Analysis of Ecclesiastes.
PART I., Chapters 1-6.
Division I., Chapters 1-2.
Division II., Chapters 3-4.
Division III., Chapters 5-6.
PART II., Chapters 7-12.
Division I., chapters 7-9:12.
Division II., chapters 9:13-12:14.
The Theme: The Chief Good Sought by the
Natural Man Through Experience and Observation of all Things Done " Under the
Sun."
PART I.
Division I., Chapters 1-2.
The Prologue; the Wise Search; the Vanities; the Resort.
Section 1. 1:1-11. The
Reflex; the Conclusion of all.
a. The Result of the consideration of all
Labor under the sun. i: 2-3.
b. In Nature is seen the symbol of the
monotonous round of Man's endless toil
and endeavor. 1: 4-7.
c. There is no progress under the sun; prospects are but retrospects; the present
things and generations and those to come
will be forgotten like the generations
gone; the earth alone abides; its abiding
a vexation to short lived man. 1:8-11.
Section 2. 1:12-18. Introduction: the
Seeker, the Search, the Method, the Result.
a. The Seeker; a King, the wisest and richest
of men. 1:12, 16. (2:9, 12, 25; 7:15, 23-25; 11:9-10.)
b. The Search; the Chief Good for the sons
of men under heaven. Such search is
given of God to humble and discipline.
1:13,17. (2:3, 7:25, 1:13, 3:10.)
c. The Method: a philosophic, wise experimentation and careful observation. 1:13,
14; 1:16,17. (2:3, 9; 7:23-25, 12:9-11.)
d. All is Vanity and Vexation of Spirit"
and this without remedy, for all under
the sun, perverse, " crooked " and defective, "wanting," remains unalterably so.
1:14-15.
e. The Result in particular; wisdom itself is
but a sorrowful possession, a ' ' Vexation
of Spirit." 1:16-18. (1:2-3, 2:11, 6:12,
11:8, 1:15, 3:14, 7:13).
Section 3. 2:1-11. The Result of all of
the Seeker's own personal Experience in search
of the Chief Good; " the whole vanity and vexation of spirit; " or "
all is vapour and feeding on wind," or " choice or seeking of
wind." LXX.
a. The Vanity of the lust of the flesh. 2:1-3.
b. The Vanity of the lust of the eyes. 2:4-6.
c. The Vanity of the pride of life. 2:7-8.
d. The Result thus far, " Vanity, a striving
after wind;" no "profit," surplus, advantage. 2: 9-11.
Section 4. 2:12-26. Various Vanities
and the Final Resort.
a. The Vanity of even Wisdom itself, though
more excellent than folly, in view of
death and oblivion to wise and foolish
alike. 2:12-15.
b. The conclusion, therefore, that life is hateful, not worth
living, for " The whole is
vapour and a chasing of the wind." 2:16. c. The hateful Vanity of work done wisely, in
view of a foolish, thick-headed heir. 2:18-19.
d. The Vanity and Despair of work done
wisely, in view of a recipient who never
did a stroke for the portion received. 2: 20-21.
e. The Vanity of all
self-denying labor under the sun. 2:22-23.
f. The Resort to the Conclusion: to
enjoy the good things of life and labor, and to thank God for the " chance "
and the power of enjoyment.
The Conclusion weakened by a contra diction
inseparable from such self-complacent enjoyment; and the refrain of " Vanity
and Vexation of Spirit," again heard. 2:24-26;
Division II., chapters 3-4.
The Result of the Observation of all Done under the
Sun, in Search of the Chief Good.
