Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 7:17
Be not over much wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?
17. Be not over much wicked ] There seems something like a paradox in the counsel. Surely, we think, the teacher is carrying his doctrine of the mean too far when he gives a precept, which, by forbidding excess, seems to sanction a moderate amount of wickedness. Various attempts have been made to tone down the precept by taking “wicked” as = not subject to rule, or = engaged in worldly affairs (the “mammon of unrighteousness”) that so often lead to wickedness. The difficulty vanishes, however, if we will but admit that the writer might have learnt the art of a playful irony from his Greek teachers. He has uttered the precept, “Be not righteous over-much.” That most men would receive as a true application of the doctrine of “Nothing in excess,” or, in the phrase we owe to Talleyrand, “ Surtout, point de zle.” He mentally sees, as it were, the complacent smile of those who were in no danger of that fault and who think that the precept gives them just the license they want, and he meets the feeling it expresses by another maxim. “Yes, my friends,” he seems to say, “but there is another ‘over-much,’ against which you need a warning, and its results are even more fatal than those of the other.” In avoiding one extreme men might fall easily into the other.
why shouldest thou die before thy time? ] Literally, Not in thy time. The form of the warning is singularly appropriate. The vices thought of and the end to which they lead are clearly those of the sensual license described in Proverbs 7. Death is the issue here, as the loss of spiritual discernment was of the Pharisaic or the over-philosophizing temper described in the preceding verse. In both precepts we may trace Koheleth’s personal experience. Ch. 2 traces the history of one who in his life experiments had been both “over much wise,” and, it must be feared, “over much wicked.”
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Verse 17. Be not overmuch wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?] al tirsha harbeh. Do not multiply wickedness, do not add direct opposition to godliness to the rest of your crimes. Why should you provoke God to destroy you before your time? Perdition will come soon enough. If you will not turn from your sins, and avoid it finally, yet keep out of it as long as you can.
It cannot be supposed, except by those who are totally unacquainted with the nature of true religion, that a man may have too much holiness, too much of the life of God in his soul! And yet a learned doctor, in three sermons on this text, has endeavoured to show, out-doing Solomon’s infidel, “the sin, folly, and danger of being righteous overmuch.” O rare darkness!
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
Be not over-much wicked; do not take occasion, either from the impunity of sinners, Ecc 7:15, or from the prohibition of excessive righteousness, to run into the contrary extreme, the defect of righteousness, or to give up thyself to the practice of all manner of wickedness, as the manner of many men is, Ecc 8:11. But this is not to be understood as if he allowed a lower degree of wickedness, no more than that prohibition of not letting the sun go down upon a mans wrath, Eph 4:26, permits him to keep his wrath all the day long; and no more than the condemnation of excess of riot, and of abominable idolatries, 1Pe 4:3,4, doth justify any kind of rioting or idolatry.
Neither be thou foolish; which he adds to show that such sinners, howsoever they esteem themselves wise, yet in truth are egregious fools, as the following words prove.
Die before thy time; either by the justice of the magistrate, or by the vengeance of God. For though I said that sometimes a wicked man prolongeth his days, &c., Ecc 7:15, yet commonly such persons are cut off, and thou hast sufficient reason to expect and fear it.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
17. over much wickedsoworded, to answer to “righteous over much.” For ifnot taken thus, it would seem to imply that we may be wicked alittle. “Wicked” refers to “wicked man”(Ec 7:15); “die before thytime,” to “prolongeth his life,” antithetically. Theremay be a wicked man spared to “live long,” owing to hisavoiding gross excesses (Ec 7:15).Solomon says, therefore, Be not so foolish (answering antitheticallyto “over wise,” Ec 7:16),as to run to such excess of riot, that God will be provoked to cutoff prematurely thy day of grace (Ro2:5). The precept is addressed to a sinner. Beware ofaggravating thy sin, so as to make thy case desperate. It refers tothe days of Solomon’s “vanity” (apostasy, Ec7:15), when only such a precept would be applicable. By litotesit includes, “Be not wicked at all.“
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
Be not over much wicked,…. Not that a man should be wicked at all; but some, observing that wicked men prolong their days in wickedness, are encouraged to go into greater lengths in sin than they have yet done, and give up themselves to all iniquity; and run into excess of not, into the grossest and most scandalous enormities. Some render it, “do not disturb” or “frighten thyself” a, distress and distract thyself with the business of life, bustling and stirring, restless and uneasy, to get wealth and riches; but be easy and satisfied with what is enjoyed, or comes without so much stir and trouble; this is the original sense of the word. The meaning seems to be, either do not multiply sin, add unto it, and continue in it; or do not aggravate it, making sins to be greater and more heinous than they are, and a man’s case worse than it is, and so sink into despair; and thus it stands opposed to an ostentatious show of righteousness;
neither be thou foolish; or give up thyself to a profligate life, to go on in a course of sin, which will issue in the ruin of body and soul; or in aggravating it in an excessive manner;
why shouldest thou die before thy time? bring diseases on thy body by a wicked course of living, which will issue in death; or fall into the hands of the civil magistrate, for capital offences, for which sentence of death must pass and be executed, before a man comes to the common term of human life; see Ps 55:23; or, as Mr. Broughton renders it, “before thy ordinary time”; not before the appointed time b. The Targum is,
“be the cause of death to thy soul;”
or through despair commit suicide.
