Eclesiastés 7:15

15 Todo esto he visto durante mi absurda vida: hombres justos a quienes su justicia los destruye, y hombres malvados a quienes su maldad les alarga la vida.

Eclesiastés 7:15 Meaning and Commentary

Ecclesiastes 7:15

All [things] have I seen in the days of my vanity
Or, "all these things" F21. What goes before and follows after, the various changes men are subject unto, both good and bad; these he had made his observations upon, throughout the course of his life, which had been a vain one, as every man's is, full of evil and trouble; see ( Ecclesiastes 6:12 ) ; perhaps the wise man may have some respect to the times of his apostasy; and which might, among other things, be brought on by this; observing good men afflicted, and the wicked prosper, which has often been a stumbling to good men; there is a just [man] that perisheth in his righteousness;
not eternally; no truly just man ever perished, who is made so by the righteousness of Christ imputed to him; for though the righteous man is said to be scarcely saved, yet he is certainly saved: it can be true only in this sense of one that is only outwardly righteous, that trusts to his own righteousness, in which he may perish; but this is to be understood temporally and corporeally; one that is really just may perish in his name, in his substance, as well as at death, and that on account of his righteousness; he may lose his good name and character, and his substance, for righteousness's sake; yea, his life also, as Abel, Naboth, and others; this is the case "sometimes", as Aben Ezra observes, not always: or a just man, notwithstanding his righteousness, dies, and sometimes lives but a short time; which sense the antithesis seems to require; and there is a wicked [man] that prolongeth [his life] in his
wickedness;
is very wicked, and yet, notwithstanding his great wickedness, lives a long time in the world; see ( Job 21:7 ) .


FOOTNOTES:

F21 (lk ta) "illa omnia", Junius & Tremellius, Piscator, Tigurine version, Gejerus; "omnia haec", Mercerus; "universa haec", Rambachius.

Eclesiastés 7:15 In-Context

13 Contempla las obras de Dios: ¿quién puede enderezar lo que él ha torcido?
14 Cuando te vengan buenos tiempos, disfrútalos; pero cuando te lleguen los malos, piensa que unos y otros son obra de Dios, y que el hombre nunca sabe con qué habrá de encontrarse después.
15 Todo esto he visto durante mi absurda vida: hombres justos a quienes su justicia los destruye, y hombres malvados a quienes su maldad les alarga la vida.
16 No seas demasiado justo,ni tampoco demasiado sabio.¿Para qué destruirtea ti mismo?
17 No hay que pasarse de malo,ni portarse como un necio.¿Para qué morirantes de tiempo?
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