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Text -- Ecclesiastes 1:12-15 (NET)

Strongs On/Off
Context
Futility of Secular Accomplishment
1:12 I, the Teacher, have been king over Israel in Jerusalem. 1:13 I decided to carefully and thoroughly examine all that has been accomplished on earth. I concluded: God has given people a burdensome task that keeps them occupied. 1:14 I reflected on everything that is accomplished by man on earth, and I concluded: Everything he has accomplished is futile– like chasing the wind! 1:15 What is bent cannot be straightened, and what is missing cannot be supplied.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Israel a citizen of Israel.,a member of the nation of Israel
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Works | WISDOM OF SOLOMON, THE | Solomon | Science | SEARCH | Preaching | Philosophy | Life | Investigation | Instruction | Experiment | EXERCISE | ECCLESIASTES, THE PREACHER | CROOKED | 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 1:12 - -- Having asserted the vanity of all things in the general, he now comes to prove his assertion in those particulars wherein men commonly seek, and with ...

Having asserted the vanity of all things in the general, he now comes to prove his assertion in those particulars wherein men commonly seek, and with greatest probability expect to find, true happiness. He begins with secular wisdom. And to shew how competent a judge he was of this matter, he lays down this character, That he was the preacher, which implies eminent knowledge; and a king, who therefore had all imaginable opportunities and advantages for the attainment of happiness, and particularly for the getting of wisdom, by consulting all sorts of books and men, by trying all manner of experiments; and no ordinary king, but king over Israel, God's own people, a wise and an happy people, whose king he was by God's special appointment and furnished by God, with singular wisdom for that great trust; and whose abode was in Jerusalem where were the house of God and the most wise and learned of the priests attending upon it, and the seats of justice, and colleges or assemblies of the wisest men of their nation. All these concurring in him, which rarely do in any other men, make the argument drawn from his experience more convincing.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- Which phrase denotes his serious and fixed purpose, and his great industry in it.

Which phrase denotes his serious and fixed purpose, and his great industry in it.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- To seek diligently and accurately.

To seek diligently and accurately.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- By the help of that wisdom wherewith God had endowed me.

By the help of that wisdom wherewith God had endowed me.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- Concerning all the works of God and men in this lower world; the works of nature; the works of Divine providence; and the works and depths of human po...

Concerning all the works of God and men in this lower world; the works of nature; the works of Divine providence; and the works and depths of human policy.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- This difficult and toilsome work of searching out these things, God hath inflicted as a just punishment upon man for his eating of the tree of knowled...

This difficult and toilsome work of searching out these things, God hath inflicted as a just punishment upon man for his eating of the tree of knowledge.

Wesley: Ecc 1:13 - -- To employ themselves in the painful study of these things.

To employ themselves in the painful study of these things.

Wesley: Ecc 1:14 - -- Diligently observed.

Diligently observed.

Wesley: Ecc 1:14 - -- Not only unsatisfying, but also an affliction or breaking to a man's spirit.

Not only unsatisfying, but also an affliction or breaking to a man's spirit.

Wesley: Ecc 1:15 - -- All our knowledge serves only to discover our miseries, but is utterly insufficient to remove them; it cannot rectify those disorders which are either...

All our knowledge serves only to discover our miseries, but is utterly insufficient to remove them; it cannot rectify those disorders which are either in our own hearts and lives, or in the men and things of the world.

Wesley: Ecc 1:15 - -- In our knowledge. Or, counted out to us from the treasures of human learning. But what is wanting, will still be so. And that which is wanting in our ...

In our knowledge. Or, counted out to us from the treasures of human learning. But what is wanting, will still be so. And that which is wanting in our own knowledge, is so much that it cannot be numbered. The more we know, the more we see of our own ignorance.

JFB: Ecc 1:12 - -- Resumption of Ecc 1:1, the intermediate verses being the introductory statement of his thesis. Therefore, "the Preacher" (Koheleth) is repeated.

