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Text -- Ecclesiastes 3:1-14 (NET)
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per phrase)
Wesley: Ecc 3:1 - -- A certain time appointed by God for its being and continuance, which no human wit or providence can alter. And by virtue of this appointment of God, a...
A certain time appointed by God for its being and continuance, which no human wit or providence can alter. And by virtue of this appointment of God, all vicissitudes which happen in the world, whether comforts or calamities, come to pass. Which is here added to prove the principal proposition, That all things below are vain, and happiness is not to be found in them, because of their great uncertainty, and mutability, and transitoriness, and because they are so much out of the reach and power of men, and wholly in the disposal of God.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:1 - -- Not only natural, but even the voluntary actions of men, are ordered and disposed by God. But it must be considered, that he does not here speak of a ...
Not only natural, but even the voluntary actions of men, are ordered and disposed by God. But it must be considered, that he does not here speak of a time allowed by God, wherein all the following things may lawfully be done, but only of a time fixed by God, in which they are actually done.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:2 - -- And as there is a time to die, so there is a time to rise again, a set time when they that lie in the grave shall be remembered.
And as there is a time to die, so there is a time to rise again, a set time when they that lie in the grave shall be remembered.
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When he who seemed to be mortally wounded is healed.
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When men have just occasion for weeping.
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Which were brought together in order to the building of a wall or house.
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When persons perform all friendly offices one to another.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:6 - -- When men lose their estates, either by God's providence, or by their own choice.
When men lose their estates, either by God's providence, or by their own choice.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:6 - -- When a man casts away his goods voluntarily, as in a storm, to save his life, or out of love and obedience to God.
When a man casts away his goods voluntarily, as in a storm, to save his life, or out of love and obedience to God.
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When men rend their garments, as they did in great and sudden griefs.
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When God stirs up love, or gives occasion for the exercise of it.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:9 - -- Seeing then all events are out of man's power, and no man can do or enjoy any thing at his pleasure, but only when God pleaseth, as has been shewed in...
Seeing then all events are out of man's power, and no man can do or enjoy any thing at his pleasure, but only when God pleaseth, as has been shewed in many particulars, and is as true and certain in all others, hence it follows, that all men's labours, without God's blessing, are unprofitable, and utterly insufficient to make them happy.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:10 - -- I have diligently observed mens various employments, and the different successes of them.
I have diligently observed mens various employments, and the different successes of them.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:10 - -- Which God hath imposed upon men as their duty; to which therefore men ought quickly to submit.
Which God hath imposed upon men as their duty; to which therefore men ought quickly to submit.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:10 - -- That hereby they might have constant matter of exercise for their diligence, and patience, and submission to God's will and providence.
That hereby they might have constant matter of exercise for their diligence, and patience, and submission to God's will and providence.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:11 - -- This seems to be added as at apology for God's providence, notwithstanding all the contrary events and confusions which are in the world. He hath made...
This seems to be added as at apology for God's providence, notwithstanding all the contrary events and confusions which are in the world. He hath made (or doth make or do, by his providence in the government of the world) every thing (which he doth either immediately, or by the ministry of men, or other creatures) beautiful (convenient, so that, all things considered, it could not have been done better) in its time or station, (when it was most fit to be done). Many events seem to mens shallow judgments, to be very irregular and unbecoming, as when wicked men prosper, and good men are oppressed; but when men shall throughly understand God's works, and the whole frame and contexture of them, and see the end of them, they will say, all things were done wisely.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:11 - -- It is true, God hath put the world into mens hearts, or made them capable of observing all the dispensations of God in the world; but this is to be un...
It is true, God hath put the world into mens hearts, or made them capable of observing all the dispensations of God in the world; but this is to be understood with a limitation, because there are some more mysterious works of God, which no man can fully, understand, because he cannot search them out from the beginning to the end.
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To employ them in acts of charity and liberality.
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All God's counsels or decrees are eternal and unchangeable.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:14 - -- Men can neither do any thing against God's counsel and providence, nor hinder any work or act of it.
Men can neither do any thing against God's counsel and providence, nor hinder any work or act of it.
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Wesley: Ecc 3:14 - -- That by the consideration of his power in the disposal of all persons and things, men should learn to trust in him, to submit to him, to fear to offen...
That by the consideration of his power in the disposal of all persons and things, men should learn to trust in him, to submit to him, to fear to offend him, and more carefully study to please him.
JFB: Ecc 3:1 - -- (Ecc. 3:1-22)
Man has his appointed cycle of seasons and vicissitudes, as the sun, wind, and water (Ecc 1:5-7).
(Ecc. 3:1-22)
Man has his appointed cycle of seasons and vicissitudes, as the sun, wind, and water (Ecc 1:5-7).
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JFB: Ecc 3:1 - -- As there is a fixed "season" in God's "purposes" (for example, He has fixed the "time" when man is "to be born," and "to die," Ecc 3:2), so there is a...
As there is a fixed "season" in God's "purposes" (for example, He has fixed the "time" when man is "to be born," and "to die," Ecc 3:2), so there is a lawful "time" for man to carry out his "purposes" and inclinations. God does not condemn, but approves of, the use of earthly blessings (Ecc 3:12); it is the abuse that He condemns, the making them the chief end (1Co 7:31). The earth, without human desires, love, taste, joy, sorrow, would be a dreary waste, without water; but, on the other hand, the misplacing and excess of them, as of a flood, need control. Reason and revelation are given to control them.
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JFB: Ecc 3:2 - -- A man can no more reverse the times and order of "planting," and of "digging up," and transplanting, than he can alter the times fixed for his "birth"...
A man can no more reverse the times and order of "planting," and of "digging up," and transplanting, than he can alter the times fixed for his "birth" and "death." To try to "plant" out of season is vanity, however good in season; so to make earthly things the chief end is vanity, however good they be in order and season. GILL takes it, not so well, figuratively (Jer 18:7, Jer 18:9; Amo 9:15; Mat 15:13).
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JFB: Ecc 3:3 - -- Namely, judicially, criminals; or, in wars of self-defense; not in malice. Out of this time and order, killing is murder.
Namely, judicially, criminals; or, in wars of self-defense; not in malice. Out of this time and order, killing is murder.
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JFB: Ecc 3:3 - -- God has His times for "healing" (literally, Isa 38:5, Isa 38:21; figuratively, Deu 32:39; Hos 6:1; spiritually, Psa 147:3; Isa 57:19). To heal spiritu...
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JFB: Ecc 3:3 - -- As Jerusalem, in the time of Zerubbabel; spiritually (Amo 9:11), "the set time" (Psa 102:13-16).
As Jerusalem, in the time of Zerubbabel; spiritually (Amo 9:11), "the set time" (Psa 102:13-16).
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JFB: Ecc 3:4 - -- As David before the ark (2Sa 6:12-14; Psa 30:11); spiritually (Mat 9:15; Luk 6:21; Luk 15:25). The Pharisees, by requiring sadness out of time, erred ...
As David before the ark (2Sa 6:12-14; Psa 30:11); spiritually (Mat 9:15; Luk 6:21; Luk 15:25). The Pharisees, by requiring sadness out of time, erred seriously.
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JFB: Ecc 3:5 - -- For building; figuratively, the Gentiles, once castaway stones, were in due time made parts of the spiritual building (Eph 2:19-20), and children of A...
For building; figuratively, the Gentiles, once castaway stones, were in due time made parts of the spiritual building (Eph 2:19-20), and children of Abraham (Mat 3:9); so the restored Jews hereafter (Psa 102:13-14; Zec 9:16).
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When God wills losses to us, then is our time to be content.
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JFB: Ecc 3:6 - -- In charity (Pro 11:24); or to part with the dearest object, rather than the soul (Mar 9:43). To be careful is right in its place, but not when it come...
In charity (Pro 11:24); or to part with the dearest object, rather than the soul (Mar 9:43). To be careful is right in its place, but not when it comes between us and Jesus Christ (Luk 10:40-42).
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JFB: Ecc 3:7 - -- Garments, in mourning (Joe 2:13); figuratively, nations, as Israel from Judah, already foretold, in Solomon's time (1Ki 11:30-31), to be "sewed" toget...
Garments, in mourning (Joe 2:13); figuratively, nations, as Israel from Judah, already foretold, in Solomon's time (1Ki 11:30-31), to be "sewed" together hereafter (Eze 37:15, Eze 37:22).
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JFB: Ecc 3:7 - -- (Amo 5:13), in a national calamity, or that of a friend (Job 2:13); also not to murmur under God's visitation (Lev 10:3; Psa 39:1-2, Psa 39:9).
(Amo 5:13), in a national calamity, or that of a friend (Job 2:13); also not to murmur under God's visitation (Lev 10:3; Psa 39:1-2, Psa 39:9).
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JFB: Ecc 3:8 - -- For example, sin, lusts (Luk 14:26); that is, to love God so much more as to seem in comparison to hate "father or mother," when coming between us and...
For example, sin, lusts (Luk 14:26); that is, to love God so much more as to seem in comparison to hate "father or mother," when coming between us and God.
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JFB: Ecc 3:9 - -- But these earthly pursuits, while lawful in their season, are "unprofitable" when made by man, what God never intended them to be, the chief good. Sol...
