
Text -- Ecclesiastes 1:1-10 (NET)




Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics



collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Ecc 1:1 - -- 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 pub...
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.

Not only vain, but vanity in the abstract, which denotes extreme vanity.

Wesley: Ecc 1:2 - -- Upon deep consideration and long experience, and by Divine inspiration. This verse contains the general proposition, which he intends particularly to ...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:2 - -- 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 fin...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:3 - -- What real and abiding benefit? None at all. All is unprofitable as to the attainment of that happiness which all men are enquiring after.
What real and abiding benefit? None at all. All is unprofitable as to the attainment of that happiness which all men are enquiring after.

Wesley: Ecc 1:3 - -- Heb. his toilsome labour, both of body and mind in the pursuit of riches, or pleasures, or other earthly things.
Heb. his toilsome labour, both of body and mind in the pursuit of riches, or pleasures, or other earthly things.

Wesley: Ecc 1:3 - -- 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 wh...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:4 - -- 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 ...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:4 - -- 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 th...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:5 - -- 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;...
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, Ecc 1:6-7, 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, Ecc 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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:6 - -- 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 f...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:7 - -- So as to overflow the earth. Whereby also he intimates the emptiness of mens minds, notwithstanding all the abundance of creature comforts.
So as to overflow the earth. Whereby also he intimates the emptiness of mens minds, notwithstanding all the abundance of creature comforts.

Wesley: Ecc 1:7 - -- 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...
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.

Not only the sun, and winds, and rivers, but all other creatures.

Wesley: Ecc 1:8 - -- They are in continual restlessness and change, never abiding in the same state.
They are in continual restlessness and change, never abiding in the same state.

Wesley: Ecc 1:8 - -- 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 desir...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:9 - -- 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...
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.

Wesley: Ecc 1:9 - -- In the nature of things, which might give us hopes of attaining that satisfaction which hitherto things have not afforded.
In the nature of things, which might give us hopes of attaining that satisfaction which hitherto things have not afforded.
JFB: Ecc 1:1 - -- And Convener of assemblies for the purpose. See my Preface. Koheleth in Hebrew, a symbolical name for Solomon, and of Heavenly Wisdom speaking through...
And Convener of assemblies for the purpose. See my Preface. Koheleth in Hebrew, a symbolical name for Solomon, and of Heavenly Wisdom speaking through and identified with him. Ecc 1:12 shows that "king of Jerusalem" is in apposition, not with "David," but "Preacher."

Rather, "in Jerusalem," for it was merely his metropolis, not his whole kingdom.

The theme proposed of the first part of his discourse.

JFB: Ecc 1:2 - -- Hebraism for the most utter vanity. So "holy of holies" (Exo 26:33); "servant of servants" (Gen 9:25). The repetition increases the force.

Hebrew, "the all"; all without exception, namely, earthly things.

JFB: Ecc 1:2 - -- Not in themselves, for God maketh nothing in vain (1Ti 4:4-5), but vain when put in the place of God and made the end, instead of the means (Psa 39:5-...
Not in themselves, for God maketh nothing in vain (1Ti 4:4-5), but vain when put in the place of God and made the end, instead of the means (Psa 39:5-6; Psa 62:9; Mat 6:33); vain, also, because of the "vanity" to which they are "subjected" by the fall (Rom 8:20).

JFB: Ecc 1:3 - -- That is, "What profit" as to the chief good (Mat 16:26). Labor is profitable in its proper place (Gen 2:15; Gen 3:19; Pro 14:23).

JFB: Ecc 1:3 - -- That is, in this life, as opposed to the future world. The phrase often recurs, but only in Ecclesiastes.
That is, in this life, as opposed to the future world. The phrase often recurs, but only in Ecclesiastes.

JFB: Ecc 1:4 - -- (Psa 104:5). While the earth remains the same, the generations of men are ever changing; what lasting profit, then, can there be from the toils of on...
(Psa 104:5). While the earth remains the same, the generations of men are ever changing; what lasting profit, then, can there be from the toils of one whose sojourn on earth, as an individual, is so brief? The "for ever" is comparative, not absolute (Psa 102:26).

JFB: Ecc 1:5 - -- (Psa 19:5-6). "Panting" as the Hebrew for "hasteth"; metaphor, from a runner (Psa 19:5, "a strong man") in a "race." It applies rather to the rising s...
(Psa 19:5-6). "Panting" as the Hebrew for "hasteth"; metaphor, from a runner (Psa 19:5, "a strong man") in a "race." It applies rather to the rising sun, which seems laboriously to mount up to the meridian, than to the setting sun; the accents too favor MAURER, "And (that too, returning) to his place, where panting he riseth."

JFB: Ecc 1:6 - -- That is, it returns afresh to its former circuits, however many be its previous veerings about. The north and south winds are the two prevailing winds...
That is, it returns afresh to its former circuits, however many be its previous veerings about. The north and south winds are the two prevailing winds in Palestine and Egypt.

JFB: Ecc 1:7 - -- By subterraneous cavities, and by evaporation forming rain clouds, the fountains and rivers are supplied from the sea, into which they then flow back....
By subterraneous cavities, and by evaporation forming rain clouds, the fountains and rivers are supplied from the sea, into which they then flow back. The connection is: Individual men are continually changing, while the succession of the race continues; just as the sun, wind, and rivers are ever shifting about, while the cycle in which they move is invariable; they return to the point whence they set out. Hence is man, as in these objects of nature which are his analogue, with all the seeming changes "there is no new thing" (Ecc 1:9).

JFB: Ecc 1:8 - -- MAURER translates, "All words are wearied out," that is, are inadequate, as also, "man cannot express" all the things in the world which undergo this ...
MAURER translates, "All words are wearied out," that is, are inadequate, as also, "man cannot express" all the things in the world which undergo this ceaseless, changeless cycle of vicissitudes: "The eye is not satisfied with seeing them," &c. But it is plainly a return to the idea (Ecc 1:3) as to man's "labor," which is only wearisome and profitless; "no new" good can accrue from it (Ecc 1:9); for as the sun, &c., so man's laborious works move in a changeless cycle. The eye and ear are two of the taskmasters for which man toils. But these are never "satisfied" (Ecc 6:7; Pro 27:20). Nor can they be so hereafter, for there will be nothing "new." Not so the chief good, Jesus Christ (Joh 4:13-14; Rev 21:5).

JFB: Ecc 1:9 - -- Rather, "no new thing at all"; as in Num 11:6. This is not meant in a general sense; but there is no new source of happiness (the subject in question)...
Rather, "no new thing at all"; as in Num 11:6. This is not meant in a general sense; but there is no new source of happiness (the subject in question) which can be devised; the same round of petty pleasures, cares, business, study, wars, &c., being repeated over and over again [HOLDEN].

JFB: Ecc 1:10 - -- The Hebrew plural cannot be joined to the verb singular. Therefore translate: "It hath been in the ages before; certainly it hath been before us" [HOL...
The Hebrew plural cannot be joined to the verb singular. Therefore translate: "It hath been in the ages before; certainly it hath been before us" [HOLDEN]. Or, as MAURER: "That which has been (done) before us (in our presence, 1Ch 16:33), has been (done) already in the old times."
Clarke: Ecc 1:1 - -- The words of the Preacher - Literally, "The words of Choheleth, son of David, king of Jerusalem."But the Targum explains it thus: "The words of the ...
The words of the Preacher - Literally, "The words of Choheleth, son of David, king of Jerusalem."But the Targum explains it thus: "The words of the prophecy, which Choheleth prophesied; the same is Solomon, son of David the king, who was in Jerusalem. For when Solomon, king of Israel, saw by the spirit of prophecy that the kingdom of Rehoboam his son was about to be divided with Jeroboam, the son of Nebat; and the house of the sanctuary was about to be destroyed, and the people of Israel sent into captivity; he said in his word - Vanity of vanities is all that I have labored, and David my father; they are altogether vanity."The word

