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Text -- Ecclesiastes 12:3 (NET)

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Context
12:3 when those who keep watch over the house begin to tremble, and the virile men begin to stoop over, and the grinders begin to cease because they grow few, and those who look through the windows grow dim,
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: WINDOW | Readings, Select | Old Age | KEEPER; KEEPERS | Instruction | Grind | DEAD | CEASE | BREAD | ALLEGORY | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , Maclaren , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- Of the body: whose keepers are the hands and arms, which are man's best instruments to defend his body; and which in a special manner are subject to h...

Of the body: whose keepers are the hands and arms, which are man's best instruments to defend his body; and which in a special manner are subject to his trembling.

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- The thighs and legs, in which the main strength of the body consists.

The thighs and legs, in which the main strength of the body consists.

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- The teeth, those especially which are commonly so called, because they grind the meat.

The teeth, those especially which are commonly so called, because they grind the meat.

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- To perform their office.

To perform their office.

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- The eyes.

The eyes.

Wesley: Ecc 12:3 - -- lids, which like windows, are either opened or shut: or, those humours and coats of the eyes, which are the chief instruments by which we see.

lids, which like windows, are either opened or shut: or, those humours and coats of the eyes, which are the chief instruments by which we see.

JFB: Ecc 12:3 - -- Namely, the hands and arms which protected the body, as guards do a palace (Gen 49:24; Job 4:19; 2Co 5:1), are now palsied.

Namely, the hands and arms which protected the body, as guards do a palace (Gen 49:24; Job 4:19; 2Co 5:1), are now palsied.

JFB: Ecc 12:3 - -- (Jdg 16:25, Jdg 16:30). Like supporting pillars, the feet and knees (Son 5:15); the strongest members (Psa 147:10).

(Jdg 16:25, Jdg 16:30). Like supporting pillars, the feet and knees (Son 5:15); the strongest members (Psa 147:10).

JFB: Ecc 12:3 - -- The molar teeth.

The molar teeth.

JFB: Ecc 12:3 - -- Are idle.

Are idle.

JFB: Ecc 12:3 - -- The eyes; the powers of vision, looking out from beneath the eyelids, which open and shut like the casement of a window.

The eyes; the powers of vision, looking out from beneath the eyelids, which open and shut like the casement of a window.

Clarke: Ecc 12:3 - -- In the day when the keepers of the house - The Body of man is here compared to a House: - mark the metaphors and their propriety 1. The keepers shal...

In the day when the keepers of the house - The Body of man is here compared to a House: - mark the metaphors and their propriety

1. The keepers shall tremble - the hands become paralytic, as is constantly the case, less or more, in old age

2. The strong men shall bow - The legs become feeble, and unable to support the weight of the body

3. The grinders cease because they are few - The teeth decayed and mostly lost; the few that remain being incapable of properly masticating hard substances or animal food. And so they cease; for soft or pulpy substances, which are requisite then, require little or no mastication; and these aliments become their ordinary food

4. Those that look out of the windows - The optic nerves, which receive impressions, through the medium of the different humours of the eye, from surrounding objects - they are darkened; the humours becoming thick, flat, and turbid, they are no longer capable of transmitting those images in that clear, distinct manner, as formerly. There may be an allusion here to the pupil of the eye. Look into it, and you will see your own image in extreme minature looking out upon you; and hence it has its name pupillus, a little child, from pupus, a baby, a doll; because the image in the eye resembles such. The optic nerve being seated at the bottom of the eye, has the images of surrounding objects painted upon it; it looks out through the different humors. The different membranes and humours which compose the eye, and serve for vision, are, the tunica conjunctiva, the tunica sclerotica, the cornea, the iris, the pupil, the choroides, and the retina. The iris is perforated to admit the rays of light, and is called the pupil; the retina is a diffusion of the optic nerve in the bottom of the eye, on which the images are painted or impressed that give us the sensation we term sight or vision. All these membranes, humours, and nerves, are more or less impaired, thickened, or rendered opaque, by old age, expressed by the metaphor, "Those that look out of the windows are darkened."

Defender: Ecc 12:3 - -- Ecc 12:3-6 constitutes a picturesque description of old age. The "house" is the aging body, the "keepers of the house" are the hands and arms, the "st...

Ecc 12:3-6 constitutes a picturesque description of old age. The "house" is the aging body, the "keepers of the house" are the hands and arms, the "strong men" are the legs, the "grinders" are the teeth, and the "windows" are the eyes."

TSK: Ecc 12:3 - -- strong : 2Sa 21:15-17; Psa 90:9, Psa 90:10, Psa 102:23; Zec 8:4 and those : Ecc 12:2

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Ecc 12:3 - -- The body in old age and death is here described under the figure of a decaying house with its inmates and furniture. This verse is best understood a...