But these earthly pursuits, while lawful in their season, are "unprofitable" when made by man, what God never intended them to be, the chief good. Solomon had tried to create an artificial forced joy, at times when he ought rather to have been serious; the result, therefore, of his labor to be happy, out of God's order, was disappointment. "A time to plant" (Ecc 3:2) refers to his planting (Ecc 2:5); "laugh" (Ecc 3:4), to Ecc 2:1-2; "his mirth," "laughter"; "build up," "gather stones" (Ecc 3:3, Ecc 3:5), to his "building" (Ecc 2:4); "embrace," "love," to his "princess" (see on Ecc 2:8); "get" (perhaps also "gather," Ecc 3:5-6), to his "gathering" (Ecc 2:8). All these were of "no profit," because not in God's time and order of bestowing happiness.
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JFB: Ecc 3:11 - -- That is, in its proper season (Psa 1:3), opposed to worldlings putting earthly pursuits out of their proper time and place (see on Ecc 3:9).
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JFB: Ecc 3:11 - -- Given them capacities to understand the world of nature as reflecting God's wisdom in its beautiful order and times (Rom 1:19-20). "Everything" answer...
Given them capacities to understand the world of nature as reflecting God's wisdom in its beautiful order and times (Rom 1:19-20). "Everything" answers to "world," in the parallelism.
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JFB: Ecc 3:11 - -- That is, but in such a manner that man only sees a portion, not the whole "from beginning to end" (Ecc 8:17; Job 26:14; Rom 11:33; Rev 15:4). PARKHURS...
That is, but in such a manner that man only sees a portion, not the whole "from beginning to end" (Ecc 8:17; Job 26:14; Rom 11:33; Rev 15:4). PARKHURST, for "world," translates: "Yet He hath put obscurity in the midst of them," literally, "a secret," so man's mental dimness of sight as to the full mystery of God's works. So HOLDEN and WEISS. This incapacity for "finding out" (comprehending) God's work is chiefly the fruit of the fall. The worldling ever since, not knowing God's time and order, labors in vain, because out of time and place.
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JFB: Ecc 3:12 - -- In God's works (Ecc 3:11), as far as relates to man's duty. Man cannot fully comprehend them, but he ought joyfully to receive ("rejoice in") God's gi...
In God's works (Ecc 3:11), as far as relates to man's duty. Man cannot fully comprehend them, but he ought joyfully to receive ("rejoice in") God's gifts, and "do good" with them to himself and to others. This is never out of season (Gal 6:9-10). Not sensual joy and self-indulgence (Phi 4:4; Jam 4:16-17).
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JFB: Ecc 3:13 - -- Literally, "And also as to every man who eats . . . this is the gift of God" (Ecc 3:22; Ecc 5:18). When received as God's gifts, and to God's glory, t...
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JFB: Ecc 3:14 - -- Opposed to man's "crooked and wanting" works (Ecc 1:15; Ecc 7:13). The event of man's labors depends wholly on God's immutable purpose. Man's part, th...
Opposed to man's "crooked and wanting" works (Ecc 1:15; Ecc 7:13). The event of man's labors depends wholly on God's immutable purpose. Man's part, therefore, is to do and enjoy every earthly thing in its proper season (Ecc 3:12-13), not setting aside God's order, but observing deep reverence towards God; for the mysteriousness and unchangeableness of God's purposes are designed to lead "man to fear before Him." Man knows not the event of each act: otherwise he would think himself independent of God.
Clarke: Ecc 3:1 - -- To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose - Two general remarks may be made on the first eight verses of this chapter
1. &n...
To every thing there is a season, and a time to every purpose - Two general remarks may be made on the first eight verses of this chapter
1. God by his providence governs the world, and has determined particular things and operations to particular times. In those times such things may be done with propriety and success; but if we neglect the appointed seasons, we sin against this providence, and become the authors of our own distresses
2. God has given to man that portion of duration called Time; the space in which all the operations of nature, of animals, and intellectual beings, are carried on; but while nature is steady in its course, and animals faithful to their instincts, man devotes it to a great variety of purposes; but very frequently to that for which God never made time, space, or opportunity. And all we can say, when an evil deed is done, is, there was a time in which it was done, though God never made it for that purpose
To say any farther on this subject is needless, as the words themselves give in general their own meaning. The Jews, it is true, see in these times and seasons all the events of their own nation, from the birth of Abraham to the present times; and as to fathers and their followers, they see all the events and states of the Christian Church in them
It is worthy of remark, that in all this list there are but two things which may be said to be done generally by the disposal of God, and in which men can have but little influence: the time of birth, and the time of death. But all the others are left to the option of man, though God continues to overrule them by his providence. The following paraphrase will explain all that is necessary to be generally understood: -
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Clarke: Ecc 3:2 - -- A time to be born, and a time to die - plant -
"As in its mother’ s womb the embryo lie
A space determined; to full growth arrived
From its dar...
A time to be born, and a time to die - plant -
"As in its mother’ s womb the embryo lie
A space determined; to full growth arrived
From its dark prison bursts, and sees the light
So is the period fix’ d when man shall dro
Into the grave - A time there is to plant
And sow; another time to pluck and reap
Even nations have their destined rise and fall
Awhile they thrive; and for destruction ripe
When grown, are rooted up like wither’ d plants."
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Clarke: Ecc 3:3 - -- A time to kill, - heal, - break down, - build up -
"The healing art, when out of season used
Pernicious proves, and serves to hasten death
But timel...
A time to kill, - heal, - break down, - build up -
"The healing art, when out of season used
Pernicious proves, and serves to hasten death
But timely medicines drooping nature raise
And health restore - Now, Justice wields her swor
With wholesome rigour, nor the offender spares
But Mercy now is more expedient found
On crazy fabrics ill-timed cost bestow’
No purpose answers, when discretion bid
To pull them down, and wait a season fi
To build anew."
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Clarke: Ecc 3:4 - -- A time to weep, - laugh, - mourn, - dance - "When private griefs affec
The heart, our tears with decent sorrow flow
Nor less becoming, when the publ...
A time to weep, - laugh, - mourn, - dance - "When private griefs affec
The heart, our tears with decent sorrow flow
Nor less becoming, when the public mourns
To vent the deepest sighs. But all aroun
When things a smiling aspect bear, our soul
May well exult; ‘ tis then a time for joy."
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Clarke: Ecc 3:5 - -- A time to cast away stones, - to gather stones, - to embrace, - to refrain -
"One while domestic cares abortive prove
And then successful. Nature no...
A time to cast away stones, - to gather stones, - to embrace, - to refrain -
"One while domestic cares abortive prove
And then successful. Nature now invite
Connubial pleasures: but, when languid grown
No less rejects."
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Clarke: Ecc 3:6 - -- A time to get, - to lose, - to keep, - to cast away - "Commerce produces wealth
Whilst time of gaining lasts; from every poin
Blow prosperous gales....
A time to get, - to lose, - to keep, - to cast away - "Commerce produces wealth
Whilst time of gaining lasts; from every poin
Blow prosperous gales. Now heaven begins to lower
And all our hopes are blasted. Prudence bids
One while, our treasure to reserve, and the
With liberal hand to scatter wide. How of
In raging storms, the owner wisely cast
Into the deep his precious merchandise
To save the foundering bark!
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Clarke: Ecc 3:7 - -- A time to rend, - sew, - keep silence, - speak - -
"Intestine broil
And factions rend a state: at length the breac
Is heal’ d, and rest ensues...
A time to rend, - sew, - keep silence, - speak - -
"Intestine broil
And factions rend a state: at length the breac
Is heal’ d, and rest ensues. Wisdom restrain
The tongue, when words are vain: but now
’ Tis time to speak, and silence would be criminal."
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Clarke: Ecc 3:8 - -- A time to love, - hate, - of war, - of peace -
"Love turns to hatred; interest or capric
Dissolves the firmest knot by friendship tied
O’ er ri...
A time to love, - hate, - of war, - of peace -
"Love turns to hatred; interest or capric
Dissolves the firmest knot by friendship tied
O’ er rival nations, with revenge inflamed
Or lust of power, fell Discord shakes awhil
Her baleful torch: now smiling Peace returns.
The above paraphrase on the verses cited contains a general view of the principal occurrences of time, in reference to the human being, from his cradle to his grave, through all the operations of life.
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Clarke: Ecc 3:9 - -- What profit hath he - What real good, what solid pleasure, is derived from all the labors of man? Necessity drives him to the principal part of his ...
What profit hath he - What real good, what solid pleasure, is derived from all the labors of man? Necessity drives him to the principal part of his cares and toils; he labors that he may eat and drink; and he eats and drinks that he may be preserved alive, and kept from sickness and pain. Love of money, the basest of all passions, and restless ambition, drive men to many labors and expedients, which perplex and often destroy them. He, then, who lives without God, travails in pain all his days.
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Clarke: Ecc 3:10 - -- I have seen the travail - Man is a sinner; and, because he is such, he suffers.
I have seen the travail - Man is a sinner; and, because he is such, he suffers.
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Clarke: Ecc 3:11 - -- Beautiful in his time - God’ s works are well done; there are order, harmony, and beauty in them all. Even the caterpillar is a finished beauty...