Clarke: Ecc 1:2 - -- Vanity of vanities - As the words are an exclamation, it would be better to translate, O vanity of vanities! Emptiness of emptinesses
True, substant...
Vanity of vanities - As the words are an exclamation, it would be better to translate, O vanity of vanities! Emptiness of emptinesses
True, substantial good is not to be found in any thing liable to change and corruption
The author referred to in the introduction begins his paraphrase thus: -
"O vain deluding world! whose largest gift
Thine emptiness betray, like painted clouds
Or watery bubbles: as the vapor flies
Dispersed by lightest blast, so fleet thy joys
And leave no trace behind. This serious trut
The royal preacher loud proclaims, convince
By sad experience; with a sigh repeat
The mournful theme, that nothing here belo
Can solid comfort yield: ‘ tis all a scene
Of vanity, beyond the power of word
To express, or thought conceive. Let every ma
Survey himself, then ask, what fruit remain
Of all his fond pursuits? What has he gain’ d
By toiling thus for more than nature’ s want
Require? Why thus with endlness projects rack’
His heated brain, and to the laboring mind
Repose denied? Why such expense of time
That steals away so fast, and ne’ er looks back?
Could man his wish obtain, how short the spac
For his enjoyment! No less transient her
The time of his duration, than the thing
Thus anxiously pursued. For, as the mind
In search of bliss, fix’ d on no solid point
For ever fluctuates; so our little frames
In which we glory, haste to their decline
Nor permanence can find. The human rac
Drop like autumnal leaves, by spring revived
One generation from the stage of lif
Withdraws, another comes, and thus makes roo
For that which follows. Mightiest realms decay
Sink by degrees; and lo! new form’ d estate
Rise from their ruins. Even the earth itself
Sole object of our hopes and fears
Shall have its period, though to man unknown."

Clarke: Ecc 1:3 - -- What profit hath a man - What is the sum of the real good he has gained by all his toils in life? They, in themselves, have neither made him content...
What profit hath a man - What is the sum of the real good he has gained by all his toils in life? They, in themselves, have neither made him contented nor happy.

Clarke: Ecc 1:4 - -- One generation passeth away - Men succeed each other in unceasing generations: but the earth is still the same; it undergoes no change that leads to...
One generation passeth away - Men succeed each other in unceasing generations: but the earth is still the same; it undergoes no change that leads to melioration, or greater perfection. And it will continue the same

Clarke: Ecc 1:5 - -- Ecc 1:6
These verses are confused by being falsely divided. The first clause of the sixth should be joined to the fifth verse
"The sun also ariseth, a...
These verses are confused by being falsely divided. The first clause of the sixth should be joined to the fifth verse
"The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place where he ariseth; going to the south, and circulating to the north."

Clarke: Ecc 1:6 - -- "The wind is continually whirling about, and the wind returneth upon its whirlings.
It is plain, from the clause which I have restored to the fifth ve...
"The wind is continually whirling about, and the wind returneth upon its whirlings.
It is plain, from the clause which I have restored to the fifth verse, that the author refers to the approximations of the sun to the northern and southern tropics, viz., of Cancer and Capricorn
All the versions agree in applying the first clause of the sixth verse to the sun, and not to the wind. Our version alone has mistaken the meaning. My old MS. Bible is quite correct
The sunne riisith up, and goth doun, and to his place turnith agein; and there agein riising, goth about bi the south, and then agein to the north
The author points out two things here
1. Day and night, marked by the appearance of the sun above the horizon; proceeding apparently from east to west; where he sinks under the horizon, and appears to be lost during the night
2. His annual course through the twelve signs of the zodiac, when, from the equinoctial, he proceeds southward to the tropic of Capricorn; and thence turneth about towards the north, till he reaches the tropic of Cancer; and so on.

Clarke: Ecc 1:7 - -- All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full - The reason is, nothing goes into it either by the; rivers or by rain, that does not come ...
All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full - The reason is, nothing goes into it either by the; rivers or by rain, that does not come from it: and to the place whence the rivers come, whether from the sea originally by evaporation, or immediately by rain, thither they return again; for the water exhaled from the sea by evaporation is collected in the clouds, and in rain, etc., falls upon the tops of the mountains; and, filtered through their fissures, produce streams, several of which uniting, make rivers, which flow into the sea. The water is again evaporated by the sun; the vapors collected are precipitated; and, being filtered through the earth, become streams, etc., as before.

Clarke: Ecc 1:8 - -- All things are full of labor - It is; impossible to calculate how much anxiety, pain, labor, and fatigue are necessary in order to carry on the comm...
All things are full of labor - It is; impossible to calculate how much anxiety, pain, labor, and fatigue are necessary in order to carry on the common operations of life. But an endless desire of gain, and an endless curiosity to unfitness a variety of results, cause men to, labor on. The eye sees much, but wishes to, see more. The ear hears of many things; but is curious to have the actual knowledge of them. So desire and curiosity carry men, under the Divine providence, through all the labors and pains of life.

Clarke: Ecc 1:9 - -- The thing that hath been - Every thing in the whole economy of nature has its revolutions; summer and winter, heat and cold, rain and drought, seedt...
The thing that hath been - Every thing in the whole economy of nature has its revolutions; summer and winter, heat and cold, rain and drought, seedtime and autumn, with the whole system of corruption and generation, alternately succeed each other, so that whatever has been shall be again. There is really, physically, and philosophically, nothing absolutely new under the sun, in the course of sublunary things. The same is the case in all the revolutions of the heavens.

Clarke: Ecc 1:10 - -- Is there any thing, etc. - The original is beautiful. "Is there any thing which will say, See this! it is new?"Men may say this of their discoveries...
Is there any thing, etc. - The original is beautiful. "Is there any thing which will say, See this! it is new?"Men may say this of their discoveries, etc.; but universal nature says, It is not new. It has been, and it will be.
Defender: Ecc 1:2 - -- The words "vanity," "vanities," and "vain" (all the same Hebrew word) occur no less than thirty-eight times in Ecclesiastes, almost as much as in all ...
The words "vanity," "vanities," and "vain" (all the same Hebrew word) occur no less than thirty-eight times in Ecclesiastes, almost as much as in all the rest of the Bible put together."

Defender: Ecc 1:3 - -- This phrase, "under the sun" occurs twenty-nine times in Ecclesiastes. If one's thoughts and motives are all "under the sun," then indeed everything i...
This phrase, "under the sun" occurs twenty-nine times in Ecclesiastes. If one's thoughts and motives are all "under the sun," then indeed everything is vanity. Each believer is exhorted to "set your affection on things above, not on things on the earth" (Col 3:2)."

Defender: Ecc 1:4 - -- This is one of many biblical affirmations that God created the earth to last forever. Like our mortal bodies, it must be made new again, but once rene...
This is one of many biblical affirmations that God created the earth to last forever. Like our mortal bodies, it must be made new again, but once renewed, it will abide forever."

Defender: Ecc 1:5 - -- Just as modern astronomers, in their everyday speech, talk of the sun rising and sun setting, so the Biblical writers, following the principle of rela...
Just as modern astronomers, in their everyday speech, talk of the sun rising and sun setting, so the Biblical writers, following the principle of relative motion, use similar terminology. This is scientifically pragmatic, not unscientific."

Defender: Ecc 1:6 - -- This is a remarkable anticipation of the modern discovery of the world's great wind circuits, in the global circulation of the atmosphere."
This is a remarkable anticipation of the modern discovery of the world's great wind circuits, in the global circulation of the atmosphere."

Defender: Ecc 1:7 - -- Similarly, this is an excellent summary of the earth's amazing hydrologic cycle, as confirmed scientifically only in modern times."
Similarly, this is an excellent summary of the earth's amazing hydrologic cycle, as confirmed scientifically only in modern times."

Defender: Ecc 1:9 - -- There is no new thing under the sun, since God has completed His creation (Gen 2:1-3). But God is above the sun, and He can still create "new things" ...
TSK: Ecc 1:1 - -- the Preacher : Ecc 1:12, Ecc 7:27, Ecc 12:8-10; Neh 6:7; Psa 40:9; Isa 61:1; Jon 3:2; 2Pe 2:5
king : Ecc 1:12; 1Ki 11:42, 1Ki 11:43; 2Ch 9:30, 2Ch 10:...