a “ne paveas”, Pagninus; “ne te occupes multum, aut distrahas te, sive inquietes”, some in Vatablus; so Aben Ezra and Ben Melech. b “Ante diem”, Virgil. Aeneid. 4. prope finem. Vid. Servium in ib. Ovid. Metamorph. l. 1. Fab. 4.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
Up to this point all is clear: righteousness and wisdom are good and wholesome, and worth striving for; but even in these a transgressing of the right measure is possible (Luther remembers the summum just summa injuria ), which has as a consequence, that they become destructive to man, because he thereby becomes a caricature, and either perishes rushing from one extreme into another, or is removed out of the way by others whose hatred he provokes. But it is strange that the author now warns against an excess in wickedness, so that he seems to find wickedness, up to a certain degree, praiseworthy and advisable. So much the stranger, since “be no fool” stands as contrast to “show not thyself wise,” etc.; so that “but also be no wicked person” was much rather to be expected as contrast to “be not righteous over-much.” Zckler seeks to get over this difficulty with the remark: “Koheleth does not recommend a certain moderation in wickedness as if he considered it allowable, but only because he recognises the fact as established, that every man is by nature somewhat wicked.” The meaning would then be: man’s life is not free from wickedness, but be only not too wicked! The offensiveness of the advice is not thus removed; and besides, Ecc 7:18 demands in a certain sense, an intentional wickedness, – indeed, as Ecc 7:18 shows, a wickedness in union with the fear of God. The correct meaning of “be not wicked over-much” may be found if for we substitute ; in this form the good counsel at once appears as impossible, for it would be immoral, since “sinning,” in all circumstances, is an act which carries in itself its own sentence of condemnation. Thus must here be a setting oneself free from the severity of the law, which, although sin in the eyes of the over-righteous, is yet no sin in itself; and the author here thinks, in accordance with the spirit of his book, principally of that fresh, free, joyous life to which he called the young, that joy of life in its fulness which appeared to him as the best and fairest reality in this present time; but along with that, perhaps also of transgressions of the letter of the law, of shaking off the scruples of conscience which conformity to God-ordained circumstances brings along with it. He means to say: be not a narrow rigorist, – enjoy life, accommodate thyself to life; but let not the reins be too loose; and be no fool who wantonly places himself above law and discipline: Why wilt thou destroy thy life before the time by suffering vice to kill thee (Psa 34:22), and by want of understanding ruin thyself (Pro 10:21)?
(Note: An old proverb, Sota 3a, says: “A man commits no transgression unless there rules in him previously the spirit of folly.”)
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
17. Over much wicked A course of desperate wickedness, and especially of bodily vices, consumes prematurely the vigour which would suffice for a long and active life. This verse has never alarmed expounders: yet it is the expect counterpart of its predecessor, and both are reasonable and judicious, according to the present style and stage of the investigation.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Be not over much wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?
Here the wise man takes the reverse of the proposition, and cautions against overmuch wickedness. But here again, common sense must see that, as all wickedness is prohibited, the smallest transgression is overmuch, if in the general acceptation of the word wickedness, the wise man directed this precept to guard from. But if by the former, self-righteousness was aimed at, by which souls too often presume, and in that presumption sometimes fall; so in this latter, by overmuch wickedness, if the Preacher meant to preserve a soul, distressed by the view of his own unworthiness, from despair, great beauty appears in both precepts, and both are agreeable to the analogy of faith. It is as if he had said, Ye whom grace hath restrained from evil, take no confidence therefrom, as if your own arm had wrought it. And ye, who have fallen by sin, let not the greatness of it make you despond: And let the Reader judge how corresponding to the grace of the gospel of Christ are both these precepts.
Fuente: Hawker’s Poor Man’s Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Ecc 7:17 Be not over much wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?
Ver. 17. Be not wicked over much, ] viz., Because thou seest some wicked men live long, and scape scot free for the present, as Ecc 7:15 . For God may cut thee short enough, and make thee die before thy time – i.e., before thou art fit to die – and when it were better for thee to do anything rather than die, since thou diest in thy sins, which is much worse than to die in a ditch. Now they are too much wicked, and egregiously foolish, that “add rebellion to sin,” Job 34:37 “drunkenness to thirst,” Deu 29:19 “doing wickedly with both hands earnestly,” Mic 7:3 refusing to be reformed, hating to be healed. These take long strides toward the burning lake, which is but a little before them. The law many times lays hold of them, the gallows claims its right, they preach in a Tyburn tippet, as they say; or otherwise, God cuts them off betime, even long before, as he knows their thoughts and dispositions long before. We used to destroy hemlock even in the midst of winter, because we know what it will do if suffered to grow. “Bloody and deceitful men shall not live out half their days.” Psa 55:23 God cut off Eli’s two sons in one day for their excessive wickedness; and further threatened their father, that there should not be an old man left in his house for ever. 1Sa 2:32 Wicked men die tempore non suo, as the text is by some rendered. The saints die not till the best time, not till their work is done – and then God sends them to bed; the two witnesses could not be killed while they were doing it – not till that time, when if they were but rightly informed, they would even desire to die.
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Be not over much wicked = Be not very wicked: i.e. Be not wicked at all. For violation of nature’s laws surely end in premature death.
foolish = stupid. Hebrew. sakal; not the same word as in verses: Ecc 4:5, Ecc 4:6, Ecc 4:9, Ecc 4:25 (“folly”). See note on Pro 1:7.
why . . . ? Figure of speech Erotesis. App-6.
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
not: Jer 2:33, Jer 2:34, Eze 8:17, Eze 16:20, Jam 1:21
why: Gen 38:7-10, 1Sa 25:38, Job 15:32, Job 15:33, Psa 55:23, Pro 10:27, Act 5:5, Act 5:10, Act 12:23
before thy time: Heb. not in thy time
Reciprocal: Job 22:16 – cut down Pro 11:3 – the perverseness Act 16:28 – Do
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge
7:17 Be not {n} over much wicked, neither be thou foolish: why shouldest thou die before thy time?
(n) Do not tarry long when you are admonished to come out of the way of wickedness.