Beautiful in his time - God’ s works are well done; there are order, harmony, and beauty in them all. Even the caterpillar is a finished beauty in all the changes through which it passes, when its structure is properly examined, and the ends kept in view in which each change is to issue. Nothing of this kind can be said of the works of man. The most finished works of art are bungling jobs, when compared with the meanest operation of nature
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Clarke: Ecc 3:11 - -- He hath set the world in their heart - העולם haolam , that hidden time - the period beyond the present, - Eternity. The proper translation of ...
He hath set the world in their heart -
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Clarke: Ecc 3:12 - -- I know that there is no good in them, but, etc. - Since God has so disposed the affairs of this world, that the great events of providence cannot be...
I know that there is no good in them, but, etc. - Since God has so disposed the affairs of this world, that the great events of providence cannot be accelerated or retarded by human cares and anxieties, submit to God; make a proper use of what he has given: do thyself no harm, and endeavor as much as possible to do others good
Enjoy, and bless thyself; let others shar
The transient blessing: ‘ tis the gift of God.
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Clarke: Ecc 3:14 - -- I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever - לעולם leolam , for eternity; in reference to that grand consummation of men and thing...
I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever -
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Clarke: Ecc 3:14 - -- Nothing can be put to it - No new order of beings, whether animate or inanimate, can be produced. God will not create more; man cannot add
Nothing can be put to it - No new order of beings, whether animate or inanimate, can be produced. God will not create more; man cannot add
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Clarke: Ecc 3:14 - -- Nor any thing taken from it - Nothing can be annihilated; no power but that which can create can destroy. And whatever he has done, he intended to b...
Nor any thing taken from it - Nothing can be annihilated; no power but that which can create can destroy. And whatever he has done, he intended to be a means of impressing a just sense of his being, providence, mercy, and judgments, upon the souls of men. A proper consideration of God’ s works has a tendency to make man a religious creature; that is, to impress his mind with a sense of the existence of the Supreme Being, and the reverence that is due to him. In this sense the fear of God is frequently taken in Scripture. The Hebrew of this clause is strongly emphatic:
"And the gods he hath done, that they might fear from before his faces."Even the doctrine of the eternal Trinity in Unity may be collected from numberless appearances in nature. A consideration of the herb trefoil is said to have been the means of fully convincing the learned Erasmus of the truth of the assertion, These Three are One: and yet three distinct. He saw the same root, the same fibres, the same pulpy substance, the same membraneous covering, the same color, the same taste, the same smell, in every part; and yet the three leaves distinct: but each and all a continuation of the stem, and proceeding from the same root. Such a fact as this may at least illustrate the doctrine. An intelligent shepherd, whom he met upon the mountains, is said to have exhibited the herb, and the illustration while discoursing on certain difficulties in the Christian faith. When a child, I heard a learned man relate this fact.
Defender: Ecc 3:11 - -- If there is anything in the world that is ugly, it must be attributed ultimately to sin; God did not make it so.
If there is anything in the world that is ugly, it must be attributed ultimately to sin; God did not make it so.
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Defender: Ecc 3:11 - -- Literally, God "hath set eternity in their hearts." Even though we cannot now comprehend the total plan of God, each person has an innate awareness th...
Literally, God "hath set eternity in their hearts." Even though we cannot now comprehend the total plan of God, each person has an innate awareness that God does exist and does have a purpose in creation."
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Defender: Ecc 3:14 - -- In addition to emphasizing the immutability of God and His works, this passage anticipates the great scientific principle of conservation (conservatio...
In addition to emphasizing the immutability of God and His works, this passage anticipates the great scientific principle of conservation (conservation of energy, mass, momentum, charge, etc.). Nothing is now being either created or annihilated. An entity may be changed in character and even deteriorate in quality, but it must be conserved in quantity."
TSK: Ecc 3:1 - -- every thing : Ecc 3:17, Ecc 7:14, Ecc 8:5, Ecc 8:6; 2Ki 5:26; 2Ch 33:12; Pro 15:23; Mat 16:3
under : Ecc 1:13, Ecc 2:3, Ecc 2:17
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TSK: Ecc 3:2 - -- time to be born : Heb. time to bear, Gen 17:21, Gen 21:1, Gen 21:2; 1Sa 2:5; 1Ki 13:2; 2Ki 4:16; Psa 113:9; Isa 54:1; Luk 1:13, Luk 1:20, Luk 1:36; Jo...
time to be born : Heb. time to bear, Gen 17:21, Gen 21:1, Gen 21:2; 1Sa 2:5; 1Ki 13:2; 2Ki 4:16; Psa 113:9; Isa 54:1; Luk 1:13, Luk 1:20, Luk 1:36; Joh 16:21; Act 7:17, Act 7:20; Gal 4:4
and a time : Gen 47:29; Num 20:24-28, Num 27:12-14; Deu 3:23-26, Deu 34:5; Job 7:1, Job 14:5, Job 14:14; Isa 38:1, Isa 38:5; Joh 7:30; Heb 9:27
a time to plant : Psa 52:5; Isa 5:2-5; Jer 1:10, Jer 18:7-10, Jer 45:4; Mat 13:28, Mat 13:29, Mat 13:41, Mat 15:13
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TSK: Ecc 3:3 - -- time to kill : Deu 32:39; 1Sa 2:6, 1Sa 2:25; Hos 6:1, Hos 6:2
a time to heal : Num 26:6-9; Isa. 38:5-20; Jer 33:6; Luk 9:54-56; Act 5:15, Act 5:16
a t...
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TSK: Ecc 3:4 - -- time to weep : Neh 8:9-12, 9:1-38; Psa 30:5, Psa 126:1, Psa 126:2, Psa 126:5, Psa 126:6; Isa 22:12, Isa 22:13; Mat 9:15; Mat 11:17; Joh 16:20-22; Rom ...
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TSK: Ecc 3:5 - -- to cast : Jos 4:3-9, Jos 10:27; 2Sa 18:17, 2Sa 18:18; 2Ki 3:25
a time to embrace : Exo 19:15; 1Sa 21:4, 1Sa 21:5; Son 2:6, Son 2:7; Joe 2:16; 1Co 7:5
...
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TSK: Ecc 3:6 - -- time to get : or, time to seek, Gen 30:30-43, Gen 31:18; Exo 12:35, Exo 12:36; Deu 8:17, Deu 8:18; 2Ki 5:26, 2Ki 8:9, an a time to lose, Mat 16:25, Ma...
time to get : or, time to seek, Gen 30:30-43, Gen 31:18; Exo 12:35, Exo 12:36; Deu 8:17, Deu 8:18; 2Ki 5:26, 2Ki 8:9, an a time to lose, Mat 16:25, Mat 16:26, Mat 19:29; Mar 8:35-37, Mar 10:28-30; Luk 9:24, Luk 9:25
and a time to cast : Ecc 11:1; 2Ki 7:15; Psa 112:9; Isa 2:20; Jon 1:5; Act 27:19, Act 27:38; Phi 3:7, Phi 3:8; Heb 10:34, Heb 10:35
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TSK: Ecc 3:7 - -- time to rend : Gen 37:29, Gen 37:34; 2Sa 1:11, 2Sa 3:31; 1Ki 21:27; 2Ki 5:7, 2Ki 6:30; Jer 36:24; Joe 2:13; Act 9:39
time to keep : Job 2:13; Psa 39:2...
time to rend : Gen 37:29, Gen 37:34; 2Sa 1:11, 2Sa 3:31; 1Ki 21:27; 2Ki 5:7, 2Ki 6:30; Jer 36:24; Joe 2:13; Act 9:39
time to keep : Job 2:13; Psa 39:2; Isa 36:21; Jer 8:14; Lam 3:28; Amo 5:13, Amo 8:3; Mic 7:5
and a time to speak : Gen 44:18, Gen 44:34; 1Sa 19:4, 1Sa 19:5, 25:24-44; Est 4:13, Est 4:14, Est 7:4; Job 32:4-37:24; Pro 24:11, Pro 24:12, Pro 31:8, Pro 31:9; Luk 19:37-40; Act 4:20
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TSK: Ecc 3:8 - -- time to love : Eze 16:8; Psa 139:21; Eph 3:19, Eph 5:25, Eph 5:28, Eph 5:29; Tit 2:4
a time to hate : 2Ch 19:2; Luk 14:26; Rev 2:2
a time of war : Gen...
time to love : Eze 16:8; Psa 139:21; Eph 3:19, Eph 5:25, Eph 5:28, Eph 5:29; Tit 2:4
a time to hate : 2Ch 19:2; Luk 14:26; Rev 2:2
a time of war : Gen 14:14-17; Josh. 8:1-29, Jos 11:23; 2Sa 10:6-19; 1Ki 5:4; 2Chr. 20:1-29, 2Ch 20:30
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TSK: Ecc 3:11 - -- hath made : Ecc 7:29; Gen 1:31; Deu 32:4; Mar 7:37
also : Mat 13:22; Rom 1:19, Rom 1:20, Rom 1:28
so : Ecc 8:17; Job 11:7, Job 37:23; Psa 104:24; Mat ...