TSK: Ecc 1:2 - -- Ecc 2:11, Ecc 2:15, Ecc 2:17, Ecc 2:19, Ecc 2:21, Ecc 2:23, Ecc 2:26, Ecc 3:19, Ecc 4:4, Ecc 4:8, Ecc 4:16, Ecc 5:10, Ecc 6:11, Ecc 11:8, Ecc 11:10, E...

TSK: Ecc 1:3 - -- profit : Ecc 2:22, Ecc 3:9, Ecc 5:16; Pro 23:4, Pro 23:5; Isa 55:2; Hab 2:13, Hab 2:18; Mat 16:26; Mar 8:36, Mar 8:37; Joh 6:27
under : Ecc 2:11, Ecc ...

TSK: Ecc 1:4 - -- One generation : Ecc 6:12; Gen. 5:3-31, Gen 11:20-32, Gen 36:9-19, Gen 47:9; Exo 1:6, Exo 1:7, Exo 6:16-27; Psa 89:47, Psa 89:48, Psa 90:9, Psa 90:10;...
One generation : Ecc 6:12; Gen. 5:3-31, Gen 11:20-32, Gen 36:9-19, Gen 47:9; Exo 1:6, Exo 1:7, Exo 6:16-27; Psa 89:47, Psa 89:48, Psa 90:9, Psa 90:10; Zec 1:5
but : Psa 102:24-28, Psa 104:5, Psa 119:90, Psa 119:91; Mat 24:35; 2Pe 3:10-13

TSK: Ecc 1:5 - -- sun : Gen 8:22; Psa 19:4-6, Psa 89:36, Psa 89:37, Psa 104:19-23; Jer 33:20
hasteth : Heb. panteth, Jos 10:13, Jos 10:14; Psa 42:1; Hab 3:11
sun : Gen 8:22; Psa 19:4-6, Psa 89:36, Psa 89:37, Psa 104:19-23; Jer 33:20
hasteth : Heb. panteth, Jos 10:13, Jos 10:14; Psa 42:1; Hab 3:11

TSK: Ecc 1:6 - -- The wind : This verse should be connected with the preceding, and rendered, ""The sun also riseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place wh...
The wind : This verse should be connected with the preceding, and rendered, ""The sun also riseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place where he arose; going toward the south, and turning about unto the north. The wind whirleth about continually,""etc. Alluding, in the former part, to the apparent daily motion of the sun from east to west, and to his annual course through the signs of the zodiac. Job 37:9, Job 37:17; Psa 107:25, Psa 107:29; Jon 1:4; Mat 7:24, Mat 7:27; Joh 3:8; Act 27:13-15

TSK: Ecc 1:7 - -- the rivers run : Job 38:10, Job 38:11; Psa 104:6-9
return again : Heb. return to go
the rivers run : Job 38:10, Job 38:11; Psa 104:6-9
return again : Heb. return to go

TSK: Ecc 1:8 - -- full : Ecc 2:11, Ecc 2:26; Mat 11:28; Rom 8:22, Rom 8:23
man : Ecc 4:1-4, Ecc 7:24-26
the eye : Ecc 4:8, Ecc 5:10, Ecc 5:11; Psa 63:5; Pro 27:20, Pro ...

TSK: Ecc 1:9 - -- that hath : Ecc 3:15, Ecc 7:10; 2Pe 2:1
and there : Isa 43:19; Jer 31:22; Rev 21:1, Rev 21:5

collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Ecc 1:1 - -- Preacher - literally, Convener. No one English word represents the Hebrew קהלת qôheleth adequately. Though capable, according to H...
Preacher - literally, Convener. No one English word represents the Hebrew

Barnes: Ecc 1:2 - -- Vanity - This word הבל hebel , or, when used as a proper name, in Gen 4:2, "Abel", occurs no less than 37 times in Ecclesiastes, and h...
Vanity - This word
(1) passes away more or less quickly and completely;
(2) leaves either no result or no adequate result behind, and therefore
(3) fails to satisfy the mind of man, which naturally craves for something permanent and progressive: it is also applied to:
(4) idols, as contrasted with the Living, Eternal, and Almighty God, and, thus, in the Hebrew mind, it is connected with sin.
In this book it is applied to all works on earth, to pleasure, grandeur, wisdom, the life of man, childhood, youth, and length of days, the oblivion of the grave, wandering and unsatisfied desires, unenjoyed possessions, and anomalies in the moral government of the world.
Solomon speaks of the world-wide existence of "vanity,"not with bitterness or scorn, but as a fact, which forced itself on him as he advanced in knowledge of men and things, and which he regards with sorrow and perplexity. From such feelings he finds refuge by contrasting this with another fact, which he holds with equal firmness, namely, that the whole universe is made and is governed by a God of justice, goodness, and power. The place of vanity in the order of Divine Providence - unknown to Solomon, unless the answer be indicated in Ecc 7:29 - is explained to us by Paul, Rom. 8, where its origin is traced to the subjugation and corruption of creation by sin as a consequence of the fall of man; and its extinction is declared to be reserved until after the Resurrection in the glory and liberty of the children of God.
Vanity of vanities - A well-known Hebrew idiom signifying vanity in the highest degree. Compare the phrase, "holy of holies."
All - Solomon includes both the courses of nature and the works of man Ecc 1:4-11. Compare Rom 8:22.

Barnes: Ecc 1:3 - -- What profit ... - The question often repeated is the great practical inquiry of the book; it receives its final answer in Ecc 12:13-14. When th...
What profit ... - The question often repeated is the great practical inquiry of the book; it receives its final answer in Ecc 12:13-14. When this question was asked, the Lord had not yet spoken Mat 11:28. The word "profit"(or pre-eminence) is opposed to "vanity."
Hath a man - Rather, hath man.

Barnes: Ecc 1:4 - -- Vanity is shown in mankind, the elements, and all that moves on earth; the same course is repeated again and again without any permanent result or r...
Vanity is shown in mankind, the elements, and all that moves on earth; the same course is repeated again and again without any permanent result or real progress; and events and people alike are forgotten.
Abideth - The apparent permanence of the earth increases by contrast the transitory condition of its inhabitants.
Ever - The word does not here absolutely signify "eternity"(compare Ecc 3:11 note), but a certainly short period (compare Exo 21:6): here it might be paraphrased "as long as this world, this present order of things, lasts."

Barnes: Ecc 1:5 - -- Hasteth ... - literally, at his place panting (in his eagerness) riseth he there.
Hasteth ... - literally, at his place panting (in his eagerness) riseth he there.

Barnes: Ecc 1:6 - -- More literally, Going toward the south and veering toward the north, veering, veering goes the wind; and to its veerings the wind returns.
More literally, Going toward the south and veering toward the north, veering, veering goes the wind; and to its veerings the wind returns.

Barnes: Ecc 1:7 - -- The place - i. e., The spring or river-head. It would seem that the ancient Hebrews regarded the clouds as the immediate feeders of the springs...
The place - i. e., The spring or river-head. It would seem that the ancient Hebrews regarded the clouds as the immediate feeders of the springs (Pro 8:28, and Psa 104:10, Psa 104:13). Gen 2:6 indicates some acquaintance with the process and result of evaporation.

Barnes: Ecc 1:8 - -- All things ... utter it - This clause, as here translated, refers to the immensity of labor. Others translate it, "all words are full of labor;...
All things ... utter it - This clause, as here translated, refers to the immensity of labor. Others translate it, "all words are full of labor; they make weary the hearers,"or "are feeble or insufficient"to tell the whole; and are referred to the impossibility of adequately describing labor.

