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Proverbs 28:13

He Who Conceals His Sins Will Not ProsperTheme: Confession / Repentance / ForgivenessVerseImportance: Major
Sources
Reformed ConsensusReformation Study BibleGeneva Bible Notes (1599)John Trapp (1647)Matthew Poole (1685)John Gill (1748)Matthew Henry (1714)Jamieson-Fausset-BrownBarnes (1832)Cross-References (TSK)
Reformed Consensus
Proverbs 28:13 sets before us the two paths of concealment and confession, teaching that the one who hides his sin from God and man will not prosper — for God's providential hand presses upon the unrepentant soul until it breaks (Psalm 32:3–4). The Hebrew *kasah* (conceals) carries the sense of deliberately covering over what God sees plainly, a futile act of self-deception that compounds guilt rather than relieving it. Reformed expositors from Calvin to Bridges emphasize that true confession is not a bare acknowledgment of wrongdoing but a genuine uncovering of the heart before a holy God, joined inseparably to forsaking — the verb *azab* denoting a decisive abandonment of the transgression, not a momentary regret. This double act of confession and forsaking is itself a gift of sovereign grace, wrought by the Spirit who convicts and enables the will to turn; mercy (*racham*, womb-tenderness) is thus not earned but freely received by those whom God draws to himself through the gospel. The verse stands as a perpetual rebuke to moralism and hypocrisy alike, and as an encouragement to run without delay to the throne of grace, where pardon is certain for all who come.
Reformation Study Bible
The orderliness and well-being in one’s life is linked to an intense- ly personal relationship with God. Unconfessed sin is the ultimate disor- der in life. Confession and repentance lead to a restoration of a right relationship with God, based on mercy (Ps. 32:1-4; 1 John 1:6-9). All other relationships depend on this.
Geneva Bible Notes (1599)
He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy.
John Trapp (1647)
He that covereth his sins shall not prosper: but whoso confesseth and forsaketh [them] shall have mercy. He that covereth his sins shall not prosper. — Sin is a traitor and must not be hid; for if so, now it sucks a man’s breast, shortly it will suck his blood. Sin is a sore and must be opened, a sickness, and must be declared to the physician; the concealing of one circumstance may endanger all. Sin is a deformity that must be uncovered, or God will never cover it: see it we must to confession, or see it we shall to our confusion. If Job had covered his transgression as Adam - or "after the manner of men" - he had undone himself. Job 31:33 It is the manner of men - and they have it from Adam - to palliate their sins and plead for them, to elevate and extenuate them, to mince and excuse them. Sin and shifting came into the world together. Sin and Satan are alike in this, they cannot abide to appear in their own colour. Some deal with their souls as others do with their bodies; when their beauty is decayed they desire to hide it from themselves by false glasses, and from others by painting; so their sins from themselves by false glosses, and from others by excuses. These must not look for Gaius’s prosperity 3 John 1:2 The sunshine also of their outward prosperity ripens their sin apace, and so fits them for destruction. Never was Ephraim’s case so desperate as when God said "Ephraim is joined with idols, let him alone"; Hosea 4:17 nor Jerusalem so near destruction as when God said, "My fury shall depart from thee; I will be quiet, and no more angry." Ezekiel 16:42 To prosper in sin is the greatest unhappiness that can befall a man out of hell. But whoso confesseth and forsaketh them, … — Confession of sin must be joined with confusion of sin, or all is lost. Papists use confession as drunkards use vomiting, that they may "add drunkenness to thirst." Profane people use it as Louis XI of France did his crucifix; he would swear an oath and then kiss it, and swear again and then kiss it again; so they sin and confess they do not well, nor will they strive to do better. As they sorrow not to a transmentation with those Corinthians, so they confess not to an utter abandoning of their wicked courses. They confess, as those Israelites did, Numbers 14:40 "We have sinned, we will go up." They might as well have said, ‘We have sinned, we will sin,’ for God had flatly forbidden them to go up at that time. They confess, as Saul did, "I have sinned," viz., in humouring the people, "yet honour me," said he, "before the people." As the Philistines confessed God’s hand, yet sent away the ark, so do these. They that confess and forsake not are only dog sick; when they have disgorged their stomachs they will return to their vomit. Shall have mercy. — Confess the debt, and God will cross the book; he will draw the red lines of Christ’s blood over the black