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TSK: Ecc 3:12 - -- but : Ecc 3:22, Ecc 9:7-9; Deu 28:63; Psa 37:3; Isa 64:5; Luk 11:41; Act 20:35; Phi 4:4-9; 1Th 5:15, 1Th 5:16; 1Ti 6:18
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TSK: Ecc 3:13 - -- Ecc 2:24, Ecc 5:18-20, Ecc 6:2, Ecc 9:7; Deu 28:30, Deu 28:31, Deu 28:47, Deu 28:48; Jdg 6:3-6; Psa 128:2; Isa 65:21-23
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TSK: Ecc 3:14 - -- whatsoever : Psa 33:11, Psa 119:90, Psa 119:91; Isa 46:10; Dan 4:34, Dan 4:35; Act 2:23, Act 4:28; Rom 11:36; Eph 3:11; Tit 1:2; Jam 1:17
nothing : Ps...
whatsoever : Psa 33:11, Psa 119:90, Psa 119:91; Isa 46:10; Dan 4:34, Dan 4:35; Act 2:23, Act 4:28; Rom 11:36; Eph 3:11; Tit 1:2; Jam 1:17
nothing : Psa 76:10; Pro 19:21, Pro 21:30, Pro 30:6; Isa 10:12-15; Dan 8:8, Dan 11:2-4; Joh 19:10, Joh 19:11, Joh 19:28-37; Act 5:39
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collapse allCommentary -- Word/Phrase Notes (per Verse)
Barnes: Ecc 3:1 - -- Everything - More particularly, the actions of people (e. g. his own, Ecc 2:1-8) and events which happen to people, the world of Providence rat...
Everything - More particularly, the actions of people (e. g. his own, Ecc 2:1-8) and events which happen to people, the world of Providence rather than the world of creation. It would seem that most of his own works described in Ecc 2:1-8 were present to his mind. The rare word translated "season"means emphatically "fitting time"(compare Neh 2:6; Est 9:27, Est 9:31).
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Barnes: Ecc 3:5 - -- Stones may be regarded either as materials for building, or as impediments to the fertility of land (see 2Ki 3:19, 2Ki 3:25; Isa 5:2).
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Get ... lose - Rather, seek, and a time to give up for lost.
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Barnes: Ecc 3:7 - -- Rend - i. e., Tear garments in sign of mourning or anger. See 2Sa 1:2, 2Sa 1:11 ff.
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Barnes: Ecc 3:11 - -- Rather, He hath made all (the travail, Ecc 3:10) beautiful (fit, in harmony with the whole work of God) in its time; also He hath set eternity in th...
Rather, He hath made all (the travail, Ecc 3:10) beautiful (fit, in harmony with the whole work of God) in its time; also He hath set eternity in their heart (i. e., the heart of the sons of men, Ecc 3:10).
The word, translated "world"in the text, and "eternity"in this note, is used seven times in Ecclesiastes.
The interpretation "eternity,"is conceived in the sense of a long indefinite period of time, in accordance with the use of the word throughout this book, and the rest of the Old Testament. God has placed in the inborn constitution of man the capability of conceiving of eternity, the struggle to apprehend the everlasting, the longing after an eternal life.
With the other meaning "the world,"i. e., the material world, or universe, in which we dwell, the context is explained as referring either to the knowledge of the objects with which this world is filled, or to the love of the pleasures of the world. This meaning seems to be less in harmony with the context than the other: but the principal objection to it is that it assigns to the word in the original a sense which, although found in rabbinical Hebrew, it never bears in the language of the Old Testament.
So ... find - i. e., Without enabling man to find. Compare Ecc 7:13; Ecc 8:17.
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Barnes: Ecc 3:12 - -- In them - i. e., in the sons of men. To do good - In a moral sense. Physical enjoyment is referred to in Ecc 3:13.
In them - i. e., in the sons of men.
To do good - In a moral sense. Physical enjoyment is referred to in Ecc 3:13.
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Barnes: Ecc 3:14 - -- The last clause of this verse goes beyond a declaration of the fact of God’ s government of the world Ecc 2:26 by adding the moral effect which...
Poole: Ecc 3:1 - -- A season a certain thee appointed by God for its being and continuance, which no human wit or providence can prevent or alter. And by virtue of this...
A season a certain thee appointed by God for its being and continuance, which no human wit or providence can prevent or alter. And by virtue of this appointment or decree of God, all the vicissitudes and changes which happen in the world, whether comforts or calamities, do come to pass; which is here added, partly, to prove what he last said, Ecc 2:24,26 , that both the free and comfortable enjoyment of the creatures which some have, and the crosses and vexations which others have with them, are from the hand and counsel of God; partly, to prove the principal proposition of the book, that all things below are vain, and happiness is not to be found in them, because of their great uncertainty, and mutability, and transitoriness, and because they are so much out of the reach and power of men, and wholly in the disposal of another, to wit, God, who doth either give or take them away, either sweeten or embitter them, as it pleaseth him; and partly, to bring the minds of men into a quiet and cheerful dependence upon God’ s providence, and submission to his will, and a state of preparation for all events.
To every purpose or will , or desire , to wit, of man; to all men’ s designs. attempts, and businesses. Not only natural, but even the free and voluntary actions of men, are ordered and disposed by God to accomplish his own purpose. But it must be considered, that he doth not here speak of a thee allowed by God, wherein all the following things may lawfully be done, which is wholly besides his scope and business; but only of a thee fixed by God, in which they would or should be done.
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Poole: Ecc 3:2 - -- A time to die a certain period unknown to man, but fixed by God, in which a man must unavoidably die; of which see Job 14:5 Joh 13:1 .
A time to pla...
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Poole: Ecc 3:3 - -- A time to kill when a man shall die a violent death, either by chance, as Exo 21:13 , or by the sentence of the magistrate, or by the hands of murder...
A time to kill when a man shall die a violent death, either by chance, as Exo 21:13 , or by the sentence of the magistrate, or by the hands of murderers.
A time to heal when he who seemed to be mortally wounded shall be healed and restored.
A time to break down when houses shall be demolished, either by the fancy of the owner, or by the rage of other men, or otherwise.
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A time to weep when men shall have just occasion for weeping and mourning.
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Poole: Ecc 3:5 - -- A time to cast away stones which were brought together in order to the building of a wall or house, but are now cast away, either because the man who...
A time to cast away stones which were brought together in order to the building of a wall or house, but are now cast away, either because the man who gathered them hath changed his mind, and desists from his project, or by other causes or accidents.
A time to embrace when persons shall enter into friendship, and perform all friendly offices one to another.
A time to refrain from embracing either through alienation of affections, or grievous calamities. See Joe 2:16 1Co 7:5
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Poole: Ecc 3:6 - -- A time to lose when men shall lose their estates, either by God’ s providence, or by their own choice.
A time to cast away when a man shall ca...
A time to lose when men shall lose their estates, either by God’ s providence, or by their own choice.
A time to cast away when a man shall cast away his goods voluntarily, as in a storm to save his life, as Jon 1:5 Act 27:18,19 ; or out of love and obedience to God, as Mat 10:37,39 Heb 10:34 .
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Poole: Ecc 3:7 - -- A time to rend when men shall rend their garments, as they did in great and sudden griefs, as Gen 37:29 Joe 2:13 .
A time to keep silence wherein m...
A time to rend when men shall rend their garments, as they did in great and sudden griefs, as Gen 37:29 Joe 2:13 .
A time to keep silence wherein men will or shall be silent, either through grief, as Job 2:12,13 , or by sickness or weakness, or because God denies a man ability to utter his mind.
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Poole: Ecc 3:8 - -- A time to love when God will stir up the affection of love, or give occasion for the exercise or discovery of it to others.
A time to love when God will stir up the affection of love, or give occasion for the exercise or discovery of it to others.
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Poole: Ecc 3:9 - -- Seeing then all actions and events in the world are out of man’ s power, and no man can at any time do or enjoy any thing at his pleasure, but ...
Seeing then all actions and events in the world are out of man’ s power, and no man can at any time do or enjoy any thing at his pleasure, but only what and when God pleaseth, as hath been now shown in many particulars, and it is as true and certain in all others, hence it follows that all men’ s labours, of themselves, and without God’ s help and blessing, are unprofitable, and utterly insufficient to make them happy.
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Poole: Ecc 3:10 - -- I have seen I have diligently observed and considered upon this occasion,
the travail or the occupation or business , men’ s various employ...
I have seen I have diligently observed and considered upon this occasion,
the travail or the occupation or business , men’ s various employments, and the differing successes of them,
which God hath given to the sons of men either,
1. Which God hath imposed upon men as their duty; and therefore men must labour, although it brings them no profit, as was now said. Or,
2. Which God hath inflicted upon mankind as a just punishment for their sins; to which therefore men ought quietly to submit.
To be exercised in it that hereby they might have constant matter of exercise for their diligence, and patience, and submission to God’ s will and providence, and for all other graces. Or, that they might be afflicted or humbled therewith , as the same phrase is rendered by divers, Ecc 1:13 .
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Poole: Ecc 3:11 - -- He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: this seems to be added as an apology for God’ s providence, notwithstanding all the contrary eve...
