Verse 1
Ecclesiastes 1:1. The words of
the Preacher — Or, discourses.
The Hebrew word קהלת, here used,
may either signify the person
who assembles the people, or the
person that addresses them when
assembled. “We must not suppose
that Solomon was like the common
or ordinary preachers among the
Hebrews; yet it is certain he
spake much in public for the
instruction of the people; for
there came of all people to hear
the wisdom of Solomon: All the
earth sought to Solomon to hear
his wisdom, which God had put
into his heart, 1 Kings 4:31; 1
Kings 4:34; 1 Kings 10:24. From
whence it is plain that he made
public discourses on several
subjects, and that people were,
in a manner, called together
from all nations round about to
hear them.” — Dodd. “He was not
only a king,” says Poole, “but
also a teacher of God’s people:
who, having sinned grievously in
the eyes of all the world,
thought himself obliged to
publish his repentance, and to
give public warning to all, to
avoid those rocks upon which he
had split.”
Verse 2
Ecclesiastes 1:2. Vanity, &c. —
Not only vain, but vanity in the
abstract, which denotes extreme
vanity. Saith the Preacher —
Upon deep consideration and long
experience, and by divine
inspiration. This verse contains
the general proposition, which
he intends particularly to
demonstrate in the following
book. All — All worldly things;
is vanity — Not in themselves,
for they are God’s creatures,
and therefore good in their
kinds, but in reference to that
happiness which men seek and
expect to find in them. So they
are unquestionably vain, because
they are not what they seem to
be, and perform not what they
promise, but, instead of that,
are the occasions of innumerable
cares, and fears, and sorrows,
and mischiefs. Nay, they are not
only vanity, but vanity of
vanities, the vainest vanity,
vanity in the highest degree.
And this is redoubled, because
the thing is certain, beyond all
possibility of dispute.
Verse 3
Ecclesiastes 1:3. What profit —
What real and abiding benefit?
None at all. All is unprofitable
as to the attainment of that
happiness which all men are
inquiring after. Of all his
labour — Hebrew, his toilsome
labour, both of body and mind,
in the pursuit of riches, or
pleasures, or other earthly
things; under the sun — In all
worldly matters, which are
usually transacted in the
day-time, or by the light of the
sun. By this restriction he
implies, that the happiness
which in vain is sought for in
this lower world, is really to
be found in heavenly places and
things.
Verse 4
Ecclesiastes 1:4. One generation
passeth away, &c. — Men continue
but for one, and that a short
age, and then they leave all
their possessions, and therefore
they cannot be happy here,
because the source of happiness
must needs be unchangeable and
eternal, and the certain
knowledge of the approaching
loss of all these things must
rob a man of solid contentment
in them. But the earth abideth —
Through all successive
generations of men; and
therefore man is more mutable
than the very earth upon which
he stands, and which, together
with all the comforts which he
enjoyed in it, he leaves behind
him to be possessed by others.
Verse 5-6
Ecclesiastes 1:5-6. The sun also
riseth — The sun is in perpetual
motion, rising, setting, and
rising again, and so constantly
repeating its course in all
succeeding days, and years, and
ages; and the like he observes
concerning the winds and rivers,
Ecclesiastes 1:6-7; and the
design of these similitudes
seems to be, to show the vanity
of all worldly things, and that
man’s mind can never be
satisfied with them, because
there is nothing in the world
but a constant repetition of the
same things, which is so
irksome, that the consideration
thereof hath made some persons
weary of their lives; and there
is no new thing under the sun,
as is added in the foot of the
account, (Ecclesiastes 1:9,)
which seems to be given us as a
key to understand the meaning of
the foregoing passages. And this
is certain from experience, that
the things of this world are so
narrow, and the mind of man so
vast, that there must be
something new to satisfy the
mind; and even delightful
things, by too frequent
repetition, are so far from
yielding satisfaction, that they
grow tedious and troublesome.
The wind goeth, &c. — The wind
also sometimes blows from one
quarter of the world, and
sometimes from another;
successively returning to the
same quarters in which it had
formerly been.
Verse 7
Ecclesiastes 1:7. The sea is not
full — So as to overflow the
earth, which might be expected
from such vast accessions of
waters to it. Whereby also he
intimates the emptiness of men’s
minds, notwithstanding the
abundance of creature comforts.
Unto the place from whence the
rivers come — Unto their springs
or fountains; thither they
return — By secret passages of
the earth: or their waters,
after flowing into the sea, and
being mixed with its waters, are
exhaled by the heat of the sun,
become vapours and clouds,
descend in showers on the hills
and mountains, and feed the
springs from which they flow
again, in streams and rivers,
into the lakes, seas, and
oceans. He seems to speak of the
visible and constant motion of
the waters, both to the sea and
from it, and then to it again in
a perpetual reciprocation.
Verse 8-9
Ecclesiastes 1:8-9. All things —
Not only the sun, and winds, and
rivers, but all other creatures;
are full of labour — They are in
continual restlessness and
change, never abiding in the
same state. The eye is not
satisfied — As there are many
things in the world vexatious to
men, so even those things which
are comfortable are not
satisfactory, but men are
constantly desiring some longer
continuance or fuller enjoyment
of them, or variety in them. The
eye and ear are here put for all
the senses, because these are
most spiritual and refined, most
curious and inquisitive, most
capable of receiving
satisfaction, and exercised with
more ease and pleasure than the
other senses. The thing that
hath been, &c. — There is
nothing in the world but a
continued and tiresome
repetition of the same things.
The nature and course of the
beings and affairs of the world,
and the tempers of men, are the
same that they ever were, and
shall ever be; and therefore,
because no man ever yet received
satisfaction from worldly
things, it is vain for any
person hereafter to expect it.