Barnes: Ecc 1:9 - -- Hath been ... is done - i. e., Hath happened in the course of nature ... is done by man.
Hath been ... is done - i. e., Hath happened in the course of nature ... is done by man.
Poole: Ecc 1:2 - -- Vanity of vanities not only vain, but vanity in the abstract, which notes extreme vanity, especially where the word is thus doubled; as a king of ki...
Vanity of vanities not only vain, but vanity in the abstract, which notes extreme vanity, especially where the word is thus doubled; as a king of kings is the chief of kings, and a servant of servants is the vilest of servants, and a song of songs is a most excellent song.
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 whole following book.
All all worldly things, and all men’ s designs, and studies, and works about them, is vanity ; not in themselves, for so they are God’ s creatures, and therefore good and really useful in their kinds; but in reference to men, and to that happiness which men seek and confidently 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, content and satisfaction, but instead of that are commonly the causes or occasions of innumerable cares, and fears, and sorrows, and mischiefs; and because they are altogether unsuitable to the noble mind or soul of man, both in nature or quality, and in duration, as being unstable and perishing things. And this vanity of them is here repeated again and again; partly, because it was most deeply fixed and perpetually present in Solomon’ s thoughts; partly, to show the unquestionable certainty and vast importance of this truth; and partly, that he might more thoroughly awaken the dull and stupid minds of men to the consideration of it, and might wean men’ s hearts from those things upon which he knew they excessively doted.

Poole: Ecc 1:3 - -- What profit? or, as others render it, What remainder ? What real and abiding benefit hath a man by it? None at all. All is unprofitable, as to the a...
What profit? or, as others render it, What remainder ? What real and abiding benefit hath a man by it? None at all. All is unprofitable, as to the attainment of that happiness which Solomon here is, and all men in the world are, inquiring after.
His labour Heb.
his toilsome labour both of body and mind, in the pursuit of riches, or pleasures, or other earthly things.
Which he taketh under the sun in all sublunary or worldly matters, which are usually transacted in the day time, or by the light of the sun. By this restriction he implies that that profit and happiness which in vain is sought for in this lower world, is really and only to be found in heavenly places and things.

Poole: Ecc 1:4 - -- One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: men continue but for one, and that a short age, and then they leave all their possessions...
One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: men continue but for one, and that a short age, and then they leave all their possessions to the succeeding age; and therefore they cannot be happy here, because happiness must needs be unchangeable and eternal; or else the perpetual fear and certain knowledge of the approaching loss of all these things will rob a man of all solid contentment in them.
The earth abideth for ever i.e. through all successive generations of men; and therefore man in this respect is more mutable and miserable than the very earth upon which he stands; and which, together with all the glories and comforts which he enjoyed in it, he leaveth behind him to be possessed by others.

Poole: Ecc 1:5 - -- The sun is in perpetual motion, sometimes arising, and sometimes setting, and then arising again, and so constantly repeating its courses in all suc...
The sun is in perpetual motion, sometimes arising, and sometimes setting, and then arising again, and so constantly repeating its courses in all succeeding days, and years, and ages; and the like he observes concerning the winds and rivers, Ecc 1:6,7 . And the design of these similitudes seems to be, either,
1. That by representing the constant changes and restless motions of these particular things he might intimate that it is so with all other earthly things; and therefore no man can expect satisfaction from them. Or,
2. That by comparing the sun, and wind, and rivers, as, Ecc 1:4 , he compared the earth with man, he might show that man, considered as mortal, is in a more unhappy condition than these things, because when the earth abides, man goes; and when the sun sets, he riseth again; and so the wind and rivers return to their former place and state, but man, when once he dies, he never returns again to this life; of which comparison see Job 14:7,12 . Or,
3. 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 a thing, 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, Ecc 1:9 , which seems to me to be given as a key to understand the meaning of the foregoing passages. And this is manifest and 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 or long continuance, are so far from yielding satisfaction, that they grow tedious and troublesome.

Poole: Ecc 1:6 - -- The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north the wind also sometimes blows from one quarter of the world, and sometimes from ano...
The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north the wind also sometimes blows from one quarter of the world, and sometimes from another; all of them being synecdochically comprehended under these two eminent quarters. But because this word, the wind , is not expressed in the Hebrew, but is only borrowed or understood from the latter clause of the verse, this first clause is by other judicious interpreters understood of the sun, of whom he last spake; the words being thus rendered according to the Hebrew, He (the sun) goeth towards the south , (which he doth one half of the year,) and turneth about unto the north, which he doth the other half. And so here is the whole motion of the sun towards the four quarters of the world particularly described; his daily motion from east to, vest, and back again, Ecc 1:5 ; and his yearly motion from north to south, between the signs of Cancer and Capricorn.
The wind returneth again according to his circuits: this clause is by all understood of the wind, which is fitly mentioned immediately after the sun, because it hath its rise from the sun, who is therefore called the father of winds , and the winds do usually rise with the sun, and are laid when he sets. But then it is rendered thus, and that very agreeably to the Hebrew, the wind goeth continually whirling or compassing about, and he returneth again to his circuits , being sometimes in one, and sometimes in another quarter, and successively returning to the same quarters in which he had formerly been.

Poole: Ecc 1:7 - -- Is not full to wit, to the brink, or so as to overflow the earth, which might be expected from such vast accessions to it; whereby also he intimates ...
Is not full to wit, to the brink, or so as to overflow the earth, which might be expected from such vast accessions to it; whereby also he intimates the emptiness and dissatisfaction of men’ s minds, not withstanding all the abundance of creature-comforts.
Unto the place from whence the rivers come either,
1. Unto the sea, from whence they are supposed to return into their proper channels, and then, as it is expressed, thither (i.e. into the sea) they return again. Or,
2. Unto their springs or fountains, to which the waters return by secret passages of the earth, as is manifest from the Caspian Sea, and reasonably supposed in other places. Or rather,
3. Unto the earth in general, from whence they come or How into the sea, and to which they return again 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; which agrees best with the former similitudes, Ecc 1:5,6 .

Poole: Ecc 1:8 - -- All things not only the sun, and winds, and rivers, which I have mentioned, but all other creatures, are full of labour ; both subjectively, as they...
All things not only the sun, and winds, and rivers, which I have mentioned, but all other creatures, are full of labour ; both subjectively, as they are in continual restlessness and change, never abiding in the same state or place; and efficiently, as they cause great and sore labour to men, in getting, and keeping, and enjoying of them, yea, even in the study of them, as is noted hereafter.
Man cannot utter it the labour is inexpressibly and unconceivably great.
The eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing as there are many things in the world troublesome and vexatious to men’ s senses and minds, so even those things which are comfortable and acceptable to them are not satisfactory, but men are constantly desiring some longer continuance or fuller enjoyment of them, or variety in them, and they never say, It is enough, I desire no more. The eye and ear are here synecdochically put for all the senses, because these are most spiritual and refined, most curious and inquisitive, most capable of receiving satisfaction, because they are exercised with more ease and pleasure than the other senses, whose satisfactions are oft attended with greater weariness and manifold dangers and inconveniences.

Poole: Ecc 1:9 - -- 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 wor...
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’ s minds, are generally the same that they ever were and shall ever be; and therefore because no man ever yet received satisfaction from any worldly things, it is a vain and foolish thing for any person hereafter to expect it.
No new thing to wit, in the nature of things, which might give us hopes of attaining that satisfaction which things have not hitherto afforded. For otherwise this doth not restrain the God of nature, who hath frequently done, and still can do, new and miraculous works, and who can and doth discover to particular persons new inventions, when it pleaseth him.

Poole: Ecc 1:10 - -- For the proof hereof I appeal to the consciences and experiences of all men. It hath been already of old thee; the same things have been said and do...
For the proof hereof I appeal to the consciences and experiences of all men. It hath been already of old thee; the same things have been said and done before, though possibly we did not know it.
Jerusalem. This clearly designates Solomon. See ver. 12., and chap. xii. 8.