He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: this seems to be added as an apology for God’ s providence, notwithstanding all the contrary events and confusions which are in the world.
He (i.e. God , expressed in the last clause of the verse)
hath made (or doth make or do , by his providence in the government of the world)
every thing (which he doth either immediately, or by the ministry of men or other creatures, for God worketh in and with all his creatures in all their actions, as is agreed by divines and philosophers)
beautiful (decently and conveniently, so that, all things considered, it could not have been done better) in his time ; in the time which he had appointed, or which he saw most proper and fit for it; or, in its time or season , when it was most fit to be done. Many events seem to men’ s shallow and perverse judgments, at least for a time, to be very irregular and unbecoming, as when wicked men prosper in their impious and unrighteous enterprises, and good men are sorely oppressed and afflicted, and that for righteousness’ sake; but when men shall come thoroughly to understand God’ s works, and the whole frame and contexture of them, and to see the end of them, they will then say that all things were done most wisely and most seasonably; whereof we have eminent instances in Joseph, and David, and Mordecai, and the Jews of his time.
He hath set the world in their heart i.e. in the hearts of men, as the following words show, where man is expressed. The sense is either,
1. Although all God’ s works are beautiful, yet men do not discern the beauty of them, because the world is in their hearts; their minds are so busied and distracted with the thoughts, and cares, and love, and business of this world, that they have neither leisure nor heart seriously to study God’ s works. But this inordinate love of the present world comes from man’ s own corruption, and not from God; and therefore it seems harsh to impute it to God, and improbable that Solomon would have phrased it thus, that God hath set or put the world i.e. worldly lusts, in men’ s hearts . Or,
2. As God’ s works are beautiful in themselves, so men are capable of discerning the beauty of them, because God hath set the world in men’ s hearts; he hath exposed the world, and all his dispensations in the world, unto the view of men’ s minds; both because he hath wrought his works so evidently and publicly, that men might easily observe them; and because he hath given men reason whereby they may discover the wisdom and beauty of all God’ s works, if they diligently apply themselves to the study of them.
So that no man can find out the work that God maketh from the beginning to the end: so this is another reason why men do not discern the beauty of God’ s works, because they do not see the whole frame or course of them from the beginning to the end, but only some small parcels or fragments of them; the eminent works of God being oft begun in one age, and finished in another. Or, yet so that , &c. or, except that (as this phrase properly signifies, and is elsewhere used) no man can find out , &c. Thus it is an exception to the next foregoing clause, and the sense is, It is true God hath put the world into men’ s hearts, or made them capable of observing all events and dispensations of God in the world; but this is to be understood with a limitation, because there are some more mysterious works of God which no man can fully understand, because he cannot search them out through or from the beginning to the end.
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Poole: Ecc 3:12 - -- I know by clear reason, and my own long and certain experience,
that there is no good no other satisfaction or felicity which a man can enjoy, in t...
I know by clear reason, and my own long and certain experience,
that there is no good no other satisfaction or felicity which a man can enjoy, in them, in creatures or worldly enjoyments. To do good ; either,
1. To himself, as it is fully expressed, Psa 49:18 . Or,
2. To others; to employ them in acts of charity and liberality towards others. Or,
3. Towards God; to use them, and to live in the fear of God, which is necessary to the happiness of this as well as of the other life.
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Poole: Ecc 3:13 - -- That every man should eat and drink i.e. hath power or a heart to use what God hath given him, as it is expressed, Ecc 6:2 .
It is the gift of God ...
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Poole: Ecc 3:14 - -- Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever all God’ s counsels or decrees are eternal and unchangeable, and his providence works effectually, so...
Whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever all God’ s counsels or decrees are eternal and unchangeable, and his providence works effectually, so as men cannot resist or hinder it.
Nothing can be put to it, nor any thing taken from it men can neither do any thing besides or against God’ s counsel and providence, nor hinder any work or act of it.
That men should fear before him not that men should make this an occasion of despair, or idleness, or dissoluteness, as some abuse this doctrine, but that, by the consideration of his sovereign and irresistible power in the disposal of all persons and things as pleaseth him, men should learn to trust in him, to submit to him, to fear to offend or rebel against him, and more carefully and industriously to study to please him.
See Philpot: SPIRITUAL TIMES AND SEASONS
Haydock: Ecc 3:1 - -- Heaven, in this world, where alone things change. (St. Jerome) ---
Nothing is here perpetual, but to be used in a proper manner. (Worthington) ---...
Heaven, in this world, where alone things change. (St. Jerome) ---
Nothing is here perpetual, but to be used in a proper manner. (Worthington) ---
The heart must not be attached to any thing created. (Calmet) ---
Pleasure had been condemned and approved, chap. 2. He shews that all must have its time. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:5 - -- Stones, with a sling, or to render a field useless, 4 Kings iii. 25., and Isaias v. 2. ---
Embraces. Countenance was sometimes prescribed for marr...
Stones, with a sling, or to render a field useless, 4 Kings iii. 25., and Isaias v. 2. ---
Embraces. Countenance was sometimes prescribed for married people, Leviticus xx. 18., and 1 Corinthians vii. (St. Jerome) (St. Augustine, Enchiridion 78.) (Calmet) ---
Hatred often succeeds love, ver. 8., and 2 Kings xiii. 14. (Haydock)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:9 - -- Labour? What advantage does he derive from any of these things? (Chap. i. 3.) (Calmet)
Labour? What advantage does he derive from any of these things? (Chap. i. 3.) (Calmet)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:11 - -- Consideration. Literally, "dispute." Hebrew and Septuagint, "heart." (Haydock) ---
Pagnin, "He has implanted the desire of immortality in their h...
Consideration. Literally, "dispute." Hebrew and Septuagint, "heart." (Haydock) ---
Pagnin, "He has implanted the desire of immortality in their hearts." ---
End. If we could discover the properties of each thing, we should be in raptures; (Calmet) but as we cannot, this increases our vexation. (Menochius)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:12 - -- Well; virtuously: or, perhaps, as literally, to enjoy himself, ver. 13. (Calmet) ---
Thus thinks the man of pleasure, Isaias xxii. 31. (St. Jerome...
Well; virtuously: or, perhaps, as literally, to enjoy himself, ver. 13. (Calmet) ---
Thus thinks the man of pleasure, Isaias xxii. 31. (St. Jerome)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:13 - -- God. He gives peace and plenty; and still more, the grace to use these things, so as to obtain heaven. (Calmet)
God. He gives peace and plenty; and still more, the grace to use these things, so as to obtain heaven. (Calmet)
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Haydock: Ecc 3:14 - -- Feared. The order of the seasons, &c., teaches men to adore Providence. (St. Jerome) ---
He has arranged every thing, how mutable soever. (St. Au...
Feared. The order of the seasons, &c., teaches men to adore Providence. (St. Jerome) ---
He has arranged every thing, how mutable soever. (St. Augustine, Confessions i. 6.)
Gill: Ecc 3:1 - -- To every thing there is a season,.... A set determined time, when everything shall come into being, how long it shall continue, and in what circumsta...
To every thing there is a season,.... A set determined time, when everything shall come into being, how long it shall continue, and in what circumstances; all things that have been, are, or shall be, were foreordained by God, and he has determined the times before appointed for their being, duration, and end; which times and seasons he has in his own power: there was a determined time for the whole universe, and for all persons and things in it; a settled fixed moment for the world to come into being; for it did not exist from everlasting, nor of itself, nor was formed by the fortuitous concourse of atoms, but by the wisdom and power of God; nor could it exist sooner or later than it did; it appeared when it was the will of God it should; in the beginning he created it, and he has fixed the time of its duration and end; for it shall not continue always, but have an end, which when it will be, he only knows: so there is a determined time for the rise, height, and declension of states and kingdoms in it; as of lesser ones, so of the four great monarchies; and for all the distinct periods and ages of the world; and for each of the seasons of the year throughout all ages; for the state of the church in it, whether in suffering or flourishing circumstances; for the treading down of the holy city; for the prophesying, slaying, and rising of the witnesses; for the reign and ruin of antichrist; for the reign of Christ on earth, and for his second coming to judgment, though of that day and hour knows no man: and as there is a set time in the counsels and providence of God for these more important events, so for every thing of a lesser nature;
and a time to every purpose under the heaven; to every purpose of man that is carried into execution; for some are not, they are superseded by the counsel of God; some obstruction or another is thrown in the way of them, so that they cannot take place; God withdraws men from them by affliction or death, when their purposes are broken; or by some other way; and what are executed he appoints a time for them, and overrules them to answer some ends of his own; for things the most contingent, free, and voluntary, fall under the direction and providence of God. And there is a time for every purpose of his own; all things done in the world are according to his purposes, which are within himself wisely formed, and are eternal and unfrustrable; and there is a time fixed for the execution of them, for every purpose respecting all natural and civil things in providence; and for every purpose of his grace, relating to the redemption of his people, the effectual calling of them, and the bringing them to eternal glory; which are the things that God wills, that he takes delight and pleasure in, as the word e signifies. The Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render it, "to everything under the heaven there is a time"; and Jarchi observes that in the Misnic language the word used so signifies. The Targum is,
"to every man a time shall come, and a season to every business under heaven.''
