The phrase "What the man makes, he does not need" suggests that the creator of an object often does not require or use what they produce. This can imply a commentary on the nature of labor and creation, where the act of making can be driven by necessity, desire, or expression rather than personal need. It highlights the difference between the creator's intention and the utility of the creation itself.
The man who makes a casket does not need it; the man who buys a casket does not use it; the man who uses a casket does not know he does.
a coffin.
a coffin
It is a coffin.The man who makes it does not need it (he's not dead).The man who buys it does not use it (he'll use it when he dies, or his friend dies, I don't know).The man who uses it doesn't know he is using it (because he's dead!).
Observing the laws of God is what makes a man happy according to the Old Testament.
We answer questions and don't give opinions , so you need to answer this.
God made man and makes man .
a dead mans coffin
the wicked man is one who ignores the need for God in his heart, and thus becomes an ungodly--or wicked--man...whose ways get progressively worse.
A tailor is a man who makes clothes.
"Reading makes a full man, conference a ready man and writing an exact man." By Francis Bacon.
What Makes a Man was created on 2000-12-18.