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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 12:11

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 12:11

The words of the wise [are] as goads, and as nails fastened [by] the masters of assemblies, [which] are given from one shepherd.

11. The words of the wise are as goads ] The general fact is, of course, stated in special connexion with the book which furnishes the writer’s theme. They assert that its words also, sweet as they seem, are not without their sting, though, like the prick of the goad, it is for good and not for evil, urging men on to strong and vigorous labour in the fields of thought and action. The comparison was a natural one in any country, but we are reminded of what was said of the words of Pericles that his eloquence “left a sting ( ) in the minds of his hearers (Eupolis, quoted by Liddell and Scott, s. v. ), and in part also of the Greek proverb, consecrated for us by a yet higher application (Act 9:5; Act 26:14) that “it is hard to kick against the pricks,” as applicable to resisting wisdom as well as to defying power (sch. Agam. 1633, Pindar, Pyth, ii. 173).

as nails fastened by the masters of assemblies ] The word for “nails” is found in this, or a cognate form, with that meaning in Isa 41:7; Jer 10:4 ; 1Ch 22:3; 2Ch 3:9; and there is no adequate reason for taking it here, as some have done (Ginsburg), in the sense of the “stakes” of a tent. The word “by” however is an interpolation, and the words taken as they stand would run as nails fastened are the masters of assemblies. The whole analogy of the Hebrew is against our referring the last words to any but persons, and we must therefore reject the interpretation that the “words of the wise are as goads, as fastened nails which are put together in collections” (Delitzsch). The “masters of assemblies” (not, as it has been rendered (Tyler) “editors of collections”,) can be none else than the heads or leaders of a body of learned men, like the Great Synagogue of the traditions of the time of Ezra and Nehemiah, or the Sanhedrin of a later date. In “the fastened nail” we have a symbolism like that of Isa 22:23; Ezr 9:8, and seen also in the Rabbinic proverb, “Well for the man who has a nail to hang things on” (Dukes, Rabbin. Blumenlese, p. 121). In both these cases, it will be noted, the word refers to persons. It is the fitting emblem of fixity and permanence, and forms the natural complement to that of the goads. As it has been well put (Ginsburg), the two words express the several aspects of Truth as progressive and conservative.

which are given from one shepherd ] The noun is used often in the O. T. both in its literal sense, and of kings and rulers as the shepherds of their people (Jer 2:8; Jer 3:15; Jer 49:19; Jer 50:44; Ezekiel 34 passim), and of God as the great Shepherd of Israel (Psa 23:1; Psa 80:1, and by implication, Eze 34:23). We have to choose accordingly between the two latter meanings. The words either assert that all the varied forms of the wisdom of the wise come from God, or that all the opinions, however diversified, which are uttered by “the masters of assemblies,” are subject to the authority of the President of the assembly. The first gives, it is believed, the most satisfactory meaning, and so taken, the words express the truth declared, without symbolism, in 1Co 12:1-11. It was not, perhaps, without some reference to this thought, though scarcely to this passage, that our Lord claimed for Himself as the one true Guide and Teacher of mankind the title of the “Good Shepherd,” and condemned all that had come before Him, assuming that character, as thieves and robbers (Joh 10:8; Joh 10:11), and that St Peter speaks of Him as the “chief Shepherd” (1Pe 5:4) over all who exercise a pastoral office in the Church of Christ.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

Ecc 12:11

The words of the wise are as goads.

A wise preacher aims to move his hearers


I.
A wise preacher will aim to impress the minds of his hearers.

1. Every wise preacher knows that unless he impresses the minds of his hearers, he can do them no good by his preaching. Hearers must feel what they hear, or what they hear will be like sounding brass, or a tinkling cymbal.

2. Every wise preacher knows that his hearers will not feel the truth and importance of what he says unless he makes them feel it. Hearers look upon it as the part of the preacher to make them feel. They mean to be passive in hearing, unless he makes them active.


II.
How he will preach in order to attain this desirable object. When any person proposes a certain end, the end which he proposes naturally suggests the proper means to accomplish it. This holds with respect to a wise preacher, who makes it his object to penetrate and impress the minds of his hearers.

1. This end will naturally lead him to use the most proper style in preaching. He will choose the best words, and place them in the best order, to enlighten the mind and affect the heart.

2. His design to penetrate and impress the minds of his hearers will lead him to exhibit great and interesting truths. He will bring much of the character, perfections and designs of God into his public discourses. He will preach Christ in the greatness of His nature, and in the glory and grace of His mediatorial character and works. He will exhibit man in the dignity of his nature, and in the importance of his destination. And he will unfold the scenes of a general judgment, and of a boundless eternity, in their own native awful solemnity.

3. For the same purpose he will explain Divine truths and describe Divine objects.

4. The wise preacher, who intends to impress the minds of his hearers, will arrange Divine truths, and exhibit Divine objects, in such an order as to reach every power and faculty of the soul, in its proper turn. Instruction should always go before declamation. It can answer no valuable purpose to inflame the passions before light is thrown into the understanding and conscience; but rather serves, on the other hand, to produce the most fatal effects.

