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Text -- Ecclesiastes 7:27-29 (NET)

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Context
7:27 The Teacher says: I discovered this while trying to discover the scheme of things, item by item. 7:28 What I have continually sought, I have not found; I have found only one upright man among a thousand, but I have not found one upright woman among all of them. 7:29 This alone have I discovered: God made humankind upright, but they have sought many evil schemes.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Women | Philosophy | Mankind | Life | Instruction | God | Fall of Mankind | FALL, THE | Engines | Depravity of Mankind | ANTHROPOLOGY | more
Table of Contents

Word/Phrase Notes
Wesley , JFB , Clarke , Defender , TSK

Word/Phrase Notes
Barnes , Poole , Haydock , Gill

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes , Geneva Bible

Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis , MHCC , Matthew Henry , Keil-Delitzsch , Constable

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)

Wesley: Ecc 7:27 - -- That I might make a true and just estimate.

That I might make a true and just estimate.

Wesley: Ecc 7:28 - -- I returned to search again with more earnestness.

I returned to search again with more earnestness.

Wesley: Ecc 7:28 - -- That it was so, he found, but the reason of the thing he could not find out.

That it was so, he found, but the reason of the thing he could not find out.

Wesley: Ecc 7:28 - -- A wise and virtuous man.

A wise and virtuous man.

Wesley: Ecc 7:28 - -- One worthy of that name; one who is not a dishonour to her sex.

One worthy of that name; one who is not a dishonour to her sex.

Wesley: Ecc 7:28 - -- In that thousand whom I have taken into intimate society with myself.

In that thousand whom I have taken into intimate society with myself.

Wesley: Ecc 7:29 - -- Though I could not find out all the streams of wickedness, and their infinite windings and turnings, yet I have discovered the fountain of it, Origina...

Though I could not find out all the streams of wickedness, and their infinite windings and turnings, yet I have discovered the fountain of it, Original sin, and the corruption of nature, which is both in men and women.

Wesley: Ecc 7:29 - -- God made our first parents, Adam and Eve.

God made our first parents, Adam and Eve.

Wesley: Ecc 7:29 - -- Heb. right: without any imperfection or corruption, conformable to his nature and will, after his own likeness.

Heb. right: without any imperfection or corruption, conformable to his nature and will, after his own likeness.

Wesley: Ecc 7:29 - -- Our first parents, and after them their posterity.

Our first parents, and after them their posterity.

Wesley: Ecc 7:29 - -- Were not contented with their present state, but studied new ways of making themselves more wise and happy, than God had made them. And we, their wret...

Were not contented with their present state, but studied new ways of making themselves more wise and happy, than God had made them. And we, their wretched children, are still prone to forsake the certain rule of God's word, and the true way to happiness, and to seek new methods of attaining it.

JFB: Ecc 7:27 - -- Namely, what follows in Ecc 7:28.

Namely, what follows in Ecc 7:28.

JFB: Ecc 7:27 - -- By comparing one thing with another [HOLDEN and MAURER].

By comparing one thing with another [HOLDEN and MAURER].

JFB: Ecc 7:27 - -- A right estimate. But Ecc 7:28 more favors GESENIUS. "Considering women one by one."

A right estimate. But Ecc 7:28 more favors GESENIUS. "Considering women one by one."

JFB: Ecc 7:28 - -- Rather, referring to his past experience, "Which my soul sought further, but I found not."

Rather, referring to his past experience, "Which my soul sought further, but I found not."

JFB: Ecc 7:28 - -- That is, worthy of the name, "man," "upright"; not more than one in a thousand of my courtiers (Job 33:23; Psa 12:1). Jesus Christ alone of men fully ...

That is, worthy of the name, "man," "upright"; not more than one in a thousand of my courtiers (Job 33:23; Psa 12:1). Jesus Christ alone of men fully realizes the perfect ideal of "man." "Chiefest among ten thousand" (Son 5:10). No perfect "woman" has ever existed, not even the Virgin Mary. Solomon, in the word "thousand," alludes to his three hundred wives and seven hundred concubines. Among these it was not likely that he should find the fidelity which one true wife pays to one husband. Connected with Ecc 7:26, not an unqualified condemnation of the sex, as Pro 12:4; Pro 31:10, &c., prove.

JFB: Ecc 7:29 - -- The "only" way of accounting for the scarcity of even comparatively upright men and women is that, whereas God made man upright, they (men) have, &c. ...

