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Text -- Ecclesiastes 4:8 (NET)

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Cross Reference (TSK)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Who has none but himself to care for.

He lives in perpetual restlessness and toil.

Wesley: Ecc 4:8 - -- Deny myself those comforts and conveniences which God hath allowed me? A sore travel - A dreadful judgment, as well as a great sin.
Deny myself those comforts and conveniences which God hath allowed me? A sore travel - A dreadful judgment, as well as a great sin.
No partner.
Clarke -> Ecc 4:8
Clarke: Ecc 4:8 - -- There is one alone, and there is not a second - Here covetousness and avarice are characterized. The man who is the center of his own existence; has...
There is one alone, and there is not a second - Here covetousness and avarice are characterized. The man who is the center of his own existence; has neither wife, child, nor legal heir; and yet is as intent on getting money as if he had the largest family to provide for; nor does he only labor with intense application, but he even refuses himself the comforts of life out of his own gains! This is not only vanity, the excess of foolishness, but it is also sore travail.
TSK -> Ecc 4:8
TSK: Ecc 4:8 - -- one : Ecc 4:9-12; Gen 2:18; Isa 56:3-5
he hath : Gen 15:2, Gen 15:3
no : Isa 5:8
is his : Ecc 1:8, Ecc 5:10; Pro 27:20; Hab 2:5-9; 1Jo 2:16
For : Psa ...

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 4:8
Poole: Ecc 4:8 - -- One alone either,
1. Who lives by himself, as grudging that any ether should partake of his provisions. Or rather,
2. Who hath none but himself to ...
One alone either,
1. Who lives by himself, as grudging that any ether should partake of his provisions. Or rather,
2. Who hath none but himself to care and labour for, as the next words explain it.
He hath neither child nor brother to whom he may leave his vast estate.
Yet is there no end of all his labour he lives in perpetual restlessness and excessive toils.
His eye i.e. his covetous mind or desire, fitly expressed by the eye , partly because that is the incentive of this sin, Jos 7:21 ; and partly because he hath no good by his riches, saving the beholding of them with his eyes, as it is affirmed, Ecc 5:11 , compared with Ecc 2:10 1Jo 2:16 . Neither saith he, within himself; he considers nothing but how he may get more and more. For whom do I labour? having no posterity nor kindred to enjoy it, as was now said. Shall I take all this pains for a stranger, possibly for an enemy, who will reap the fruit of all my labours? Bereave my soul of good ; deity myself those comforts and conveniencies which God hath allowed unto me.
A sore travail a dreadful judgment and misery as well as a great sin.
Haydock -> Ecc 4:8
Things? He acts as if he were to live for ever, or feared to be starved.
Gill -> Ecc 4:8
Gill: Ecc 4:8 - -- There is one alone, and there is not a second,.... According to Aben Ezra, either no friend or companion, or no servant, or no wife, which last sens...
There is one alone, and there is not a second,.... According to Aben Ezra, either no friend or companion, or no servant, or no wife, which last sense he prefers; no friend or companion he chooses, because friendship and fellowship lead to expenses; and no servant who would be chargeable to him; and no wife, which would be more expensive, and bring on a family of children; wherefore, to save charges, he chooses to have neither of these; for this is a covetous man who is here desert bed;
yea, he hath neither child nor brother; to inherit his substance, as the Targum adds; some worldly men, whose bellies are filled with hidden treasures, having enjoyed much, when they die, leave the rest of their substance to their babes; but the man here described has no children, nor any relations to leave his wealth unto;
yet is there no end of all his labour; when he has executed one scheme to get riches, he forms another; and having finished one work, he enters upon another; he rises early and sits up late, and works and toils night and day, as if he was not worth a dollar, and had a large and numerous family to provide for; or there is no end of what he labours for, or gets by his labour; there is no end of his treasures, Isa 2:7; he is immensely rich, so Aben Ezra interprets it;
neither is his eye satisfied with riches: with seeing his bags of gold and silver, though he takes a great deal of sure in looking upon them too, without making use of them; yet he is not satisfied with what he has, he wants more, he enlarges his desire as hell, and like the grave never has enough; see Ecc 5:10;
neither saith he, for whom do I labour? having neither wife nor child, nor relation, nor friend, and yet so wretchedly stupid and thoughtless as never once to put this question to himself, Who am I toiling for? I am heaping up riches, and know not who shall gather them; it is a vexation to a worldly man to leave his substance behind him, and even to a man that has an heir to inherit it, when he knows not whether he will be a wise man or a fool; but for a man that has no heir at all, and yet to be toiling and labouring for the world, is gross stupidity, downright madness, and especially when he deprives himself of the comfort of what he is possessed of;
and bereave my soul of good? instead of richly enjoying what is given him, he withholds it from himself, starves his back and belly, lives in pinching want amidst the greatest plenty; has not power to eat of what he has, and his soul desireth; see Ecc 6:2.
This is also vanity, yea, it is a sore travail; a very vain and wicked thing; "an evil business", as it may be rendered; a very great sin and folly indeed; it is thought by some divines to be the worst species of covetousness, most cruel and unnatural.

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 4:7-8
MHCC: Ecc 4:7-8 - --Frequently, the more men have, the more they would have; and on this they are so intent, that they get no enjoyment from what they have. Selfishness i...
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 4:7-8
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 4:7-8 - --
"There is one without a second, also son and brother he has not; and there is no end of his labour; his eyes nevertheless are not satisfied with ric...
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...