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Gill: Ecc 3:2 - -- A time to be born,.... The Targum is,
"to beget sons and daughters;''
but rather it is to bear them, there being a time in nature fixed for that...
A time to be born,.... The Targum is,
"to beget sons and daughters;''
but rather it is to bear them, there being a time in nature fixed for that, called the hour of a woman, Job 14:1;
and a time to die; the time of a man's coming into the world and going out of it, both being fixed by the Lord f: this is true of all men in general, of all men that come into the world, for whom it is appointed that they shall die; and particularly of Christ, whose birth was at the time appointed by the Father, in the fulness of time; and whose death was in due time, nor could his life be taken away before his hour was come, Joh 7:30; and this holds good of every individual man; his birth is at the time God has fixed it; that any man is born into the world, is of God; no man comes into it at his own pleasure or another's, but at the will of God, and when he pleases, not sooner nor later; and the time of his going out of the world is settled by him, beyond which time he cannot live, and sooner he cannot die, Job 14:5; and though no mention is made of the interval of life between a man's birth and death, yet all events intervening are appointed by God; as the place of his abode; his calling and station of life; all circumstances of prosperity and adversity; all diseases of body, and what lead on to death, and issue in it: the reason why these two are put so close together is, to show the certainty of death; that as sure as a man is born, so sure shall he die; and the frailty and shortness of life, which is but an hand's breadth, passes away like a tale that is told, yea, is as nothing; so that no account is made of it, as if there was no time allotted it, or that it deserved no mention; and also to observe that the seeds of mortality and death are in men as soon as they are born; as soon as they begin to live they begin to die, death is working in them;
a time to plant; a tree, as the Targum, or any herb;
and a time to pluck up that which is planted; a tree or herb, as before, when grown to its ripeness, and fit for use; or when grown old, barren, and unfruitful; there are particular seasons for planting plants, and some for one and some for another. This may be applied in a civil sense to planting and plucking up kingdoms and states; see Jer 1:10; as it is by the Jews, particularly to the planting and plucking up of the kingdom of Israel; the people of Israel were a vine brought out of Egypt and planted in the land of Canaan, and afterwards plucked up and carried captive into Babylon; and afterwards planted again, and then again plucked up by the Romans; and will be assuredly planted in their own land again; see Psa 80:8; It may be illustrated in a spiritual sense by the planting of the Jewish church, sometimes compared to a vineyard; and the plucking it up, abolishing their church state and ordinances; and by planting Gospel churches in the Gentile world, and plucking them up again, as in the seven cities of Asia; or removing the candlestick out of its place; and by planting particular persons in churches, and removing them again: some indeed that are planted in the house of the Lord are planted in Christ, and rooted and grounded in the love of God; are plants which Christ's Father has planted, and will never be rooted up; but there are others who are planted through the external ministry of the word, or are plants only by profession, and these become twice dead, plucked up by the roots; and there are times for these things, Psa 92:14.
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Gill: Ecc 3:3 - -- A time to kill, and a time to heal,.... A time to kill may be meant of a violent death, as a time to die is of a natural one; so the Targum,
"a tim...
A time to kill, and a time to heal,.... A time to kill may be meant of a violent death, as a time to die is of a natural one; so the Targum,
"a time to kill in war;''
or else, by the hand of the civil magistrate, such who deserve death. Aben Ezra interprets it "to wound", because of the opposite "to heal"; and so there is a time when wounds and diseases are incurable, and baffle all the skill of the physician, being designed unto death; and there is a time when, by the blessing of God on means, they are healed; the wound or sickness not being unto death: so the Targum paraphrases the last clause,
"to heal one that lies sick.''
This may be applied in a civil sense to calamities in kingdoms, and a restoration of peace and plenty to them; which is the property of God alone, who in this sense kills and makes alive in his own time, Deu 32:39; And in a spiritual sense to the ministers of the word, who are instruments of slaying souls by the law, which is the killing letter, and of healing them by the Gospel, which pours in the oil and wine of peace and pardon through the blood of Christ, and so binds up and heals the broken hearted; and there is a time for both;
a time to break down, and a time to build up; to break down a building, and build a waste, as the Targum; to break down cities and the walls of them, as the of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar; and to build them up: as in the times of Nehemiah and Zerubbabel: and so in a spiritual sense to break down the church of God, the tabernacle of David, and to raise up and repair the breaches of it; to build up Zion, and the walls of Jerusalem, or to restore the Gospel church state to its glory, for which there is a set time; see Amo 9:11.
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Gill: Ecc 3:4 - -- A time to weep, and a time to laugh,.... There is a time for these things, as it goes ill or well with persons, as to their health, estate, or friends...
A time to weep, and a time to laugh,.... There is a time for these things, as it goes ill or well with persons, as to their health, estate, or friends; and as it goes ill or well with kingdoms and states. The Jews wept when they were in Babylon, and their mouths were filled with laughter when their captivity was returned, Psa 137:1; and as it goes ill or well with the church of Christ, when there are corruptions in doctrine and worship, a neglect of ordinances, declensions in faith and practice, few instances of conversion, and there are divisions and contentions, it is a time for the mourners in Zion to weep but when God creates Jerusalem a rejoicing, and her people a joy, or makes her an eternal excellency, and the praise of the whole earth, then it is a time to rejoice and be glad, Isa 61:3; and as it is, with believers, when Christ is withdrawn from them, it is a time to lament, but, when the bridegroom is with them, it is a time of joy; when it is a night of darkness and desertion, weeping endures, but when the morning comes, the day breaks, and the sun of righteousness arises, joy comes with it, Mat 9:15 Joh 16:19. Now in the present state is the saints' weeping time; in the time to come they will laugh, or be filled with joy unspeakable and full of glory, Luk 6:21;
a time to mourn, and a time to dance; to mourn at funerals, and to dance at festivals; in a spiritual sense, God sometimes turns the mourning of his people into dancing, or joy, which that is expressive of; see Psa 30:11.
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Gill: Ecc 3:5 - -- A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together,.... To cast stones out of a field or vineyard where they are hurtful, and to gather ...
A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together,.... To cast stones out of a field or vineyard where they are hurtful, and to gather them together to make walls and fences of, or build houses with; and may be understood both of throwing down buildings, as the temple of Jerusalem, so that not one stone was left upon another; of pouring out the stones of the sanctuary, and of gathering them again and laying them on one another; which was done when the servants of the Lord took pleasure in the stones of Zion, and favoured the dust thereof. Some understand this of precious stones, and of casting them away through luxury, wantonness, or contempt, and gathering them again: and it may be applied, as to the neglect of the Gentiles for a long time, and the gathering of those stones of which children were raised to Abraham; so of the casting away of the Jews for their rejection of the Messiah, and of the gathering of them again by conversion, when they shall be as the stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign on his land, Zec 9:16;
a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing: or "to be far from" g it; it may not only design conjugal embraces h, but parents embracing their children, as Jacob did his; and one brother embracing another, as Esau Jacob, and one friend embracing another; all which is very proper and agreeable at times: but there are some seasons so very calamitous and distressing, in which persons are obliged to drop such fondnesses: it is true, in a spiritual sense, of the embraces of Christ and believers, which sometimes are, and sometimes are not, enjoyed, Pro 4:8.
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Gill: Ecc 3:6 - -- A time to get, and a time to lose,.... To get substance, as the Targum, and to lose it; wealth and riches, honour and glory, wisdom and knowledge: or,...
A time to get, and a time to lose,.... To get substance, as the Targum, and to lose it; wealth and riches, honour and glory, wisdom and knowledge: or, "to seek, and to lose" i; a time when the sheep of the house of Israel, or God's elect, were lost, and a time to seek them again; which was, lone by Christ in redemption, and by the Spirit of God, in effectual calling;
a time to keep, and a time to cast away; to keep a thing, and to cast it away, into the sea, in the time of a great tempest, as the Targum; as did the mariners in the ship in which Jonah was, and those in which the Apostle Paul was, Jon 1:5; It may be interpreted of keeping riches, and which are sometimes kept too close, and to the harm of the owners of them; and of scattering them among the poor, or casting them upon the waters; see Ecc 5:13.
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Gill: Ecc 3:7 - -- A time to rend, and a time to sew,.... To rend garments, in case of blasphemy, and in times of mourning and fasting, and then to sew them up when they...
A time to rend, and a time to sew,.... To rend garments, in case of blasphemy, and in times of mourning and fasting, and then to sew them up when they are over; see Isa 37:1; This the Jews apply to the rending of the ten tribes from Rehoboam, signified by the rending of Jeroboam's garment, 1Ki 11:30; the sewing up or uniting of which is foretold, Eze 37:22. Some interpret it of the rending of the Jewish church state, signified by the rending of the vail, at the death of Christ; and of the constituting the Gospel church state among the Gentiles;
a time to keep silence, and a time to speak k; when it is an evil time, a time of calamity in a nation, it is not a time to be loquacious and talkative, especially in a vain and ludicrous way, Amo 5:13; or when a particular friend or relation is in distress, as in the case of Job and his friends, Job 2:13; or when in the presence of wicked men, who make a jest of everything serious and religious, Psa 39:1; and so when under afflictive dispensations of Providence, it is a time to be still and dumb, and not open the mouth in a murmuring and complaining way, Lev 10:3. And, on the other hand, there is a time to speak, either publicly, of the truths of the Gospel, in the ministry of it, and in vindication of them; or privately, of Christian experience: there is a time when an open profession should be made of Christ, his word and ordinances, and when believers should speak to God in prayer and praise; which, should they not, the stones in the wall would cry out.