The "only" way of accounting for the scarcity of even comparatively upright men and women is that, whereas God made man upright, they (men) have, &c. The only account to be "found" of the origin of evil, the great mystery of theology, is that given in Holy Writ (Gen. 2:1-3:24). Among man's "inventions" was the one especially referred to in Ecc 7:26, the bitter fruits of which Solomon experienced, the breaking of God's primeval marriage law, joining one man to "one" woman (Mat 19:4-6). "Man" is singular, namely, Adam; "they," plural, Adam, Eve, and their posterity.

Clarke: Ecc 7:27 - -- Counting one by one - I have gone over every particular. I have compared one thing with another; man with woman, his wisdom with her wiles; his stre...

Counting one by one - I have gone over every particular. I have compared one thing with another; man with woman, his wisdom with her wiles; his strength with her blandishments; his influence with her ascendancy; his powers of reason with her arts and cunning; and in a thousand men, I have found one thoroughly upright man; but among one thousand women I have not found one such. This is a lamentable account of the state of morals in Judea, in the days of the wise King Solomon. Thank God! it would not be difficult to get a tithe of both in the same number in the present day

The Targum gives this a curious turn: "There is another thing which my soul has sought, but could not find: a man perfect and innocent, and without corruption, from the days of Adam until Abraham the just was born; who was found faithful and upright among the thousand kings who came together to construct the tower of Babel: but a woman like to Sarah among the wives of all those kings I have not found."

Clarke: Ecc 7:29 - -- Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright - Whatever evil may be now found among men and women, it is not of God; for God made them...

Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright - Whatever evil may be now found among men and women, it is not of God; for God made them all upright. This is a singular verse, and has been most variously translated

עשה האלהים את האדם ישר והמה בקשו חשבנות רבים asah haelohim eth haadam yashar vehemhah bikkeshu chishbonoth rabbim

"Elohim has made mankind upright, and they have sought many computations.

"He hath meddled with endless questions."- Vulgate

"Many reasonings."- Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic

"They seek dyverse sotylties."Coverdale

And he himself mengide with questions without eend. - Old MS. Bible

The Targum considers the text as speaking of Adam and Eve

"This have I found out, that the Lord made the first man upright before him, and innocent: but the serpent and Eve seduced him to eat of the fruit of the tree, which gave the power to those who ate of it to discern between good and evil; and was the cause that death came upon him, and all the inhabitants of the earth; and they sought that they might find out many stratagems to bring this evil upon all the inhabitants of the world.

I doubt much whether the word חשבנות chishbonoth should be taken in a bad sense. It may signify the whole of human devices, imaginations, inventions, artifice, with all their products; arts, sciences, schemes, plans, and all that they have found out for the destruction or melioration of life. God has given man wondrous faculties; and of them he has made strange uses, and sovereign abuses: and they have been, in consequence, at one time his help, and at another his bane. This is the fair way of understanding this question.

Defender: Ecc 7:29 - -- God made man in His own image (Gen 1:27). The fact that now there is not a just man on earth is due entirely to the fact that all men, beginning with ...

God made man in His own image (Gen 1:27). The fact that now there is not a just man on earth is due entirely to the fact that all men, beginning with Adam, have deliberately disobeyed God and gone their own way, seeking many devices to escape from God."

TSK: Ecc 7:27 - -- saith : Ecc 1:1, Ecc 1:2, Ecc 12:8-10 counting one by one, to find out the account : or, weighing one thing after another, to find out the reason, Ecc...

saith : Ecc 1:1, Ecc 1:2, Ecc 12:8-10

counting one by one, to find out the account : or, weighing one thing after another, to find out the reason, Ecc 7:25

TSK: Ecc 7:28 - -- yet : Ecc 7:23, Ecc 7:24; Isa 26:9 one : Job 33:23; Psa 12:1 but : Solomon, instead of seeking one rational, virtuous woman, had collected an immense ...

yet : Ecc 7:23, Ecc 7:24; Isa 26:9

one : Job 33:23; Psa 12:1

but : Solomon, instead of seeking one rational, virtuous woman, had collected an immense multitude, of various countries and religions, for magnificence and indulgence; among whom, as might have been expected, he had not found one who was thoroughly faithful, upright, and pious. He here uses the language of a penitent, warning others of the errors into which he had been led; and not that of a wasphish satirist, lashing indiscriminately one half of the human species. 1Ki 11:1-3

TSK: Ecc 7:29 - -- God : Gen 1:26, Gen 1:27, Gen 5:1 they : The descendants of Adam have sought out an immense number of inventions, in order to find happiness in the wo...

