Verse 1-2
Ecclesiastes 2:1-2. I said in my
heart — Being disappointed of my
hopes from knowledge, I resolved
to try another course. Go to now
— O my soul! I will try whether
I cannot make thee happy by the
enjoyment of sensual delights.
This also is vanity — Is vain,
and unable to make men happy. I
said of laughter, It is mad —
This is an act of madness, more
fit for fools who know nothing,
than for wise men in this
sinful, and dangerous, and
deplorable state of mankind.
What doth it — What good doth
it? Or how can it make men
happy? I challenge all the
epicures in the world to give me
a solid answer.
Verse 3
Ecclesiastes 2:3. I sought to
give myself unto wine — To
gratify myself with delicious
meats and drinks; yet
acquainting, &c. — Yet resolving
to use my wisdom, that I might
try whether I could not arrive
at satisfaction, by mixing wine
and wisdom together. To lay hold
on folly, &c. — To pursue
sensual pleasure, which was my
folly; till I might see, &c. —
Till I might find out the true
way to contentment and
satisfaction, during this mortal
life.
Verses 4-7
Ecclesiastes 2:4-7. I made me
great works — Magnificent works,
for my honour and delight. I
builded me houses — Of which see
1 Kings 7:1, &c.; 9:15, &c.;
Song of Solomon 8:11. I made me
gardens — Hebrew, paradises, or
gardens of pleasure; I planted
trees, &c. — Mixing pleasure and
profit together. I made me pools
of water — Because the rain
there fell but seldom; to water
therewith the wood — The
nurseries of young trees, which,
for the multitude of them, were
like a wood or forest. I had
servants born in my house — Of
my bond-servants, which
therefore were a part of my
possessions.
Verse 8
Ecclesiastes 2:8. I gathered me
silver and gold — Vast riches;
and the peculiar treasure of
kings — Riches, answerable to
the state of a king, or, he
means, the greatest jewels and
rarities of other kings, which
they gave to me, either as a
tribute, or by way of present;
and of the provinces — Which
were imposed upon or presented
by all the provinces of my
dominions.
Verse 9-10
Ecclesiastes 2:9-10. So I was
great — In riches, and power,
and glory. My wisdom remained —
As yet I was not wholly seduced
from God. And whatsoever mine
eyes desired — Whatsoever was
grateful to my senses, or my
heart desired; I kept not from
them — I denied myself nothing,
at least, of lawful delights,
but went to the very bounds of
them; which was the occasion of
his falling afterward into
sinful pleasures. I withheld not
my heart, &c. — As my heart was
vehemently set upon pleasure, so
I did not resist, or curb it
therein, but made all possible
provision to gratify it. For my
heart rejoiced — I had the
comfort of all my labours, and
was not hindered from the full
enjoyment of them by sickness or
war, or any other calamity. This
was my portion — This present
enjoyment of them was all the
benefit which I could expect
from all my labours. So that I
made the best of them.
Verse 11
Ecclesiastes 2:11. I looked on
all the works, &c. — I made a
serious review of my former
works and labours, and
considered whether I had
obtained that satisfaction in
them which I had expected to
find; and behold, all was vanity
— I found myself disappointed,
and wholly dissatisfied in this
course. And there was no profit,
&c. — The pleasure was past, and
I was never the better for it,
but as empty as before.
Verse 12
Ecclesiastes 2:12. And I turned
myself, &c. — Being frustrated
of my hopes in pleasure, I
returned to a second
consideration of my first
choice, to see whether there was
not more satisfaction to be
gotten from wisdom, than I
discovered at my first view. For
what can the man do — To find
out the truth in this matter; to
discover the utmost satisfaction
possible to be found in
pleasure; that cometh after the
king — That succeeds me in this
inquiry. So this is added as a
reason why he gave over the
pursuit of pleasures, and
directed his thoughts to another
object; and why he so
confidently asserted the vanity
of pleasures, from his own
particular experience; namely,
because he had made the best of
them, and it was a vain thing
for any private man to expect
that from them which could not
be found by a king, and such a
king, who had so much wisdom to
invent, and such great riches to
pursue and enjoy all imaginable
delights; and who had made it
his design and business to
search this matter to the
bottom. Even that which, hath
been already done — As by
others, so especially by myself.
They can make no new discoveries
as to this point. They can make
no more of the pleasures of
sense than I have done. Let me
then try, once more, whether
wisdom can give happiness.
Verse 13-14
Ecclesiastes 2:13-14. I saw that
wisdom — I allowed thus much.
Although wisdom is not
sufficient to make men happy,
yet it is of far greater use
than vain pleasures, or any
other follies. The wise man’s
eyes are in his head — In their
proper place. He hath the use of
his eyes and reason, and
foresees, and so avoids, many
dangers and mischiefs. But the
fool walketh in darkness —
Manages his affairs ignorantly,
rashly, and foolishly, whereby
he shows that his eyes are not
in his head, or are not used
aright. And, or yet, I myself
perceived also, &c. — That,
notwithstanding this excellence
of wisdom above folly, at last
they both come to one end. Both
are subject to the same
calamities, and to death itself,
which takes away all difference
between them.
Verse 15-16
Ecclesiastes 2:15-16. Then I
said — why was I more wise —
What benefit have I by my
wisdom? or, to what purpose did
I take so much pains to get
wisdom. For there is no
remembrance of the wise — Their
memory, though it may flourish
for a season, yet will, in a
little time, be worn out; as we
see in most of the wise men of
former ages, whose very names,
together with all their
monuments, are utterly lost. As
the fool — He must die as
certainly as the fool.