Section 1. 3:1-22. The "Times" of Man; the
Purpose of God; the Judgment.
a. The " times " of man under the sun, are in
orderly, seasonable sequence; but not only is there no permanent outcome or
profit from all their toil and trouble, but man is perplexingly ignorant of the
one great unalterable purpose and work of God. He does not know how to fit, or
how his little knowledge and work under the sun fit into the eternal purpose of
God. 3:1-11.
b. The Resort, because of such ignorance and
of the necessity of submission to the in
evitable of the divine order, to the Conclusion of a joyous, serene and thankful
enjoyment of good in one's labor, and to
fear before God in view of the divine
judgment of all the past. 3:12-15.
c. The Day of God will be long: "a time
therefor every purpose and work;" and
for all unjust judges under the sun; un-righted wrongs test men; and yet one
" chance " of death is alike to men and
beasts; in that respect there is no preeminence of man above the beast, for " all
is vanity." Still, in view of all, one may
calmly rejoice in the present, for there is
no long future for man on earth; and
when he is gone he cannot know any
more what is done under the sun. 3:16-22.
Section 2. 4:1-16. Observation of various wrongs and vanities under the sun.
a. Oppressions make death and oblivion preferable to life. 4:1-3.
b. The envy of lazy fools, of the successful
rich, makes success a vanity and vexation of spirit. 4:4-6.
c. The Vanity and sore travail of the labor of
the lone miser, in contrast with the Benefit of Companionship. 4:7-12.
d. The Vanities of political life: its sudden
reversals; its passing popularity. 4:13-16,
8:10.
Division III., Chapters 5-6.
Exhortations concerning Vanities in Religion and the Extortions of the High. The
Vanities of Riches. The Height and the
Depths of the Preacher's Mood. The Conclusion as to the Chief Good; its Contradiction
and utter Failure.
Section 1. 5:1-9. Divine worship; human injustice.
a. The worship of God: the rebuke of the
irreverent, rash and wordy. Foolish
fancies make worship Vanity. The
Seeker, in his mood of piousness, says " thou " to himself. 5:1-7. b. Exhortations (" thou ") concerning the extortions of the high and the relations of
the Highest thereto. 5:8-9.
Section 2. 5: 10-20. The Vanities of
Wealth; the Complacent Conclusion.
a. The Vanity of the Gain and increase of
Riches. 5:10-12.
b. The Vanity and sore evil of the loss of
hoarded riches in an unwise venture. 5:13-17
c. The Result of Experience and Observation,
thus far, is the Conclusion that "the Good
that is comely," or the Good and the Beautiful, is, to enjoy the good things of life
and to thank God for the power of enjoyment. And when all enjoyment is
forgotten, it is still " the Good " that God
gave it. 5:18-20.
Section 3. 6:1-12. The sore Contradiction and utter breakdown of the foregoing
Conclusion; despair of finding the Chief Good.
a. The sore evil and vanity, common among
men, contradicting and disturbing the
complacent conclusion, not to be able to
eat and enjoy the good things of life.
6:1-2.
b. But the exceeding vanity and worst feeding
on wind is, in being rich, and having a
hundred sons and a long life, and yet in
life no fill of the soul, and at death no
honorable burial; better never to have
lived at all. 6:3-9.
c. It is seen and acknowledged that all these
experiences under the sun are of man as
man, of Adam, the race, utterly weak and
unable to cope with the unalterable purpose and work of Him Who is mightier
than man. 6:10.
The Seeker comes to an utter break
down of all knowledge of what is the
Good for man in all his shadow-like life of numberless vanities, 6:11-12.
PART II., Chapters 7-12.
The Chief Good Sought for in Wise Conduct. The Law of
the Golden Mean. Its Application. The Problem of Life Unsolved. Wisdom the Most
Desirable Resort. The Final Retrospect. The Warning. The Great Conclusion, or
The Chief Good Under The Sun.
Division I., 7:1—9:12.
The law of Prudence; the Anomalies; the Resort; the fresh attempt; the final
failure.
Section 1. 7:1-29. The Recovery from depths of despairful ignorance to
a Philosophic Mood.
a. The balancing and the better things; the average struck.
7:1-14.
b. Things seen in days of vanity and not ended; anomalies among men; the
extremes to be avoided. 7:15-18.
c. Wisdom a strength; no one perfectly righteous, not even the Preacher. 7:19-22.
d. In all the Search in the deeps of the
past, in the far off and soundless, the worst
thing found was the evil woman; and the
final confession follows that man, the race,
once created upright, is indeed fallen. 7:23-29.