5. The wise preacher, who means to impress the minds of his hearers, will always apply his discourse according to their particular characters. What belongs to saints, he will apply to saints; and what belongs to sinners, he will apply to sinners.


III.
Improvement.

1. We learn from what has been said, the importance of ministers being good men. Piety is necessary, both to dispose and enable them to penetrate and impress the minds of their hearers.

2. We learn from what has been said, the importance of ministers giving themselves wholly to their work. If they mean to penetrate and impress the minds of their hearers, they must exhibit, in the course of their preaching, a rich variety of Divine truths. But they will soon lose a variety, and fall into a sameness in preaching, unless they constantly improve their minds in the knowledge of the doctrines and duties of religion by reading, meditation and prayer.

3. We learn from what has been said, the manner in which a minister should appear and speak in the pulpit. His voice, his looks, his gestures, and his whole deportment, should be wholly governed by his ultimate end, which is to penetrate and impress the minds of his hearers.

4. We learn from what has been said that it is not very material whether a minister preaches with notes, or without. If he aims to impress the minds of his hearers, he may attain his end by either of these modes of preaching.

5. We learn from what has been said, the great absurdity of those ministers who studiously avoid penetrating and impressing the minds of their hearers. Solomon and Christ, the prophets and apostles meant to penetrate and impress the minds of their hearers; and, by the manifestation of the truth, to commend themselves to every mans conscience in the sight of God. These are examples, which it is wise in preachers to follow, though it Should give pain and even offence to their hearers.

6. If it be the wisdom and duty of ministers to penetrate and impress the minds of their hearers, then they have no reason to complain of the most close and pungent preaching. They always desire such plainness and fidelity in other men, whom they employ to promote their temporal good. They wish their attorney to examine their cause with care, discover every flaw, and tell them the plain, naked truth. And they heartily desire their surgeon to probe their wounds to the bottom, and apply the moss effectual remedies, though ever so painful and distressing to endure. Why, then, should they complain of their minister for dealing plainly and faithfully with their souls? This is an absurdity in its own nature, an injury to their minister, and may be eternal destruction to themselves.

7. If it ought to be the aim of the minister to penetrate and impress the minds of his hearers, then there is blame somewhere if their minds are not penetrated and impressed. Either the minister does not aim to impress their minds, or they mean to resist the impressions of Divine truth. (N. Emmons, D. D.)

The words of the wise


I.
They are stimulating, as goads. Wise teaching, however attractive (Ecc 12:10), is never pointless. It is penetrating, incisive. It stimulates to–

1. Hatred and opposition. Ahab. (1Ki 21:20; 1Ki 22:8). The Pharisees (Mar 12:12).

2. Conversion. Saul of Tarsus (Act 9:5. See also Psa 45:2; Psa 45:5).

3. Progress and effort (2Pe 1:12; 2Pe 3:1-18 :l).


II.
They are abiding, as nails, etc. Masters of assemblies, either those who assemble persons together to hear them, or perhaps masters of collections, those who collect and arrange wise words. In either case they are teachers, by word of mouth or in writing. A nail fastened or planted, not only penetrates, but abides. The impression made by wise teaching is lasting. It abides–

1. To be pondered. The Blessed Virgin (Luk 2:19; Luk 2:51. See also Luk 1:66, and Gen 37:11).

2. To be acted upon, as fixed principles, regulating the conduct. Having heard the word, keep it, and bring forth fruit, etc. (Luk 8:15; see Psa 119:11).

3. To be added to; a nail (a peg, as we say) on which to hang much else. Compare the promise to Eliakim (Isa 22:23-25).


III.
They have essential unity, given from one shepherd.

1. The human teacher making his own (so giving harmony and unity to words of the wise), drawn from many sources.

2. God, the Author of all wisdom (Pro 2:6), the Great Prophet and Teacher of the Church (Joh 16:13; 1Co 2:9-13). Harmony and unity of truth, as taught by inspired writers, and those whose teaching accords with them.