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Gill: Ecc 3:8 - -- A time to love, and a time to hate,.... For one to love his friend, and to hate a man, a sinner, as the Targum; to love a friend while he continues su...
A time to love, and a time to hate,.... For one to love his friend, and to hate a man, a sinner, as the Targum; to love a friend while he continues such, and hate him, or less love him, when he proves treacherous and unfaithful; an instance of a change of love into hatred may be seen in the case of Amnon, 2Sa 13:15. A time of unregeneracy is a time of loving worldly lusts and sinful pleasures, the company of wicked men, and all carnal delights and recreations; and a time of conversion is a time to hate what was before loved, sin, and the conversion of sinners, the garment spotted with the flesh, the principles and practices, though not the persons, of ungodly men; and even to hate, that is, less love, the dearest friends and relations, in comparison of, or when in competition with, Christ;
a time of war, and a time of peace; for nations to be engaged in war with each other, or to be at peace, which are continually revolving; and there is a time when there will be no more war. In a spiritual sense, the present time, or state of things, is a time of war; the Christian's life is a warfare state, though it will be soon accomplished, in which he is engaging in fighting with spiritual enemies, sin, Satan, and the world: the time to come, or future state, is a time of peace, when saints shall enter into peace, and be no more disturbed by enemies from within or from without. In the Midrash, all the above times and seasons are interpreted of Israel, and applied to them.
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Gill: Ecc 3:9 - -- What profit hath he that worketh in that wherein he laboureth? That is, he has none. This is an inference drawn from the above premises, and confirms ...
What profit hath he that worketh in that wherein he laboureth? That is, he has none. This is an inference drawn from the above premises, and confirms what has been before observed, Ecc 1:3; Man has no profit of his labour, since his time is so short to enjoy it, and he leaves it to another, he knows not who; and, while he lives, is attended with continual vicissitudes and changes; sometimes it is a time for one thing, and sometimes for its contrary, so that there is nothing certain, and to be depended on; and a man can promise himself nothing in this world pleasant or profitable to him, and much less that will be of any advantage to him hereafter. The Targum adds,
"to make treasures and gather mammon, unless he is helped by Providence above;''
though it is man's duty to labour, yet all his toil and labour will be fruitless without a divine blessing; there is a time and season for everything in providence, and there is no striving against that.
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Gill: Ecc 3:10 - -- I have seen the travail which God hath given to the sons of men,.... The pains and trouble they are at to get a little wisdom and knowledge, Ecc 1:13;...
I have seen the travail which God hath given to the sons of men,.... The pains and trouble they are at to get a little wisdom and knowledge, Ecc 1:13; and so to obtain riches and honour, peace and plenty, which sometimes they do obtain, and sometimes not; and when they do, do not keep them long, for there is a time for everything. This the wise man had observed, in a variety of instances; and he considered the end of God in it, which was for men
to be exercised in it, or "by it"; or "to afflict" or "humble them by it" l; to let them see that all their toil and labour signified little; all depended on a divine blessing, and no happiness was to be had in the creatures; all was vanity and vexation of spirit; See Gill on Ecc 1:13.
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Gill: Ecc 3:11 - -- He hath made every thing beautiful in his time,.... That is, God has made everything; as all things in creation are made by him, for his pleasure and...
He hath made every thing beautiful in his time,.... That is, God has made everything; as all things in creation are made by him, for his pleasure and glory, and all well and wisely, there is a beauty in them all: so all things in providence; he upholds all things; he governs and orders all things according to the counsel of his will; some things are done immediately by him, others by instruments, and some are only permitted by him; some he does himself, some he wills to be done by others, and some he suffers to be done; but in all there is a beauty and harmony; and all are ordered, disposed, and overruled, to answer the wisest and greatest purposes; everything is done in the time in which he wills it shall; be done, and done in the time most fit and suitable for it to be done; all things before mentioned, for which there is a time, and all others: all natural things are beautiful in their season; things in summer, winter, spring, and autumn; frost and snow in winter, and heat in summer; darkness and dews in the night, and light and brightness in the day; and so in ten thousand other things: all afflictive dispensations of Providence; times of plucking up and breaking down of weeping and mourning, of losing and casting away are all necessary, and seasonable and beautiful, in their issue and consequences: prosperity and adversity, in their turns, make a beautiful checker work, and work together for good; are like Joseph's coat, of many colours, which was an emblem of those various providences which attended that good man; and were extremely beautiful, as are all the providences of God to men: and all his judgments will be, when made manifest; when he shall have performed his whole work, and the mystery of God in providence will be finished; which is like a piece of tapestry; when only viewed in parts no beauty appears in it, scarce any thing to be made of it but when all is put together, it is most beautiful and harmonious. The words may be rendered, "the beautiful One hath made all things in his time" m; the Messiah; who, as a divine Person, is the brightness of his Father's glory; as man, is fairer than the sons, of Adam; as Mediator, is full of grace and truth; is white and ruddy, altogether lovely, exceeding precious to his people: this fair and lovely One has made all things in creation; works with his Father in the affairs of providence; and has done all things well in grace and redemption, Joh 1:2;
also he hath set the world in their heart; so that no man can find out the work that God maketh from the beginning to the end; not a sinful love of the world, and the things of it; not a criminal desire after them, and a carking care for them, whereby persons have no heart and inclination, time and leisure, to search into and find out the works of God; for though all this is in the heart of the sons of men, yet, not placed, there by the Lord: nor an opinion of living for ever; of a long time in this world, the word for "world" having the signification of perpetuity in it; so that they regard not, the work of the Lord, nor the operations of his hands, tomorrow being with them as this day, and much more abundant; but this sense meets with the same difficulty as the former. Rather the meaning is, that God hath set before the minds of men, and in them, the whole world of creatures, the whole book of nature, in which they may see and read much of the wisdom power, and goodness of God in his works; and to some he gives an inclination and desire hereunto; but yet the subject before them is so copious, there is such a world of matter presented to them, and their capacity so small, and life so short, that they cannot all their days find out the works of God, either of creation or providence, to perfection; or find out what God works, from the beginning of the world to the end of it; for, of what he has wrought, but a small portion is known by them, and they know less still what shall be done hereafter: some of God's works of providence are set on foot and but begun in the life of some men; they do not live to see them finished, and therefore cannot find them out; and others are so dark and obscure, that they are obliged to say, "O the depth of the riches both of the wisdom and knowledge of God! how unsearchable are his judgments, and his ways past finding out!" see Rom 1:19; and though everything is beautiful in its time, yet till they are made manifest, and all viewed together; they will not be perfectly understood, or the beauty of them seen, Rev 15:4. For God has put something "hidden", or "sealed up", in the midst of them, as it may be rendered n, so that they cannot be perfectly known.
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Gill: Ecc 3:12 - -- I know that there is no good in them,.... In these things; as the Arabic version; in the creatures, as Jarchi; in all sublunary enjoyments; in everyt...
I know that there is no good in them,.... In these things; as the Arabic version; in the creatures, as Jarchi; in all sublunary enjoyments; in everything the wise man had made a trial of before, as natural Wisdom and knowledge, worldly pleasure, riches, and wealth; the "summun bonum", or happiness of men, did not lie in these things; this he knew by experience, and had the strongest assurance of it: or in them, that is, the children of men, as the Targum: there is no real good thing in them, nor comes out of them, nor is done by them; they cannot think a good thought, nor do a good action, of themselves. Or rather the sense is, I know there is nothing better for them than what follows:
but for a man to rejoice; not in sin and sinful pleasures, in a riotous, voluptuous, and epicurean manner; but to be cheerful, and enjoy the blessings of life in a comfortable way, and with a thankful heart; and especially to rejoice in spiritual things, and above all in Christ; and not in any self-boastings or carnal confidences, all such rejoicing is evil; see Ecc 9:7. The Targum is,
"but that they rejoice in the joy of the law;''
but it is much better to rejoice in the things of the Gospel, which is indeed a joyful sound;
and to do good in his life: to himself and family, by making use of the good things of life, and not withholding and hoarding them up; and to others, to all men, as opportunity offers, and especially to the household of faith; and not only by liberality and alms deeds, but by doing all good works, from right principles and to right ends, and that always, as long as he lives, Gal 6:9.
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Gill: Ecc 3:13 - -- And also that every man should eat and drink,.... Not to excess, but in moderation; and yet freely, plentifully, and cheerfully; and not alone, but gi...
And also that every man should eat and drink,.... Not to excess, but in moderation; and yet freely, plentifully, and cheerfully; and not alone, but giving the poor a portion with him; and in all having in view the glory of God, 1Co 10:31;
and enjoy the good of all his labour; take the comfort of what he has been labouring for, and not lay it up for, and leave it to, he knows not who: the Targum is,
"and see good in his days, and cause his children, at the time of his death, to inherit all his labour;''
it is the gift of God; not only to have, but to enjoy, and make a proper use of the mercies of life. This is the same doctrine which is delivered Ecc 2:24.
