
Text -- Ecclesiastes 1:15-18 (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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:16 - -- As I had a large stock of wisdom infused into me by God, so I have greatly improved it by conversation, and study, and experience.
As I had a large stock of wisdom infused into me by God, so I have greatly improved it by conversation, and study, and experience.

Whether governors, or priests, or private persons.

Which was then the most eminent place in the world for wisdom.

Wesley: Ecc 1:17 - -- That I might throughly understand the nature and difference of truth and error, of virtue and vice.
That I might throughly understand the nature and difference of truth and error, of virtue and vice.

Or, displeasure within himself, and against his present condition.

Wesley: Ecc 1:18 - -- Which he does many ways, because he gets his knowledge with hard and wearisome labour, both of mind and body, with the consumption of his spirits, and...
Which he does many ways, because he gets his knowledge with hard and wearisome labour, both of mind and body, with the consumption of his spirits, and shortening of his life; because he is often deceived with knowledge falsely so called, and often mistakes error for truth, and is perplexed with manifold doubts, from which ignorant men are wholly free; because he hath the clearer prospect into, and quicker sense of his own ignorance, and infirmities, and disorders, and withal how vain and ineffectual all his knowledge is for the prevention or removal of them; and because his knowledge is very imperfect and unsatisfying, yet increasing his thirst after more knowledge; lastly, because his knowledge quickly fades and dies with him, and then leaves him in no better, and possibly in a much worse condition than the meanest and most unlearned man in the world.
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.

Rather, "I have magnified and gotten" (literally, "added," increased), &c.

JFB: Ecc 1:16 - -- Namely, the priests, judges, and two kings that preceded Solomon. His wisdom exceeded that of all before Jesus Christ, the antitypical Koheleth, or "G...

JFB: Ecc 1:16 - -- Literally, "had seen" (Jer 2:31). Contrast with this glorying in worldly wisdom (Jer 9:23-24).
Literally, "had seen" (Jer 2:31). Contrast with this glorying in worldly wisdom (Jer 9:23-24).

JFB: Ecc 1:17 - -- That is, their effects, the works of human wisdom and folly respectively. "Madness," literally, "vaunting extravagance"; Ecc 2:12; Ecc 7:25, &c., supp...
That is, their effects, the works of human wisdom and folly respectively. "Madness," literally, "vaunting extravagance"; Ecc 2:12; Ecc 7:25, &c., support English Version rather than DATHE, "splendid matters." "Folly" is read by English Version with some manuscripts, instead of the present Hebrew text, "prudence." If Hebrew be retained, understand "prudence," falsely so called (1Ti 6:20), "craft" (Dan 8:25).

JFB: Ecc 1:18 - -- Not in general, for wisdom, &c., are most excellent in their place; but speculative knowledge of man's ways (Ecc 1:13, Ecc 1:17), which, the farther i...
Not in general, for wisdom, &c., are most excellent in their place; but speculative knowledge of man's ways (Ecc 1:13, Ecc 1:17), which, the farther it goes, gives one the more pain to find how "crooked" and "wanting" they are (Ecc 1:15; Ecc 12:12).
He next tries pleasure and luxury, retaining however, his worldly "wisdom" (Ecc 3:9), but all proves "vanity" in respect to the chief good.
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.

Clarke: Ecc 1:16 - -- I communed with mine own heart - Literally, "I spoke, I, with my heart, saying."When successful in my researches, but not happy in my soul, though e...
I communed with mine own heart - Literally, "I spoke, I, with my heart, saying."When successful in my researches, but not happy in my soul, though easy in my circumstances, I entered into my own heart, and there inquired the cause of my discontent. He found that, though -
1. He had gotten wisdom beyond all men
2. Wealth and honors more than any other
3. Practical wisdom more than all his predecessors
4. Had tried pleasure and animal gratification, even to their extremes; yet after all this he had nothing but vexation of spirit
None of these four things, nor the whole of them conjoined, could afford him such a happiness as satisfies the soul. Why was all this? Because the soul was made for God, and in the possession of him alone can it find happiness.

Clarke: Ecc 1:17 - -- To know madness and folly - הוללות ושכלות holloth vesichluth . Παραβολας και επιστημην, "Parables and science."-...
To know madness and folly -
"What were error and foolishness."- Coverdale. Perhaps gayety and sobriety may be the better meaning for these two difficult words. I can scarcely think they are taken in that bad sense in which our translation exhibits them. "I tried pleasure in all its forms; and sobriety and self-abnegation to their utmost extent."Choheleth paraphrases, "Even fools and madmen taught me rules."