Resumption of Ecc 1:1, the intermediate verses being the introductory statement of his thesis. Therefore, "the Preacher" (Koheleth) is repeated.

JFB: Ecc 1:12 - -- Instead of "am," because he is about to give the results of his past experience during his long reign.

Instead of "am," because he is about to give the results of his past experience during his long reign.

JFB: Ecc 1:12 - -- Specified, as opposed to David, who reigned both in Hebron and Jerusalem; whereas Solomon reigned only in Jerusalem. "King of Israel in Jerusalem," im...

Specified, as opposed to David, who reigned both in Hebron and Jerusalem; whereas Solomon reigned only in Jerusalem. "King of Israel in Jerusalem," implies that he reigned over Israel and Judah combined; whereas David, at Hebron, reigned only over Judah, and not, until he was settled in Jerusalem, over both Israel and Judah.

JFB: Ecc 1:13 - -- Namely, that of "searching out all things done under heaven." Not human wisdom in general, which comes afterwards (Ecc 2:12, &c.), but laborious enqui...

Namely, that of "searching out all things done under heaven." Not human wisdom in general, which comes afterwards (Ecc 2:12, &c.), but laborious enquiries into, and speculations about, the works of men; for example, political science. As man is doomed to get his bread, so his knowledge, by the sweat of his brow (Gen 3:19) [GILL].

JFB: Ecc 1:13 - -- That is, disciplined; literally, "that they may thereby chastise, or humble themselves."

That is, disciplined; literally, "that they may thereby chastise, or humble themselves."

JFB: Ecc 1:14 - -- The reason is here given why investigation into man's "works" is only "sore travail" (Ecc 1:13); namely, because all man's ways are vain (Ecc 1:18) an...

The reason is here given why investigation into man's "works" is only "sore travail" (Ecc 1:13); namely, because all man's ways are vain (Ecc 1:18) and cannot be mended (Ecc 1:15).

JFB: Ecc 1:14 - -- "a preying upon"

"a preying upon"

JFB: Ecc 1:14 - -- MAURER translates; "the pursuit of wind," as in Ecc 5:16; Hos 12:1, "Ephraim feedeth on wind." But old versions support the English Version.

MAURER translates; "the pursuit of wind," as in Ecc 5:16; Hos 12:1, "Ephraim feedeth on wind." But old versions support the English Version.

JFB: Ecc 1:15 - -- Investigation (Ecc 1:13) into human ways is vain labor, for they are hopelessly "crooked" and "cannot be made straight" by it (Ecc 7:13). God, the chi...

Investigation (Ecc 1:13) into human ways is vain labor, for they are hopelessly "crooked" and "cannot be made straight" by it (Ecc 7:13). God, the chief good, alone can do this (Isa 40:4; Isa 45:2).

JFB: Ecc 1:15 - -- (Dan 5:27).

JFB: Ecc 1:15 - -- So as to make a complete number; so equivalent to "supplied" [MAURER]. Or, rather, man's state is utterly wanting; and that which is wholly defective ...

So as to make a complete number; so equivalent to "supplied" [MAURER]. Or, rather, man's state is utterly wanting; and that which is wholly defective cannot be numbered or calculated. The investigator thinks he can draw up, in accurate numbers, statistics of man's wants; but these, including the defects in the investigator's labor, are not partial, but total.

Clarke: Ecc 1:12 - -- I the Preacher was king - This is a strange verse, and does not admit of an easy solution. It is literally, "I, Choheleth, have been king over Israe...

I the Preacher was king - This is a strange verse, and does not admit of an easy solution. It is literally, "I, Choheleth, have been king over Israel, in Jerusalem."This book, as we have already seen, has been conjectured by some to have been written about the time that Ptolemy Philadelphus formed his great library at Alexandria, about two hundred and eighty-five years before our Lard; and from the multitude of Jews that dwelt there, and resorted to that city for the sake of commerce, it was said there was an Israel in Alexandria. See the introduction

It has also been conjectured from this, that if the book were written by Solomon, it was intended to be a posthumous publication. "I that was king, still continue to preach and instruct you."Those who suppose the book to have been written after Solomon’ s fall, think that he speaks thus through humility. "I was once worthy of the name of king: but I fell into all evil; and, though recovered, I am no longer worthy of the name."I am afraid this is not solid.