lines of our sins, and cancel the handwriting that was against us. No sooner could David cry Peccavi, I have sinned, but Nathan said, Transtulit peccatum tuum Dominus, God hath taken away my sin; yea, transtulit, he hath translated it, he hath caused thy sin to pass over from thee to Christ. Isaiah 53:6 Romans 4:8 Confession is the soul’s vomit, and those that use it shall not only have ease of conscience, but God’s best comforts and cordials to restore them again. Cum homo agnoscit, Deus ignoscit, saith Augustine. It is not here, Confess and be hanged, but Confess and be saved. In the courts of men it is safest to say Non feci, quoth Quintilian; I did it not; to plead not guilty. Not so here; Ego feci is the best plea, I did it, I have done very foolishly. "Have mercy upon me, O Lord," … Per Miscrere mei, tollitur ira Dei. Judah, that is, confession, got the kingdom from Reuben; it is the way to the kingdom. No man was ever kept out of heaven for his confessed badness; many are for their supposed goodness.
Matthew Poole (1685)
That covereth his sins; that doth not confess them (as appears by the opposite clause) to God, and to men too, when occasion requires it; that being convinced or admonished of his sins, either justifieth, or denieth, or excuseth them. Shall not prosper; shall not succeed in his design of avoiding punishment by the concealment of his sins; shall not find mercy, as is implied from the next clause. Whoso confesseth and forsaketh them, by hearty dislike and hatred of all his sins, and by a resolved cessation from a sinful course of life. This is added, to show, that although the dissembling or hiding one’s sins is sufficient for his damnation, yet mere confession without forsaking of sin is not sufficient for salvation. Shall have mercy, both from God, who hath promised, and from men, who are ready to grant pardon and favour to such persons.
John Gill (1748)
He that covereth his sins shall not prosper,.... God may cover a man's sins, and it is an instance of his grace, and it is the glory of it to do it, but a man may not cover his own: it is right in one good man to cover the sins of another, reproving him secretly, and freely forgiving him; but it is wrong in a man to cover his own: not that any man is bound to accuse himself before a court of judicature, or ought to expose his sins to the public, which would be to the hurt of his credit, and to the scandal of religion; but whenever he is charged with sin, and reproved for it by his fellow Christian, be should not cover it, that is, he should own it; for not to own and acknowledge it is to cover it; he should not deny it, which is to cover it with a lie, and is adding sin to sin; nor should he justify it, as if he had done a right thing; nor extenuate or excuse it, or impute it to others that drew him into it, as Adam, which is called a covering transgression, as Adam, Job 31:33 ; for such a man "shall not prosper"; in soul or body, in things temporal or spiritual; he shall not have peace of mind and conscience; but, sooner or later, shall feel the stings it; he shall not succeed even in those things he has in view by covering his sins; he shall not be able to cover them long, for there is nothing covered but what shall be revealed; if not in this life, which yet often is, however at the day of judgment, when every secret thing shall be made manifest; nor shall he escape the shame and punishment he thought to avoid by covering it, as may be observed in the case of Achan, Joshua 7:11 ; in short, he shall have no mercy shown him by God or man, as appears by the antithesis in the next clause; but whoso confesseth and forsaketh them shall have mercy; who confesses them to men privately and publicly, according to the nature of the offences, from whom they find mercy; but not to a priest, in order for absolution, which no man can give; sin is only in this sense to be confessed to God, against it is committed, and who only can pardon it; and though it is known unto him, yet he requires an acknowledgment of it, which should be done from the heart, with an abhorrence of the sin, and in the faith of Christ, as a sacrifice for it; and it is not enough to confess, there must be a forsaking likewise, a parting with sin, a denying of sinful self, a leaving the former course of sin, and a quitting the company of wicked men before used to, and an abstaining from all appearance of evil; as is and will be the case, where there is a true sight and sense of sin, and the grace of God takes place: and such find "mercy", pardoning grace and mercy, or pardon in a way of mercy, and not merit; for though the sinner confesses and forsakes it, it is not that which merits pardon and mercy in God, who is rich in it, delights in showing it, and from whom it may be hoped for and expected by all such persons; see Psalm 32:5 . So the Targum and Syriac version, God will have mercy on him.
