
Text -- Ecclesiastes 10:11 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Ecc 10:11
Wesley: Ecc 10:11 - -- If not prevented by the art and care of the charmer; which practice he does not justify, but only mentions by way of resemblance.
If not prevented by the art and care of the charmer; which practice he does not justify, but only mentions by way of resemblance.
JFB -> Ecc 10:11
JFB: Ecc 10:11 - -- A "serpent will bite" if "enchantment" is not used; "and a babbling calumniator is no better." Therefore, as one may escape a serpent by charms (Psa 5...
A "serpent will bite" if "enchantment" is not used; "and a babbling calumniator is no better." Therefore, as one may escape a serpent by charms (Psa 58:4-5), so one may escape the sting of a calumniator by discretion (Ecc 10:12), [HOLDEN]. Thus, "without enchantment" answers to "not whet the edge" (Ecc 10:10), both expressing, figuratively, want of judgment. MAURER translates, "There is no gain to the enchanter" (Margin, "master of the tongue") from his enchantments, because the serpent bites before he can use them; hence the need of continual caution. Ecc 10:8-10, caution in acting; Ecc 10:11 and following verses, caution in speaking.
Clarke -> Ecc 10:11
Clarke: Ecc 10:11 - -- The serpent will bite without enchantment - בלא לחש belo lachash , without hissing. As a snake may bite before it hiss, so also will the babb...
The serpent will bite without enchantment -
TSK -> Ecc 10:11

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ecc 10:11
Barnes: Ecc 10:11 - -- Rather: "If a serpent without enchantment (i. e., not being enchanted) bites, then there is no advantage to the charmer": i. e., if the charmer is u...
Rather: "If a serpent without enchantment (i. e., not being enchanted) bites, then there is no advantage to the charmer": i. e., if the charmer is unwisely slack in exercising his craft, he will be bitten like other people. See Psa 58:4 note.
Poole -> Ecc 10:11
Poole: Ecc 10:11 - -- Without enchantment if not seasonably prevented by the art and care of the charmer; which practice he doth not justify, but only mention by way of re...
Without enchantment if not seasonably prevented by the art and care of the charmer; which practice he doth not justify, but only mention by way of resemblance. See on Psa 58:5 .
A babbler Heb. a master of the tongue ; which may be understood, either,
1. Of the detractor or slanderer, who like a serpent bites secretly; who may be so called, because he takes liberty to use his tongue as he lists, without any regard either to the offence of God, or to the injury of others; like them who said, Our lips are our own ; who is lord over us? But I do not see either why this phrase should be limited to the detractor, which equally belongs to all abusers of the tongue in any other way; or how this particular vice of detraction comes to be inserted here among things of a quite differing nature. Or,
2. Of an eloquent person, who may well be called a master of the tongue , or of speech , nothing being more usual in the Hebrew, than to call a man master of that which he excels in, or hath a full and free power to use. And this clause is and may be rendered thus, And there is no excellency or profit to the master of the tongue , i.e. the most eloquent person, who doth not understand and in due time use the charmer’ s art, cannot by all his eloquence afterward hinder the biting of the serpent, or mischievous effects of it; and so this agrees with the principal scope of the chapter, which is to show the necessity and usefulness of wisdom, and the mischief of folly.
Haydock -> Ecc 10:11
Haydock: Ecc 10:11 - -- Silence. Protestants, "without enchantment, and a babbler is no better." (Haydock) ---
But he compares the detractor to a serpent, (Calmet) as he ...
Silence. Protestants, "without enchantment, and a babbler is no better." (Haydock) ---
But he compares the detractor to a serpent, (Calmet) as he infuses the poison into all who pay attention to him. (St. Jerome; St. Bernard)
Gill -> Ecc 10:11
Gill: Ecc 10:11 - -- Surely the serpent will bite without enchantment,.... See Jer 8:17. Or rather, "without a whisper" t; without hissing, or any noise, giving no warning...
Surely the serpent will bite without enchantment,.... See Jer 8:17. Or rather, "without a whisper" t; without hissing, or any noise, giving no warning at all: so the Vulgate Latin version renders it, "in silence"; some serpents bite, others sting, some both; see Pro 23:32; some hiss, others not, as here;
and a babbler is no better; a whisperer, a backbiter, a busy tattling body, that goes from house to house, and, in a private manner, speaks evil of civil governments, of ministers of the word, and of other persons; and; in a secret way, defames men, and detracts from their characters: such an one is like a venomous viper, a poisonous serpent or adder; and there is no more guarding against him than against such a creature that bites secretly.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ecc 10:1-20
TSK Synopsis: Ecc 10:1-20 - --1 Observations of wisdom and folly;16 of riot;18 slothfulness;19 and money.20 Men's thoughts of kings ought to be reverent.
MHCC -> Ecc 10:11-15
MHCC: Ecc 10:11-15 - --There is a practice in the East, of charming serpents by music. The babbler's tongue is an unruly evil, full of deadly poison; and contradiction only ...
Matthew Henry -> Ecc 10:4-11
Matthew Henry: Ecc 10:4-11 - -- The scope of these verses is to keep subjects loyal and dutiful to the government. In Solomon's reign the people were very rich, and lived in prospe...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ecc 10:11
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 10:11 - --
The last proverb of this series presents for consideration the uselessness of him who comes too late. "If a serpent bite without enchantment, the ch...
Constable: Ecc 6:10--11:7 - --III. THE LIMITATIONS OF WISDOM 6:10--11:6
Clues in the text indicate the value and purpose of 6:10-11:6. The phr...

Constable: Ecc 9:1--11:7 - --C. Man's Ignorance of the Future 9:1-11:6
The emphasis in this section (9:1-11:6) is on what man does no...
