
Text -- Ecclesiastes 1:17 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley -> Ecc 1:17
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.
JFB -> Ecc 1:17
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).
Clarke -> Ecc 1:17
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."
TSK -> Ecc 1:17

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes -> Ecc 1:17
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.
Poole -> Ecc 1:17
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 .
Haydock -> Ecc 1:17
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)
Gill -> Ecc 1:17
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.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

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 1:16-18
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; Ecc 1:16-18
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...