Clarke: Ecc 1:13 - -- And I gave my heart to seek and search - While Solomon was faithful to his God he diligently cultivated his mind. His giving himself to the study of...

And I gave my heart to seek and search - While Solomon was faithful to his God he diligently cultivated his mind. His giving himself to the study of natural history, philosophy, poetry, etc., are sufficient proofs of it. He had not intuitive knowledge from God; but he had a capacity to obtain every kind of knowledge useful to man

Clarke: Ecc 1:13 - -- This sore travail - This is the way in which knowledge is to be acquired; and in order to investigate the operations of nature, the most laborious d...

This sore travail - This is the way in which knowledge is to be acquired; and in order to investigate the operations of nature, the most laborious discussions and perplexing experiments must be instituted, and conducted to their proper results. It is God’ s determination that knowledge shall be acquired in no other way.

Clarke: Ecc 1:14 - -- Behold, all is vanity - After all these discussions and experiments, when even the results have been the most successful, I have found only rational...

Behold, all is vanity - After all these discussions and experiments, when even the results have been the most successful, I have found only rational satisfaction; but not that supreme good by which alone the soul can be made happy

O curas hominum! O quantum est in rebus inane

"How anxious are our cares, and yet how vai

The bent of our desires!

Pers. Sat. i., 5: 1.

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Clarke: Ecc 1:15 - -- That which is crooked cannot be made straight - There are many apparent irregularities and anomalies in nature for which we cannot account; and ther...

That which is crooked cannot be made straight - There are many apparent irregularities and anomalies in nature for which we cannot account; and there are many defects that cannot be supplied. This is the impression from a general view of nature; but the more we study and investigate its operations, the more we shall be convinced that all is a consecutive and well-ordered whole; and that in the chain of nature not one link is broken, deficient, or lost.

Defender: Ecc 1:14 - -- King Solomon, the Preacher, had the greatest wealth, the greatest wisdom, the greatest power, the greatest sensual pleasures and comforts, of just abo...

King Solomon, the Preacher, had the greatest wealth, the greatest wisdom, the greatest power, the greatest sensual pleasures and comforts, of just about any man who ever lived. Yet when these works were done only "under the sun" (and this is the recurring theme of Ecclesiastes) it was soon found by him all to be done in vain, and merely vexed his spirit, rather than satisfying it.

Defender: Ecc 1:14 - -- "Vanity" in this book, does not mean foolish pride, (although Solomon surely had much he could boast about), but rather the emptiness of life when liv...

"Vanity" in this book, does not mean foolish pride, (although Solomon surely had much he could boast about), but rather the emptiness of life when lived outside the will of God."

TSK: Ecc 1:12 - -- Ecc 1:1; 1Kings 4:1-19

Ecc 1:1; 1Kings 4:1-19

TSK: Ecc 1:13 - -- I gave : Ecc 1:17, Ecc 7:25, Ecc 8:9, Ecc 8:16, Ecc 8:17; Psa 111:2; Pro 2:2-4, Pro 4:7, Pro 18:1, Pro 18:15, Pro 23:26; 1Ti 4:15 this sore : Ecc 3:10...