God : Gen 1:26, Gen 1:27, Gen 5:1

they : The descendants of Adam have sought out an immense number of inventions, in order to find happiness in the world, without God, which have only proved so many variations of impiety and iniquity. Gen 3:6, Gen 3:7, Gen 6:5, Gen 6:6, Gen 6:11, Gen 6:12, Gen 11:4-6; Psa 99:8, Psa 106:29, Psa 106:39; Jer 2:12, Jer 2:13; Jer 4:22; Eze 22:6-13; Mar 7:8, Mar 7:9; Act 7:40-43; Rom 1:21-32, Rom 3:9-19; Eph 2:2, Eph 2:3; Tit 3:3

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Commentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)

Barnes: Ecc 7:28 - -- One man - One whose good qualities quite satisfy our expectation. Compare the expression "one among a thousand"(marginal reference). A wom...

One man - One whose good qualities quite satisfy our expectation. Compare the expression "one among a thousand"(marginal reference).

A woman - The number of Solomon’ s wives and concubines 1Ki 11:3 was a thousand.

Barnes: Ecc 7:29 - -- God hath made - Rather, God made. A definite allusion to the original state of man: in which he was exempt from vanity.

God hath made - Rather, God made. A definite allusion to the original state of man: in which he was exempt from vanity.

Poole: Ecc 7:27 - -- Behold it is a strange thing, and worthy of your serious observation. The preacher or, the penitent , who speaks what he hath learned, both by dee...

Behold it is a strange thing, and worthy of your serious observation.

The preacher or, the penitent , who speaks what he hath learned, both by deep, study and costly experience.

Counting one by one considering things or persons very exactly and distinctly, one after another; and not only in general and confusedly, in which case a man may very easily be mistaken; and comparing them together, whereby I was enabled to make the truer judgment of them.

To find out the account that I might make a true and just estimate in this matter. Or, as it is in the margin:, and was rendered Ecc 7:25 , the reason , to wit, of that which I am about to say. I considered the persons severally and critically, that from thence I might understand the reason of the thing.

Poole: Ecc 7:28 - -- My soul seeketh it seemed so wonderful to me, that I suspected I had not made a sufficient inquiry, and therefore I returned to search again with mor...

My soul seeketh it seemed so wonderful to me, that I suspected I had not made a sufficient inquiry, and therefore I returned to search again with more earnestness and accurateness.

I find not that it was so he found out, as he now said, Ecc 7:27 but the whole truth and reason of the thing he could not find out.

One man one worthy of the name of a man; a wise and virtuous man. Man is put for a worthy or good man, as name is put for a good name , above, Ecc 7:1 , and wife for a good wife , as was noted before.

Among a thousand with whom I have conversed. He is supposed to mention this number in allusion to his thousand wives and concubines, as they are numbered by parcels, 1Ki 11:3 .

A woman one worthy of that name; one who is not a dishonour to her kind and sex, who is not brutish in her disposition and conversation.

Among all those in that thousand whom I have taken into intimate society with myself; whereby he also passeth a severe censure upon himself that he had associated himself with such persons, and not with the virtuous women, which doubtless there were in his time, as appears from Pr 31 . It is not Solomon’ s design to disparage this sex, nor to make a general comparison between men and women in all places and ages, but only to suggest his own experience concerning it.

Poole: Ecc 7:29 - -- This only have I found though I could not find out all the streams of wickedness, and their infinite windings and turnings in the world, yet I have d...

This only have I found though I could not find out all the streams of wickedness, and their infinite windings and turnings in the world, yet I have discovered the fountain of it, to wit, original sin, and the corruption of nature, which is both in men and women.

God hath made man God made our first parents, Adam and Eve, upright , Heb. right , without any imperfection or corruption, conformable to his nature and will, which is the rule of right, after his own likeness, understanding, and holy, and every way good.

They our first parents, and after them their posterity treading in their steps,

have sought out many inventions were not contented with their present state, but aimed at higher things, and studied new ways of making themselves more wise and happy than God had made them, and readily hearkened to the suggestions of the devil to that end. And we their sinful and wretched children, after their example, are still prone to forsake the certain rule of God’ s word, and the true way to happiness, and to seek new methods and inventions of attaining to it, even such as Solomon hath discoursed of in this book.

