there be any animals more contemptible" ('Hom. 4 in Phil.' and 'Hom. 13 in 1 Tim.,' Oxford transl.). The contrast between show, or promise, and performance is developed in the second clause. But a faithful man who can find? The faithfulness intended is fidelity to promises, the practical execution of the vaunted benevolence; this is rare indeed, so that a psalmist could cry, "I said in my haste, All men are liars" (Psalm 116:11; comp. Romans 3:4). Lesetre refers to Massillon's sermon, 'Sur la Gloire Humaine,' where we read (the preacher, of course, rests on the Latin Version), "Ces hommes vertueux dont le monde se fait tant d'honneur, n'ont au fond souvent pour eux que l'erreur publique. Amis fideles, je le veux; mais c'est le gout, la vanite ou Pin teret, qui les lie; et dans leur amis, ils n'amient qu' eux-memes En un mot, dit l'Ecriture, on les appelle misericordieux, ils ont toutes les vertus pour le public; mais n'etant pas fideles a Dieu, ils n'en ont pas une seule pour eux-memes."

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(6) Most men will proclaim every one his own goodness.--Will be full of his benevolent intentions, "but a faithful man," who carries out these promises, "who can find?"