Haydock: Ecc 1:2 - -- Vanities. Most vain and despicable, (Calmet) and frustrating the expectations of men. (Menochius) ---
St. Augustine reads vanitantium, and infer...
Vanities. Most vain and despicable, (Calmet) and frustrating the expectations of men. (Menochius) ---
St. Augustine reads vanitantium, and infers that this vanity of sublunary things is an effect of man's sin. Yet he afterwards discovered that he had read incorrectly. (Retractions i. 7.)

Haydock: Ecc 1:3 - -- Labour. People fight for a mere point; for such is the earth compared with the universe. (Seneca, q. Nat.) Hoc est punctum, &c., Matthew xvi. ...
Labour. People fight for a mere point; for such is the earth compared with the universe. (Seneca, q. Nat.) Hoc est punctum, &c., Matthew xvi. 26.

Haydock: Ecc 1:4 - -- Ever. Its substance remains, though the form be changed. (Calmet) ---
At the end of time, it will be purified to continue for ever. (Worthington)
Ever. Its substance remains, though the form be changed. (Calmet) ---
At the end of time, it will be purified to continue for ever. (Worthington)

Place daily. Its annual motion is then mentioned. (Calmet)

Haydock: Ecc 1:6 - -- Spirit. The sun, (St. Jerome) which is like the soul of the world, and which some have falsely asserted to be animated; or rather (Calmet) the wind ...
Spirit. The sun, (St. Jerome) which is like the soul of the world, and which some have falsely asserted to be animated; or rather (Calmet) the wind is meant, as one rises in different parts of the world when another falls. (Pliny, [Natural History?] ii. 27.) (Menochius)

Haydock: Ecc 1:7 - -- Again. The sea furnishes vapours, &c. Homer (Iliad Greek: Ph. ) expresses himself in the same manner.
Again. The sea furnishes vapours, &c. Homer (Iliad Greek: Ph. ) expresses himself in the same manner.

Haydock: Ecc 1:8 - -- Hearing. In all sciences there are many difficulties. If a man had arrived at perfect knowledge, his researches would cease.
Hearing. In all sciences there are many difficulties. If a man had arrived at perfect knowledge, his researches would cease.

Haydock: Ecc 1:10 - -- New. Such vicissitudes have occurred before, though we must not infer that the world is eternal; or that there have been many others before this, as...
New. Such vicissitudes have occurred before, though we must not infer that the world is eternal; or that there have been many others before this, as Origen would suppose. (Prin. iii. 5., &c.) (Calmet) ---
Men's souls, which are created daily, are nevertheless of the same sort as Adam's was; and creatures proceed from others of the same species, which have been from the beginning. (St. Thomas Aquinas, [Summa Theologiae] p. 1. q. 73.) (Worthington) ---
Natural and moral things continue much the same. (Menochius)
Gill: Ecc 1:1 - -- The words of the preacher,.... Or the preacher's sermon. The whole book is one continued discourse, and an excellent one it is; consisting not of mere...
The words of the preacher,.... Or the preacher's sermon. The whole book is one continued discourse, and an excellent one it is; consisting not of mere words, but of solid matter; of things of the greatest importance, clothed with words apt and acceptable, which the preacher sought out, Ecc 12:10. The Targum is,
"the words of the prophecy, which the preacher, who is Solomon, prophesied.''
According to which this book is prophetic; and so it interprets it, and owns it to be Solomon's. The word "Koheleth", rendered "preacher", is by some taken to be a proper name of Solomon; who, besides the name of Solomon, his parents gave him, and Jedidiah, as the Lord called him, had the name of Koheleth; nay, the Jews say i, he had seven names, and to these three add four more, Agur, Jake, Ithiel, and Lemuel; the word by many is left untranslated k; but it seems rather to be an appellative, and is by some rendered "gathered", or the "soul gathered" l. Solomon had apostatized from the church and people of God, and had followed idols; but now was brought back by repentance, and was gathered into the fold, from whence he had strayed as a lost sheep; and therefore chooses to call himself by this name, when he preached his recantation sermon, as this book may be said to be. Others rather render it, "the gatherer" m; and was so called, as the Jewish writers say n, either because he gathered and got much wisdom, as it is certain he did; or because he gathered much people from all parts, to hear his wisdom, 1Ki 4:34; in which he was a type of Christ, Gen 49:10; or this discourse of his was delivered in a large congregation, got together for that purpose; as he gathered and assembled together the heads and chief of the people, at the dedication of the temple, 1Ki 8:1; so he might call them together to hear the retraction he made of his sins and errors, and repentance for them: and this might justly entitle him to the character of a "preacher", as we render it, an office of great honour, as well as of great importance to the souls of men; which Solomon, though a king, did not disdain to appear in; as David his father before him, and Noah before him, the father, king, and governor of the new world, Psa 34:11. The word used is in the feminine gender, as ministers of the Gospel are sometimes expressed by a word of the like kind; and are called maidens, Psa 68:11; to denote their virgin purity, and uncorruptness in doctrine and conversation: and here some respect may be had to Wisdom, or Christ, frequently spoken of by Solomon, as a woman, and who now spoke by him; which is a much better reason for the use of the word than his effeminacy, which his sin or his old age had brought him to. The word "soul" may be supplied, as by some, and be rendered, "the preaching soul" o; since, no doubt, he performed his work as such with all his heart and soul. He further describes himself by his descent,
the son of David; which he mentions either as an honour to him, that he was the son of so great, so wise, so holy, and good a man; or as an aggravation of his fall, that being the descendant of such a person, and having had so religious an education, and so good an example before him, and yet should sin so foully as he had done; and it might also encourage him, that he had interest in the sure mercies of David, and in the promises made to him, that when his children sinned, they should be chastised, yet his lovingkindness and covenant should not depart from them.
King of Jerusalem; not of Jerusalem only, but of all Israel, for as yet no division was made; see Ecc 1:12. In Jerusalem, the city of Wisdom, as Jarchi observes, where many wise and good men dwelt, as well as it was the metropolis of the nation; and, which was more, it was the city where the temple stood, and where the worship of God was performed, and his priests ministered, and his people served him; and yet he, their king, that should have set them a better example, fell into idolatry!

Gill: Ecc 1:2 - -- Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher,.... This is the preacher's text; the theme and subject he after enlarges upon, and proves by an induction of p...
Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher,.... This is the preacher's text; the theme and subject he after enlarges upon, and proves by an induction of particulars; it is the sum of the whole book;
vanity of vanities, all is vanity; most extremely vain, exceedingly so, the height of vanity: this is repeated, both for the confirmation of it, men being hard of belief of it; and to show how much the preacher was affected with it himself, and to affect others with the same. The Targum reads, "vanity of vanities in this world"; which is right as to the sense of the passage; for though the world, and all things in it, were made by God, and are very good; yet, in comparison of him, are less than nothing, and vanity; and especially as become subject to it through sin, a curse being brought upon the earth by it; and all the creatures made for the use of men liable to be abused, and are abused, through luxury, intemperance, and cruelty; and the whole world usurped by Satan, as the god of it. Nor is there anything in it, and put it all together, that can give satisfaction and contentment; and all is fickle, fluid, transitory, and vanishing, and in a short time will come to an end: the riches of the world afford no real happiness, having no substance in them, and being of no long continuance; nor can a man procure happiness for himself or others, or avert wrath to come, and secure from it; and especially these are vanity, when compared with the true riches, the riches of grace and glory, which are solid, substantial, satisfying, and are for ever: the honours of this world are empty things, last a very short time; and are nothing in comparison of the honour that comes from God, and all the saints have, in the enjoyment of grace here, and glory hereafter: the sinful pleasures of life are imaginary things, short lived ones; and not to be mentioned with spiritual pleasures, enjoyed in the house of God, under the word and ordinances; and especially with those pleasures, for evermore, at the right hand of God. Natural wisdom and knowledge, the best thing in the world; yet much of it is only in opinion; a great deal of it false; and none saving, and of any worth, in comparison of the knowledge of Christ, and of God in Christ; all the forms of religion and external righteousness, where there is not the true fear and grace of God, are all vain and empty things. Man, the principal creature in the world, is "vain man"; that is his proper character in nature and religion, destitute of grace: every than is vain, nay, vanity itself; high and low, rich and poor, learned or unlearned; nay, man at his best estate, as worldly and natural, is so; as even Adam was in his state of innocence, being fickle and mutable, and hence he fell, Psa 39:5; and especially his fallen posterity, whose bodies are tenements of clay; their beauty vain and deceitful; their circumstances changeable; their minds empty of all that is good; their thoughts and imaginations vain; their words, and works, and actions, and their whole life and conversation; they are not at all to be trusted in for help, by themselves or others. The Targum is,
"when Solomon, king of Israel, saw, by the spirit of prophecy, that the kingdom of Rehoboam his son would be divided with Jeroboam, the son of Nebat; and that Jerusalem, and the house of the sanctuary, would be destroyed, and the people of the children of Israel would be carried captive; he said, by his word, Vanity of vanities in this world, vanity of vanities; all that I and my father David have laboured for, all is vanity!''