The body in old age and death is here described under the figure of a decaying house with its inmates and furniture.

This verse is best understood as referring to the change which old age brings to four parts of the body, the arms ("the keepers"), the legs ("the strong men"), the teeth ("the grinders"), and the eyes.

Poole: Ecc 12:3 - -- The keepers of the house i.e. of the body, which is oft and fitly compared to a house, as Job 4:19 Psa 119:54 2Co 5:1 ; whose keepers here are eith...

The keepers of the house i.e. of the body, which is oft and fitly compared to a house, as Job 4:19 Psa 119:54 2Co 5:1 ; whose keepers here are either,

1. The ribs and bones into which they are fastened, which are the guardians of the inward and vital parts, which also are much weakened and shaken by old age. Or rather,

2. The hands and arms, which are man’ s best instruments to defend his body from the assaults of men or beasts, and which in a special manner are subject to this trembling, by paralytical or other like distempers, that are most incident to old men.

The strong men either the back, or the thighs and legs, in which the main strength of the body doth consist, which in old men are very feeble, and unable both for the support of the body and for motion.

The grinders the teeth, those especially which are commonly so called, because they grind the meat which we eat.

Cease to wit, to perform their office,

because they are few Heb. because they are diminished , either,

1. In strength. Or,

2. In number; being here one, and there another, and not united together, and one directly against another, and consequently unfit for their work.

Those that look out of the windows the eyes. By windows he understands either,

1. The holes in which the eyes are fixed, Zec 14:12 . Or,

2. The eye-lids, which, like windows, are either opened or shut. Or,

3. Those humours and coats of the eyes noted by anatomists, which are the chief instruments by which the eye sees.

Haydock: Ecc 12:3 - -- House. The sides, (St. Jerome) or rather the arms. (Calmet) --- Some understand prelates, or angels. (Thaumat.) --- And the powers that are in h...

House. The sides, (St. Jerome) or rather the arms. (Calmet) ---

Some understand prelates, or angels. (Thaumat.) ---

And the powers that are in heaven shall be moved. (Mark xiii. 25.) (Haydock) ---

Men. The arms, (Chaldean) or thighs, (Smith) or those who were formerly the most robust. ---

Number. The rest have been lost, and what remain are of little service for chewing meat. (Calmet) ---

Holes. Spectacles, (Geier) as if they had been already in use. (Calmet) ---

Hebrew, "windows." (Haydock)

Gill: Ecc 12:3 - -- In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble,.... By the "house" is meant the human body; which is a house of clay, the earthly house of our...

In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble,.... By the "house" is meant the human body; which is a house of clay, the earthly house of our tabernacle, in which the soul dwells, Job 4:19, 2Co 5:1. The Targum interprets the keepers of the house, of the knees and the trembling of them; but the Midrash and Jarchi, much better, of the ribs; man being fenced with bones and sinews, as Job says, Job 10:11; though trembling cannot be well ascribed to them, they being so fixed to the backbone: rather therefore, as Aben Ezra, the hands and arms are meant; which work for the maintenance of the body, and feed it with food, got and prepared by them; and which protect and defend it from injuries; for all which they are fitted, and made strong by the God of nature. The Arabic version renders it, "both keepers"; and, doubtless, respects both hands and arms; and which, in old age, are not only wrinkled, contracted, and stiff, but attended with numbness, pains, and tremor. Some, not amiss, take in the head; which is placed as a watchtower over the body, the seat of the senses; which overlooks, guards, and keeps it, and which often through paralytic disorders, and even the weakness of old age, is attended with a shaking;

and the strong men shall bow themselves; it is strange the Targum and Midrash should interpret this of the arms, designed in the former clause; Jarchi and Aben Ezra, more rightly, of the thighs; it takes in thighs, legs, and feet, which are the basis and support of the human body; and are strengthened for this purpose, having stronger muscles and tendons than any other parts of the body; but these, as old age comes on, are weakened and distorted, and bend under the weight of the body, not being able, without assistance, to sustain it;

and the grinders cease because they are few; the Targum is,

"the teeth of the mouth:''

all agree the teeth are meant; only the Midrash takes in the stomach also, which, like a mill, grinds the food. There are three sorts of teeth; the fore teeth, which bite the food, and are called "incisores": the eye teeth, called "canini", which bruise and break the food; and the double teeth, the hindermost, which are called "dentes molares", the grinding teeth; and which being placed in the upper and nether jaw, are like to millstones, broad and rough, and rub against each other and grind the food, and prepare it for the stomach: these, in old age, rot and drop out, and become few and straggling, one here and another there; and, not being over against each other, are of no use, but rather troublesome;