IV.
Conclusion. In this description we have a rule by which–

1. The teacher should guide himself.

2. The hearer should try himself. (Archdeacon Perowne.)

The Christian ministry of literary men

There is a Christian ministry wider than that to which men are consecrated through ecclesiastical offices. They also belong to the great company of preachers, or teachers, who explore the heavens, or who decipher the records graven on rocks, or who analyze material forms, or who trace the evolutions of life, with those who delineate or embody the beautiful in art; all these are co-workers with the apostles and prophets in the service and worship of God the Father. Some of Gods servants stand nearer to the altar than others, but the sacrifice and service of these in the outermost range are ever and everywhere acceptable to Him when offered or done in an honest and true heart. And among these diverse gifts of Gods Spirit, who divides to men severally as He will, we may surely count the gift of the genius which has enriched the world with so many sweet and inspiring thoughts in the varied forms of literature. Charles Lamb has said, in his own quiet, quaint way, I am disposed to say grace upon twenty other occasions in the course of the day besides my dinner. I want a form for setting out upon a pleasant walk, for a moonlight ramble, for a friendly meeting, for a solved problem. Why have we none for books, those spiritual repasts–a grace before Milton, a grace before Shakespeare, a devotional exercise proper to be said before reading the Faery Queen? For literature, even in its lowlier forms, has been a ministry of comfort and help to millions. It has filled days in the lives of multitudes with solace or with sunshine which otherwise had been dark and dreary. Many devout people have a horror, I know, of what they call works of fiction: nor am I insensible of the demoralizing influence of the baser sort of such literature. But let us discriminate here, as we do in music and in painting and in poetry, nor condemn that which is wholesome with that which is vicious in books of amusement or recreation; for the greatest writers of so-called fiction have done good and blessed service often in the cause of morality and religion. There is more pure gospel, in the substantial sense of that cant phrase, in the writings of Charles Dickens, for instance, than in seven-tenths of our prinked sermons. Think of the gentleness, the pathos, the Divine charity which pervade his books! while even the homely, the ludicrous and the seemingly profane are always friendly to virtue. What a power he has been in the regeneration of English manners! Then think of a similar service done by his great compeer in English letters; by him who lashed the follies and the vices of Vanity Fair, doing a work which the pulpit was impotent or afraid to do in rebuking the fashionable extravagance and profligacy of the age; for literature could find audience in circles which were closed to homilies and Episcopal pastorals, insinuating truths which had been resented coming in dogmatic shape. And the results are marked in every sphere of English life, for it is not to an increase of ecclesiastical activity that the improved manners and morals of the English people are to be solely or chiefly traced. The influence of the press has become supreme; our greatest prophets speak through books. No man can estimate the debt which modern civilization owes to the men the weapon of whose warfare has been the pen. They have been ever forward to expose hypocrisy, to resist the tyranny of power, to plead the cause of the oppressed, and sometimes at a bitter cost. Of all powers merely human, poetry has been the most potent over the cultivated thought and feeling of the world. It holds more condensed wisdom, it speaks more directly to the primal affections, it incites the soul to grander aims, it is more nearly akin to the unction of the Divine Spirit than any other instrument or influence controlled by man. The art of making verses may be acquired, but the true poet is inspired, having deeper insight into men and things with finer faculties of interpretation: the teacher at whose feet all other men sit to catch the flow of harmonious wisdom. All gifts of genius are from heaven, but the brightest and the best is the vision and the faculty Divine of the poet. He is the teacher of teachers. The best thoughts of the cultivated world had birth in poetry. Every other species of intellectual power has been inspired by it. Religion, morals, government have all been penetrated and purified by it. Take one name and all it represents out of the literary annals of England, and what a void would be visible wherever the English tongue has gone! Take the entire range of English literature, says the late Canon Wordsworth; put together our best authors who have written upon subjects not professedly religious or theological, and we Shall not find, I believe, in them all united so much evidence of the Bible having been read and used as we have found in Shakespeare alone. Who can take his thoughts and reflections into the study or the closet without coming forth with deeper and diviner feelings in him–without a more awful estimate of life and its great issues? (J. H. Rylance, D. D.)

Fuente: Biblical Illustrator Edited by Joseph S. Exell

Verse 11. The words of the wise] Doctrines of faith, illustrated by suitable language, are as nails fastened by the masters of assemblies, baaley asuphoth, the masters of collections, those who had made the best collections of this kind, the matter of which was of the most excellent nature; every saying sinking as deeply into the mind, by the force of the truth contained in it, as a nail well pointed does into a board, when impelled by the hammer’s force. These masters of collections have been supposed to be public persons appointed by the prince himself, the sole shepherd, to see that nothing was put into the people’s hands but what would be profitable for them to read; and that, when any wise man gave public instructions, a good scribe sat by to take down the words; and then the master examined what he had written, to see that it was upright, and that the words were doctrines of truth. These were something like our licensers of the press; but the existence of such is little more than conjecture.

After all, masters of assemblies may mean public teachers; that which was written, the oracles of God, out of which they instructed the people; the one Shepherd, GOD ALMIGHTY, from whom they received their authority and unction to preach the truth; and by the energy of whose Spirit the heavenly teaching was fastened in their hearts, as a well-driven nail in a sound piece of wood.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

The words of the wise; not of secularly or politicly wise men, but of the spiritually wise and holy men of God; of which, and not of the former, this whole context treats.

As goads, and as nails, piercing into mens dull minds and hard hearts, and quickening and provoking them to the practice of all their duties.

Fastened; which do not only amuse and startle men for the present, as the wise and grave counsels of moral philosophers frequently do, but make powerful and abiding impressions in them; which is the peculiar effect of Gods word.

By the masters of assemblies; by the teachers of Gods church and people, whether prophets or others, appointed by God for that work.

