ECCLESIASTES CHAPTER 6 The vanity of riches without use, ECCLESIASTES
6:1,2. Of children and old age without competent wealth; their
obscurity is worse than not to have been, ECCLESIASTES 6:3. All labour
is for necessaries of life, which one getteth as well as another,
ECCLESIASTES 6:7,8. It is good... [ Continue Reading ]
WEALTH; all sorts of riches, as gold and silver, cattle and lands, &c.
OF ALL THAT HE DESIRETH; which he doth or can reasonably desire.
GIVETH HIM NOT POWER TO EAT; either because they are suddenly taken
away from him by the hand and curse of God, and given to others; or
because God gives him up to... [ Continue Reading ]
AN HUNDRED CHILDREN, i.e. very many children, to whom he intends to
leave his estate. LIVE MANY YEARS; which is the chief thing that he
desires, and which giveth him opportunity of increasing his estate
vastly. THE DAYS; he saith days, because the years of men's life are
but few. BE NOT FILLED WITH... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR; or rather, _although_, as this particle is frequently rendered.
For this verse seems to contain not so much a reason of what he last
said, _that an untimely birth is better than he_, as an answer to an
exception which might be made against it. Although all that is here
said be true of the abort... [ Continue Reading ]
HE HATH NOT SEEN THE SUN; he never beheld the light, and therefore it
is not grievous to him to want it; whereas the covetous man saw that
light was very pleasant, and therefore the loss of it was irksome to
him. NOR KNOWN ANY THING; hath had no knowledge, sense, or experience
of any thing, whether... [ Continue Reading ]
LIVE A THOUSAND YEARS TWICE TOLD; wherein he seems to have a privilege
above an untimely birth. _Hath he seen no good_; he hath enjoyed
little or no comfort in it, and therefore long life is rather a curse
and mischief than a blessing or advantage to him. DO NOT ALL, whether
born out of and before t... [ Continue Reading ]
FOR HIS MOUTH; for meat to put into his mouth, that he may get food;
and as bread is oft put for all food, so food is put for all necessary
provisions for this life, as PROVERBS 30:8, and elsewhere; whereof
this is the chief, for which a man will sell his house and lands, yea,
the very garments upon... [ Continue Reading ]
THE FOOL, to wit, in these matters. Both are equally subject to the
same calamities, and partakers of the same comforts of this life.
BEFORE THE LIVING, to wit, before the poor, that doth not know this;
which words are easily understood by comparing this clause with the
former. And such defects are... [ Continue Reading ]
THE SIGHT OF THE EYES, i.e. the comfortable enjoyment of what a man
hath; for seeing is oft put for enjoying, as PSALMS 34:12 ECCLESIASTES
2:1, ECCLESIASTES 3:13, &c. THE WANDERING OF THE DESIRE; restless and
insatiable desires of what a man hath not, wherewith covetous rich men
are perpetually haun... [ Continue Reading ]
This verse is added either as a proof of what he last said concerning
the vanity and wandering of insatiable desires, or as a timber
instance of the vanity of all things in this life. THAT WHICH HATH
BEEN (or, _is_, for the Hebrew verb) may be rendered either way, to
wit, man considered with all his... [ Continue Reading ]
This seems to be added as a conclusion of the disputation managed in
all the foregoing Chapter s, SEEING not only man is a vain creature in
himself, as hath been now said, but _there are also many_ other
_things_ in the world, _which_ instead of removing or diminishing, as
might be expected, do but... [ Continue Reading ]
WHO KNOWETH WHAT IS GOOD FOR MAN? no man certainly knows what is best
for him here, whether to be high or low, rich or poor, because those
great things which men generally desire and pursue are very frequently
the occasions of men's utter ruin, as hath been noted again and again
in this book. VAIN L... [ Continue Reading ]