I gave : Ecc 1:17, Ecc 7:25, Ecc 8:9, Ecc 8:16, Ecc 8:17; Psa 111:2; Pro 2:2-4, Pro 4:7, Pro 18:1, Pro 18:15, Pro 23:26; 1Ti 4:15

this sore : Ecc 3:10, Ecc 4:4, Ecc 12:12; Gen 3:19

to be exercised : or, to afflict them

TSK: Ecc 1:14 - -- Ecc 1:17, Ecc 1:18, Ecc 2:11, Ecc 2:17, Ecc 2:26; 1Ki 4:30-32; Psa 39:5, Psa 39:6

TSK: Ecc 1:15 - -- crooked : Ecc 3:14, Ecc 7:12, Ecc 7:13; Job 11:6, Job 34:29; Isa 40:4; Lam 3:37; Dan 4:35; Mat 6:27 wanting : Heb. defect

crooked : Ecc 3:14, Ecc 7:12, Ecc 7:13; Job 11:6, Job 34:29; Isa 40:4; Lam 3:37; Dan 4:35; Mat 6:27

wanting : Heb. defect

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Ecc 1:12 - -- Solomon relates his personal experience Eccl. 2; the result of which was "no profit,"and a conviction that all, even God’ s gifts of earthly go...

Solomon relates his personal experience Eccl. 2; the result of which was "no profit,"and a conviction that all, even God’ s gifts of earthly good to good men, in this life are subject to vanity. His trial of God’ s first gift, wisdom, is recounted in Ecc 1:12-18.

Was - This tense does not imply that Solomon had ceased to be king when the word was written. See the introduction to Ecclesiastes. He begins with the time of his accession to the throne, when the gifts of wisdom and riches were especially promised to him 1Ki 3:12-13.

Barnes: Ecc 1:13 - -- Wisdom - As including both the powers of observation and judgment, and the knowledge acquired thereby (1Ki 3:28; 1Ki 4:29; 1Ki 10:8, ...). It i...

Wisdom - As including both the powers of observation and judgment, and the knowledge acquired thereby (1Ki 3:28; 1Ki 4:29; 1Ki 10:8, ...). It increases by exercise. Here is noted its application to people and their actions.

Travail - In the sense of toil; the word is here applied to all human occupations.

God - God is named as אלהים 'elohı̂ym thirty-nine times in this book; a name common to the true God and to false gods, and used by believers and by idolators: but the name Yahweh, by which He is known especially to the people who are in covenant with Him, is never once used.

Perhaps the chief reason for this is that the evil which is the object of inquiry in this book is not at all unique to the chosen people. All creation Rom. 8 groans under it. The Preacher does not write of (or, to) the Hebrew race exclusively. There is no express and obvious reference to their national expectations, the events of their national history, or even to the divine oracles which were deposited with them. Hence, it was natural for the wisest and largest-hearted man of his race to take a wider range of observation than any other Hebrew writer before or after him. It became the sovereign of many peoples whose religions diverged more or less remotely from the true religion, to address himself to a more extensive sphere than that which was occupied by the twelve tribes, and to adapt his language accordingly. See the Ecc 5:1 note.

Barnes: Ecc 1:14 - -- Vexation of spirit - A phrase which occurs 7 times, and may be otherwise translated, "feeding on wind."Modern Hebrew grammarians assert that th...

Vexation of spirit - A phrase which occurs 7 times, and may be otherwise translated, "feeding on wind."Modern Hebrew grammarians assert that the word rendered "vexation"must be derived from a root signifying "to feed,""follow,""strive after."This being admitted, it remains to choose between two translations:

(1) "striving after wind,"or "windy effort;"adopted by the Septuagint and the majority of modern interpreters; or

(2) feeding on wind. Compare Hos 12:1 : and similar phrases in Pro 15:14; Isa 44:20; Psa 37:3.

Barnes: Ecc 1:15 - -- He saw clearly both the disorder and incompleteness of human actions (compare the marginal reference), and also man’ s impotence to rectify the...

He saw clearly both the disorder and incompleteness of human actions (compare the marginal reference), and also man’ s impotence to rectify them.

Poole: Ecc 1:12 - -- This verse is a preface to the following discourse, that by the consideration of the quality of the speaker they might be induced to give more atten...