Haydock: Ecc 7:27 - -- Her. He speaks by experience, (St. Jerome) as none perhaps ever fell more terribly victims of impure love. (Calmet) --- Though a plurality of wive...

Her. He speaks by experience, (St. Jerome) as none perhaps ever fell more terribly victims of impure love. (Calmet) ---

Though a plurality of wives was then permitted, Solomon did wrong in marrying strangers; and in suffering himself to be deluded by them, so as to erect temples to their respective idols. (Haydock) ---

All the attractions of women are replete with danger, and can only be overcome by God's grace, and by flight, 1 Corinthians iv. 8., and Proverbs vii. 22., and xxii. 14. (Calmet)

Haydock: Ecc 7:29 - -- Man. The superior part of the soul rarely thinks of good; but the sensual part always inclines to evil. (Worthington) --- Solomon found danger from...

Man. The superior part of the soul rarely thinks of good; but the sensual part always inclines to evil. (Worthington) ---

Solomon found danger from all women, (St. Jerome) and there is none who may not prove fatal to those who are off their guard. (Calmet) ---

Yet some are doubtless innocent, like the bless Virgin [Mary]. (Haydock)

Gill: Ecc 7:27 - -- Behold, this have I found,.... That a harlot is more bitter than death; and which he found by his own experience, and therefore would have it observed...

Behold, this have I found,.... That a harlot is more bitter than death; and which he found by his own experience, and therefore would have it observed by others for their caution: or one man among a thousand, Ecc 7:28;

(saith the preacher); of which title and character see Ecc 1:1; it is here mentioned to confirm the truth of what he said; he said it as a preacher, and, upon the word of a preacher, it was true; as also to signify his repentance for his sin, who was now the "gathered soul", as some render it; gathered into the church of God by repentance;

counting one by one, to find out the account; not his own sins, which he endeavoured to reckon up, and find out the general account of them, which yet he could not do; nor the good works of the righteous, and the sins of the wicked, which are numbered before the Lord one by one, till they are added to the great account; as Jarchi, from the Rabbins, interprets it, and so the Midrash: but rather the sense is, examining women, one by one, all within the verge of his acquaintance; particularly the thousand women that were either his wives or concubines; in order to take and give a just estimate of their character and actions. What follows is the result.

Gill: Ecc 7:28 - -- Which yet my soul seeketh, but I find not,.... He was very earnest and diligent in his inquiry; he took a great deal of pains, and was exceedingly sol...

Which yet my soul seeketh, but I find not,.... He was very earnest and diligent in his inquiry; he took a great deal of pains, and was exceedingly solicitous; he sought with great intenseness of mind, and with an eager desire, to find out a chaste and virtuous woman among them all, but could not;

one man among a thousand have I found; it is a great rarity to find a good man n, truly wise and gracious; there are many that walk in the broad way, and but few that find the strait gate and narrow way, and are saved; they are but as one to a thousand; see Jer 5:1. Or rather, by this one of a thousand, is meant the, Messiah, the Wisdom of God, he sought for, Ecc 7:25; and now says he found; to whom he looked for peace, pardon, and atonement, under a sense of his sins; who is the messenger, an interpreter, one among a thousand; yea, who is the chiefest among ten thousands, Job 33:23; who is superior to angels and men, in the dignity of his person; in the perfection, purity, and holiness of his nature; in the excellency of his names; in his offices and relations; and in his concern in the affairs of grace and salvation; and who is to be found by every truly wise and gracious soul that seeks him early and earnestly, in the word and ordinances, under the illumination and direction of the blessed Spirit. If it is to be understood of a mere man, I should think the sense was this; of all the men that have been ensnared and taken by an adulterous woman, but one of a thousand have I observed, and perhaps Solomon has respect to himself, that was ever recovered out of her hands;

but a woman among all those have I not found; that is, among all the harlots and adulterous women I ever knew or heard of, I never knew nor heard of one that was ever reclaimed from her evil ways, and reformed or became a chaste and virtuous woman: he may have respect to the thousand women that were either his wives and concubines, and, among all these, he found not one that deserved the above character; for this is not to be understood of women in general, for Solomon must have known that there have been good women in all ages, and perhaps more than men; and that there were many in his days, though those with whom his more intimate acquaintance was were not such, which was his unhappiness; and his criminal conversation with them is what he lamented and repented of. It may be interpreted thus, One man, the Messiah, among all the sons of men, have I found, free from original sin; but one woman, among all the daughters of Eve, I have not found clear of it. The Targum is,

"there is another thing which yet my soul seeketh, and I have not found; a man perfect and innocent, without corruption, from the days of Adam, till Abraham the righteous was born; who was found faithful and just among the thousand kings who were gathered together to build the tower of Babel; and a woman among all the wives of those kings, as Sarah, I found not.''