Which are given from one shepherd; from God, or from Jesus Christ, the great Shepherd and Teacher of the church in all ages, by whose Spirit the ancient prophets, as well as other succeeding teachers, were inspired and taught, Jer 3:15; 1Pe 1:11; 2Pe 1:21. And this clause seems to be added partly as the reason of that admirable harmony and agreement which is amongst all the men of God in all ages and places, because they are all taught by one Master, and guided by the same hand; and partly to oblige us to the greater attention and reverence to all their doctrines and counsels, which we are to receive as the word of God, and not of men only, as it is said, 1Th 2:13.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

11. goadspiercing deeply intothe mind (Act 2:37; Act 9:5;Heb 4:12); evidently inspiredwords, as the end of the verse proves.

fastenedrather, onaccount of the Hebrew genders, (The words) “are fastened(in the memory) like nails” [HOLDEN].

masters of assembliesrather,”the masters of collections (that is, collectors of inspiredsayings, Pr 25:1), are given(‘have published them as proceeding’ [HOLDEN])from one Shepherd,” namely, the Spirit of Jesus Christ [WEISS],(Eze 37:24). However, themention of “goads” favors the English Version,“masters of assemblies,” namely, under-shepherds,inspired by the Chief Shepherd (1Pe5:2-4). SCHMIDTtranslates, “The masters of assemblies are fastened (made sure)as nails,” so Isa 22:23.

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

The words of the wise [are] as goads,…. As the goad teacheth the ox; so the Targum. Not the words of the wise philosophers of that age, or of ages before, or since; but of the inspired penmen of the Scriptures, as Moses, David, Solomon, and of others since; and of all good men, whose doctrines are agreeably to them; these are like “goads” or “pricks”, sharp pointed sticks or staves, with which men push and prick their cattle, when driving them from place to place, or ploughing with them: and of a similar use are the doctrines of the word, when attended with a divine efficacy; these are a means of pricking sinners to the heart; and of laying open their vileness and sinfulness to them; and of repentance and contrition; and of awakening them from a sleep in sin to a sense of their danger; and even of killing them, as to their own sense and apprehension of things, and, with respect to their hopes of life, by their own works; as the Philistines were slain by Shamgar with an ox goad, Jud 3:31; see Ac 2:37; and these are also of use to the saints, as goads, to stir them up, when slothful, to the discharge of duty; and to awaken them, when drowsy, out of their carnal security; and to correct them for their faults, by sharp reproofs and rebukes; as well as to excite them to go on to perfection, who are apt to sit still and lie down; and to direct them to walk straight on, without turning to the right hand or left;

and as nails fastened [by] the masters of assemblies; like these are the truths and doctrines of the word, when they have a place in the heart, and become the “ingrafted word” there; when they are “planted” e in the soul, as the word signifies; when they are fixed in the mind and memory, and dwell and abide there: and when as nails, driven into anything, fasten what they are drove into; so these are the means of fastening souls; of causing them to cleave to God and Christ; to the church, and his people, and to one another; and to the Gospel, and their profession of it; hence they are not like children, tossed to and fro, wavering and unstable: of all which “the masters of the assemblies” are the instruments; that is, ministers and pastors of churches. As there were assemblies for religious worship under the law, in which the prophets, priests, and Levites, assisted; so there are assemblies or churches under the Gospel dispensation, which are gathered and meet together for the service of God, and over these the ministers of the word preside; these are set over the churches in the Lord, and have the rule of them; though they are not to lord it over God’s heritage, or have the dominion over their faith; but are helpers of their joy, and useful in the above things, through their ministry. Some choose to render “masters of collections”, or “gatherings” f; and think it may respect their gathering truths out of the sacred writings, as the bee gathers honey out of the flowers; in allusion to those that gathered together the choice and pithy sentences and sayings of others, like the men of Hezekiah, Pr 25:1; or to undershepherds, gathering the sheep into the fold g, by the order of the principal one; who made use of goads, to drive away thieves or wild beasts; and nails, to preserve the sheepfold whole. And others think that not the words, but the of the assemblies themselves, are compared to “nails”, and read them, “and the masters of the assemblies [are] as nails fastened” h; are well established, firm and sure; see Isa 22:23; and others take it to be no other than an epithet of the nails themselves, and render it, “as nails fixed, which are binders”; that is, great binding nails, which, being fixed in boards, bind, compact, and hold them together; to which the words of the wise may be compared, being the means of compacting and holding together the church of God, comparable to a sheepfold; hence mention is made of the shepherd in the next clause: or of fixing the attention of the minds of men unto them, and of retaining them in memory, and to which they speak of as first principles, and never swerve from them i; but, that not ministers, the instruments, but the principal and efficient cause, may have the glory, is added,