SECTION 2. 8:1-15. Prudence and caution
before wicked rulers. High and low, good
and evil, go to the same doom of death; no
golden mean, no prudence avails. The vanity
of an unloved ruler. The great problem concerning righteous and wicked unsolved.
a. Be prudent before kings. From lack of this
seasonable prudence great misery comes
on common men. They cannot save themselves from the common, inevitable doom
of death, neither can rich rulers; and a
vanity belongs to their very death; their
memory is soon forgotten. " Out of sight,
out of mind." 8:1-10.
b. The assertions and recantings touching the
contrarious treatment of righteous and
wicked. 8:11-13.
c. In utter discomfiture the prudent man resorts to the favorite conclusion to enjoy
himself anyhow. 8:14-15.
Section 3. 8:16, 9:12.
The discomfiture
temporary. The final attempt to solve the
problem of God'' s work and human allotments.
The failure and resort to enjoyment; a new
contradiction.
a. "All move to a common fate;" but any
kind of life is better than oblivion; all
allotments of joy and grief, love and
hatred, in the hand of God, but no one
knows what is before him in a world
of seeming chance. " A living dog is
better than a dead lion." 8:16-9:6.
b. "See life" (9:9) in the fragrant delights
of the family; eat, drink and be merry;
it is the portion left; work hard for it.
9:7-10.
c. And yet the indiscriminate allotments and
unaccountable failures of life, check all
expectations of sure success. The evil
chance may happen to one any moment.
7:11-12.
DIVISION II., 9:13-12:14.
Recovery to the placid philosophic mood;
the cautious praise of wisdom; the proverbial
philosophy; the final wise admonition as to
human work. The summing up; the forecast;
the warning to youth; the old age and its sorrows; the great Conclusion.
Section 1. 9:13; 11:6.
The philosophic
mind; the wise maxims; the work of man
and God.
a. The narrative of the wisdom once seen in
a city, leads to the rhythmical statements
that follow. 9:13-16.
b. The Proverbs of natural wisdom and prudence. 9:17; 10:20.
c. Man should do his work, though all ignorant of the work. God worketh from the
beginning to the end, and this the
Preacher had failed to find out. 11:1-6.
Section 2. 11:7; 12:8.
The final sum
and forecast; the exhortation; the warning.
a. The final sum and forecast: that however
pleasant at times, life under the sun may
be, all to come, like all past, will have
many days of darkness, for "the whole,"
from childhood to old age, " is Vanity."
11:7-8.
b. Special exhortation to childhood and youth
as being themselves only vanity. A
pathos of irony; a melancholy approval
of enjoyment mingled with fear of coming
judgment. 11: 9-10.
c. Warnings against the evils and miseries of
the old age of a vainly spent life. The
Creator and Judgment to come.
The vanity of the old age of a vain
life. 12:1-8.
Section 3. 12:9-14. The Epilogue or Supplement.
The last and mournful repetition of the
monotonous Refrain, "Vanity of Vanities, all
is Vanity," with which the book began and
the old age closes, leads to the conclusion of
the whole matter.
a. Praise for the Preacher. 12:9-11.
b. The Weariness of the foregoing Search
and Study, and of the
endless observations or books that might still be made. 12:12.
c. The Great Conclusion of
man under the
sun; the material for the Conclusion
found during the search.
(1.) As to the
relation of God to the
Search,
1:13; 3:10.
(2.) As to life, 5:18; 8:15; 9:9; 12:7.
(3.) As to earthly good and enjoyment, 2:26;.
5:19; 2:24; 3:13-14; 5:19-20; 9:7-10; 6:2;
11:9.
(4.) As to future judgment, 3:15-17; 5:1-7; 7:29;
11:9; 12:13-14.
But the Chief Good seen by the Natural
Man is still in the future; all is still facing
a Fulfillment and a Righteousness in the
Man to come from above the sun.
The Failure of man implied in the
abrupt ending; preparation for salvation
through it all.
Germantown, Pa.,
January, 1896. |