Gill: Ecc 7:29 - -- Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright,.... The first man Adam, as the Targum and Jarchi interpret it; and not Adam only, but Eve ...

Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright,.... The first man Adam, as the Targum and Jarchi interpret it; and not Adam only, but Eve also with him; for these were both made by the Lord, and on the same day, and in the same image, and had the same common name of Adam given them, Gen 1:27; And they were both made "upright"; which is to be understood, not of the erectness of their bodies, but of the disposition of their minds; they were

"right and innocent before him,''

or in the sight of God, as the Targum; which is best explained by their being made in the image and likeness of God, Gen 1:26; and which, according to the apostle, lay in knowledge, righteousness, and holiness, Eph 4:24; agreeably to which Plato o make likeness to God to be righteous and holy, with prudence: for this likeness of Adam and Eve to God; lay not in the shape of their bodies, for God is a spirit, and not a corporeal being, as the Anthropomorphites imagined, and so fancied men to be made like unto him in this respect; but in their souls, and it consisted of knowledge; of the knowledge of the creatures, their nature, use, and ends for which they were made, and put under their government; and of God, and his perfections, as made known in the creatures; and of his mind and will, and manner of worshipping him, he revealed unto them; and they might know the trinity of Persons in the Godhead, who were concerned in the making of them, though they seem not to have known Christ, as Mediator and Saviour, which was not necessary previous to their fall; nor evangelical truths suited to a fallen state: also this image lay in righteousness and true holiness, which was original, natural, and created with them; it was with them as soon as they were; not acquired, but infused; not a habit obtained, but a quality given; and this not supernatural, but natural; it was perfect in its kind, and entirely agreeable to the holy, just, and good law of God; it had no defects in it, yet was but the righteousness of a creature, and loseable, as the event showed; and so very different from the righteousness of Christ, man is justified by. Likewise, this uprightness is no other than the rectitude of human nature, of all the powers and faculties of the soul of man, as they were when he was created; his understanding clear of all errors and mistakes, either about divine or human things; his affections regular and ordinate, no unruly passion in him, no sinful affection, lust, and desire; he loved God with all his heart and soul, and delighted in him, and communion with him; the bias of his will was to that which is good; the law of God was written on his heart, and he had both power and will to keep it; and, during his state of integrity, was pure and sinless; yet he was not impeccable, as the confirmed angels and glorified saints are; nor immutable, as God only is; but being a creature, and changeable, he was liable to temptation, and subject to fall, as he did. Now Solomon, with all his diligent search and scrutiny, could not find out the infinity of sin, the boundless extent of it among mankind, the exceeding sinfulness of it, which he sought after, Ecc 7:25; yet this he "found" out, and this "only", the fountain of all sin, the origin of moral evil; namely, the corruption of human nature through the fall of Adam: this he found by reading the Scriptures, the three first chapters of Genesis; and by consulting human nature he found some remains of the image of God, and of the law that was in man's heart; whereby he perceived that man was once another man than he is now; and that this corruption is not owing to God, who is not the author of any thing sinful, he made man upright; but to himself, his own sin and folly: and this he found confirmed by sad experience; in himself and others, and by observing the history of all ages, from the times of the first man; and as this was notorious, it was worth knowing and observing, and therefore he calls upon others to take notice of it; lo, behold, consider it, as well as what follows;

but they have sought out many inventions; that is, Adam and Eve, not content with their present knowledge and happiness, they sought out new ways and means of being wiser and happier than God made them, or it was his will they should be. "They sought out the inventions of the many", or "great things", or "of the mighty and great ones" p, as it may be rendered, the eternal Three in One; they sought to be as wise as God himself; or, however, as the great and mighty ones, the angels, who excelled them, as in strength, so in knowledge; see Gen 3:5; or they sought out thoughts of sin, as Jarchi says it is interpreted in the Midrash. Sins are the inventions of men, and these are many and numerous; they sought to gratify their senses, on which followed innumerable evils; and then they sought for shifts and evasions to excuse themselves; the man shifting it from himself, and throwing the blame upon the woman, and the woman upon the serpent: and so sinning, they lost the knowledge they had; their righteousness and holiness, the rectitude of their nature; the moral freedom of their will to that which is good, and their power to perform it; and they lost the presence of God, and communion with him: and so their posterity are not only inventors of evil things, of sins, but of new ways of happiness; some placing it in riches; others in honours; others in pleasures; and some in natural wisdom and knowledge; and some in their own works of righteousness; the vanity of all which Solomon has before exposed.