and those that look out of the windows be darkened; the eyes, as the Targum and Ben Melech; and all agree that those that look out are the eyes, or the visive rays: the "windows" they look through are not spectacles; for it is questionable whether they were in use in Solomon's time, and, however, they are not parts of the house; but either the holes in which the eyes are, and so the Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render it, to which the Targum agrees, paraphrasing it, the strong bounds of the head; and which are no other than what oculists call the orbits of the eye: or else the eyelids, which open and shut like the casement of a window, and through which, being opened, the eyes look; or the humours of the eye, the watery, crystalline, and glassy, which are transparent, and through which the visive rays pass; or the tunics, or coats of the eye, particularly the "tunica aranea" and "cornea"; as also the optic nerves, and especially the "pupilla", or apple of the eye, which is perforated or bored for this purpose: now these, in old age, become weak, or dim, or thick, or contracted, or obstructed by some means or another by which the sight is greatly hindered, and is a very uncomfortable circumstance; this was Isaac's case, Gen 27:1; but Moses is an exception to the common case of old men, Deu 34:7.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Ecc 12:3 The verb חָשַׁךְ (khashakh, “to grow dim”) is used elsewhere in reference to failing eyesight (e...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 12:3 In the day when the ( b ) keepers of the house shall tremble, and the ( c ) strong men shall bow themselves, and the ( d ) grinders cease because they...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Ecc 12:1-14 - --1 The Creator is to be remembered in due time.8 The preacher's care to edify.13 The fear of God is the chief antidote of vanity.

Maclaren: Ecc 12:1-7 - --The Conclusion Of The Matter Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shal...

MHCC: Ecc 12:1-7 - --We should remember our sins against our Creator, repent, and seek forgiveness. We should remember our duties, and set about them, looking to him for g...

Matthew Henry: Ecc 12:1-7 - -- Here is, I. A call to young people to think of God, and mind their duty to him, when they are young: Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy yo...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 12:3 - -- To the thought: Ere the mind and the senses begin to be darkened, and the winter of life with its clouds and storms approaches, the further details ...

Constable: Ecc 11:7--Sos 1:1 - --IV. THE WAY OF WISDOM 11:7--12:14 In 1:12-6:9, Solomon demonstrated that all work is ultimately futile for two r...

Constable: Ecc 11:7--12:8 - --A. Joyous and Responsible Living 11:7-12:7 Solomon had already advocated the enjoyment of life and respo...

Constable: Ecc 12:1-7 - --2. Responsible living 12:1-7 This pericope expands the ideas Solomon introduced in 11:9-10 by fo...

Constable: Ecc 12:2-5 - --The coming of old age 12:2-5 Verses 2-7 are full of figures of speech that picture old age and death.79 12:2-3 Solomon likened the evil days first to ...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title is Koheleth, which the speaker in it applies to himself (Ecc 1:12), "I, Koheleth, was king over Israel." It means an Assembler or Con...

JFB: Ecclesiastes (Outline) INTRODUCTION. (Ecc. 1:1-18)

TSK: Ecclesiastes 12 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Ecc 12:1, The Creator is to be remembered in due time; Ecc 12:8, The preacher’s care to edify; Ecc 12:13, The fear of God is the chief ...

Poole: Ecclesiastes 12 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 12 Early piety recommended before old age come on and death be near: old age described, and death, Ecc 12:1-7 . The conclusion: all is vani...

MHCC: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) The name of this book signifies " The Preacher." The wisdom of God here preaches to us, speaking by Solomon, who it is evident was the author. At the...

MHCC: Ecclesiastes 12 (Chapter Introduction) (Ecc 12:1-7) A description of the infirmities of age. (Ecc 12:8-14) All is vanity: also a warning of the judgment to come.

Matthew Henry: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Ecclesiastes We are still among Solomon's happy men, his happy servants, that stood contin...

Matthew Henry: Ecclesiastes 12 (Chapter Introduction) The wise and penitent preacher is here closing his sermon; and he closes it, not only lie a good orator, but like a good preacher, with that which ...

Constable: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew text is all of verse 1. The Se...

Constable: Ecclesiastes (Outline)

Constable: Ecclesiastes Ecclesiastes Bibliography Archer, Gleason L., Jr. "The Linguistic Evidence for the Date of Ecclesiastes'." Jour...

Haydock: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) ECCLESIASTES. INTRODUCTION. This Book is called Ecclesiastes, or the preacher, (in Hebrew, Coheleth ) because in it Solomon, as an excelle...

Gill: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES This book has been universally received into the canon of the Scriptures, by Jews and Christians. The former, indeed, ...

Gill: Ecclesiastes 12 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES 12 This chapter begins with advice to young men, which is continued from the preceding; and particularly to remember t...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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