Clarke: Ecc 1:18 - -- For in much wisdom is much grief - The more we know of ourselves the less satisfied shall we be with our own hearts; and the more we know of mankind...
For in much wisdom is much grief - The more we know of ourselves the less satisfied shall we be with our own hearts; and the more we know of mankind the less willing shall we be to trust them, and the less shall we admire them

Clarke: Ecc 1:18 - -- Be that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow - And why so? Because, independently of God, the principal objects of knowledge are natural and moral...
Be that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow - And why so? Because, independently of God, the principal objects of knowledge are natural and moral evils
The Targum gives a curious paraphrase here: "The man who multiplies wisdom, when he sins and is not converted to repentance, multiplies the indignation of God against himself; and the man who adds science, and yet dies in his childhood, adds grief of heart to his relatives."A man in science; a foolish child in conduct. How pained must they be who had the expense of his education! But there are many men-children of this sort in every age and country.
Defender -> Ecc 1:18
Defender: Ecc 1:18 - -- In the book of Proverbs, Solomon extolled wisdom and knowledge; in Ecclesiastes, he says it only brings trouble. The difference is that in the one he ...
In the book of Proverbs, Solomon extolled wisdom and knowledge; in Ecclesiastes, he says it only brings trouble. The difference is that in the one he is speaking of true wisdom and knowledge, as founded on "the fear of the Lord" (Pro 1:7; Pro 9:10). In the other, he is lamenting the futility of the pseudo-wisdom and knowledge of those who build on humanistic or pantheistic foundations."
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

TSK: Ecc 1:16 - -- communed : 2Ki 5:20; Psa 4:4, Psa 77:6; Isa 10:7-14; Jer 22:14; Eze 38:10, Eze 38:11; Dan 4:30
Lo : Ecc 2:9; 1Ki 3:12, 1Ki 3:13, 1Ki 4:30, 1Ki 10:7, 1...

TSK: Ecc 1:17 - -- I gave : Ecc 1:13, Ecc 2:3, Ecc 2:12, Ecc 7:23-25; 1Th 5:21
I perceived : Ecc 2:10, Ecc 2:11

TSK: Ecc 1:18 - -- For in : Ecc 2:15, Ecc 7:16, Ecc 12:12, Ecc 12:13; Job 28:28; 1Co 3:18-20; Jam 3:13-17
For in : Ecc 2:15, Ecc 7:16, Ecc 12:12, Ecc 12:13; Job 28:28; 1Co 3:18-20; Jam 3:13-17

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
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.

Barnes: Ecc 1:16 - -- I am come ... - Rather, I have accumulated (literally "enlarged and added") wisdom more than etc. They that have been ... - The reference...
I am come ... - Rather, I have accumulated (literally "enlarged and added") wisdom more than etc.
They that have been ... - The reference is probably to the line of Canaanite kings who lived in Jerusalem before David took it, such as Melchizedek Gen 14:18, Adonizedek Jos 10:1, and Araunah 2Sa 24:23; or, it may be, to Solomon’ s contemporaries of his own country 1Ki 4:31 and of other countries who visited him 1Ki 4:34; 1Ki 10:24. for "in"Jerusalem render over.

Barnes: Ecc 1:17 - -- To know madness and folly - A knowledge of folly would help him to discern wisdom, and to exercise that chief function of practical wisdom - to...
To know madness and folly - A knowledge of folly would help him to discern wisdom, and to exercise that chief function of practical wisdom - to avoid folly.

Barnes: Ecc 1:18 - -- We become more sensible of our ignorance and impotence, and therefore sorrowful, in proportion as we discover more of the constitution of nature and...
We become more sensible of our ignorance and impotence, and therefore sorrowful, in proportion as we discover more of the constitution of nature and the scheme of Providence in the government of the world; every discovery serving to convince us that more remains concealed of which we had no suspicion before.
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.