This verse is a preface to the following discourse, that by the consideration of the quality of the speaker they might be induced to give more attention and respect to his words. Having asserted the vanity of all things in the general, he now comes to prove his assertion in all those particulars wherein men commonly seek, and with greatest probability expect to find true happiness. He begins with secular wisdom. And to show how competent a judge he was of this matter, he lays down his character, that he was the

Preacher which implies eminent knowledge and ability to teach others; or, the convert , who had learned by dear-bought experience what he now taught them; and a king, who therefore had all imaginable opportunities and advantages for the attainment of happiness, and particularly for the getting of wisdom, by consulting all sorts of books and men, by trying all manner of experiments, and many other ways; and no ordinary king, but

king over Israel God’ s own and only beloved people, a wise and a happy people, Deu 4:6,7 33:29 , whose king he was by God’ s special and gracious appointment, and furnished by God with singular wisdom for the discharge of that great trust; and whose royal palace and abode was in Jerusalem, where were the house of God, and the most wise and learned of the priests attending upon it, and the seats of justice, and colleges or assemblies of the wisest men of their nation; of which see 2Ki 22:14 1Ch 25:8 , &c.; Psa 122:5 : all which helps concurring together in him, which very rarely do in any other men, makes the argument drawn from his experience more convincing and undeniable.

Poole: Ecc 1:13 - -- I gave my heart which phrase notes his serious and fixed purpose, his great industry and alacrity in it, to seek and search out to seek diligently ...

I gave my heart which phrase notes his serious and fixed purpose, his great industry and alacrity in it,

to seek and search out to seek diligently and accurately, by wisdom, wisely, or by the help of that wisdom wherewith God had endowed me, concerning all things that are done under heaven; concerning all the works of God and men in this lower world ; the works of nature, and their causes, effects, properties, and operations; the works of Divine providence, and God’ s counsels and ends in them; the work and depths of human policy in the conduct of personal, and domestical, and public affairs.

This sore travail this difficult and toilsome work of searching out these things,

hath God given to the sons of man God hath inflicted this as a just punishment upon man for his eating of the tree of knowledge, that instead of that sweet and perfect knowledge which God had freely infused into man at his first creation, he should now grope after some small parcels or fragments of it, and those too not to be gotten without the sweat of his brows and brains.

To be exercised therewith to employ themselves in the painful study of these things, which now is both their duty and their punishment. Or, as it is rendered in the margin, and by many others, to afflict them in or by it , to chastise their former curiosity, and to give them matter of continual humiliation and vexation. And therefore knowledge is so far from making men happy, that it exposeth them to trouble and infelicity.

Poole: Ecc 1:14 - -- I have seen i.e. diligently observed, and in great measure understood. Behold for it was a great surprise to me, and therefore may seem strange to ...

I have seen i.e. diligently observed, and in great measure understood.

Behold for it was a great surprise to me, and therefore may seem strange to you.

All is vanity and vexation of spirit and not only unsatisfying, but also troublesome, and an affliction or breaking to a man’ s spirit or mind. Or, as others, both ancient and modern translators, render it, a feeding upon wind , as these very words, save only that there is the verb from which this noun seems most probably deduced, are rendered, Hos 12:1 , where also it signifies a fruitless or lost labour, and a disappointment of their hopes and desires of satisfaction. And so this is a repetition of the same thing in other words, according to the manner of these books.

Poole: Ecc 1:15 - -- That which is crooked cannot be made straight all our knowledge serves only to discover our diseases and miseries, but is oft itself utterly insuffic...

That which is crooked cannot be made straight all our knowledge serves only to discover our diseases and miseries, but is oft itself utterly insufficient to heal or remove them; it cannot rectify those confusions and disorders which are either in our own hearts and lives, or in the men and things of the world.

That which is wanting to wit, in our knowledge, and in order to man’ s complete satisfaction and felicity, cannot be numbered; we know little of what we should or might know, or did know in the state of innocency, or shall know in the future life.