[which] are given from one Shepherd; not Zerubbabel, as Grotius; nor Moses, as the Targum, Jarchi, and Alshech; but Christ, the one Shepherd, set over the flock; and under whom the masters of assemblies, or pastors of churches, are, Eze 37:23; from whom they have their gifts and qualifications, their mission and commissions; and are given to the churches, as pastors and teachers, to feed them, Eph 4:10; and from whom they have their food, the Gospel and the doctrines of it, to feed the flocks with, assigned to their care, Joh 17:8; though this is to be understood not to the exclusion of God, the Father of Christ, by whom all Scripture is inspired; nor of the Spirit, by whom holy men of God spake as they were moved, 2Ti 3:16.

e “plantati”, Pagninus, Montanus, Tigurine version, Rambachius. f “auctores, vel dominos collectionum”, Montanus, Vatablus, Mercerus, Gejerus. g Vid. Lightfoot, vol. 2. p. 575. h “Veluti clavi. infixi sunt domini, vel magistri congregationum”, Schmidt. i Vid. De Dieu & Cocceium in loc. & Vitringam de Synag. Vet. l. 1. par 2. c. 8. p. 377. & Hyde Not. in Peritzol. Itinera Mundi, p. 94.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

From the words of Koheleth the author comes to the words of the wise man in general; so that what he says of the latter finds its application to himself and his book: “Words of the wise are as like goads, and like fastened nails which are put together in collections – they are given by one shepherd.” The lxx, Aq., and Theod. translate darvonoth by , the Venet. by ; and that is also correct. The word is one of three found in the Jerus. Gemara, Sanhedrin x. 1, to designate a rod for driving (oxen) – (from , to sharpen, to point), (from , to adjust, teach, exercise), and (from , to hold back, repellere ); we read ka – darevonoth ; Gesen., Ewald, Hitz., and others are in error in reading dorvonoth ; for the so-called light Metheg, which under certain circumstances can be changed into an accent, and the Kametz chatuph exclude one another.

(Note: The Kametz is the Kametz gadhol (opp. Kametz chatuph), and may for this reason have the accent Munach instead of Metheg. Vid., Michlol 153 b, 182 b. The case is the same as at Gen 39:3, where mimmachoraath is to be read. Cf. Baer’s Metheg -Setz. 27 and 18.)

If is the goad, the point of comparison is that which is to be excited intellectually and morally. Incorrectly, Gesen., Hitz., and others: like goads, because easily and deeply impressing themselves on the heart as well as on the memory. For goads, aculei , the Hebrews use the word ; darevonoth also are goads, but designed for driving on, thus stimuli (Jerome); and is there a more natural commendation for the proverbs of the wise men than that they incite to self-reflection, and urge to all kinds of noble effort? Divre and darevonoth have the same three commencing consonants, and, both for the ear and the eye, form a paronomasia. In the following comparison, it is a question whether ba’ale asuppoth (plur. of ba’al asuppoth , or of the double plur. ba’al asuppah , like e.g., sare missim , Exo 1:11, of sar mas ) is meant of persons, like ba’al hallashon , Ecc 10:11, cf. ba’al kenaphayim , Ecc 10:20, or of things, as ba’al piphiyoth , Isa 41:15; and thus, whether it is a designation parallel to or to . The Talm. Jer. Sanhedrin x. 1, wavers, for there it is referred first to the members of the assemblies (viz., of the Sanedrium), and then is explained by “words which are spoken in the assembly.” If we understand it of persons, as it was actually used in the Talm., then by asuppoth we must understand the societies of wise men, and by ba’ale asuppoth , of the academicians (Venet.: ; Luther: “masters of assemblies”) belonging to such academies. But an appropriate meaning of this second comparison is not to be reached in this way. For if we translate: and as nails driven in are the members of the society, it is not easy to see what this wonderful comparison means; and what is then further said: they are given from one shepherd, reminds us indeed of Eph 4:11, but, as said of this perfectly unknown great one, is for us incomprehensible. Or if we translate, after Isa 28:1: and (the words of the wise are) like the fastened nails of the members of the society, it is as tautological as if I should say: words of wise men are like fastened nails of wise men bound together in a society (as a confederacy, union). Quite impossible are the translations: like nails driven in by the masters of assemblies (thus e.g., Lightfoot, and recently Bullock), for the accus. with the pass. particip. may express some nearer definition, but not (as of the genit.) the effective cause; and: like a nail driven in are the (words) of the masters of assemblies (Tyler: “those of editors of collections”), for ellipt. genit., dependent on a governing word carrying forward its influence, are indeed possible, e.g., Isa 61:7, but that a governing word itself, as ba’ale , may be the governed genit. of one omitted, as here divre , is without example.

(Note: Regarding this omission of the mudaf the governing noun, where this is naturally supplied before a genitive from the preceding, cf. Samachschari’s Mufassal , p. 43, l. 8-13.)