Poole: Ecc 1:16 - -- I communed with mine own heart I considered within myself in what condition I was, and what degrees of knowledge I had gained, and whether it was not...
I communed with mine own heart I considered within myself in what condition I was, and what degrees of knowledge I had gained, and whether it was not my ignorance that made me unable to rectify those errors, and supply those wants, and wiser men could do it, though I could not.
I am come to great estate Heb. I am grown great , to wit, in wisdom; or, I have magnified , or greatly enlarged . Have gotten , Heb. have added . As I had a large stock of wisdom infused into me by God, 1Ki 3:12 4:29 , so I have greatly improved it by conversation, and study, and experience.
More wisdom than all they that have been before me whether governors, or priests, or private persons; which was no vain boast, but a known and confessed truth, and profession hereof was necessary to demonstrate his assertion.
In Jerusalem which was then the most eminent place in the world for wisdom and knowledge.
Had great experience Heb. had seen much ; which intimates that his knowledge was clear, and certain, and experimental, as that is which we have from our own eyesight.
Wisdom and knowledge two words signifying the same thing, as may be gathered from Ecc 1:18 , and from the promiscuous use of them in this book, and in the Proverbs, and elsewhere, and implying all manner of knowledge, Divine or human, speculative or practical, political or philosophical.

Poole: Ecc 1:17 - -- I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly that I might thoroughly understand the nature and difference of truth and error, of vir...
I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know madness and folly that I might thoroughly understand the nature and difference of truth and error, of virtue and vice, all things being best understood by contraries, and might discern if there were any opinion or practice amongst men which would give him full satisfaction.
Vexation of spirit or, feeding upon wind , as Ecc 1:14 .

Poole: Ecc 1:18 - -- Grief or indignation , or displeasure within himself, and against his present condition.
Increaseth sorrow which he doth many ways, partly, becaus...
Grief or indignation , or displeasure within himself, and against his present condition.
Increaseth sorrow which he doth many ways, partly, because he gets his knowledge with hard and wearisome labour, both of mind and body, with the consumption of his spirits, and shortening and embitterment of his life; partly, because he is oft deceived with knowledge falsely so called, and oft mistakes errors for truths, and is perplexed with manifold doubts, from which ignorant men are wholly free; partly, because he foresees, and consequently feels, the terror of many miseries which are or are likely to come to pass, which are unobserved by less knowing persons, and which possibly never happen; partly, because he hath the clearer prospect into, and quicker sense of, his own ignorance, and infirmities, and disorders, and withal how vain and ineffectual all his knowledge is for the prevention or removal of them; and partly, because his knowledge is very imperfect and unsatisfying, yet increasing his thirst after more knowledge, and consequently after more dissatisfaction, because instead of that just honour, and delight, and advantage which he expects from it, he meets with nothing but envy, and opposition, and contempt, because his knowledge quickly fades and dies with him, and then leaves him in no better, and possibly in a much worse, condition than the meanest and most unlearned man in the world.
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.

Haydock: Ecc 1:16 - -- Learned. Solomon was blessed both with a natural genius, which he improved by study, and also he had the gift of supernatural wisdom. Yet he declar...
Learned. Solomon was blessed both with a natural genius, which he improved by study, and also he had the gift of supernatural wisdom. Yet he declares that all is vanity and pain.

Haydock: Ecc 1:17 - -- Errors. Septuagint, "parables and science." But to discern the mistakes of men is a part of wisdom, (Calmet) and Grabe substitutes "wanderings," in...
Errors. Septuagint, "parables and science." But to discern the mistakes of men is a part of wisdom, (Calmet) and Grabe substitutes "wanderings," instead of "parables," after Theodotion, as Hebrew ealluth (Haydock) means "errors," (Calmet) or "follies." (Montanus)

Haydock: Ecc 1:18 - -- Labour. He is bound to do more for heaven, as he is convinced of his own defects, and of the strict judgments of God. Wisdom is not true happiness,...
Labour. He is bound to do more for heaven, as he is convinced of his own defects, and of the strict judgments of God. Wisdom is not true happiness, but the means to obtain it. (Worthington) ---
The more a person knows, the more he is convinced of his own ignorance, (Calmet) and filled with grief, that wisdom should be so much concealed. (St. Jerome) ---
Those who are learned, feel indignant that their disciples should be so dull. (Menochius)
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.

