Proverbs Chapter 4 verse 19 Holy Bible

ASV Proverbs 4:19

The way of the wicked is as darkness: They know not at what they stumble.
read chapter 4 in ASV

BBE Proverbs 4:19

The way of sinners is dark; they see not the cause of their fall.
read chapter 4 in BBE

DARBY Proverbs 4:19

The way of the wicked is as darkness: they know not at what they stumble.
read chapter 4 in DARBY

KJV Proverbs 4:19

The way of the wicked is as darkness: they know not at what they stumble.
read chapter 4 in KJV

WBT Proverbs 4:19


read chapter 4 in WBT

WEB Proverbs 4:19

The way of the wicked is like darkness. They don't know what they stumble over.
read chapter 4 in WEB

YLT Proverbs 4:19

The way of the wicked `is' as darkness, They have not known at what they stumble.
read chapter 4 in YLT

Pulpit Commentary

Pulpit CommentaryVerse 19. - The way of the wicked is as darkness. In contrast with the path of the just is the way of the wicked, which is described as darkness itself: i.e. so deeply enveloped in gloom that the wicked are not able even to see the obstacles and impediments against which they stumble, and which are the cause of their ruin. It is a way dark throughout - a via tenebrosa (Vulgate) - terminating at length in "the blackness of darkness." As light is emblematical of knowledge, holiness, and joy, so darkness represents ignorance, unholiness, and misery (see Isaiah 8:22). Darkness (aphelah); strictly, thick darkness, midnight gloom, the entire absence of light. It is the word used of the plague of "thick darkness" that settled over all the land of Egypt, even a darkness that "might be felt," when the Egyptians "saw not one another, nor any arose from his place for three days" (Exodus 10:21-23). It occurs again in ch. 7:9, "in the black and dark night." In this darkness the wicked cannot help but stumble. Compare our Lord's teaching, "But if a man walk in the night, he stumbleth, because there is no light in him" (John 11:10; cf. 12:36). The expression, they know not at what they stumble, carries with it the idea that they are so ignorant that they neither know wickedness as wickedness, nor do they apprehend the destruction which it involves. "Sins, however great and detestable they may be, are looked upon as trivial, or as not sins at all, when men get accustomed to them" (St. Augustine, 'Enchiridion,' cap. 80). On "stumble" (kashal), see ver. 12; and on the destruction of the wicked implied in the stumbling, see Proverbs 1:27, seq., 2:18-22; 3:35.

Ellicott's Commentary

Ellicott's Commentary for English Readers(19) The way of the wicked is as darkness.--By refusing to "walk in the light" of God's Word, and conscience (1John 1:7), the light that was in them has become darkness (Matthew 6:23); they know not whither they are going (John 12:35), and stumble (Proverbs 11:10) over difficulties which in the light they might have avoided.