
Text -- Ecclesiastes 1:15 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
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 1:15 - -- 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...

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 1:15
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.
TSK -> Ecc 1:15

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ecc 1:15
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 1:15
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 1:15
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 1:15
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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ecc 1:1-18
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...
MHCC -> Ecc 1:12-18
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
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 1:15
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; Ecc 1:12-15
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...