Gill: Ecc 1:3 - -- What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun? This is a general proof of the vanity of all things, since there is no profit ...
What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun? This is a general proof of the vanity of all things, since there is no profit arises to a man of all his labour; for, though it is put by way of question, it carries in it a strong negative. All things a man enjoys he gets by labour; for man, through sin, is doomed and born unto it, Job 5:7; he gets his bread by the sweat of his brow, which is a part of the curse for sin; and the wealth and riches got by a diligent hand, with a divine blessing, are got by labour; and so all knowledge of natural and civil things is acquired through much labour and weariness of the flesh; and these are things a man labours for "under the sun", which measures out the time of his labour: when the sun riseth, man goeth forth to his labour; and, by the light and comfortable warmth of it, he performs his work with more exactness and cheerfulness; in some climates, and in some seasons, its heat, especially at noon, makes labour burdensome, which is called, bearing "the heat and burden of the day", Mat 20:12; and, when it sets, it closes the time of service and labour, and therefore the servant earnestly desires the evening shadow, Job 7:2. But now, of what profit and advantage is all this labour man takes under the sun, towards his happiness in the world above the sun? that glory and felicity, which lies in super celestial places in Christ Jesus? none at all. Or, "what remains of all his labour?" p as it may be rendered; that is, after death: so the Targum,
"what is there remains to a man after he is dead, of all his labour which he laboured under the sun in this world?''
nothing at all. He goes naked out of the world as he came into it; he can carry nothing away with him of all his wealth and substance he has acquired; nor any of his worldly glory, and grandeur, and titles of honour; these all die with him, his glory does not descend after him; wherefore it is a clear case that all these things are vanity of vanities; see Job 1:21. And, indeed, works of righteousness done by men, and trusted in, and by which they labour to establish a justifying righteousness, are of no profit and advantage to them in the business of justification and salvation; indeed, when these are done from right principles, and with right views, the labour in them shall not be in vain; God will not forget it; it shall have a reward of grace, though not of debt.

Gill: Ecc 1:4 - -- One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh,.... This shows that a man can have no profit of all his labour under the sun, because of...
One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh,.... This shows that a man can have no profit of all his labour under the sun, because of his short continuance; as soon almost as he has got anything by his labour, he must leave it: not only particular persons, but families, nations, and kingdoms; even all the inhabitants of the world, that are contemporaries, live together in the same age, in a certain period of time; these gradually go off by death, till the whole generation is consumed, as the generation of the Israelites in the wilderness were. Death is meant by passing away; it is a going out of time into eternity; a departure out of this world to another; a quitting of the earthly house of this tabernacle for the grave, the house appointed for all living; it is man's going to his long home: and this is going the way of all the earth; in a short time a whole race or generation of men go off the stage of the world, and then another succeeds q; they come in by birth; and men are described from their birth by such as "come into the world"; for which there is a set time, as well as for going out, Joh 1:9; and these having been a while in the world, go off to make room for another generation; and so things have been from the beginning of the world, and will be to the end of it. Homer r illustrates this by the succession of leaves of trees; as is the generation of trees, he says, such is that of men; some leaves, the wind sheds them on the ground; others the budding forest puts forth, and they grow in their room in the springtime; so is the generation of men; one is born, and another ceases. Now death puts an end to all a man's enjoyments got by labour, his riches, honour, and natural knowledge; these all cease with him, and therefore he has no profit of all his labour under the sun;
but the earth abideth for ever; for a long time, until the dissolution of all things; and then, though that and all in it will be burnt up, yet it will rather be changed than destroyed; the form of it will be altered, when the substance of it will continue; it will not be annihilated, but renewed and refined. This is mentioned to show that the earth, which was made for man, of which he is the inhabitant and proprietor, is more stable than he himself; he soon passes off from it, but that continues; he returns to the earth, from whence he came, but that remains as it did; he dies, and leaves the earth behind him, and all his acquisitions in it; and therefore what profit has he of all his labours on it? Besides, that remains to have the same things transacted on it, over and over again, as has been already; God, that made it for men to dwell in, has determined the times before appointed, and the bounds of men's habitations in it; he has appointed who shall dwell on it, and where, in successive generations; and till all these men are born and gone off, age after age, the earth shall continue, and then pass through its last change. The Targum is,
"the earth stands for ever, to bear the vengeance that is to come upon the world for the sins of the children of men.''
The Midrash Tanchuma, as Jarchi observes, interprets it of all the righteous of Israel, called the earth; and he himself, of the meek that shall inherit the earth: says R. Isaac s,
"one kingdom comes, and another goes, but Israel abideth for ever.''

Gill: Ecc 1:5 - -- The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place where he arose. The sun rises in the morning and sets at evening in our hemisph...
The sun also ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and hasteth to his place where he arose. The sun rises in the morning and sets at evening in our hemisphere, according to the appearance of things; and then it makes haste to go round the other hemisphere in the night: it "pants", as the word t signifies; the same figure is used by other writers u; like a man out of breath with running; so this glorious body, which rejoiceth as a strong man to run his race, and whose circuit is from one end of the heavens to the other, Psa 19:5; is in haste to get to the place where he rose in the morning, and there he makes no stop, but pursues his course in the same track again. By this instance is exemplified the succession of the generations of men one after another, as the rising and setting of the sun continually follows each other; and also sets forth the restless state of things in the world, which, like the sun, are never at a stand, but always moving, and swiftly taking their course; and likewise the changeable state of man, who, like the rising sun, and when at noon day, is in flourishing circumstances, and in the height of prosperity, but as this declines and sets, so he has his declining times and days of adversity. Moreover, like the rising sun, he comes into this world and appears for a while, and then, like the setting sun, he dies; only with this difference, in which the sun has the preference to him, as the earth before had; the sun hastens and comes to its place from whence it arose, but man lies down and rises not again till the heavens be no more, and never returns to his place in this world, that knows him no more, Job 7:10. The Jews w say, before the sun of one righteous, man sets, the sun of another righteous man rises.

Gill: Ecc 1:6 - -- The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north,.... The word "wind" is not in this clause in the original text, but is taken from t...
The wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about unto the north,.... The word "wind" is not in this clause in the original text, but is taken from the next, and so may be rendered, "it goeth towards the south", &c. that is, the sun x before mentioned, which as to its diurnal and nocturnal course in the daytime goes towards the south, and in the night towards the north; and as to its annual course before the winter solstice it goes to the south, and before the summer solstice to the north, as interpreters observe. And the Targum not only interprets this clause, but even the whole verse, of the sun, paraphrasing the whole thus,
"it goes all the side of the south in the daytime, and goes round to the side of the north in the night, by the way of the abyss; it goes its circuit, and comes to the wind of the south corner in the revolution of Nisan and Tammuz; and by its circuit it returns to the wind of the north corner in the revolution of Tisri and Tebet; it goes out of the confines of the east in the morning, and goes into the confines of the west in the evening.''
But Aben Ezra understands the whole of the wind, as our version and others do, which is sometimes in the south point of the heavens, and is presently in the north;
it whirleth about continually; and the wind returneth again according to his circuits; which may be meant of the circuits of the sun, which has a great influence on the wind, often raising it in a morning and laying it at night; but it is the wind itself which whirls and shifts about all the points of the compass, and returns from whence it came, where the treasures of it are. Agreeably to Solomon's account of the wind is Plato's definition of it,
"the wind is the motion of the air round about the earth y.''
This also exemplifies the rotation of men and things, the instability, inconstancy, and restless state of all sublunary enjoyments; the unprofitableness of men's labours, who, while they labour for riches and honour, and natural knowledge, labour for the wind, and fill their belly with east wind, which cannot satisfy, Ecc 5:16; as well as the frailty of human life, which is like the wind that passes away and comes not again; and in this respect, like the rest of the instances, exceed man, which returns to its place, but man does not, Job 7:7.

