
Text -- Ecclesiastes 4:9 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Who live together in any kind of society.

Wesley: Ecc 4:9 - -- Both have great benefit by such conjunction, whereby they support, encourage, and strengthen one another.
Both have great benefit by such conjunction, whereby they support, encourage, and strengthen one another.
JFB: Ecc 4:9 - -- Opposed to "one" (Ecc 4:8). Ties of union, marriage, friendship, religious communion, are better than the selfish solitariness of the miser (Gen 2:18)...

JFB: Ecc 4:9 - -- Advantage accrues from their efforts being conjoined. The Talmud says, "A man without a companion is like a left hand without the right.
Advantage accrues from their efforts being conjoined. The Talmud says, "A man without a companion is like a left hand without the right.
Clarke -> Ecc 4:9
Clarke: Ecc 4:9 - -- Two are better than one - Married life is infinitely to be preferred to this kind of life, for the very reasons alleged below, and which require no ...
Two are better than one - Married life is infinitely to be preferred to this kind of life, for the very reasons alleged below, and which require no explanation.
TSK -> Ecc 4:9
TSK: Ecc 4:9 - -- are : Gen 2:18; Exo 4:14-16; Num 11:14; Pro 27:17; Hag 1:14; Mar 6:7; Act 13:2; Act 15:39, Act 15:40; 1Co 12:18-21
a good : Rth 2:12; Joh 4:36; 2Jo 1:...

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ecc 4:7-12
Barnes: Ecc 4:7-12 - -- The spectacle of a prosperous man whose condition is rendered vain by his brotherless, childless isolation. Ecc 4:8 A second - Any one as...
The spectacle of a prosperous man whose condition is rendered vain by his brotherless, childless isolation.
A second - Any one associated or connected with him.
Compare a saying from the Talmud: "A man without companions is like the left hand without the right."
Poole -> Ecc 4:9
Poole: Ecc 4:9 - -- Two who live together in any kind of society, and join their powers together in any enterprises; which he opposeth to that humour of the covetous man...
Two who live together in any kind of society, and join their powers together in any enterprises; which he opposeth to that humour of the covetous man, who desired to live alone, as was now said.
A good reward for their labour both have great benefit by such combinations and conjunctions of their counsels and abilities, whereby they do exceedingly support, and encourage, and strengthen one another, and effect many things which neither of them alone could do.
Haydock -> Ecc 4:9
Haydock: Ecc 4:9 - -- Therefore is not in Hebrew, &c. The miser had better have some society. It is advantageous; though to refrain from its comforts, out of piety, is ...
Therefore is not in Hebrew, &c. The miser had better have some society. It is advantageous; though to refrain from its comforts, out of piety, is not blamed. The solitary must be "an angel or a devil." (Calmet) ---
Society. Besides the advantages of friendship, this implies that a person must have Jesus Christ with him, that he may rise from sin and death by his assistance. (St. Jerome) (Worthington)
Gill -> Ecc 4:9
Gill: Ecc 4:9 - -- Two are better than one,.... The wise man takes occasion, from the solitariness Of the covetous man before described, to show in this and some follow...
Two are better than one,.... The wise man takes occasion, from the solitariness Of the covetous man before described, to show in this and some following verses the preferableness and advantages of social life; which, as it holds true in things natural and civil, so in things spiritual and religious; man is a sociable creature, was made to be so; and it was the judgment of God, which is according to truth, and who can never err, that it was not good for man to be alone, Gen 2:18. It is best to take a wife, or at least to have a friend or companion, more or less to converse with. Society is preferable to solitariness; conversation with a friend is better than to be always alone; the Targum is,
"two righteous men in a generation are better than one;''
such may be helpful to each other in their counsels and comforts, and mutual aids and assistances in things temporal and spiritual. The Midrash interprets this of the study in the law together, and of two that trade together, which is better than studying or trading separately;
because they have a good reward for their labour; the pleasure and profit they have in each other's company and conversation; in religious societies, though there is a labour in attendance on public worship, in praying and conferring together, in serving one another in love, and bearing one another's burdens, yet they have a good reward in it all; they have the presence of Christ with them, for, where two or three are met together in his name, he is with them; and whatsoever two of them agree to ask in his name they have it; and if two of them converse together about spiritual things, it is much if he does not make a third with them; besides they have a great deal of pleasure in each other's company, and much profit in their mutual instructions, advices, and reproofs; they sharpen each other's countenances, quicken and comfort each other's souls, establish one another in divine truth, and strengthen each other's hands and hearts.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 4:9-12
MHCC: Ecc 4:9-12 - --Surely he has more satisfaction in life, who labours hard to maintain those he loves, than the miser has in his toil. In all things union tends to suc...
Matthew Henry -> Ecc 4:7-12
Matthew Henry: Ecc 4:7-12 - -- Here Solomon fastens upon another instance of the vanity of this world, that frequently the more men have of it the more they would have; and on thi...
Keil-Delitzsch -> Ecc 4:9
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 4:9 - --
"Better are two together than one, seeing they have a good reward in their labour."By hashshenaim , the author refers to such a pair; haehhad is o...
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...
