Verses 1–5
Introduction
The Proverbs 6:1-Psalms : of this chapter form an interruption in the speech of the father to his son about the strange woman. Still, the subjects that he deals with in these verses are related to what he has said about her: it is about sins that, like adultery, lead to deep poverty (Proverbs 5:9-1 Kings :).
Do Not Ever Become Surety
A good father also looks after the financial situation of his son. He speaks about that in Proverbs 6:1-Deuteronomy :, where he particularly warns about becoming surety for his neighbor (Proverbs 6:1). The son is naive when he becomes surety and “gives a pledge”. The father is not so naive for thinking that his son is not capable of doing that. He assumes that his son can let himself to be tempted to become surety.
Nobody is obligated to become surety. To become surety for one’s neighbor is totally different from the usual and permitted manner of helping someone by lending money to someone who is in financial trouble (Matthew 5:42). To become surety means that a person signs a declaration – which happens here symbolically by giving a “pledge” – for taking the responsibility to pay the debt of another person when this person defaults on payment. He serves as a guarantor.
It is wisdom not to take such a responsibility. This is something that is more often warned about in Proverbs (Proverbs 11:15; Proverbs 17:18Proverbs 22:26). It is the misuse of money that God has given to be used on His behalf.
Whoever persuades somebody to become surety for him, has snared the other person with the words of his mouth and has made him a captive of those words (Proverbs 6:2). It is foolish to become surety, for it makes you become a slave of another person due to your own fault. The person for whom you have become surety, will abuse your surety. The gullibility and misplaced generosity may possibly have the effect that the son becomes a lifetime slave of the one he has become surety for.
He who becomes surety, has come “into the hand” of his neighbor (Proverbs 6:3). Therefore the urgent advice of the father sounds that the son will free himself from it against all price. How urgent it is, resonates in addressing his son once more explicitly as “my son”. He has to make sure that he immediately comes out of the snare of the person for whom he became surety. He has to deliver himself, for otherwise he will die. That’s how deadly the danger is.
That implies that he does everything about it so that the other person fulfills his obligations. He has to go to his neighbor for whom he became surety. It may imply that he has to humble himself for him. But everything is better than to die. He must swallow his pride and, if necessary, let the other person trample him, as long as he liberates himself from the grip of his neighbor. He has to sacrifice his sleep for it (Proverbs 6:4; cf. Psalms 132:4-Deuteronomy :), for postponement is fatal. Therefore he should do it with the pace of a gazelle that flees from the hunter and of a bird that wants to escape the hand of the fowler (Proverbs 6:5). They see the danger and waste no time, in order to escape from the danger zone.
There is one good surety, which is God Himself (Psalms 119:122; Job 17:3). The Lord Jesus is Surety of the new covenant (Hebrews 7:22). He is the fulfillment of it. The Lord was able to; He took up the conditions and fulfilled them. He took up our obligations, which made us to become partakers of the blessings of the new covenant.