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Ecc 7:28 The word “upright” does not appear in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation twice, here and in the following line, for clari...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 7:27 Behold, this have I found, saith the preacher, [counting] one by one, to ( s ) find out the account: ( s ) That is, to come to a conclusion.

Geneva Bible: Ecc 7:29 Lo, this only have I found, that God hath made man upright; but they have sought out many ( t ) devices. ( t ) And so are cause for their own destruc...

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Commentary -- Verse Range Notes

TSK Synopsis: Ecc 7:1-29 - --1 Remedies against vanity are, a good name;2 mortification;7 patience;11 wisdom.23 The difficulty of wisdom.

MHCC: Ecc 7:23-29 - --Solomon, in his search into the nature and reason of things, had been miserably deluded. But he here speaks with godly sorrow. He alone who constantly...

Matthew Henry: Ecc 7:23-29 - -- Solomon had hitherto been proving the vanity of the world and its utter insufficiency to make men happy; now here he comes to show the vileness of s...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 7:27-28 - -- "Behold what I have found, saith Koheleth, adding one thing to another, to find out the account: What my soul hath still sought, and I have not foun...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 7:29 - -- "Lo, this only have I found, that God created man upright; but they seek many arts."Also here the order of the words is inverted, since זה , belo...

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 7:1--8:17 - --B. God's Inscrutable Plan chs. 7-8 Solomon proceeded in this section to focus on the plan of God, His de...

Constable: Ecc 7:15-29 - --2. Righteousness and wickedness 7:15-29 Even though the righteous sometimes do not receive a reward in this life and the wicked prosper, it is still b...

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Introduction / Outline

JFB: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) The Hebrew title is Koheleth, which the speaker in it applies to himself (Ecc 1:12), "I, Koheleth, was king over Israel." It means an Assembler or Con...

JFB: Ecclesiastes (Outline) INTRODUCTION. (Ecc. 1:1-18)

TSK: Ecclesiastes 7 (Chapter Introduction) Overview Ecc 7:1, Remedies against vanity are, a good name; Ecc 7:2, mortification; Ecc 7:7, patience; Ecc 7:11, wisdom; Ecc 7:23, The difficulty ...

Poole: Ecclesiastes 7 (Chapter Introduction) CHAPTER 7 A good name desirable; and the house of mourning and rebuke better than songs and laughter, Ecc 7:1-6 . Exhortations to patience and pers...

MHCC: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) The name of this book signifies " The Preacher." The wisdom of God here preaches to us, speaking by Solomon, who it is evident was the author. At the...

MHCC: Ecclesiastes 7 (Chapter Introduction) (Ecc 7:1-6) The benefit of a good name; of death above life; of sorrow above vain mirth. (Ecc 7:7-10) Concerning oppression, anger, and discontent. ...

Matthew Henry: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) An Exposition, with Practical Observations, of The Book of Ecclesiastes We are still among Solomon's happy men, his happy servants, that stood contin...

Matthew Henry: Ecclesiastes 7 (Chapter Introduction) Solomon had given many proofs and instances of the vanity of this world and the things of it; now, in this chapter, I. He recommends to us some go...

Constable: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) Introduction Title The title of this book in the Hebrew text is all of verse 1. The Se...

Constable: Ecclesiastes (Outline)

Constable: Ecclesiastes Ecclesiastes Bibliography Archer, Gleason L., Jr. "The Linguistic Evidence for the Date of Ecclesiastes'." Jour...

Haydock: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) ECCLESIASTES. INTRODUCTION. This Book is called Ecclesiastes, or the preacher, (in Hebrew, Coheleth ) because in it Solomon, as an excelle...

Gill: Ecclesiastes (Book Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES This book has been universally received into the canon of the Scriptures, by Jews and Christians. The former, indeed, ...

Gill: Ecclesiastes 7 (Chapter Introduction) INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES 7 The wise man having exposed the many vanities to which men are subject in this life, and showed that there is no rea...

Advanced Commentary (Dictionaries, Hymns, Arts, Sermon Illustration, Question and Answers, etc)


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