And there is no new thing — In
the nature of things, which
might give us hopes of attaining
that satisfaction which hitherto
things have not afforded.
Verse 11
Ecclesiastes 1:11. There is no
remembrance, &c. — This seems to
be added, to prevent the
objection, that there are many
inventions and enjoyments
unknown to former ages. To this
he answers, This objection is
grounded only upon our ignorance
of ancient times, which, if we
exactly knew or remembered, we
should easily find parallels to
all present occurrences. There
are many thousands of remarkable
speeches and actions done in
this, and which will be done in
the following ages, which
neither are, nor ever will be,
put into the public records or
histories, and consequently must
unavoidably be forgotten in
succeeding ages; and therefore
it is just and reasonable to
believe the same concerning
former ages.
Verse 12
Ecclesiastes 1:12. I the
Preacher was king — Having
asserted the vanity of all
things in the general, he now
comes to prove his assertion in
those particulars wherein men
commonly seek, and with the
greatest probability expect to
find, true happiness. He begins
with secular wisdom. And to show
how competent a judge he was of
this matter, he lays down this
character, that he was the
Preacher, which implies eminent
knowledge; and a king, who
therefore had all imaginable
opportunities and advantages for
the attainment of happiness, and
particularly for the getting of
wisdom, by consulting all sorts
of books and men, by trying all
manner of experiments; and no
ordinary king, but king over
Israel — God’s own people, a
wise and a happy people, whose
king he was by God’s special
appointment, and furnished by
God with singular wisdom for
that great trust; and whose
abode was in Jerusalem — Where
were the house of God, and the
most wise and learned of the
priests attending upon it, and
the seats of justice, and
colleges, or assemblies of the
wisest men of their nation. All
these concurring in him, which
rarely do in any other man, make
the argument, drawn from his
experience, more convincing.
Verse 13
Ecclesiastes 1:13. I gave my
heart — Which phrase denotes his
serious and fixed purpose, and
his great industry in it. To
search out by wisdom — To seek
diligently and accurately, by
the help of that wisdom
wherewith God had endowed me.
Concerning all things, &c. —
Concerning all the works of God
and men in this lower world; the
works of nature; the works of
divine providence; and the works
and depths of human policy. This
sore travail — This difficult
and toilsome work of searching
out these things, God hath
inflicted as a just punishment
upon man for his eating of the
tree of knowledge. To be
exercised therewith — To employ
themselves in the painful study
of these things.
Verse 14-15
Ecclesiastes 1:14-15. I have
seen all the works, &c. —
Diligently observed, and, in a
great measure, understood them;
and behold, all is vanity and
vexation of spirit — Not only
unsatisfying, but also an
affliction or breaking to a
man’s spirit. That which is
crooked, &c. — All our knowledge
serves only to discover our
miseries, but is utterly
insufficient to remove them; it
cannot rectify those disorders
which are either in our own
hearts and lives, or in the men
and things of the world. That
which is wanting — In our
knowledge, and in order to man’s
complete satisfaction and
happiness; cannot be numbered —
Or, counted out to us from the
treasures of human learning, but
what is wanting will be so
still; all our enjoyments here,
when we have done our utmost to
bring them to perfection, are
still defective: and that which
is wanting in our own knowledge
is so much, that it cannot be
numbered. The more we know, the
more we see of our own
ignorance.
Verse 16-17
Ecclesiastes 1:16-17. I communed
with mine own heart — I
considered within myself in what
condition I was, and what
degrees of knowledge I had
gained; and whether it was not
my ignorance that made me unable
to rectify those errors, and
supply those wants of which I
complain; and whether wiser men
could not do it, though I could
not; saying, Lo! I am come to
great estate — Hebrew, הגדלתי, I
am grown great, namely, in
wisdom, or, I have magnified, or
greatly enlarged; and have
gotten —
Hebrew, והוספתי, have added,
more wisdom — As I had a large
stock of wisdom infused into me
by God, so I have greatly
improved it by conversation,
study, and experience; than all
they that were before me —
Whether governors, priests, or
private persons. This was no
vain boast, but a known and
confessed truth, and the
profession of it was necessary
to demonstrate his assertion; in
Jerusalem — Which was then the
most eminent place in the world
for wisdom and knowledge. I gave
my heart to know wisdom, &c. —
That I might thoroughly
understand the nature and
difference of truth, and error,
of virtue and vice. I perceived
that this is vexation, &c. — Or,
feeding upon wind, as the Hebrew
רעיון רוח, may be properly
rendered, and as a similar
phrase is rendered by many, both
ancient and modern translators,
in Ecclesiastes 1:14, and by our
translators, Hosea 12:1.
Verse 18
Ecclesiastes 1:18. In much
wisdom is much grief — Or
displeasure to a man within
himself, and against his present
condition; and he that
increaseth knowledge, increaseth
sorrow — Which he does many
ways, because he gets his
knowledge with hard and
wearisome labour, both of mind
and body, with the consumption
of his spirits, and shortening
of his life; because he is often
deceived with knowledge, falsely
so called, and often mistakes
error for truth, and is
perplexed with manifold doubts,
from which ignorant men are
wholly free; because he hath the
clearer prospect into, and
quicker sense of, his own
ignorance, and infirmities, and
disorders; and, withal, how vain
and ineffectual all his
knowledge is for the prevention
or removal of them; and because
his knowledge is very imperfect
and unsatisfying, yet increasing
his thirst after more knowledge;
lastly, because his knowledge
quickly fades and dies with him,
and then leaves him in no
better, and possibly in a much
worse condition, than that of
the meanest and most unlearned
man in the world. |