Gill: Ecc 1:7 - -- All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full,.... Which flow from fountains or an formed by hasty rains; these make their way to the sea,...
All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea is not full,.... Which flow from fountains or an formed by hasty rains; these make their way to the sea, yet the sea is not filled therewith, and made to abound and overflow the earth, as it might be expected it would. So Seneca says z we wonder that the accession of rivers is not perceived in the sea; and Lucretius a observes the same, that it is wondered at that the sea should not increase, when there is such a flow of waters to it from all quarters; besides the wandering showers and flying storms that fall into it, and yet scarce increased a drop; which he accounts for by the exhalations of the sun, by sweeping and drying winds, and by what the clouds take up. Homer b makes every sea, all the rivers, fountains, and wells, flow, from the main ocean. Hence Pindar c calls the lake or fountain Camarina the daughter of the ocean But Virgil d makes the rivers to flow into it, as the wise man here; with which Aristotle e agrees. So Lactantius f says, "mare quod ex fluminibus constat", the sea consists of rivers. Both may be true, for, through secret passages under ground, the waters of it are caused to pass back again to their respective places from whence they flowed, as follows;
unto the place from whence the rivers come, thither they return again; this also illustrates the succession of men, age after age, and the revolution of things in the world, their unquiet and unsettled state; and the unsatisfying nature of all things; as the sea is never full with what comes into it, so the mind of man is never satisfied with all the riches and honour he gains, or the knowledge of natural things he acquires; and it suggests that even water, as fluctuating a body as it is, yet has the advantage of men; that though it is always flowing and reflowing, yet it returns to its original place, which man does not. And from all these instances it appears that all things are vanity, and man has no profit of all his labour under the sun.

Gill: Ecc 1:8 - -- All things are full of labour,.... Or "are laborious" g; gotten by labour, and attended with fatigue and weariness; riches are got by labour, and tho...
All things are full of labour,.... Or "are laborious" g; gotten by labour, and attended with fatigue and weariness; riches are got by labour, and those who load themselves with thick clay, as gold and silver be, weary themselves with it; honour and glory, crowns and kingdoms, are weighty cares, and very fatiguing to those that have them; much study to acquire knowledge is a weariness to the flesh; and as men even weary themselves to commit iniquity, it is no wonder that religious exercises should be a weariness to a natural man, and a carnal professor;
man cannot utter it; or declare all the things that are laborious and fatiguing, nor all the labour they are full of; time would fail, and words be wanting to express the whole; all the vanity, unprofitableness, and unsatisfying nature of all things below the sun; particularly
the eye is not satisfied with seeing, nor the ear filled with hearing; both one and the other require new objects continually; the pleasure of these senses is blunted by the same objects constantly presented; men are always seeking new ones, and when they have got them they want others; whatever curious thing is to be seen the eye craves it; and, after it has dwelt on it a while, it grows tired of it, and wants something else to divert it; and so the ear is delighted with musical sounds, but in time loses the taste of them, and seeks for others; and in discourse and conversation never easy, unless, like the Athenians, it hears some new things, and which quickly grow stale, and then wants fresh ones still: and indeed the spiritual eye and ear will never be satisfied in this life, until the soul comes into the perfect state of blessedness, and beholds the face of God, and sees him as he is; and sees and hears what eye hath not seen, nor ear heard below. The Targum is,
"all the words that shall be in the world, the ancient prophets were weary in them, and they could not find out the ends of them; yea, a man has no power to say what shall be after him; and the eye cannot see all that shall be in the world, and the ear cannot be filled with hearing all the words of all the inhabitants of the world.''

Gill: Ecc 1:9 - -- The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be,.... The thing that has been seen and heard is no other than what shall be seen and heard again; ...
The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be,.... The thing that has been seen and heard is no other than what shall be seen and heard again; so that what is now seen and heard is only what has been seen and heard before; it is but the same thing over again; and that is the reason why the eye and ear are never satisfied; the same objects, as the visible heavens and earth, and all therein, which have been from the beginning, these are they which shall be, and there is nothing else to be seen and heard, and enjoyed;
and that which is done, is that which shall be done; what is done in the present age, nay, in this year, month, or day, shall be done over again in the next;
and there is no new thing under the sun; which is to be understood of things natural, as the works of creation, which were finished from the beginning of the world, and continue as they were ever since, Heb 4:3; the various seasons of day and night, of summer and winter, of spring and autumn, of heat and cold, of seed time and harvest, come in course, as they always did; these ordinances never fail, Gen 8:22. The things before mentioned, the constant succession of men on earth, who are born into the world and die out of it, just as they always did; the sun rises and sets at its appointed time, as it did almost six thousand years ago; the winds whirl about all the points of the compass now as formerly; the rivers have the same course and recourse, and the sea its ebbing and flowing, they ever had; the same arts and sciences, trades and manufactures, obtained formerly as now, though in some circumstances there may be an improvement, and in others they grow worse; see Gen 4:2, Exo 31:3; and even such things as are thought of new invention, it may be only owing to the ignorance of former times, history failing to give us an account of them; thus the art of printing, the making of gunpowder, and the use of guns and bombs, and of the lodestone and mariner's compass, were thought to be of no long standing; and yet, according to the Chinese histories, that people were in possession of these things hundreds of years before; the circulation of the blood, supposed to be first found out by a countryman of ours in the last century, was known by Solomon, and is thought to be designed by him in Ecc 12:6; and the like may be observed of other things. The emperor Mark Antonine f has the very phrase
"nothing new I see, nothing new I do.''
This will likewise hold good in moral things; the same vices and virtues are now as ever, and ever were as they are; men in every age were born in sin, and were transgressors from the womb; from their infancy corrupt, and in all the stages of life; there were the same luxury and intemperance, and unnatural lusts, rapine and violence, in the days of Noah and Lot, as now; in Sodom and Gomorrah, and in the old world, as in the present age; and there were some few then, as now, that were men of sobriety, honesty, truth, and righteousness. There is nothing to be excepted but preternatural things, miraculous events, which may be called new, unheard of, and wonderful ones; such as the earth's opening and swallowing men alive at once; the standing still of the sun and moon for a considerable time; the miracles wrought by the prophets of the Old and the apostles of the New Testament, and especially by Christ; and particularly the incarnation of Christ, or his birth of a virgin, that new thing made in the earth; these and such like things are made by the power of, he divine Being, who dwells above the sun, and is not bound by the laws of nature. Spiritual things may also be excepted, which are the effects of divine favour, or the produce of efficacious grace; and yet these things, though in some sense new, are also old; or there have been the same things for substance in former ages, and from the beginning, as now; such as the new covenant of grace; the new and living way to God; new creatures in Christ; a new name; the New Testament, and the doctrines of it; new ordinances, and the new commandment of love; and yet these, in some sense, are all old things, and indeed are the same in substance: there is nothing new but what is above the sun, and to be enjoyed in the realms of bliss to all eternity; and there are some things new h, new wine in Christ's Father's kingdom, new glories, joys, and pleasures, that will never end.

