
Text -- Ecclesiastes 4:5 (NET)




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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Ecc 4:5 - -- Is careless and idle: perceiving that diligence is attended with envy, he runs into the other extreme.
Is careless and idle: perceiving that diligence is attended with envy, he runs into the other extreme.

Wesley: Ecc 4:5 - -- Wastes his substance, and brings himself to poverty, whereby his very flesh pines away for want of bread.
Wastes his substance, and brings himself to poverty, whereby his very flesh pines away for want of bread.
JFB: Ecc 4:5 - -- Still the
fool (the wicked oppressor) is not to be envied even in this life, who "folds his hands together" in idleness (Pro 6:10; Pro 24:33), livin...
Clarke -> Ecc 4:5
Clarke: Ecc 4:5 - -- The fool foldeth his hands - After all, without labor and industry no man can get any comfort in life; and he who gives way to idleness is the verie...
The fool foldeth his hands - After all, without labor and industry no man can get any comfort in life; and he who gives way to idleness is the veriest of fools.
TSK -> Ecc 4:5
TSK: Ecc 4:5 - -- fool : Pro 6:10, Pro 6:11, Pro 12:27, Pro 13:4, Pro 20:4, Pro 24:33, Pro 24:34
eateth : That is, with envy (see Ecc 4:4), though too idle to follow hi...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ecc 4:5
Barnes: Ecc 4:5 - -- Foldeth his hands - The envious man is here exhibited in the attitude of the sluggard (marginal references). Eateth his own flesh - i. e....
Poole -> Ecc 4:5
Poole: Ecc 4:5 - -- Foldeth his hands together is careless and idle, which is the signification of this gesture, Pro 6:10 19:24 26:15 . Perceiving that diligence is atte...
Foldeth his hands together is careless and idle, which is the signification of this gesture, Pro 6:10 19:24 26:15 . Perceiving that diligence is attended with envy, Ecc 4:4 , he, like a fool, runs into the other extreme.
Eateth his own flesh wasteth his substance, and bringeth himself to poverty, whereby his very flesh pineth away for want of bread, and he is reduced to skin and bone; and if he have any flesh left, he is ready to eat it through extremity of hunger.
Haydock -> Ecc 4:5
Haydock: Ecc 4:5 - -- Flesh, which he will not labour to sustain; (Haydock) or he repines at his own past misconduct, and at the affluence of others.
Flesh, which he will not labour to sustain; (Haydock) or he repines at his own past misconduct, and at the affluence of others.
Gill -> Ecc 4:5
Gill: Ecc 4:5 - -- The fool foldeth his hands together,.... In order to get more sleep, or as unwilling to work; so the Targum adds,
"he folds his hands in summer, an...
The fool foldeth his hands together,.... In order to get more sleep, or as unwilling to work; so the Targum adds,
"he folds his hands in summer, and will not labour;''
see Pro 6:10. Some persons, to escape the envy which diligence and industry bring on men, will not work at all, or do any right work, and think to sleep in a whole skin; this is great folly and madness indeed:
and eateth his own flesh; such a man is starved and famished for want of food, so that his flesh is wasted away; or he is so hungry bitten, that he is ready to eat his own flesh; or he hereby brings to ruin his family, his wife, and children, which are his own flesh, Isa 58:7. The Targum is,
"in winter he eats all he has, even the covering of the skin of his flesh.''
Some understand this of the envious man, who is a fool, traduces the diligent and industrious, and will not work himself; and not only whose idleness brings want and poverty on him as an armed man, but whose envy eats up his spirit, and is rottenness in his bones, Pro 6:11. Jarchi, out of a book of theirs called Siphri, interprets this of a wicked man in hell, when he sees the righteous in glory, and he himself judged and condemned.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes: Ecc 4:5 Heb “and eats his own flesh.” Most English versions render the idiom literally: “and eats/consumes his flesh” (KJV, AS, NASB, ...
Geneva Bible -> Ecc 4:5
Geneva Bible: Ecc 4:5 The fool foldeth his hands together, and ( e ) eateth his own flesh.
( e ) For idleness he is compelled to destroy himself.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ecc 4:1-16
TSK Synopsis: Ecc 4:1-16 - --1 Vanity is increased unto men by oppression;4 by envy;5 by idleness;7 by covetousness;9 by solitariness;13 by wilfulness.
MHCC -> Ecc 4:4-6
MHCC: Ecc 4:4-6 - --Solomon notices the sources of trouble peculiar to well-doers, and includes all who labour with diligence, and whose efforts are crowned with success....
Matthew Henry -> Ecc 4:4-6
Matthew Henry: Ecc 4:4-6 - -- Here Solomon returns to the observation and consideration of the vanity and vexation of spirit that attend the business of this world, which he had ...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ecc 4:5
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 4:5 - --
There ought certainly to be activity according to our calling; indolence is self-destruction: "The fool foldeth his hands, and eateth his own flesh....
Constable: Ecc 2:18--6:10 - --B. General Observations 2:18-6:9
Thus far Solomon had reflected on the futility of all human endeavor ge...

Constable: Ecc 4:4-16 - --3. The motivations of labor 4:4-16
The phrase "vanity and striving after wind" (vv. 4, 16) brack...