Verses 17-19
Ecclesiastes 2:17-19. Therefore
I hated life — My life, though
accompanied with so much honour,
and pleasure, and wisdom, was a
burden to me, and I was ready to
wish, either that I had never
been born, or that I might
speedily die; because the work,
&c., is grievous — All human
designs and works are so far
from yielding me satisfaction,
that the consideration of them
increases my discontent. I hated
all my labour — All these riches
and buildings, and other fruits
of my labour, were aggravations
of my misery. Because I should
leave it, &c. — Because I must,
and that everlastingly, leave
them all behind me. And who
knoweth whether he shall be wise
or a fool? — Who will undo all
that I have done, and turn the
effects of my wisdom into
instruments of his folly. Some
think he had such an opinion of
Rehoboam.
Verse 20-21
Ecclesiastes 2:20-21. I went to
cause my heart to despair — I
gave myself up to despair of
ever reaping that satisfaction
which I promised to myself. For
there is a man whose labour, &c.
— Who uses great industry, and
prudence, and justice too, in
the management of his affairs;
yet to a man that hath not
laboured therein — shall he
leave it for his portion — A
portion which he will probably
consume upon his lusts. This
also is a great evil — A great
disorder in itself, and a great
torment to a considering mind.
Verse 22-23
Ecclesiastes 2:22-23. For what
hath man — “To what purpose,” a
man may well say, “is all this
toil of my body, and these
solicitous thoughts, and this
anguish of my mind? For all that
a man can enjoy himself of the
anxious labours wherein he
spends his days, amounts to
little or nothing; and what
comfort hath he in thinking who
shall enjoy the fruit of them
hereafter?” For all his days are
sorrows, &c. — “And yet, such is
our folly, there is no end of
our cares; for we see many a
man, whose life is nothing but a
mere drudgery; who never is at
leisure to enjoy any thing that
he hath, but still engaged in
one troublesome employment or
other to get more; which he
follows so eagerly, as if it
were his business to disquiet
and vex himself, and make his
life uneasy to him! being not
content with his daily toils,
unless he rack his mind also
with cares in the night! This is
so void of all reason that
nothing can be imagined more
vain and foolish.” — Bishop
Patrick.
Verse 24
Ecclesiastes 2:24. There is
nothing better — Or, Is there
any thing better for a man? —
Which implies that there is
nothing better, namely, for
man’s present comfort and
satisfaction; than that he
should make his soul enjoy good
in his labour — That, studying
first to free his mind from
overmuch care and anxiety, he
should, instead of heaping up
perpetually for his heirs, allow
himself a moderate and decent
use of all the good things that
he hath gotten by his honest
labours; praising God for them,
and cheerfully communicating
them with his friends and
neighbours, and to the relief of
the necessitous poor and
afflicted. This also — Namely,
that a man should thankfully
take, and freely and cheerfully
enjoy and communicate with
others, the comforts which God
gives him; I saw — was from the
hand of God — Was a singular
gift of God, and not to be
procured by a man’s own wisdom
and diligence.
Verse 25
Ecclesiastes 2:25. For who can
eat, &c. — For the truth of this
you may rely upon my experience:
for who can more freely and
fully enjoy the comforts of this
life than I did? Or who else can
hasten hereunto more than I? —
Who can pursue them with more
diligence, obtain them with more
readiness, or embrace them with
more greediness? And yet, (as
his words imply,) I had not
comfort in these things till God
was pleased to impart it unto
me; till he gave me grace to see
and consider that they were his
gifts, to acknowledge his
goodness in bestowing them upon
me, and to use and enjoy them
with prudence and moderation
according to his will, not
seeking my happiness in them, or
in any creatures, but in
himself, above all creatures.
For this verse is evidently
added to confirm, from his own
experience, what he said in the
foregoing verse: and surely no
man’s experience, in such a
case, was ever greater; no man
was ever a more capable judge in
these matters: none could either
have more creature-comforts, or
more addict himself to the
enjoyment of them, or improve
them to better advantage than he
did; and therefore he could best
tell what was the greatest good
to be found in them, and whether
they were able of themselves,
without God’s special gift, to
yield a man satisfaction.
Verse 26
Ecclesiastes 2:26. For God
giveth to a man that is good in
his sight — Who not only seems
to men to be good, as many bad
men do, but is really and
sincerely good; or, who pleaseth
him, as the same phrase, שׂוב
לפניו, is rendered, Ecclesiastes
7:26, and often elsewhere:
whereby he seems to intimate the
reason why he found no more
comfort in his labours, namely,
because his ways had been very
displeasing to God, and
therefore God justly denied him
that gift; wisdom and knowledge
— To direct him how to use his
comforts right, that so they may
be blessings, and not snares and
curses to him; and joy — A mind
thankful for, and contented
with, his portion. “This is a
blessing,” says Bishop Patrick,
“which God reserves for him whom
he loves; whose sincere piety he
rewards with wisdom to judge
when, and with knowledge to
understand how, he should enjoy
and take the comfort of all he
hath; especially with inward
joy, satisfaction of heart, and
tranquillity of mind in this
favour of God to him; whereby
the troublesome affairs of this
life are tempered and seasoned.”
But to the sinner he giveth
travail — He giveth him up to
insatiable desires, and
wearisome labours, to little or
no purpose, that he may have no
comfort in the riches he gains,
but leave them to others, yea,
to such as he least expected or
desired, to good and virtuous
men, into whose hands his estate
falls, by the wise and
all-disposing providence of God. |