Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Proverbs Song of Solomon
Ecclesiastes 1
Outline of Ecclesiastes
Verse 1. The preacher - Who was not only a king, 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 publick warning to all, to avoid those rocks upon which he
had split.
Verse
2. Vanity - Not only vain, but vanity in the abstract, which
denotes extreme vanity. Saith - 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. What profit - What real and abiding benefit? None at all. All is
unprofitable as to the attainment of that happiness which all men
are enquiring after. 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. Passeth - 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 happiness must needs be unchangeable and
eternal; or else the certain knowledge of the approaching loss of
all these things will rob a man of solid contentment in them.
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 to be possessed by others.
Verse
5. The sun - 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, ver. 6, 7, and the design of these
similitudes seem to be; to shew 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, ver. 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.
Verse
6. The wind - 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. Is not full - So as to overflow the earth. Whereby also he
intimates the emptiness of mens minds, notwithstanding all the
abundance of creature comforts. Rivers come - Unto the earth in
general, from whence they come or flow into the sea, and to
which they return by the reflux of the sea. For 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. All things - Not only the sun, and winds, and rivers, but all
other creatures. labour - They are in continual restlessness and
change, never abiding in the same state. 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.
Verse
9. There is - 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. 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. No remembrance - This seems to be added to prevent the
objection, 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 the following ages which neither are,
nor ever will be, put into the publick 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. I 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 greatest probability expect
to find, true happiness. He begins with secular wisdom. And to
shew 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
an 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 men, make the argument
drawn from his experience more convincing.
Verse
13. I gave my heart - Which phrase denotes his serious and fixed
purpose, and his great industry in it. To search - To seek diligently
and accurately. By wisdom - By the help of that wisdom
wherewith God had endowed me. Concerning - 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 travel - 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
- To employ themselves in the painful study of these things.
Verse
14. Seen - Diligently observed. Vanity - Not only unsatisfying,
but also an affliction or breaking to a man's spirit.
Verse
15. Crooked - 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. Wanting - In our
knowledge. Or, counted out to us from the treasures of human
learning. But what is wanting, will still be so. 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. Communed - I considered within myself. Great - In wisdom.
Have gotten - As I had a large stock of wisdom infused into me by
God, so I have greatly improved it by conversation, and study,
and experience. Than all - Whether governors, or priests, or
private persons. In Jerusalem - Which was then the most eminent
place in the world for wisdom.
Verse
17. To know - That I might throughly understand the nature and
difference of truth and error, of virtue and vice.
Verse
18. Grief - Or, displeasure within himself, and against his present
condition. 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 the meanest and most unlearned man in the world.
Chapter 1:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Proverbs Song of Solomon
This version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible is a derivative of an electronic version, Copyright 1997, by Sulu D. Kelley. All rights reserved. Used by permission. It may not be modified or used commercially without permission of Wesleyan Heritage Publishing and Sulu Kelley. A special thanks to Mr. Kelley and Wesleyan Heritage Publishing for permission to create and post this version of Wesley's Notes on the Bible.
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