Gill: Ecc 1:10 - -- Is there any thing whereof it may be said, see, this is new?.... This is an appeal to all men for the truth of the above observation, and carries in...
Is there any thing whereof it may be said, see, this is new?.... This is an appeal to all men for the truth of the above observation, and carries in it a strong denial that there is anything new under the sun; and is an address to men to inquire into the truth of it, and thoroughly examine it, and see if they can produce any material objection to it; look into the natural world, and the same natural causes will be seen producing the same effects; or into the moral world, and there are the same virtues, and their contrary; or into the political world, and the same schemes are forming and pursuing, and which issue in the same things, peace or war; or into the learned world, and the same languages, arts, and sciences, are taught and learned; and the same things said over again i: or into the mechanic world, and the same trades and businesses are carrying on: or the words may be considered as a concession, and carry in them the form of an objection, "there is a thing k whereof it may be said", or a man may say, "see, this is new"; so the Targum; there were some things in Solomon's time it is allowed that might be objected, as there are in ours, to which the answer is,
it hath been already of old time which was before us; what things are reckoned new are not so; they were known and in use in ages past, long before we had a being. R. Alshech takes the words to be an assertion, and not an interrogation, and interprets it of a spiritual temple in time to come, which yet was created before the world was.

expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes -> Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:1; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:2; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:3; Ecc 1:4; Ecc 1:4; Ecc 1:4; Ecc 1:4; Ecc 1:4; Ecc 1:5; Ecc 1:5; Ecc 1:5; Ecc 1:5; Ecc 1:5; Ecc 1:6; Ecc 1:6; Ecc 1:7; Ecc 1:7; Ecc 1:7; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:8; Ecc 1:9; Ecc 1:9; Ecc 1:9; Ecc 1:10; Ecc 1:10; Ecc 1:10; Ecc 1:10
NET Notes: Ecc 1:1 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

NET Notes: Ecc 1:2 The motto Everything is futile! is the theme of the book. Its occurs at the beginning (1:2) and end of the book (12:8), forming an envelope structure ...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:3 This rhetorical question expects a negative answer: “Man has no gain in all his toil.” Ecclesiastes often uses rhetorical questions in thi...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:4 The term עוֹלָם (’olam) has a wide range of meanings: (1) indefinite time: “long time, duration,”...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:5 The word “again” does not appear in Hebrew, but is supplied in the translation for clarity and smoothness.

NET Notes: Ecc 1:6 The use of שָׁב (shav, Qal active participle masculine singular from שׁוּב, shuv, “to retu...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:7 This verse does not refer to the cycle of evaporation or the return of water by underground streams, as sometimes suggested. Rather, it describes the ...

NET Notes: Ecc 1:8 The term מָלֵא (male’, “to be filled, to be satisfied”) is repeated in 1:7-8 to draw a comparison betw...


Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:1 The words of the ( a ) Preacher, the son of David, king of Jerusalem.
The Argument - Solomon as a preacher and one that desired to instruct all in th...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:2 ( b ) Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities; all [is] vanity.
( b ) He condemns the opinions of all men who set happiness in any...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:3 What profit hath a man of all his ( c ) labour which he taketh under the sun?
( c ) Solomon does not condemn man's labour or diligence, but shows tha...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:4 [One] generation passeth away, and [another] generation cometh: but the earth abideth for ( d ) ever.
( d ) One man dies after another, and the earth...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:6 The ( e ) wind goeth toward the south, and turneth about to the north; it whirleth about continually, and the wind returneth again according to its ci...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:7 All the rivers run into the sea; yet the sea [is] not full; to the place from ( f ) which the rivers come, there they return again.
( f ) The sea whi...

Geneva Bible: Ecc 1:9 ( g ) The thing that hath been, it [is that] which shall be; and that which is done [is] that which shall be done: and [there is] no new [thing] under...

expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ecc 1:1-18
TSK Synopsis: Ecc 1:1-18 - --1 The preacher shews that all human courses are vain;4 because the creatures are restless in their courses,9 they bring forth nothing new, and all old...
Maclaren: Ecc 1:4 - --What Passes And What Abides
One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh : but the earth abideth for ever.'--Eccles. 1:4.
And the world...

Maclaren: Ecc 1:9 - --The Past And The Future
"The thing that hath been, it is that which shall be; and that which is done is that which shall be done : and there is no ne...
MHCC: Ecc 1:1-3 - --Much is to be learned by comparing one part of Scripture with another. We here behold Solomon returning from the broken and empty cisterns of the worl...

MHCC: Ecc 1:4-8 - --All things change, and never rest. Man, after all his labour, is no nearer finding rest than the sun, the wind, or the current of the river. His soul ...

MHCC: Ecc 1:9-11 - --Men's hearts and their corruptions are the same now as in former times; their desires, and pursuits, and complaints, still the same. This should take ...
Matthew Henry: Ecc 1:1-3 - -- Here is, I. An account of the penman of this book; it was Solomon, for no other son of David was king of Jerusalem; but he conceals his name Solomo...

Matthew Henry: Ecc 1:4-8 - -- To prove the vanity of all things under the sun, and their insufficiency to make us happy, Solomon here shows, 1. That the time of our enjoyment of ...

Matthew Henry: Ecc 1:9-11 - -- Two things we are apt to take a great deal of pleasure and satisfaction in, and value ourselves upon, with reference to our business and enjoyments ...
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:1 - --
The title, Ecc 1:1, The words of Koheleth, son of David, king in Jerusalem , has been already explained in the Introduction. The verse, which does ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:2 - --
The book begins artistically with an opening section of the nature of a preamble. The ground-tone of the whole book at once sounds in Ecc 1:2, which...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:3 - --
With this verse commences the proof for this exclamation and statement: "What profit hath a man of all his labour which he laboureth in under the su...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:4 - --
"One generation passeth away, and another generation cometh: and the earth remaineth for ev."The meaning is not that the earth remains standing, and...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:5 - --
"And the sun ariseth, the sun goeth down, and it hasteth (back) to its place, there to rise again."It rises and sets again, but its setting is not a...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:6 - --
"It goeth to the south, and turneth to the north; the wind goeth ever circling, and the wind returneth again on its circuits."Thus designedly the ve...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:7 - --
"All rivers run into the sea, and the sea becomes not full; to the place whence the rivers came, thither they always return again."Instead of nehhaÌ...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:8 - --
"All things are in activity; no man can utter it; the eye is not satisfied with seeing, and the ear is not full with hearing."All translators and in...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:9 - --
"That which hath been is that which shall be, and that which is done is that which shall be done; and there is nothing new under the sun."- The olde...

Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 1:10 - --
"Is there anything whereof it may be said: See, this is new? - it was long ago through the ages (aeons) which have been before us."The Semit. substa...
Constable: Ecc 1:1-11 - --I. THE INTRODUCTORY AFFIRMATION 1:1-11
The first 11 verses of the book introduce the writer, the theme of the bo...

Constable: Ecc 1:1 - --1. The title 1:1
The author identified himself by his titles. These titles as well as other refe...

Constable: Ecc 1:2 - --2. The theme 1:2
"Vanity" (Heb. hebel) means "meaningless."11 As Solomon used this word in Eccle...

Constable: Ecc 1:3-11 - --B. The Futility of All Human Endeavor 1:3-11
In this pericope Solomon gave general support to his theme ...

Constable: Ecc 1:3 - --1. The vanity of work 1:3
Rather than saying, "All work is vanity," Solomon made the same point ...

Constable: Ecc 1:4-11 - --2. The illustrations from life 1:4-11
To clarify his meaning and to support his contention in verse 3, Solomon cited examples from nature. Work produc...

expand allCommentary -- Other
Critics Ask: Ecc 1:1 ECCLESIASTES 1:1 —If this book is inspired, why isn’t it quoted in the NT? PROBLEM: The NT writers quote the vast majority of the OT from Gen...

Critics Ask: Ecc 1:2 ECCLESIASTES 1:2 —How can this book be part of the Scriptures since it contains such skepticism? PROBLEM: Several statements that Solomon makes...

Critics Ask: Ecc 1:9 ECCLESIASTES 1:9-10 —Isn’t it false to claim there is nothing new under the sun? PROBLEM: Solomon declared here that “there is nothing new ...