Gill: Ecc 1:16 - -- I communed with my own heart,.... That is, looked into it, examined it, and considered what a stock and fund of knowledge he had in it, after all his ...
I communed with my own heart,.... That is, looked into it, examined it, and considered what a stock and fund of knowledge he had in it, after all his researches into it; what happiness accrued to him by it, and what judgment upon the whole was to be formed upon it; and he spoke within himself after this manner:
saying, lo, I am come to great estate; or become a great man; famous for wisdom, arrived to a very great pitch of it; greatly increased in it, through a diligent application to it;
and have gotten more wisdom than all they that have been before me in Jerusalem; or, "that before me were over Jerusalem" p; governors of it, or in it; not only than the Jebusites, but than Saul, the first king of Israel, or than even his father David; or, as Gussetius q, than any princes, rulers, and civil magistrates in Jerusalem, in his own days or in the days of his father; and also than all the priests and prophets, as well as princes, that ever had been there: and indeed he was wiser than all men, 1Ki 4:30; and even than any that had been in Jerusalem, or any where else, or that should be hereafter, excepting the Messiah; see 1Ki 3:12. And seeing this is said of him by others, and even by the Lord himself, it might not only be said with truth by himself, but without ostentation; seeing it was necessary it should be said to answer his purpose, which was to show the vanity of human wisdom in its highest pitch; and it was nowhere to be found higher than in himself;
yea, my heart had great experience of wisdom and knowledge; or, "saw much wisdom and knowledge" r; he thoroughly understood it, he was a complete master of it; it was not a superficial knowledge he had attained unto, or a few lessons of it he had committed to memory; some slight notions in his head, or scraps of things he had collected together, in an undigested manner; but he had made himself thoroughly acquainted with everything worthy to be known, and had digested it in his mind.

Gill: Ecc 1:17 - -- And I gave my heart to know wisdom,.... Which is repeated, for the confirmation of it, from Ecc 1:13, and that it might be taken notice of how assiduo...
And I gave my heart to know wisdom,.... Which is repeated, for the confirmation of it, from Ecc 1:13, and that it might be taken notice of how assiduous and diligent he had been in acquiring it; a circumstance not to be overlooked;
and to know madness and folly: that he might the better know wisdom, and learn the difference between the one and the other, since opposites illustrate each other; and that he might shun madness and folly, and the ways thereof, and expose the actions of mad and foolish men: so Plato s says, ignorance is a disease, of which there are two kinds, madness and folly. The Targum, Septuagint, and all the Oriental versions, interpret the last word, translated "folly", by understanding, knowledge, and prudence; which seems to be right, since Solomon speaks of nothing afterwards, as vexation and grief to him, but wisdom and knowledge: and I would therefore read the clause in connection with the preceding, thus, "and the knowledge of things boasted of", vain glorious knowledge; "and prudence", or what may be called craftiness and cunning; or what the apostle calls "science falsely so called", 1Ti 6:20; see Pro 12:8;
I perceived that this also is vexation of spirit; See Gill on Ecc 1:14; the reason follows.

Gill: Ecc 1:18 - -- For in much wisdom is much grief,.... In getting it, and losing it when it is gotten: or "indignation" t, at himself and others; being more sensible ...
For in much wisdom is much grief,.... In getting it, and losing it when it is gotten: or "indignation" t, at himself and others; being more sensible of the follies and weakness of human nature;
and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow: for, the more he knows, the more he would know, and is more eager after it, and puts himself to more pains and trouble to acquire it; and hereby becomes more and more sensible of his own ignorance; and of the difficulty of attaining the knowledge he would come at; and of the insufficiency of it to make him easy and happy: and besides, the more knowledge he has, the more envy it draws upon him from others, who set themselves to oppose him, and detract from his character; in short, this is the sum of all human knowledge and wisdom, attained to in the highest degree; instead of making men comfortable and happy, it is found to be mere vanity, to cause vexation and disquietude of mind, and to promote grief and sorrow. There is indeed wisdom and knowledge opposite to this, and infinitely more excellent, and which, the more it is increased, the more joy and comfort it brings; and this is wisdom in the hidden part; a spiritual and experimental knowledge of Christ, and of God in Christ, and of divine and evangelical truths; but short of this knowledge there is no true peace, comfort, and happiness. The Targum is,
"for a man who multiplies wisdom, when he sins and does not turn by repentance, he multiplies indignation from the Lord; and he who increases knowledge, and dies in his youth, increases grief of heart to those who are near akin to him.''

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes



NET Notes: Ecc 1:18 This term does not appear in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for clarity.
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...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:17 And I gave my heart to know wisdom, and to know ( l ) madness and folly: I perceived that this also is vexation of spirit.
( l ) That is, vain things...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:18 For in much wisdom [is] much ( m ) grief: and he that increaseth knowledge increaseth sorrow.
( m ) Wisdom and knowledge cannot be come by without gr...

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; Ecc 1:16-18
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...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:16-18 - --
"I have communed with mine own heart, saying: Lo, I have gained great and always greater wisdom above all who were before me over Jerusalem; and my ...
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...