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Gill: Ecc 3:14 - -- I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever,.... Which some, as Jarchi, understand of the works of creation, the heavens and the earth, whi...
I know that whatsoever God doeth, it shall be for ever,.... Which some, as Jarchi, understand of the works of creation, the heavens and the earth, which are however of long standing and duration; and though they shall be dissolved and perish, as to their form and quality, yet not as to the substance of them: the earth particularly is said to abide for ever, Ecc 1:4; the sun and moon, and stars, keep their course or station; and the several seasons of the year have their constant revolution, and shall as long as the earth endures; see Gen 8:22; the several kinds of creatures God has made, in the earth, air, and sea, though the individuals die, their species remain; and man, the chief of creatures, though he dies, shall live again, and live for ever; so the Arabic version,
"I have learned that all the creatures which God hath made shall perpetually remain in the same order and condition:''
though Abarbinel o interprets this of the continuance of the world for a certain time, and then of the destruction of it; which he thinks is supported by Ecc 3:15, and which is to be understood of the creation of one world after another; and that which is past he explains of the world that is destroyed. But rather this is to be understood of the decrees of God, which are his works "ad intra"; the thoughts of his heart, that are to all generations; the counsel of his will, which always stands, and is performed; his mind, which is one, the same always, and invariable, and which he never changes; his pleasure he always does; his purposes and appointments, which are always accomplished, never frustrated and made void: for he is all wise in forming them, all knowing, and sees the end from the beginning, so that nothing unforeseen can turn up to hinder the execution of them; he is unchangeable, and never alters his will; and all powerful, able to effect his great designs; and faithful and true, cannot deny himself, nor ever lie nor repent. To this sense is the Targum,
"I know, by a spirit of prophecy, that all which the Lord does in the world, whether good or evil, after it is decreed from his mouth, it shall be for ever.''
This holds good of all his works, and acts of grace; election of persons to eternal life stands firm, not on the foot of works, but of grace, and has its certain effect; it can never be made void, nor be surer than it is; it will ever take place, and continue in its fruit and consequences: the covenant of grace, as it is made from everlasting, continues to everlasting; its promises never, fail, its blessings are the sure mercies of David: redemption by Christ is eternal; such as are redeemed from sin, Satan, and the law, are ever so, and shall never be brought into bondage to either again: the work of grace upon the heart being begun, shall be performed and perfected; the graces wrought in the soul, as faith, hope, and love, ever remain; the blessings of grace bestowed, as pardon, justification, adoption, and salvation, are never reversed, but ever continue; such as are regenerated, pardoned, justified, adopted, and saved, shall be ever so; and the work of God, as it is durable, so perfect;
nothing can be put to it, nor anything taken from it; the works of nature have been finished and perfected from the foundation of the world; the decrees of God are a complete system of his will, according to which he does all things invariably, in providence and grace; the covenant of grace is ordered in all things, and nothing wanting in it; the work of redemption is completely done by Christ, who is a rock, and his work is perfect; and the work of grace on the heart, though at present imperfect, shall be perfected; nor is it in the power of men to add anything to it, nor take anything from it;
and God doth it, that men should fear before him; his works of creation being done in so much wisdom, and giving such a display of his power and goodness, command art awe of him in his creatures, Psa 33:6; his works of providence, being all according to his wise purposes and decrees, should be patiently and quietly submitted to; and men should be still, and know that he is God, and humble themselves under his mighty hand: his decrees, respecting the present or future state of men, do not lead to despair, nor to a neglect of means, nor to a dissolute life, but tend to promote the fear of God and true holiness, which they are the source of; and the blessings of grace have a kind influence on the same; particularly the blessing of pardoning grace, which is with God, that he may be feared, Psa 130:4; and one principal part of the work of grace on the heart is the fear of God; and nothing more strongly engages to the whole worship of God, which is often meant by the fear of him, than his grace vouchsafed to men; see Heb 12:28. The Targum refers this to the vengeance of God in the world: and Jarchi, to the unusual phenomena in it; as the flood, the sun's standing still and going backward, and the like.
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes
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NET Notes: Ecc 3:2 In 3:2-8, Qoheleth uses fourteen sets of merisms (a figure using polar opposites to encompass everything in between, that is, totality), e.g., Deut 6:...
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NET Notes: Ecc 3:9 This rhetorical question is an example of negative affirmation, expecting a negative answer: “Man gains nothing from his toil!” (see E. W....
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NET Notes: Ecc 3:11 The phrase “of their lives” does not appear in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for clarity.
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NET Notes: Ecc 3:13 Heb “for it.” The referent of the 3rd person feminine singular independent person pronoun (“it”) is probably the preceding sta...
Geneva Bible: Ecc 3:1 To every [thing there is] a ( a ) season, and a time to every purpose under the heaven:
( a ) He speaks of this diversity of time for two causes firs...
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Geneva Bible: Ecc 3:10 I have seen the labour, which God hath given to the sons of men ( b ) to be exercised in it.
( b ) Read (Ecc 1:13).
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Geneva Bible: Ecc 3:11 He hath made every [thing] beautiful in its time: also he hath set the ( c ) world in their heart, so that no man can find out the work that God maket...
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Geneva Bible: Ecc 3:13 And also that every man should eat and drink, and enjoy the good of all his labour, it [is] the ( d ) gift of God.
( d ) Read (Ecc 2:24) and these pl...
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Geneva Bible: Ecc 3:14 I know that, whatever God doeth, it shall be for ( e ) ever: nothing can be added to it, nor any thing taken from it: and God doeth [it], that [men] s...
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expand allCommentary -- Verse Range Notes
TSK Synopsis -> Ecc 3:1-22
TSK Synopsis: Ecc 3:1-22 - --1 By the necessary change of times, vanity is added to human travail.11 There is an excellency in God's works.16 But as for man, God shall judge his w...
Maclaren: Ecc 3:2 - --A Time To Plant'
A time to plant.'--Eccles. 3:2.
The writer enumerates in this context a number of opposite courses of conduct arranged in pairs, eac...
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Maclaren: Ecc 3:11 - --Eternity In The Heart
He hath made every thing beautiful in his time: also He hath set the world in their heart.'--Eccles. 3:11.
THERE is considerabl...
MHCC -> Ecc 3:1-10; Ecc 3:11-15
MHCC: Ecc 3:1-10 - --To expect unchanging happiness in a changing world, must end in disappointment. To bring ourselves to our state in life, is our duty and wisdom in thi...
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MHCC: Ecc 3:11-15 - --Every thing is as God made it; not as it appears to us. We have the world so much in our hearts, are so taken up with thoughts and cares of worldly th...
Matthew Henry -> Ecc 3:1-10; Ecc 3:11-15
Matthew Henry: Ecc 3:1-10 - -- The scope of these verses is to show, 1. That we live in a world of changes, that the several events of time, and conditions of human life, are vast...
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Matthew Henry: Ecc 3:11-15 - -- We have seen what changes there are in the world, and must not expect to find the world more sure to us than it has been to others. Now here Solomon...
Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:1 - --
"Everything has its time, and every purpose under the heavens its hour."The Germ. language is poor in synonyms of time. Zöckler translates: Everyth...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:2 - --
(Note: These seven verses, 2-8, are in Codd and Edd., like Jos 12:9., and Est 9:7., arranged in the form of a song, so that one עת (time) always ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:3 - --
"To put to death has its time, and to heal has its time; to pull down has its time, and to build has its time."That harog (to kill) is placed over ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:4 - --
"To weep has its time, and to laugh has its time; to mourn has its time, and to dance has its time."It is possible that the author was led by the co...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:5 - --
"To throw stones has its time, and to gather together stones has its time; to embrace has its time, and to refrain from embracing has its time."Did ...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:6 - --
"To seek has its time, and to lose has its time; to lay up has its time, and to throw away has its time."Vaihinger and others translate לאבּד ,...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:7 - --
7 a . "To rend has its time, and to sew has its time."When evil tidings come, when the tidings of death come, then is the time for rending the garm...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:8 - --
"To love has its time, and to hate has its time; war has its time, and peace has its time."In the two pairs of contrasts here, the contents of the f...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:9 - --
Since, then, everything has its time depending not on human influence, but on the determination and providence of God, the question arises: "What ga...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:10-11 - --
"I saw the travail, which God gave to the children of men to fatigue themselves with it - : He hath well arranged everything beautiful in its appoin...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:12 - --
"Thus I then perceived that among them (men) there is nothing better than to enjoy themselves, and indulge themselves in their life."The resignation...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:13 - --
"But also that he should eat and drink, and see good in all his labour, is for every man a gift of God."The inverted and yet anacoluthistic formatio...
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Keil-Delitzsch: Ecc 3:14 - --
"Thus I discerned it then, that all that God will do exists for ever; nothing is to be added to it, and nothing taken from it: God has thus directed...
Constable -> Ecc 2:18--6:10; Ecc 3:1--4:4
Constable: Ecc 2:18--6:10 - --B. General Observations 2:18-6:9
Thus far Solomon had reflected on the futility of all human endeavor ge...
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