It is also inconsistent to understand ba’ale asuppoth after the analogy of ba’ale masoreth (the Masoretes) and the like. It will not be meant of the persons of the wise, but of the proverbs of the wise. So far we agree with Lang and Hoelem. Lang (1874) thinks to come to a right understanding of the “much abused” expression by translating, “lords of troops,” – a designation of proverbs which, being by many acknowledged and kept in remembrance, possess a kind of lordship over men’s minds; but that is already inadmissible, because asuppoth designates not any multitude of men, but associations with a definite end and aim. Hoelem. is content with this idea; for he connects together “planted as leaders of assemblies,” and finds therein the thought, that the words of the wise serve as seeds and as guiding lights for the expositions in the congregation; but ba’ale denotes masters, not in the sense of leaders, but of possessors; and as ba’ale berith , Gen 14:13, signifies “the confederated,” ba’ale shevu’ah , Neh 6:18, “the sworn,” and the frequently occurring ba’ale ha’ir , “the citizens;” so ba’ale asuppoth means, the possessors of assemblies and of the assembled themselves, or the possessors of collections and of the things collected. Thus ba’ale asuppoth will be a designation of the “words of the wise” (as in shalishim , choice men = choice proverbs, Pro 22:20, in a certain measure personified), also of those which form or constitute collections, and which stand together in order and rank (Hitz., Ewald, Elst., Zckl., and others). Of such it may properly be said, that they are like nails driven in, for they are secured against separations, – they are, so to speak, made nail-feast, they stand on one common ground; and their being fixed in such connection not only is a help to the memory, but also to the understanding of them. The Book of Koheleth itself is such an asuppah ; for it contains a multitude of separate proverbs, which are thoughtfully ranged together, and are introduced into the severe, critical sermon on the nothingness of all earthly things as oases affording rest and refreshment; as similarly, in the later Talmudic literature, Haggadic parts follow long stretches of hair-splitting dialectics, and afford to the reader an agreeable repose.

And when he says of the “proverbs of the wise,” individually and as formed into collections: , i.e., they are the gift of one shepherd, he gives it to be understood that his “words of Koheleth,” if not immediately written by Solomon himself, have yet one fountain with the Solomonic Book of Proverbs, – God, the one God, who guides and cares as a shepherd for all who fear Him, and suffers them to want nothing which is necessary to their spiritual support and advancement (Psa 23:1; Psa 28:9). “ Mero’eh ehad ,” says Grtz, “is yet obscure, since it seldom, and that only poetically, designates the Shepherd of Israel. It cannot certainly refer to Moses.” Not to Moses, it is true (Targ.), nor to Solomon, as the father, the pattern, and, as it were, the patron of “the wise,” but to God, who is here named the as spiritual preserver (provider), not without reference to the figure of a shepherd from the goad, and the figure of household economy from the nails; for , in the language of the Chokma (Pro 5:21), is in meaning cogn. to the N.T. conception of edification.

(Note: Vid., my Heb. Rmerbrief, p. 97.)

Regarding masmeroth (iron nails), the word is not used of tent spikes (Spohn, Ginsb.), – it is masc., the sing. is ( ), Arab. mismar . is = (cf. Dan 11:45 with Gen 31:25), post-bibl. ( vid., Jer. Sanhedrin) (Jerome, in altum defixi ). Min with the pass., as at Job 21:1; Job 28:4; Psa 37:23 (Ewald, 295 b), is not synonymous with the Greek . The lxx well: “given by those of the counsel from one shepherd.” Hitzig reads , and accordingly translates: “which are given united as a pasture,” but in mero’eh ehad there lies a significant apologetic hint in favour of the collection of proverbs by the younger Solomon (Koheleth) in relation to that of the old. This is the point of the verse, and it is broken off by Hitzig’s conjecture.

(Note: J. F. Reimmann, in the preface to his Introduction to the Historia Litterarum antediluviana, translates, Ecc 12:11: “The words of the wise are like hewn-out marble, and the beautiful collectanea like set diamonds, which are presented by a good friend.” A Disputatio philologica by Abr. Wolf, Knigsberg 1723, contends against this .)

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

(11) Words of the wise.In this and the next verse the weighty words of sages, such as was Kohleth, are contrasted with the volubility of modern bookmakers. Though the general purpose of the verses is plain, the words used are enigmatical, and one cannot feel great confidence in assigning their precise meaning. The translation of our version fairly represents the original, if it is observed that the words by and which, which determine the meaning, are in italics. With regard to the nail, compare Ezr. 9:8; Isa. 22:23. The word masters we have had twice in this book already in the sense of possessor, master of the tongue (Ecc. 10:11), master of wings (Ecc. 10:20). Assemblies is a word not coming from the same root as that from which Kohleth is derived. It might mean collections of sayings as well as of people. It is difficult to affix any meaning to the last clause, except that the sages, of whom the verse speaks, have been given for the instruction of the people by Israels great Shepherd (Psa. 80:1).

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

11. The words of the wise are as goads The writer gives the reason of his undertaking, suggesting, too, his ideal of what such work should be, as if his toil would be repaid should these words prove such.

And as nails Better, And as stakes firmly set, are those (words) of the masters of assemblies. The stakes are those to which the tent ropes are fastened, firmly holding the tent in its place.