Haydock: Ecc 1:12 - -- Israel. This was the case with none of Solomon's descendants. (Calmet)

Israel. This was the case with none of Solomon's descendants. (Calmet)

Haydock: Ecc 1:14 - -- Vexation. Hebrew also, "food of wind;" (Symmachus) or "choice of the spirit." (Septuagint) People are eager to become learned, and yet find no sat...

Vexation. Hebrew also, "food of wind;" (Symmachus) or "choice of the spirit." (Septuagint) People are eager to become learned, and yet find no satisfaction. (Haydock) ---

All natural things are insufficient to procure felicity. (Worthington) O Curas hominum! O quantum est in rebus inane! (Persius.)

Haydock: Ecc 1:15 - -- Perverse. Habitual and obstinate sinners. (Calmet) --- Fools, who follow the broad road. (Haydock) --- Hebrew and Septuagint, "the defect canno...

Perverse. Habitual and obstinate sinners. (Calmet) ---

Fools, who follow the broad road. (Haydock) ---

Hebrew and Septuagint, "the defect cannot be numbered." We know not to what a height the soul of man might have risen, if he had continued faithful.

Gill: Ecc 1:12 - -- I the preacher was king over Israel in Jerusalem. Solomon having given a general proof of the vanity of all things here below, and of the insufficienc...

I the preacher was king over Israel in Jerusalem. Solomon having given a general proof of the vanity of all things here below, and of the insufficiency of them to make men happy, proceeds to particular instances, and begins with human wisdom and knowledge, which of all things might be thought to be most conducive to true happiness; and yet it falls short of it: he instances in himself for proof of it; and he could not have pitched on anyone more proper and pertinent to the purpose, who had all the advantages of obtaining wisdom, was assiduous in his pursuit of it, and made a proficiency in it above all mankind; wherefore he must be owned to be a proper judge, and whatever is concluded by him may be taken for granted as certain; and this is the sum of the following verses to the end of the chapter. Now let it be observed, that he was a "preacher", not a private person, and must have a good share of knowledge to qualify him for teaching and instructing others; and, more than this, he was a king, and did not want money to purchase books, and procure masters to instruct him in all the branches of literature; and when he entered upon the more profound study of wisdom, and especially when he said this, it was not in his infancy or childhood, or before he came to the throne, but after; even after he had asked, wisdom of God to govern, and it had been given him; yea, after he had been a long time king, as he now was; though the Jewish writers, as the Targum, Jarchi, and others, conclude from hence that he was not now a king, but become a private person, deposed or driven from his throne, which does not appear: moreover, he was king of Israel, not over a barbarous people, where darkness and ignorance reigned, but over a "wise and understanding people", as they are called Deu 4:6; and he was king over them in Jerusalem too, the metropolis of the nation; there he had his royal palace, where were not only the temple, the place of divine worship, but a college of prophets, and a multitude of priests, and an abundance of wise and knowing men, whom he had opportunity of conversing with frequently; to which may be added, his large correspondence abroad; persons from all kings and kingdoms came to hear his wisdom, as the queen of Sheba; and by putting questions to him, and so exercising his talents, not a little contributed to the improvement of them. Now a person so qualified must be a judge of wisdom, and what he says deserves attention; and it may be observed, that what he says, as follows, is "in verbo regis et sacerdotis", on the word of a king and preacher, who would never risk his honour, or forfeit his character, by saying an untruth.

Gill: Ecc 1:13 - -- And I gave my heart to seek and search out by wisdom,.... As he had all advantages and opportunities, so he did not want for industry and application ...