Matthew Henry (1714)
Sin makes men cowards. Whatever difficulties the righteous meet in the way of duty, they are not daunted. 2. National sins disturb the public repose. 3. If needy persons get opportunities of oppressing, their extortion will be more severe than that of the more wealthy. 4. Wicked people strengthen one another in wicked ways. 5. If a man seeks the Lord, it is a good sign that he understands much, and it is a good means of understanding more. 6. An honest, godly, poor man, is better than a wicked, ungodly, rich man; has more comfort in himself, and is a greater blessing to the world. 7. Companions of riotous men not only grieve their parents, but shame them. 8. That which is ill got, though it may increase much, will not last long. Thus the poor are repaid, and God is glorified. 9. The sinner at whose prayers God is angry, is one who obstinately refuses to obey God's commands. 10. The success of ungodly men is their own misery. 11. Rich men are so flattered, that they think themselves superior to others. 12. There is glory in the land when the righteous have liberty. 13. It is folly to indulge sin, and excuse it. He who covers his sins, shall not have any true peace. He who humbly confesses his sins, with true repentance and faith, shall find mercy from God. The Son of God is our great atonement. Under a deep sense of our guilt and danger, we may claim salvation from that mercy which reigns through righteousness unto eternal life, by Jesus Christ our Lord. 14. There is a fear which causes happiness. Faith and love will deliver from the fear of eternal misery; but we should always fear offending God, and fear sinning against him. 15. A wicked ruler, whatever we may call him, this scripture calls a roaring lion, and a ranging bear. 16. Oppressors want understanding; they do not consult their own honour, ease, and safety. 17. The murderer shall be haunted with terrors. None shall desire to save him from deserved punishment, nor pity him.
Jamieson-Fausset-Brown
13. (Compare Ps 32:3-5). Concealment of sin delivers none from God's wrath, but He shows mercy to the humble penitent (Ps 51:4).
Barnes (1832)
The conditions of freedom are confession and amendment, confession to God of sins against Him, to men of sins against them. The teaching of ethical wisdom on this point is identical with that of psalmist, prophet, apostles, and our Lord Himself.
Cross-References (TSK)
Proverbs 28:12; Proverbs 28:14; Proverbs 10:12; Proverbs 17:9; Genesis 3:12; Genesis 4:9; 1Samuel 15:13; Job 31:33; Psalms 32:3; Jeremiah 2:22; Matthew 23:25; Leviticus 26:40; 1Kings 8:47; Job 33:27; Psalms 51:1; Exodus 10:16; 1Samuel 15:30; Matthew 3:6; Matthew 27:4; Acts 26:20; Proverbs 28:1; Proverbs 12:10; 1John 4:15; 1John 4:3; Nehemiah 9:3; Proverbs 26:23; Proverbs 28:11; Proverbs 21:21; Proverbs 15:10; Proverbs 28:4; Proverbs 27:14; Proverbs 28:7; Proverbs 20:18; Proverbs 27:5; Proverbs 19:8; Proverbs 17:8; Psalms 10:3; Proverbs 27:16; Proverbs 14:21; Isaiah 9:17; Proverbs 10:6; Matthew 10:32; 1John 2:23; Daniel 9:20; Isaiah 6:2; Songs 3:10; Proverbs 28:23; Ecclesiastes 6:5; Jeremiah 14:5; Isaiah 1:28