Which are given Referring to “the words of the wise.” The savings of true wisdom, whether they are radical and arousing, like goads, or conservative and supporting, like tent stakes, are from the inspiration of one Shepherd, the Allwise, who, in manifold ways, aims at the correction and instruction of his creatures. “All true wisdom is from One Wise.”

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Ecc 12:11 The words of the wise [are] as goads, and as nails fastened [by] the masters of assemblies, [which] are given from one shepherd.

Ver. 11. The words of the wise are like goads. ] To rouse up men’s drowsy and drossy spirits; to drive them, as the eagle doth her young ones with her talons, out of the nest of carnal security; to awaken them out of the snare of the devil, who hath cast many into such a dead lethargy, such a dedolent disposition, that, like Dionysius the Heracleot, they can hardly feel sharpest goads, or needles thrust into their fat hearts – “fat as grease.” Psa 119:70 St Peter so preached that his hearers were “pricked at heart.” Act 2:37 St Stephen so galled his adversaries that they were “cut to the heart.” Act 7:54 And before them both, how barely and boldly dealt John Baptist and our Saviour Christ with those enemies of all righteousness, the Pharisees, qui toties puncti ac repuncti, nunquam tamen ad resipiscentiam compuncti, as one saith of them (who like those bears in Pliny, or asses of Tuscany, that have fed on hemlock), were so stupified that no sharp words would work upon them or take impression in their hearts, so brawny were their breasts, so horny their heart strings!

And as nails. ] Such as shepherds fastened their tents to the ground with. Jael drove one of these tent nails through Sisera’s temples, and laid his body as it were listening what was become of the soul. Jdg 4:21 Now, as nails driven into pales do fasten them to their rails, so the godly and grave sentences of teachers – those “masters of assemblies” – do pierce into men’s hearts, to unite them unto God by faith, and one to another in love. Our exhortations truly should be strong and well pointed, not only to wound as arrows, but to stick by the people as forked arrows, that they may prove, as those of Joash, “the arrows of the Lord’s deliverance.” And surely it were to be wished, in these unsettled and giddy times especially, that people would suffer such words of exhortation, as, like goads, might prick them on to pious practice, and, like nails, might fix their wild conceits, that they might be steadfast and immoveable, stablished in the truth, and not whiffied about with every wind of doctrine. But we can look for no better, so long as they have so mean an esteem of the ministers, those “masters of the assemblies” (whose office it is to congregate the people, and to preside in the congregations), which are given from one shepherd, the arch-shepherd 1Pe 2:25 of his sheep, Jesus Christ, who in the days of his solemn inauguration into his kingdom, “gave these gifts unto men” – viz., “some to be apostles, some evangelists, some pastors, some teachers,” &c. Eph 4:11 What a mouth of blasphemy then opens that schismatical pamphleteer, a that makes this precious gift of Christ to his spouse, this sacred and tremendous function of the ministry, to be as mere an imposture, as very a mystery of iniquity, as arrant a fraud as the Papacy itself!

a The Compas. Samarit.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

NASB (UPDATED) TEXT: Ecc 12:11-12

11The words of wise men are like goads, and masters of these collections are like well-driven nails; they are given by one Shepherd. 12But beyond this, my son, be warned: the writing of many books is endless, and excessive devotion to books is wearying to the body.

Ecc 12:11 There is a reverse parallelism (chiasm):

1. the words of wise men

the masters of these collections

2. like goads (BDB 201)

like well-driven nails (BDB 702)

As #1 refers to the same group (there is some variety possible: [1] the words of scholars, NKJV; [2] collected sayings, NRSV; [3] they guide the assembled people, REB; [4] their collected sayings, NIV; [5] these wise words left us by many masters, Knox), so #2 refers to the same thing (i.e., an animal prod, a long staff with a metal point firmly attached).

Wisdom Literature was to be a guide and discipline from God (i.e., One Shepherd, cf. NAB, NKJV, TEV, NIV) to challenge and encourage humans in this life and point them to the next.

goads This form is found only here. These long, pointed (from the same root, to sharpen, cf. 1Sa 13:21) sticks (BDB 201) were used to prod animals into activity. These truths should motivate humans into godly action.

given This VERB (BDB 678, KB 733) is a Niphal PERFECT. This VERB is often used in Ecclesiastes to refer to God’s activity (cf. Ecc 1:13; Ecc 2:26; Ecc 3:10; Ecc 5:18-19; Ecc 6:2; Ecc 8:15; Ecc 9:9; Ecc 12:7; Ecc 12:11).

by one Shepherd This title was often used of God (cf. Gen 48:15; Gen 49:24; Psa 23:1; Psa 80:1; Psa 95:7; Isa 40:11; Jer 31:10; Eze 34:11). This verse emphasizes the fact that God inspires these truths (i.e., recognition of inspiration and later canonicity).

Jewish tradition identifies the one shepherd with Moses (i.e., Targums, Rashi). However, Moses is never called shepherd, but he does carry the rod of God (shepherd’s staff). Moses also warned against adding to or taking away from God’s revealed truths (cf. Deu 4:2; Deu 12:32.