And I gave my heart to seek and search out by wisdom,.... As he had all advantages and opportunities, so he did not want for industry and application to obtain knowledge; he gave his mind to it; he took up a resolution not to be discouraged by any difficulties, but to break through them, if possible; he set about the work with great readiness and cheerfulness; he had a price in his hand to get wisdom, and he had a heart unto it; see Pro 17:16; and he pursued it with all diligence, with all his might and main: nor did he content himself with a superficial knowledge of things; but "searched" after the most recondite and abstruse learning, and penetrated into the utmost recesses of it, to find out all that was to be known; and this he did "by" using all the "wisdom" and sagacity, the light and strength of reason, and all those bright natural parts, which God had given him in a very extraordinary manner. And his inquiry was very extensive; it was

concerning all things that are done under heaven; into the nature of all things, animate and inanimate; trees, herbs, plants, fossils, minerals, and metals; beasts, birds, fish, and all creeping things; see 1Ki 4:33; with everything else in nature: he sought to make himself master of all arts and sciences; to get knowledge of all trades and manufactures; to understand everything in politics, relating to kingdoms and states, and the government of them; to observe all the actions of men, wise and foolish, that he might know the difference, and be a judge of what was right and wrong. And his observation upon the whole is,

this sore travail hath God given to the sons of men, to be exercised therewith: he found by experience it was a heavy task, which God had put upon the children of men, to get wisdom and knowledge in the way it was to be gotten; which was very burdensome and wearisome to the flesh; nay, he found it was an l "evil business", as it may be rendered; or there was something sinful and criminal, which God suffered men in their pursuit after knowledge to fall into, and which their studies exposed them to; as to indulge a vain and sinful curiosity, to pry into things unlawful, and to be wise above what is written; or to be too anxious in attaining natural knowledge, to the neglect of things of great importance; or to abuse or trust in knowledge attained unto, or be vainly elated and puffed up with it. Or this may be understood of the evil of punishment, which God inflicts on men for the sin of eating of the tree of knowledge; and that as he is doomed to get his bread, so his knowledge, with the sweat of his brow, that is, with great pains and labour; which otherwise would have been more easily obtained: but this God has done to "afflict" or "humble" m men, as the word may be rendered; to afflict or punish them for sin; and to humble them by showing them how weak are the powers and faculties of their minds, that so much pains must be taken to get a small share of knowledge. The Targum is,

"and I saw all the works of the children of men obnoxious to an evil business; the Lord gave to the children of men, to be afflicted with it.''

Gill: Ecc 1:14 - -- I have seen all the works that are done under the sun,.... All things done by the Lord, that were on the earth, and in it, and in the sea; he consider...

I have seen all the works that are done under the sun,.... All things done by the Lord, that were on the earth, and in it, and in the sea; he considered them, and endeavoured to search into the nature of them; and did attain to a very great knowledge of them, so that he could speak of them to the instruction of others; see 1Ki 4:33; and all that were done by men, by their head, or by their hands; all that were written or wrought by them; all their philosophical works and experiments, and all their mechanic operations; as well as all their good and bad works, in a moral sense; so the Targum,

"I saw all the deeds of the children of men, which are done under the sun in this world;''

and, behold, all is vanity and vexation of spirit; not only the things known, but the knowledge of them; it is mere vanity, there is nothing solid and substantial in it, or that can make a man happy; yea, on the contrary, it is vexatious and distressing; it is not only a weariness to the flesh to obtain it, but, in the reflection of it, gives pain and uneasiness to the mind: it is a "breaking of the spirit" n of the man, as the Targum, Jarchi, and Alshech, interpret the phrase; it wastes and consumes his spirit, as well as his time, and all to no purpose; it is, as some ancient Greek versions and others render it, and not amiss, a "feeding on wind" o; what is useless and unprofitable, and like labouring for that; see Hos 12:1, Ecc 5:16; and so Aben Ezra.

Gill: Ecc 1:15 - -- That which is crooked cannot be made straight,.... By all the art and cunning, wisdom and knowledge of man, that he can attain unto; whatever he, in ...

That which is crooked cannot be made straight,.... By all the art and cunning, wisdom and knowledge of man, that he can attain unto; whatever he, in the vanity of his mind, may find fault with in the works of God, either of nature of providence, and which he may call crooked, it is not in his power to make them straight, or to mend them; see Ecc 7:13. There is something which, through sin, is crooked, in the hearts, in the nature, in the principles, ways and works, of men; which can never be made straight, corrected or amended, by all the natural wisdom and knowledge of men, which shows the insufficiency of it: the wisest philosophers among men, with all their parade of wit and learning, could never effect anything of this kind; this only is done by the Spirit and grace of God; see Isa 42:16;

and that which is wanting cannot be numbered; the deficiencies in human science are so many, that they cannot be reckoned up; and the defects in human nature can never be supplied or made up by natural knowledge and wisdom; and which are so numerous, as that they cannot be understood and counted. The Targum is,

"a man whose ways are perverse in this world, and dies in them, and does not return by repentance, he has no power of correcting himself after his death; and a man that fails from the law and the precepts in his life, after his death hath no power to be numbered with the righteous in paradise:''

to the same sense Jarchi's note and the Midrash.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Ecc 1:12 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

NET Notes: Ecc 1:13 Or “that keeps them occupied” or “that busies them.” The verb II עָנַה (’anah, “to b...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:14 Heb “striving of wind.” The word “like” does not appear in the Hebrew text; it has been added in the translation to make the c...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:15 Heb “cannot be counted” or “cannot be numbered.” The term הִמָּנוֹת (him...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:12 ( h ) I the Preacher was king over Israel in Jerusalem. ( h ) He proves that if any could have attained happiness in this world by labour and study, ...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:13 And I gave my heart to seek and search out by wisdom concerning all [things] that are done under heaven: this grievous labour hath God given to the so...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:15 [That which is] ( k ) crooked cannot be made straight: and that which is lacking cannot be numbered. ( k ) Man is not able by all his diligence to ca...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Ecc 1:1-18 - --1 The preacher shews that all human courses are vain;4 because the creatures are restless in their courses,9 they bring forth nothing new, and all old...

Maclaren: Ecc 1:13 - --Two Views Of Life This sore travail hath God given to the sons of man, to be exercised therewith.--Eccles. 1:13. He for our profit, that we might be ...

MHCC: Ecc 1:12-18 - --Solomon tried all things, and found them vanity. He found his searches after knowledge weariness, not only to the flesh, but to the mind. The more he ...

Matthew Henry: Ecc 1:12-18 - -- Solomon, having asserted in general that all is vanity, and having given some general proofs of it, now takes the most effectual method to evince ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:12 - -- "I, Koheleth, have been king over Israel in Jerusalem."That of the two possible interpretations of הייתי , "I have become"and "I have been,"no...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:13 - -- "And I gave my heart to seek and to hold survey with wisdom over all that is done under the sun: a sore trouble it is which God has given to the chi...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:14 - -- He adduces proof of the wearisomeness of this work of research: "I saw all the works that are done under the sun; and, behold, all is vanity and str...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:15 - -- The judgment contained in the words, "vanity and a striving after the wind,"is confirmed: "That which is crooked cannot become straight; and a defic...

Constable: Ecc 1:12--2:18 - --A. Personal Observations 1:12-2:17 There are four parts to this section (1:12-2:17) that fall into two p...

Constable: Ecc 1:12-15 - --1. Solomon's investigation of human achievement 1:12-15 Solomon had unique resources for investi...

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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 1 (Chapter Introduction) Ecc 1:1, The preacher shews that all human courses are vain; Ecc 1:4, because the creatures are restless in their courses, Ecc 1:9, they bring for...

Poole: Ecclesiastes 1 (Chapter Introduction) OR, The Preacher THREE things in general are to be noted concerning this book: 1. The author of it, who was Solomon, as is manifest both from the ...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) (Ecc 1:1-3) Solomon shows that all human things are vain. (Ecc 1:4-8) Man's toil and want of satisfaction. (Ecc 1:9-11) There is nothing new. (Ecc ...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) In this chapter we have, I. The inscription, or title of the book (Ecc 1:1). II. The general doctrine of the vanity of the creature laid down (Ec...

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 1 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES 1 After the title of the book, which describes the author of it, by his office, as a preacher; by his descent, as the ...

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