Ecc 12:12 my son In Israel’s Wisdom Tradition the teacher was called father and his male students sons (cf. Pro 1:8; Pro 4:1).

be warned This VERB (BDB 264, KB 265) is a Niphal IMPERATIVE found in Wisdom Literature only three times (once in Psa 19:11 and twice in Ecc 4:13; Ecc 12:12). This at first seems to contradict the author’s plea to search for wisdom, but apparently as Ecc 12:11 asserts God’s authorship of some literature (i.e., canonical texts), Ecc 12:12 must refer to other non-canonical wisdom literature. It is similar to Ecc 1:18.

NASBexcessive devotion

NKJV, NRSV,

TEV, NJB,

JPSOA, NIV,

REBmuch study

The VERBAL excessive (BDB 915 I, KB 1176, Hiphil INFINITIVE ABSOLUTE) is used twice in this verse:

1. making of many books

2. excessive devotion

The NOUN (BDB 529) is found only here in the OT. In Arabic it means to be devoted, to be attached, or to apply oneself assiduously to something.

It is uncertain whether (1) the writing; (2) the compiling; or (3) the study of books is the focus of the warning. The problem is that human wisdom is helpful, but not ultimate!

Fuente: You Can Understand the Bible: Study Guide Commentary Series by Bob Utley

The words of the wise. See notes on p. 864, and App-7.

nails. These were built into a wall, because Eastern walls were too hard or too soft for them to be hammered in. fastened = planted. Masculine, while “nails” is feminine: but the Accent unite the two words. The verb nata’ is found again only in Ecc 3:2, where it is singular.

by the masters = [are] the lords, or rulers. ba’al.

one shepherd. The Inspirer. See Gen 48:15; Gen 49:24. Psa 23:1.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

Ecc 12:11

Ecc 12:11

“The words of the wise are as goads; and as nails well fastened are the words of the masters of assemblies, which are given from one Shepherd.”

“In the Old Testament, the word Shepherd usually refers to God”; and a good rendition is this, “The words of the wise … have been given by God, the one shepherd of us all. This is a very important verse, because here Solomon recognizes the Word of God as the ultimate authority. How far has this wise man come from the doubts and sins of former days! “He says here that it is the teachings of the masters of assemblies, drawn from the fountainhead (the Word of God the one Shepherd), which give stability and strength to life.

Ecc 12:11 Wisdom is directive. The words of wise men are designed to guide both the teacher and his audience on the road of right behavior. (Cf. Mat 7:24) These words of truth are like goads. A goad is a stick or pole with a sharp point which is used to prod oxen or sheep in the direction one wishes them to move. (Cf. Jdg 3:31; Act 9:5) The collections could refer to the material found in Ecclesiastes. It would mean that he has arranged his material in such a way that one is drawn to a path of proper conduct because he is motivated by the thought and content of the ordered material. On the other hand, it could refer to the joint-authors of the collected canonical Scriptures. (Cf. 2Pe 1:21) The truth taught by inspired teachers is now likened unto well-driven nails. The figure of the nails is used because it is the nature of the nail to penetrate easily. It could mean to plant or drive in, to fasten and secure. So the words of the wise nail down the truths which change mens lives and their eternal destinies.

Solomons reference here to the fact that such truths have their origin with the one Shepherd is a clear claim to inspiration. The collected sayings have but one source and thus one authority. The one Shepherd is God who is elsewhere called the Shepherd of Israel. (Cf. Gen 48:15; Gen 49:24; Psa 23:1; Psa 80:1; Isa 40:11; Jer 31:10; Eze 34:11-12; Joh 10:14-16; Heb 13:20; 1Pe 2:25; 1Pe 5:4) On the subject of inspiration as claimed by Solomon, Leupold states: Observe what a correct and clear conception of the inspiration of the sacred writings prevailed in Israel at this time, especially of the fact that it was a unified work done by the Lord for the good of His people. Observe also that the Preacher is aware of the fact that God was pleased to use him to share in this work.”

Fuente: Old and New Testaments Restoration Commentary

as goads: Jer 23:29, Mat 3:7, Act 2:37, 2Co 10:4, Heb 4:12

masters: Joh 3:10

given: Gen 49:24, Psa 23:1, Psa 80:1, Isa 40:11, Eze 34:23, Joh 10:14, Heb 13:20, 1Pe 5:4

Reciprocal: Exo 27:19 – all the pins thereof Exo 38:20 – the pins 1Ch 26:15 – Asuppim Ezr 9:8 – a nail Job 6:25 – forcible Pro 1:6 – the words Isa 22:23 – I will Eze 37:24 – one Luk 4:22 – the gracious Joh 10:2 – the shepherd Joh 10:16 – one shepherd

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

12:11 The words of the wise [are] as goads, and as nails {x} fastened [by] the masters of assemblies, [which] are given from one {y} shepherd.

(x) Which are well applied by the ministers, whom he calls masters.

(y) That is by God.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes