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Ecclesiastes
Chapter Two
Ecclesiastes 2
Chapter Contents
The vanity and vexation of mirth
sensual pleasure
riches
and pomp. (1-11) Human wisdom insufficient. (12-17) This world to be
used according to the will of God. (18-26)
Commentary on Ecclesiastes 2:1-11
(Read Ecclesiastes 2:1-11)
Solomon soon found mirth and pleasure to be vanity. What
does noisy
flashy mirth towards making a man happy? The manifold devices of
men's hearts
to get satisfaction from the world
and their changing from one
thing to another
are like the restlessness of a man in a fever. Perceiving it
was folly to give himself to wine
he next tried the costly amusements of
princes. The poor
when they read such a description
are ready to feel
discontent. But the remedy against all such feelings is in the estimate of it all
by the owner himself. All was vanity and vexation of spirit: and the same
things would yield the same result to us
as to Solomon. Having food and
raiment
let us therewith be content. His wisdom remained with him; a strong
understanding
with great human knowledge. But every earthly pleasure
when
unconnected with better blessings
leaves the mind as eager and unsatisfied as
before. Happiness arises not from the situation in which we are placed. It is
only through Jesus Christ that final blessedness can be attained.
Commentary on Ecclesiastes 2:12-17
(Read Ecclesiastes 2:12-17)
Solomon found that knowledge and prudence were preferable
to ignorance and folly
though human wisdom and knowledge will not make a man
happy. The most learned of men
who dies a stranger to Christ Jesus
will
perish equally with the most ignorant; and what good can commendations on earth
do to the body in the grave
or the soul in hell? And the spirits of just men
made perfect cannot want them. So that if this were all
we might be led to
hate our life
as it is all vanity and vexation of spirit.
Commentary on Ecclesiastes 2:18-26
(Read Ecclesiastes 2:18-26)
Our hearts are very loth to quit their expectations of
great things from the creature; but Solomon came to this at length. The world
is a vale of tears
even to those that have much of it. See what fools they
are
who make themselves drudges to the world
which affords a man nothing
better than subsistence for the body. And the utmost he can attain in this
respect is to allow himself a sober
cheerful use thereof
according to his
rank and condition. But we must enjoy good in our labour; we must use those
things to make us diligent and cheerful in worldly business. And this is the
gift of God. Riches are a blessing or a curse to a man
according as he has
or
has not
a heart to make a good use of them. To those that are accepted of the
Lord
he gives joy and satisfaction in the knowledge and love of him. But to
the sinner he allots labour
sorrow
vanity
and vexation
in seeking a worldly
portion
which yet afterwards comes into better hands. Let the sinner seriously
consider his latter end. To seek a lasting portion in the love of Christ and
the blessings it bestows
is the only way to true and satisfying enjoyment even
of this present world.
── Matthew Henry《Concise Commentary on Ecclesiastes》
Ecclesiastes 2
Verse 1
[1] I said in mine heart
Go to now
I will prove thee with
mirth
therefore enjoy pleasure: and
behold
this also is vanity.
I said — Being disappointed of my hopes from knowledge
I
resolved to try another course.
Go to — O my soul! I will try whether I cannot make thee
happy
by the enjoyment of sensual delights.
Vanity — Is vain
and unable to make men happy.
Verse 2
[2] I said of laughter
It is mad: and of mirth
What doeth
it?
It is mad — This is an act of madness
more
fit for fools who know nothing
than for wise men in this sinful
and
dangerous
and deplorable state of mankind.
What doth it — What good doth it? Or how can it
make men happy? I challenge all the Epicures in the world to give me a solid
answer.
Verse 3
[3] I sought in mine heart to give myself unto wine
yet
acquainting mine heart with wisdom; and to lay hold on folly
till I might see
what was that good for the sons of men
which they should do under the heaven
all the days of their life.
To wine — To gratify myself with delicious meats and drinks.
Yet — Yet resolving to use my wisdom
that I might try
whether I could not arrive at satisfaction
by mixing wine and wisdom together.
To lay hold — To pursue sensual pleasures
which was my folly.
'Till — 'Till I might find out the true way to contentment and
satisfaction
during this mortal life.
Verse 6
[6] I made me pools of water
to water therewith the wood
that bringeth forth trees:
The wood — The nurseries of young trees
which for the multitude
of them were like a wood or forest.
Verse 8
[8] I gathered me also silver and gold
and the peculiar
treasure of kings and of the provinces: I gat me men singers and women singers
and the delights of the sons of men
as musical instruments
and that of all
sorts.
Peculiar treasure — The greatest jewels
and rarities of other kings
which they gave to me
either as a tribute
or by
way of present.
Of provinces — Which were imposed upon or
presented by all the provinces of my dominions.
Verse 9
[9] So I was great
and increased more than all that were
before me in Jerusalem: also my wisdom remained with me.
Great — In riches
and power
and glory.
My wisdom remained — As yet I was not
wholly seduced from God.
Verse 10
[10] And whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept not from them
I
withheld not my heart from any joy; for my heart rejoiced in all my labour: and
this was my portion of all my labour.
And — Whatsoever was grateful to my senses.
Rejoiced — I had the comfort of all my labours
and was not
hindered from the full enjoyment of them by sickness or war
or any other
calamity.
My portion — This present enjoyment of them
was all the benefit which I could expect from all my labours. So that I made
the best of them.
Verse 11
[11] Then I looked on all the works that my hands had
wrought
and on the labour that I had laboured to do: and
behold
all was
vanity and vexation of spirit
and there was no profit under the sun.
Vexation — I found myself wholly dissatisfied.
No profit — The pleasure was past
and I was
never the better for it
but as empty as before.
Verse 12
[12] And I turned myself to behold wisdom
and madness
and
folly: for what can the man do that cometh after the king? even that which hath
been already done.
I turned — Being frustrated of my hopes in pleasure
I returned
to a second consideration of my first choice
to see whether there was not more
satisfaction to be gotten from wisdom
than I discovered at my first view.
Done — As by others
so especially by myself. They can make
no new discoveries as to this point. They can make no more of the pleasures of
sense than I have done. Let me then try once more
whether wisdom can give
happiness.
Verse 13
[13] Then I saw that wisdom excelleth folly
as far as light
excelleth darkness.
I saw — I allowed thus much. Although wisdom is not sufficient
to make men happy
yet it is of a far greater use than vain pleasures
or any
other follies.
Verse 14
[14] The wise man's eyes are in his head; but the fool
walketh in darkness: and I myself perceived also that one event happeneth to
them all.
Head — In their proper place. He hath the use of his eyes and
reason
and foresees
and so avoids many dangers and mischiefs.
Yet — Notwithstanding this excellency of wisdom above folly
at last they both come to one end. Both are subject to the same calamities
and
to death itself
which takes away all difference between them.
Verse 15
[15] Then said I in my heart
As it happeneth to the fool
so
it happeneth even to me; and why was I then more wise? Then I said in my heart
that this also is vanity.
Why — What benefit have I by my wisdom?
Verse 16
[16] For there is no remembrance of the wise more than of the
fool for ever; seeing that which now is in the days to come shall all be forgotten.
And how dieth the wise man? as the fool.
For — Their memory
though it may flourish for a season
yet
will in a little time be worn out; as we see it
most of the wise men of former
ages
whose very names
together with all their monuments
are utterly lost.
As the fool — He must die as certainly as the
fool.
Verse 17
[17] Therefore I hated life; because the work that is wrought
under the sun is grievous unto me: for all is vanity and vexation of spirit.
Life — My life was a burden to me.
Is grievous — All human designs and works are
so far from yielding me satisfaction
that the consideration of them increases
my discontent.
Verse 18
[18] Yea
I hated all my labour which I had taken under the
sun: because I should leave it unto the man that shall be after me.
All my labour — All these riches and buildings
and other fruits of my labour
were aggravations of my misery.
Because — Because I must
and that everlastingly
leave them all
behind me.
Verse 19
[19] And who knoweth whether he shall be a wise man or a
fool? yet shall he have rule over all my labour wherein I have laboured
and
wherein I have shewed myself wise under the sun. This is also vanity.
Or a fool — Who will undo all that I have
done
and turn the effects of my wisdom into instruments of his folly. Some
think he had such an opinion of Rehoboam.
Verse 20
[20] Therefore I went about to cause my heart to despair of
all the labour which I took under the sun.
Despair — I gave myself up to despair of ever reaping that
satisfaction which I promised to myself.
Verse 21
[21] For there is a man whose labour is in wisdom
and in
knowledge
and in equity; yet to a man that hath not laboured therein shall he
leave it for his portion. This also is vanity and a great evil.
Wisdom — Who uses great industry
and prudence
and justice
too
in the use and management of his affairs.
To a man — Who has spent his days in sloth and folly.
A great evil — A great disorder in itself
and a
great torment to a considering mind.
Verse 22
[22] For what hath man of all his labour
and of the vexation
of his heart
wherein he hath laboured under the sun?
For what — What comfort or benefit remains to any man after this
short and frail life is once ended?
Verse 23
[23] For all his days are sorrows
and his travail grief; yea
his heart taketh not rest in the night. This is also vanity.
Sorrows — Full of sorrows. Tho' he took great and unwearied
pains all his days
yet the toils of his body were accompanied with vexation of
mind.
His heart — Because his sleep was broken with
perplexing cares.
Verse 24
[24] There is nothing better for a man
than that he should
eat and drink
and that he should make his soul enjoy good in his labour. This
also I saw
that it was from the hand of God.
Enjoy — That he should thankfully take
and freely and
chearfully enjoy the comforts which God gives him.
It was — A singular gift of God.
Verse 25
[25] For who can eat
or who else can hasten hereunto
more
than I?
More than I — Therefore he could best tell
whether they were able of themselves
without God's special gift
to yield a
man content
in the enjoying of them. Who can pursue them with more diligence
obtain them with more readiness
or embrace them with more greediness?
Verse 26
[26] For God giveth to a man that is good in his sight wisdom
and knowledge
and joy: but to the sinner he giveth travail
to gather and to
heap up
that he may give to him that is good before God. This also is vanity
and vexation of spirit.
Wisdom — To direct him how to use his comforts aright; that so
they may be blessings
and not curses to him.
Joy — A thankful contented mind.
To heap up — He giveth him up to insatiable
desires
and wearisome labours
that he may leave it to others
yea to such as
he least desired
to good and virtuous men.
── John Wesley《Explanatory Notes on Ecclesiastes》
02 Chapter 2
Verses 1-26
Go to now
I will prove thee with mirth.
The threefold view of human life
Three views of human life are given in this remarkable chapter.
I. The theatrical
view of life (Ecclesiastes 2:1-11). The writer seeks to
prove his heart with mirth and laughter; he treats his flesh with wine; he
gathers peculiar treasure;
he is enamoured of greatness
magnificence
and abundance; he delights in
architecture
scenery
literature
music
song. Everything is spectacular
dazzling
wonderful. This is a very misleading idea of the world in which we find
ourselves.
1. It is partial. Nothing whatever is said here of the problems which
challenge us--of duty
enterprise
discipline
work
sacrifice
suffering;
nothing about character or conduct. It really leaves out two-thirds of life
and the noblest two-thirds.
2. It is exaggerated. It contemplates great works
great possessions
and great fame. Life is largely made up of commonplace tasks
homely faces
uneventful days
monotonous experiences.
3. It is selfish. You see throughout how prominent the individual is.
It is all “I.” The writer never thinks of other people except as they may
enhance his pleasure
or be spectators of his glory.
4. It is superficial. There is not a word about conscience
righteousness
responsibility. Now beware of the theatrical view of life--of
the great
the gaudy
the glistering. True life
as a rule
is simple
sober
and severe. Beware of companions who would represent life to you in a gay and
voluptuous light. Beware also of your reading
and see that it does not give a
false and delusive idea of the life that awaits you. The world is not a
theatre
not a magician’s cave
not a carnival; it is a temple where all things
are serious and sacred.
II. The sepulchral
view of life (Ecclesiastes 2:12-23). Men usually start
with the rosy ideal of life
and then finding its falsity--that there are tears
as well as laughter--they sink into vexation and despair
and paint all things
black as night. But the world is not emptiness; it is a cup deep and large
delightful and overflowing. Fulness
not emptiness
is the sign of the world.
There is the fulness of nature--of intellectual life--of society--of practical
life--the manifold and enduring unfolding of the interests and movements and
fortunes of humanity. There is the fulness of religious life. A true man never
feels the world to be limited
meagre
shallow. God is no mockery
and He will
not mock us.
III. The religious
view of life (Ecclesiastes 2:24-26).
1. The purification and strengthening of the soul will secure to us
all the brightness and sweetness of life.
2. And as the Spirit of Christ leads to the realization of the bright
side of the world
so shall it fortify you against the dark side. Carry the Spirit of Christ into
this dark side
and you shall rejoice in tribulation also. In one of the
illustrated magazines I noticed a picture of the flower-market of Madrid in a
snowstorm. The golden and purple glories were mixed with the winter’s snow. And
in a true Christian life sorrow is strangely mingled with joy. Winter in
Siberia is one thing
winter in the flower-market of the South is another
thing; and so the power of sorrow is broken and softened in the Christian life
by great convictions
consolations
and hopes. Do not accept the theatrical view of
life; life is not all beer and ski[ties
operas
banquets
galas
and
burlesques. Do not accept the sepulchral theory of life; it is absolutely
false. Toequeville said to Sumner
“Life is neither a pain nor a pleasure
but
serious business
which it is our duty to carry through and conclude with
honour.” This is a true and noble conception of life
and it can be fulfilled
only as Christ renews and strengthens us. (W. L. Watkinson.)
The pleasures of sin and the pleasures of Christ’s service
contrasted
I. What are the
pleasures of sin?
1. They are present pleasures; now and here; not in the dim distance;
not in the next world
but in this.
2. They are varied and many: adapted to every taste
capacity
age
condition.
3. They fall in with the desires and cravings of our carnal nature.
4. They possess the power to excite in a wonderful degree
--the
fancy
the mind
the passions
--ambition
lust
pride
etc.
II. What are the
pleasures or rewards of Christ’s service?
1. They are real and substantial
not fictitious and imaginary or
deceptive.
2. They are not all in the future. No small part of them are here
and enjoyed day by day. Heaven is the ultimate state of blessedness
the final
reward in Christ’s service. But heaven is begun in every reconciled
sanctified
soul at once and progresses to the consummation.
3. Christ’s service is soul-satisfying. It touches
elevates
expands
gives dignity to
and harmonizes and gladdens man’s highest nature.
4. The pleasure
the reward of Christ’s service is enduring. It fears
no death
knows no end. It is perpetual
everlasting
ever augmenting. (J.
M. Sherwood
D. D.)
A strange experiment
He now resolves to abandon the “studious cloisters.” For their
quiet he will substitute the excitement of feverish pleasure. But this
tremendous reaction from the joys of the philosopher to coarser animal pleasure
is not easy. He has to goad his mind before it is ready for this new and low
direction. He has to say to his heart
“Go to now
I will prove thee with
mirth.” What a fall is here
from the contemplation of high themes of truth
the works of God and man
to merely sensual pleasure! But the experiment is
brief. It would be. For
a man of wisdom could not be long in discovering the utter worthlessness of
sensual gratification; sharp and swift comes the conclusion: “I said of
laughter
It is mad
and of mirth
What doeth it?” It has sometimes been the
question of thoughtful people how the wise man could bring himself to try this
second experiment
the effort to find happiness in “the lust of the flesh” and
“the lust of the eye.” This
it is usually thought
is the delight of fools.
But that a man who could say he “had seen the works that are done under the
sun
” whose philosophy had ranged over new things until they were seen to be the old
things recurrent
who could truly say that he had “gotten more wisdom than all
they that had been before him in Jerusalem
”--for such an one to fly from
philosophy to pleasure
from meditation to mirth
is accounted phenomenally
strange. But it is not. Across just such extremes does the restless spirit fly
that has not yet learned that happiness is not the creature of circumstance
but the outgrowth of the life. And how it magnifies this inner character of
happiness to reflect that even wisdom pursued for its own sake may be seen to
be so hollow that the soul will fly to the farthest distance from it
inferring
that even sensual folly may be a relief from the emptiness of knowledge! (C.
L. Thompson
D. D.)
Go to now
I will prove thee with mirth.
The threefold view of human life
Three views of human life are given in this remarkable chapter.
I. The theatrical
view of life (Ecclesiastes
2:1-11). The writer
seeks to prove his heart with mirth and laughter; he treats his flesh with
wine; he gathers peculiar treasure;
he is enamoured of greatness
magnificence
and abundance; he delights in
architecture
scenery
literature
music
song. Everything is spectacular
dazzling
wonderful. This is a very misleading idea of the world in which we
find ourselves.
1. It is partial.
Nothing whatever is said here of the problems which challenge us--of duty
enterprise
discipline
work
sacrifice
suffering; nothing about character or
conduct. It really leaves out two-thirds of life
and the noblest two-thirds.
2. It is
exaggerated. It contemplates great works
great possessions
and great fame.
Life is largely made up of commonplace tasks
homely faces
uneventful days
monotonous experiences.
3. It is selfish.
You see throughout how prominent the individual is. It is all “I.” The writer
never thinks of other people except as they may enhance his pleasure
or be
spectators of his glory.
4. It is
superficial. There is not a word about conscience
righteousness
responsibility. Now beware of the theatrical view of life--of the great
the
gaudy
the glistering. True life
as a rule
is simple
sober
and severe.
Beware of companions who would represent life to you in a gay and voluptuous
light. Beware also of your reading
and see that it does not give a false and
delusive idea of the life that awaits you. The world is not a theatre
not a
magician’s cave
not a carnival; it is a temple where all things are serious
and sacred.
II. The sepulchral
view of life (Ecclesiastes
2:12-23). Men usually
start with the rosy ideal of life
and then finding its falsity--that there are
tears as well as laughter--they sink into vexation and despair
and paint all
things black as night. But the world is not emptiness; it is a cup deep and
large
delightful and overflowing. Fulness
not emptiness
is the sign of the
world. There is the fulness of nature--of intellectual life--of society--of
practical life--the manifold and enduring unfolding of the interests and
movements and fortunes of humanity. There is the fulness of religious life. A
true man never feels the world to be limited
meagre
shallow. God is no
mockery
and He will not mock us.
III. The religious
view of life (Ecclesiastes
2:24-26).
1. The
purification and strengthening of the soul will secure to us all the brightness
and sweetness of life.
2. And as the
Spirit of Christ leads to the realization of the bright side of the world
so
shall it fortify you against the
dark side. Carry the Spirit of Christ into this dark side
and
you shall rejoice in tribulation also. In one of the illustrated magazines I
noticed a picture of the flower-market of Madrid in a snowstorm. The golden and
purple glories were mixed with the winter’s snow. And in a true Christian life
sorrow is strangely mingled with joy. Winter in Siberia is one thing
winter in
the flower-market of the South is another thing; and so the power of sorrow is
broken and softened in the Christian life by great convictions
consolations
and hopes. Do not accept the theatrical
view of life; life is not all beer and ski[ties
operas
banquets
galas
and
burlesques. Do not accept the sepulchral theory of life; it is absolutely
false. Toequeville said to Sumner
“Life is neither a pain nor a pleasure
but
serious business
which it is our duty to carry through and conclude with
honour.” This is a true and noble conception of life
and it can be fulfilled
only as Christ renews and strengthens us. (W. L. Watkinson.)
The pleasures of sin and the pleasures of Christ’s service
contrasted
I. What are the
pleasures of sin?
1. They are
present pleasures; now and here; not in the dim distance; not in the next world
but in this.
2. They are varied
and many: adapted to every taste
capacity
age
condition.
3. They fall in
with the desires and cravings of our carnal nature.
4. They possess
the power to excite in a wonderful degree
--the fancy
the mind
the passions
--ambition
lust
pride
etc.
II. What are the
pleasures or rewards of Christ’s service?
1. They are real
and substantial
not fictitious and imaginary or deceptive.
2. They are not
all in the future. No small part of them are here
and enjoyed day by day.
Heaven is the ultimate state of blessedness
the final reward in Christ’s
service. But heaven is begun in every reconciled
sanctified soul at once and
progresses to the consummation.
3. Christ’s
service is soul-satisfying. It touches
elevates
expands
gives dignity to
and harmonizes and gladdens man’s highest nature.
4. The pleasure
the reward of Christ’s service is enduring. It fears no death
knows no end. It
is perpetual
everlasting
ever augmenting. (J. M. Sherwood
D. D.)
A strange experiment
He now resolves to abandon the “studious cloisters.” For their
quiet he will substitute the excitement of feverish pleasure. But this
tremendous reaction from the joys of the philosopher to coarser animal pleasure
is not easy. He has to goad his mind before it is ready for this new and low
direction. He has to say to his heart
“Go to now
I will prove thee with
mirth.” What a fall is here
from the contemplation of high themes of truth
the works of God and man
to merely sensual pleasure! But the experiment is
brief. It would be. For
a man of wisdom could not be long in discovering the utter worthlessness of
sensual gratification; sharp and swift comes the conclusion: “I said of
laughter
It is mad
and of mirth
What doeth it?” It has sometimes been the
question of thoughtful people how the wise man could bring himself to try this
second experiment
the effort to find happiness in “the lust of the flesh” and
“the lust of the eye.” This
it is usually thought
is the delight of fools.
But that a man who could say he “had seen the works that are done under the
sun
” whose philosophy had ranged over new things until they were seen to be the old
things recurrent
who could truly say that he had “gotten more wisdom than all
they that had been before him in Jerusalem
”--for such an one to fly from
philosophy to pleasure
from meditation to mirth
is accounted phenomenally
strange. But it is not. Across just such extremes does the restless spirit fly
that has not yet learned that happiness is not the creature of circumstance
but the outgrowth of the life. And how it magnifies this inner character of
happiness to reflect that even wisdom pursued for its own sake may be seen to
be so hollow that the soul will fly to the farthest distance from it
inferring
that even sensual folly may be a relief from the emptiness of knowledge! (C.
L. Thompson
D. D.)
Verse 2
I said of laughter
It is mad.
The wit and the madman
If you were asked who had sat for the portrait of a madman
you
would be disposed to look out for some monster
some scourge of our race
in
whom vast powers had been at the disposal of ungoverned passions
and who had
covered a country with weeping and with desolate families; and at first we
might be readily tempted to conclude that Solomon employed somewhat exaggerated
terms when he identified laughter with madness. Neither need we suppose that
all laughter is indiscriminately condemned; as though gloom marked a sane person
and cheerfulness an insane. “Rejoice evermore” is a scriptural direction
and
blithe-heartedness ought to be both felt and displayed by those who know that
they have God for their Guardian
and Christ for their Surety. But it is the
laughter of the world which the wise man calls madness; and there will be no
difficulty in showing you
in two or three instances
how close is the parallel
between the maniac and the man by whom this laughter is excited. We would first
point out to you how that conflict
of which this creation is the scene
and
the leading antagonists in which are Satan and God
is a conflict between
falsehood and truth. The entrance of evil was effected through a lie; and when
Christ promised the descent of the Holy Ghost
whose special office it was to
be to regenerate human kind
to restore their lost purity
and therewith their
lost happiness
He promised it under the character of the Spirit of truth; as
though truth were all that was needed to the making of this earth once more a
paradise. And it is in accordance with this representation of that great struggle
which
fixes the regards of higher orders of intelligence
as being a struggle between
falsehood and truth
that so much criminality is everywhere in Scripture
attached to a lie
and that those on whom a lie may be charged
are represented
as thereby more especially obnoxious to the anger of God. “A lying tongue
”
says the wise man
“is but for a moment”: as though sudden vengeance might be
expected to descend upon the liar
and sweep him away ere he could reiterate
the falsehood. And if there be thus
as it were
a kind of awful majesty in
truth
so that the swerving from it is emphatically treason against God and the
soul
it follows that whatever is calculated to diminish reverence for truth
or to palliate falsehood
is likely to work as wide mischief as may well be
imagined. You are
all ready without hesitation to admit that nothing would go further towards
loosening the bonds of society than the destroying the shame which now attaches
to a lie; and accordingly you would rise up as by one common impulse to
withstand any man or any authority which should propose to shield the liar
or
to make his offence comparatively unimportant. But whilst the bold and direct
falsehood thus gains for itself the general execration
mainly perhaps because
felt to militate against the general interest
there is a ready indulgence in
the more sportive falsehood
which is rather the playing with truth than the
making a lie. Here it is that we shall find laughter which is madness
and
identify with a madman him by whom the laughter is raised. There is very
frequently a departure from truth in that mirthful discourse to which Solomon
refers. In amusing a table
and causing light-heartedness and gaiety to go
round the company
men may be teaching others to view with less abhorrence a
lie
or diminishing in them that sanctity of truth which is at once an
admirable virtue and essential to the existence of any other. I do not fear the
influence of one whom the world denounces as a liar; but I do of one whom it
applauds as a wit. I fear it in regard of reverence for truth--a reverence
which
if it do not of itself make a great character
must be strong
wheresoever the character is great. The man who passes off a clever fiction
or
amusingly distorts an occurrence
or dextrously misrepresents a fact
may say
that he only means to be amusing
and that nothing is further from his thoughts
than the doing an injury; but nevertheless
forasmuch as it can hardly fail but
that he will lower the majesty of truth in the eyes of his neighbour
there may
be equally ample reason for assenting to the wise man’s decision--“I said of
laughter
It is mad: and of mirth
What doeth it?” But we have not yet given
the worst case of that laughter which may be identified with madness. It is
very true
that whatever tends to diminish men’s abhorrence of a lie
tends
equally to the spreading confusion and wretchedness
and may therefore be
justly classed amongst things which resemble the actings of a maniac. It is
also true that this tendency exists in much of that admired conversation whose
excellence virtually lies in its falseness; so that the correspondence is clear
between the wit and the madman. But it is not perhaps till the laughter is
turned upon sacred things that we have before us the madness in all its
wildness and in all its injuriousness. The man who in any way exercises his wit
upon the Bible conveys undoubtedly an impression
whether he intend it or not
that he is not a believer in the inspiration of the Bible; for it is altogether
insupposable that a man who really recognized in the Bible the Word of the
living God
who felt that its pages had been traced by the very hand which
spread out the firmament
should select from it passages to parody
or
expressions which might be thrown into a ludicrous form. It may be true that he
does this only in joke
and with no evil design; he never meant
he may tell
you
when he introduced Scripture ridiculously
or amused his companions by
sarcastic allusions to the peculiarities of the pious--he never meant to
recommend a contempt for religion
or to insinuate a disbelief in the Bible
and perhaps he never did; but nevertheless
even if you acquit him of harmful
intention
and suppose him utterly unconscious that he is working a moral
injury
he who frames jokes on sacred things
or points his wit with scriptural
allusions
may do far more mischief to the souls of his fellow-men than if he
engaged openly in assaulting the great truths of Christianity. If you have
heard a text quoted in a ridiculous sense
or applied to some laughable
occurrence
you will hardly be able to separate the text from that occurrence;
the association will be permanent; and when you hear the text again
though it may
be in the house of God
or under circumstances which make you wish for the most
thorough concentration of thought on the most awful things
yet will there come
back upon you- all the joke and all the parody
so that the mind will be
dissipated and the very sanctuary profaned. And hence the justice of
identifying with madness the laughter excited by reference to sacred things.
Now
the upshot of the whole matter is
that we ought to set a watch upon our
tongues
to pray God to keep the door of our lips. “Death and life are in the
power of the tongue.” Of all the gifts with which we have been entrusted
the
gift of speech is perhaps that through which we may work most of evil or of
good
and nevertheless it is that of whose right exercise we seem to make least
account. It appears to us a hard saying
that for every idle word which they
speak men shall give an account at the last
and we scarcely discern any
proportion between a few syllables uttered without thought and those
retributive judgments which must be looked for hereafter; but if you observe
how we have been able to vindicate the correctness of the assertion of our
text
though it be only the idle talker whose laughter is declared to be
madness
effecting the same results
and producing the same evils as the fury
of the uncontrolled maniac
you will see that a word may be no insignificant
thing--that its consequences may be widely disastrous
and certainly the
speaker is answerable for the consequences which may possibly ensue
however
God may prevent their actual occurrence. The fiction may not make a liar
and
the jest may not make an infidel
but since it is the tendency of the fiction
to make liars
and the tendency of the jest to make infidels
he who invents
the one
or utters the other
is as criminal as though the result had been the
same as the tendency. (H. Melvill
B. D.)
Verse 11
I
looked on all the works that my hands had wrought
and on the labour that I had
laboured to do.
The review
Our
Lord pronounced the children of this world “wise in their generation”: and who
can doubt that thousands who are lost would
with God’s blessing
be saved
did
they bring the same prudence
and diligence
and energy to their eternal
as
they do to their temporal interests? Some years ago a man was called to decide
between preserving his life
and parting with the gains of his lifetime. A
gold-digger
he stood on the deck of a ship that
coming from Australian shores
had--as some all but reach heaven--all but reached her harbour in safety. But
as the proverb runs
there is much between the cup and the lip. Night came
lowering down; and with the night a storm that wrecked ship
and hopes
and
fortunes
all together. The dawning light but revealed a scene of horror--death
staring them in the face. The sea
lashed into fury
ran mountains high; no
boat could live in her. One chance still remained. Pale women
weeping
children
feeble and timid men
must die; but a stout
brave swimmer
with
trust in God
and disencumbered of all impediment
s
might reach the shore
where hundreds stood ready to dash into the boiling surf
and
seizing
save
him. One man was observed to go below. He bound around his waist a heavy belt
filled
with gold
the hard gains of his life; and returned to the deck. One after
another
he saw his fellow-passengers leap overboard. After a brief but
terrible struggle
head after head went down--sunk by the gold they had fought
hard to gain
and were loath to lose. Slowly he was seen to unbuckle his belt.
If he parts with it
he is a beggar; but then if he keeps it
he dies. He
poised it in his hand; balanced it for a while; took a long
sad look at it;
and then with one strong
desperate effort
flung it far out into the roaring
sea. Wise man! It sinks with a sullen plunge; and now he follows it--not to
sink
but
disencumbered of its weight
to swim; to beat the billows manfully;
and
riding on the foaming surge
to reach the shore. Well done
brave gold-digger!
Aye
well done
and well chosen; but if “a man will give all that he hath for
his life
” how much more should he give all he hath for his soul! Better to
part with gold than with God; to bear the heaviest cross than miss a heavenly
crown.
I. Inquire what we have done for god. We have had many
daily
innumerable
opportunities of serving Him
speaking for Him
working for Him
not sparing ourselves for Him who spared not His own Son for us. Yet
how
little have we attempted; and how much less have we done in the spirit of our
Saviour’s words
“Wist ye not that I must be about my Father’s business?” There
is no moor in our country so barren as our hearts. They drink up God’s
blessings as the sands of the Sahara heaven’s rain.
II. Inquire what we have done for ourselves. No profit? Do you reply
I have made large profits--my business has paid me
and yielded large
returns--I have added acres to my lands. But
let me say that that
perhaps
is
not all you have added. What if by every day you have lived without God and for
the world
you have added difficulties to your salvation; shackles to your
limbs; bars to your prison; guilt to your soul; sins to your debt; thorns to
your dying pillow? Let no man be cast down; give way to despair! Years are
lost; but the soul is not yet lost. There is still time to be saved. Haste
then
and away.
III. Inquire what we have done for others. Suppose that our blessed
Lord
sitting down on Olivet to review the years of His busy life
had looked
on all the works which His hands had wrought
--what a crowd
a long procession
of miracles and mercies had passed before Him! I believe there were more good
works crowded into one single day of Christ’s life than you will find spread
over the lifelong history of any Christian. Trying our piety by this test
what
testimony does our past life bear to its character? The tree is known by its
fruits. In conclusion--
1. This review
God’s
Spirit blessing it
should awaken careless sinners.
2. This review should stir up God’s people. (T. Guthrie
D.
D.)
Love not the
world
I. The habit of men in pursuing worldly objects.
1. By worldly objects we mean those which terminate entirely on the
earth
and which occupy human thought and pursuit without any connection with
spiritual and eternal things.
2. The cause to which the pursuit of worldly objects is to be
ascribed it is of course of immense importance to assign and to remember; and
that cause is to be found only in the moral corruption or depravity of human
nature.
II. The evils by which the pursuit of worldly objects is invariably
attended.
1. The pursuit of worldly objects is associated with much
disappointment and sorrow in the present state.
2. The pursuit of worldly objects places in jeopardy the final and immortal
happiness of the soul.
III. The vast importance of turning our attention from worldly objects
and of seeking the attainment of far higher blessings.
1. As we are devoted to religion
in the present world we obtain
solid satisfaction and peace. There is no disappointment in religion; all that
it confers is solid and lasting; nor is there one who under Divine grace has
been led to yield his heart to its power
who does not at once
according to
its legitimate operation
find the storms and tempests of the spirit subside
into one placid and beautiful calm.
2. As we are devoted to religion
we secure
beyond the present
state
the salvation and immortal happiness of the soul. (J. Parsons.)
The failure of
pleasures
I. The pleasures of great and good men may be vanity and vexation of
spirit. Solomon was great
and he was good. This is the inspired judgment of
him (Nehemiah 13:26). But he had for the time declined from greatness
swerved from
goodness
and it was in this search for pleasure. Here we see how degraded a
man of high rank
splendid genius
rich character
may become. Truly “the
pinnacle overhangs the precipice.”
II. The pleasures of skill and toil may become vanity and vexation of
spirit. Those that Solomon found so utterly dissatisfying were not alone
pleasures of appetite and of indulgence. There were thought
contrivance
taste
effort involved. So pleasures along the lines even of art
and science
and
literature may
as Dundas
and David Scott
and Chesterfield all prove
become
vanity and vexation of spirit.
III. Pleasures in themselves fitted to delight may become vanity and
vexation of spirit. The abundance of life
the hues of the flowers
the
fragrance and melodies and shade
all make “gardens” sources of exquisite
delight
and it may be of innocent and high delight
for God planted a garden
for unfallen man. Yet these gardens gave no satisfaction to Solomon; and
similarly many real pleasures give no joy to men. So it has with many become an
adage
that “Life would be very tolerable if it were not for its amusements.”
IV. In all these cases the selfish search for pleasure has made it
vanity and vexation of spirit. It was thus with Solomon: it will be thus with
all. Selfishness is the cankerworm in the flower of such pleasures
the alloy
that the laboratory of such experiences as Solomon discovers in such would-be delights.
(R. Thomas.)
The vanity of
worldly happiness
There
is no man living can ever expect to be in more happy outward circumstances than
Solomon was
or to enjoy more of this world’s good than Solomon did. And if he
after all
found nothing but labour and trouble
and dissatisfaction and
emptiness
no real profit
no advantage in any worldly thing
what must we
expect to find? Certainly no better fortune than he did. And if this be the
case of mankind
how unaccountable is it that any of us should fix our thoughts
and designs
our comforts and expectancies upon anything under the sun. It is
just the same folly that those men are guilty of
that being tossed up and down
at sea
yet nevertheless desire to be still there
and cannot endure to think
of coming to a port. It is the madness of those
that being condemned to dig in
the mines
are so much in love with toil and labour
with chains and darkness
that they despise a life above ground
a life of light and liberty. In a word
it is the fantastic punishment of Tantalus in the poets that these men wish for
themselves: they desire to spend their time for ever in gaping after those
lovely pleasant fruits which (they fancy) seem almost to touch their mouths.
Yet all their labour is in vain; and as they never did
so they never shall be
able to come at them.
1. Let us consider the continual toil and labour that mankind in this
world are exposed to. The despatching of one business is but the making room for some
other
and possibly more troublesome one
that is presently to follow after. We
toil till we are weary
and have exhausted our strength and spirits
and then
we think to refresh and recruit ourselves; but
alas! that refreshment is only
to prepare and enable us for the bearing the next hour’s burthen
which will
inevitably come upon us.
2. But this is not all: we might
possibly
find some comfort in that
pains and labour we take in this world
at least they would be much more supportable if
we were sure our designs would always succeed; if we were sure to attain that
which we labour for; but
alas! it is oftentimes quite otherwise. We meet with
frequent disappointments in our endeavours; nay
we cannot say beforehand of
anything we undertake that it shall certainly come to pass as we would have it.
And this is a matter that renders the world a place of still more restlessness
and disquiet.
3. Supposing
after several disappointments
and with much
difficulty
we do attain our ends
and get what our souls desired
yet doth the
thing answer our expectation? Do we find that it is fit
and good
and
convenient for us? If so
then we seem to have laboured to some purpose. But if
not
then we are but still where we were; nay
we had better never have
troubled our heads about it. In all our labours we either hit
or miss; we
either succeed
or are disappointed. If we be disappointed
we are certainly
troubled; and if we do succeed
for anything we know
that very success may
prove our greatest unhappiness.
4. But let us suppose that we have brought no inconvenience upon
ourselves by our choice. Let us suppose our designs were reasonable
and they
rightly succeeded
and the circumstances of our condition are every way fit and
proper for us; yet
is this sufficient to procure us content? Alas! there is
too much reason to fear the contrary; for such is the constitution of this
world
that let us be in what circumstances we will
yet we shall meet with many
troubles and inconveniencies that do necessarily flow from the nature of that
condition which we are in
though otherwise it may be the fittest for us of all
others. There is no sincere unmingled good to be met with. Every state of life
as it hath something of good in it
so the best hath some evil displeasing
appendages inseparable adhering to it. Nay
perhaps
in true speaking
the
worldly happiness of any man’s condition is not to be measured by the multitude
of goods he enjoyeth in it
but rather by the fewness of the evils it brings
upon him.
5. But let us suppose we find no inconvenience in the circumstances
of our lives: we will suppose we are possessed of many goods from the enjoyment
of which we may promise to ourselves solid contentment and satisfaction. These
are our present thoughts. But are we sure we shall always continue in the same
mind? Are we sure that that which is now very grateful and agreeable
and affects us with a
sensible pleasure and delight
will continue always to do so? On the contrary
have we not much reason to fear
that
in a little time
it will grow dull and
unaffecting; nay
possibly
very irksome and displeasing?
6. To all these things let us add the numberless daily troubles and
discomposures of mind
not peculiar to any condition
as those I spoke of
before
but common to all
arising from men’s minds and tempers
and the things
and persons they converse with in the world. It is a melancholy consideration;
but I believe the experience of mankind will make it good
that there is scarce
a day in our lives that we pass in perfect uninterrupted peace and content
but
something or other every day happens that gives us trouble
and makes us uneasy
to ourselves.
7. But what must we say of the many sad accidents and more grievous
and weighty afflictions that do frequently exercise the patience of mankind? If
in the best condition of human life men are not happy
but everything is able
to ruffle and disorder them; O how miserable are they in the worst! So long as
we have mortal bodies exposed to sickness and diseases
to sad accidents and
casualties; so long as we have a frail nature that betrays us to a thousand
follies and sins; so long as we have dear friends and relations
or children
that we may be deprived of; so long as we may prove unfortunate in our
marriage
or in our posterity
or in the condition of life we have chosen; so
long as there are men to slander us
or to rob us
or to undermine us; so long
as there are storms at sea
or fire upon land; so long as there are enemies
abroad
or tumults
seditions
and turns of state at home: I say
so long as we
are exposed to these things
we must
every one of us
expect
in some degree
or other
to bear a share in the miseries of the world. And now
all these
things considered
judge ye whether
this world doth look like a place of rest; whether it is not rather a stage of
calamities and sad events. Judge ye whether the best of human things be not
“vanity”: but the worst of them intolerable “vexation of spirit.”
8. Which will still appear the more evident if we add this
that
though all we have hitherto said did go for nothing; though we could be
supposed to be exempted from all those inconveniencies and mischiefs I have
mentioned; though we could be supposed to be capable of an uninterrupted
enjoyment of the good things of this life as long as we live; yet even this
would not satisfy much to the making our state in this world easy and happy;
for there is one thing still would spoil all such hopes and pretences
and that
is
the fear of death
which hath made mankind all their lifetime subject to
bondage (Hebrews 2:15). O what a dismal reflection must this needs be to a man who bath
set up his rest in this world
and dreams of no other happiness but what he
hath here! To think that in a few years at the farthest
but possibly in a few
months or days
he shall lie down in the dust
and then all that he hath here
possessed and enjoyed is lost and gone
irrecoverably gone! O that we would
seriously think upon these things! We should certainly have this advantage by
it
that we should not any longer be cheated with the gaudy appearances of this
world
but look after something more solid
more substantial
than anything we
find here to live for
to set our hearts and affections upon. (Abp. Sharp.)
The vanity of
life
Consider
the vanity of the present state of being
considered as our only state.
Suppose
first
that a decree were to go forth perpetuating your present
condition--pronouncing that you should remain eternally just as you are now.
How would you receive such a decree? Is there one of you who would be willing
to stop the wheel of fortune now and for ever? If you will look into your own
hearts you will find that you are living more in the future than in the
present
more in your plans than in your possessions
.
that
you depend more on what you think that you are laying up for time to come than
on any means of enjoyment actually in hand. But what will this future on which
you are building bring to you? Incompleteness
vexation
disappointment
bereavement
sorrow. Few of your blossoms will ripen into fruit; few of your
plans will be realized; very little of what you now clearly see in the future
will shape itself as you see it. The farther you go on in life
the more blighted hopes
will lie behind you
the more vacant places will there be in the circle of your
kindred and friendship
the more will there be in your outward condition to
make you feel that there is no rest or home for you on this side of the grave. Again
if you
would look into your hearts
in the gayest and most gladsome moments of earthly
enjoyment
you will perceive much of this same emptiness and vanity. Who has
not at such times been conscious
as it were
of a double self
of an
uneasiness in the midst of gratification
of a restless feeling in the very
fulness of seeming joy
of a voice that whispers
“Up and be doing
” while many
voices bid us stay
and drown all other thoughts in the scene before ha? But
though at these seasons such thoughts will come over us
we crowd them out.
There are
however
times when they are forced upon us
and we cannot expel
them. There are times of sudden and overwhelming grief
when calamity breaks in
upon us like a swift flood
and seems to wash away the very ground on which we
stand--that earth’s fairest mansions are but whited sepulchres
her choicest
fruit but dust and ashes. We are then conscious of the frailty of what remains
to us
no less than of what has been taken from us
and can say from the heart
that there is nothing here below on which we can place the least
dependence
--nothing which we dare to love as we have loved
or to trust as we
have trusted. Then
were it not for the words of eternal life
we could say in
intense anguish
--“All is vanity and vexation of spirit
and there is no profit
under the sun.” But after all
though we walk in a vain show
there is
enjoyment in life
--in our mere earthly life. Yet from what does it flow? Not
from the ever-changing scene
not from the winter-frozen and summer-dried
fountains around us
but from the unchanging love of God
the bow of whose
promise remains fixed over the stream of time and the waves of unceasing
vicissitude. He who gives the ravens their food feeds also His human children
and by filling all things with His love makes us happy. And
blessed be God
there is that in life which is not vanity or vexation. The outer man may
perish
the desire of eyes and the pride of life may fail; but the signature of
God’s spirit on the inner man time cannot efface
or the waves of death wash
away. The soul
character
virtue
piety
remain
amidst the reverses of
fortune
the desolation of our households
the wasting of disease
and the
thunder-blast of death. (A. P. Peabody.)
Verse 14
The
wise man’s eyes are in his head; but the fool walketh in darkness.
The advantage
of wisdom over folly
Wisdom
possesses the same advantage over folly that sight does over blindness. The man
of wisdom
having all his wits about him
in the full possession and the
appropriate exercise of all his faculties
“guides his affairs with
discretion
” looks before him
thinks maturely of what he is doing
and by his
knowledge of men and things
is directed to the adoption of plans which promise
to be profitable
and to the prudent and successful prosecution of them. He
“foreseeth the evil
and hideth himself.” He aims at worthy ends
and employs
suitable means for their accomplishment. But the fool--the ignorant
and
inconsiderate
and improvident man--is continually in danger of stumbling
or
of going astray
like a person overtaken by darkness
who “knoweth not whither
he goeth.” He is ever prone to run blindly and heedlessly into absurd and
injurious projects
or to destroy such as are in themselves good
by blundering
in the execution of them. The fool’s eyes
it is elsewhere said
are “in the
ends of the earth
” roaming vainly and idly abroad
without serving his present
and needful purposes; gazing
as the organs of a vacant mind
on far-off
objects
and allowing him to stumble over what is immediately in his way.
Without foresight to anticipate probable evils
without even sagacity to avoid
such as are present
the fool is in perpetual hazard of iniuring and ruining
both himself and all who are so unfortunate as to stand connected with him
or
to be exposed to his influence. (R. Wardlaw
D. D.)
The wisdom of
the eye
I. To understand this proverb
notice
first
the contrasts which it
suggests. One of these is expressed in the context; the other is to be readily
and clearly inferred.
1. First
there is a contrast between persons. We have before us the
believer in God and the unbeliever
the child of light and the child of
darkness
the converted and the unconverted
the spiritual and the natural.
Whatever may be their relative state of knowledge or ignorance
of wealth or
poverty
in the sense of the Bible of truth
and in the judgment of the God of truth
the one is wise and the other a fool.
2. Secondly
there is a contrast implied: “The wise man’s eyes are in
his head
but the fool walketh in darkness.” And why is his path in darkness?
Because
unlike the wise man
his eyes are not in his head; if they had been
there
he would have walked in light
surely
safely. But they are in his
heart
and so he walks foolishly
erringly
darkly. The eye in the head--the
wise man’s eye
sees under the direction of reason
and faith
and of right
understanding. The eye in the heart--the fool’s eye
sees under the direction
of the affections
the disposition and the feelings. And so
while the one man
walks in light
the other man walks in darkness.
II. But now let me more pointedly and practically set out the meaning
of this verse. Let us take by itself each part of this proverb and consider it.
1. First
then
it is implied that the fool’s eyes are in his heart.
He sees all things through the medium of his own wishes and inclinations; his
reason and conscience do not control
but they are possessed by his
inclinations.
2. But “the wise man’s eyes are in his head.” The light of a holy
knowledge shines upon them
and in this light the eye of reason and of faith
the eye
not of blind inclination
but of Christian consciousness and
confidence
sees light.
One event happeneth to them all.--
Wisdom and
folly compared
Looking
simply at knowledge as such
and looking merely at the brief span of our
existence “under the sun
” we must confess that the wise man is sometimes as
powerless as the fool. Two men take their seats in a railway train. The one man
is an accomplished scholar
or mathematician
or philosopher. He has
disciplined his mental powers
and has amassed large stores of knowledge. He
has even acquired
it may be a certain reputation as a man of learning
or as a
leader of the thoughts of others. The man who is sitting beside him cares
nothing for intellectual culture. Animal enjoyment is his ideal. Give him a
good dinner
and you may keep your books to yourself! He could never see any
good in racking his brains over hard problems. There sit these two men in the railway carriage
side
by side: the one
perhaps
reading the latest book of science; the other
perhaps
glancing through some “Sporting Gazette.” Suddenly
in a moment
there
comes the collision which it was utterly impossible for either of them to
foresee: the
train is a wreck; and these two lie together
crushed
mangled
and dead! “One
event
one chance
has happened to them both!” Now
shut out the thought of
God
and the thought of immortality
and what “advantage” has the one man over
the other? The student has had his intellectual enjoyments: the votary of
pleasure has had his enjoyments also. The scholar
along with his enjoyment
has had much fatiguing toil
and
it may be
painful thought; the
pleasure-seeker also has doubtless
on his part experienced some of the
penalties of self-indulgence. The lover of knowledge has
indeed
had this
advantage
that his “eyes” have been “in his head”: he has had a wider and
clearer vision; and he has lived a higher kind of life. But to what purpose?
Where is the permanent advantage? These two men have lived their short span:
and here has come Death
as the great leveller! For a few years
perhaps
the
scholar may be spoken of; his name may even get into some “biographical
dictionary” but
unless he is one of a very select few
it will be little more
than a name
and
in the ages to come
he will be altogether forgotten. To what
purpose
then
has he “scorned delights
and lived laborious days”? Can he be
said to have made the best use of human life
if he has simply spent it in
acquiring a “wisdom” which leaves him
in the end
indistinguishable from the
fool? Thus
then
we seem to be driven to the same conclusion as Ecclesiastes.
Whatever advantages earthly wisdom has
it cannot be regarded as the chief good
for man. The amassing of knowledge as the one supreme object of human existence
is a vain delusion: it is a “feeding on wind”: it fails to satisfy the deepest
cravings of the human soul. (T. C. Finlayson.)
Verse 17
Therefore
I hated life.
Is life worth
living
“Is
life worth living?” is a question that is continually coming before the public
mind in one form or another. When Mr. Maddock’s book appeared
as many of you
may remember
there was an attempt to make light of it by the pun contained in
the supposed doctor’s answer
“It depends on the liver.” This has been
capped by “Punch’s” clergyman
who replies
“It depends on the living.” One
must
however
approach the matter with the utmost seriousness
as it touches
upon the deep basal truths and principles of existence
and is too solemn a
subject to admit of any flippancy in our treatment of it. The problem would be
met by an unqualified affirmative wherever life is young
healthy
and active
and the environment favourable to a rich
varied
and exuberant form of
existence. In some respects
therefore
the doctor is right; it does depend
upon the state of the health and the physical condition. I wonder what a happy
schoolboy
rushing out with the football under his arm
would say if he were
asked
“Is life worth living?” His expression would be a curious study as he gave
his reply
and would itself convey deep significance. What a happy thing it
would be if that schoolboy aspect of life were only exchanged for a deeper
conviction of its fuller value and noble possibilities
and that it should
never occur to us to ask whether this breath of life might not as well cease
and that perhaps the whole had been a hideous mistake! The words of the
Koheleth express the sentiment of those who thus pass an adverse sentence upon
the value of life
condemning both the career of the wise man and the fool
and
who have come to hate life
for “all is vanity and vexation of spirit” or “a
striving after wind.” The grand old Greeks
with their highly-refined
conditions of life
and life itself full of richness and variety
end ennobled
by the splendid idealism of the fine arts
now and then fell into this sad
vein. Even the ancient poet
the “sunny-brewed” Homer
sang--
“For there is nothing
whatever more wretched than man
Of all things that breathe
and that move o’er the earth.”
We
have
further
in Theognis
“It would be best for the children of the earth not
to be born . . . next best for them
when born
to pass through the gates of
Hades as soon as possible.” Can anything be more touching than the words of
Cassandra in “Agamemnon” by AEschylus: “Alas for the conditions of
mortals! When prosperous
a shadow may overturn them; if
however
they be in
adversity
a moistened sponge blots out the picture.” Then we find Seneca
one
of the best of the Roman Stoics
whose maxims came so near to many of the
sayings of St. Paul
praising death as the “best invention of nature
” and
Marcus Aurelius
“a seeker after God
” expressing his disgust at human life
with the apostrophe
“O death
delay not thy coming.” There is much the same in
the literature of Persia
and in the sphere of the religion of “the light.” The
pure-souled and seraphic Buddha considers that “True wisdom is a desire to be
nothing
to be blown out
to enter into Nirvana
i.e.
extinction.” Coming to modern times we find in French literature of the
Pompadour period the same strain of melancholy. Diderot wrote
“To be
amid
pain and weeping
the plaything of uncertainty
of error
of want
of sickness
and of passions--every step
from the moment when we learn to lisp
to the time
of departure
when our voice falters--this is called the most important gift of
our parents and of nature--life.” This is more than equalled by the words of
Sehelling
“The death’s head never fails behind the ogling mask
and life is
only the cap and bells which the nonentity has donned just to make a jingle
and afterwards to tear it to pieces and east it away.” These instances will
suffice to indicate the strongly marked pessimistic tendency amongst some of
the finest thinkers
and would lead those who are predisposed to this kind of
philosophizing to the inevitable conviction that
on the whole
life is not
worth living.
1. The value of life
if judged from the point of view of happiness
depends upon the sum of its functional activities and interests. Our pessimistic
views concerning life are largely the result of our mistaken ideas of
happiness. We are apt to imagine that health
leisure
and a splendid income
are absolutely necessary to our happiness; and when there is a prospect of
losing these permanently
life is no longer desirable. No man is really unhappy
who realizes that he has work to do and sets himself in earnest to do it. The
utmost of pain and sorrow can be borne if only one has an object in life. Men
who throw up all for lost are those who have abandoned
if they ever had it
their object in life. Let a person once set his mind upon some worthy aim
and
allow his interest to centre in that
and let it absorb his energies
and never
will he think of laying violent hands upon himself. When the Christians
assembled in the catacombs we discover none of those traces of pessimism that
are so characteristic of the poems of Horace. Their interest was centred in
their Lord and Master
and His royal will. We can understand
then
how a truly
Christian man
following in the experiences of the Apostle Paul
would
apprehend Christ to be the true object of existence. “To live is Christ
” to
learn about Christ
to live for Christ
to gain Christ
and to realize the life
and character of Christ within oneself
so that the very principle of the
within
is Christ. Such realization gives life its value.
2. The value of life further depends upon its extrinsic utilities in
the service of our fellows. We owe a debt of gratitude to the past
which can only be paid to the future
for this
and it is a point of
honour
that every man should acknowledge
to make his life valuable to others
to those who shall come after him. It would be ignoble to slight that which has
cost so much to develop
and especially since every life is capable of being
made useful in a greater or less degree.
3. If we are men of faith we shall value life for the sake of its
higher development beyond the grave. Even though this life were spent in a
purgatory of torture
or a hell of pain
which life need never be
no one who
believes in the Christ can deny that the great hereafter will more than
obliterate the traces of this sorrowful world in the glorious activities of the
heavenly state and all its grand developments. Cheer up
brothers
and brace
yourselves for manly effort. There are no sorrows or difficulties that a
brave-hearted man
who trusts in Cod
need fear to encounter. Whatever straits
one may find oneself in
there is no lot so painful
so bitter
or so trying
that it may not be sweetened and ennobled by effort--and that effort will be
our joy. (J. G. James
B. A.)
Pessimism and
optimism
(with
Psalms 27:1):--We all of us are by turns followers of the laughing
philosopher and of the weeping philosopher. Life sometimes appears full of joy
at other times full of sorrow. Hence the folly of labelling the souls of our
fellow-men is manifest
of calling one man an optimist and another a pessimist.
Deep souls are both at different periods of their development. We are all
pilgrims; and so we pass through many widely different countries during our
journey. And it is much to be wished that men would not be so precipitate in
guessing at the goal or terminus
to which the spirits of their brethren are
going. To all of us that really think
there has been given a new commandment:
and it is this
Thou shalt not label thy brother’s soul. Pessimism is often
like the moulting of birds
a thing not pleasing in itself
but still a
necessary process. A moulting eagle is grander far than a well-conditioned
sparrow. Pessimism is often only a sort of prolonged moulting of the divine
eagle wings of the most soaring faith and the noblest compassion and love.
1. Christianity has obviously very much in common with pessimism. It
has nothing in common with the fantastic optimism of Emerson
which
deliberately chooses to ignore the darker side of human life. It plainly
teaches that the present condition of the world is abnormal
and in many
respects evil. Our religion fully recognizes the fact that we are pilgrims and
strangers here
and that our life is essentially a warfare. It does not require
us to be always in a triumphant mood. It knows that many of the very greatest
of the elect are destined to pass long years in the dark valley of the shadow
of death. It blesses those that mourn.
2. Christianity nowhere teaches that pleasure
or even happiness
is
the end or object of life. On the contrary
our religion teaches that progress
through suffering is the real end and object of our life. The doctrine of the
Cross
with its divine amplitude of meaning is to use a precious rock-hewn path
of safety between the deceptive quagmire of a flimsy Emersonian optimism and
the hideous abysses of a despairing pessimism. The very fact that God has
brought the human race so far in its spiritual pilgrimage forbids any
reasonable despair. The old
sacred
guiding fire of the Eternal still leads us
on. The burning and unearthly splendours of the mighty Ideal from time to time
disperse the thick clouds of the actual. The far-off goal of the human race
gleams fitfully on our worn eyes; even amidst the heartbreaking sorrow of
prolonged moral failure
an angel of the Divine pity sometimes “carries us away
in the spirit to a great and high mountain
and shows us that great city
the
holy Jerusalem
descending out of heaven from God.” There
in God’s nearer
presence
the ailing soul knows that it shall one day grow well and strong. (A.
Crawford
M. A.)
Tired of life
What
are the causes of suicide? The general impression is
insanity: this is for the
most part the verdict of juries over the corpse of the self-slain man. But
insanity is not always the cause. In most cases of suicide there have been
displayed on the part of the perpetrator forethought
deliberation
plan. What
then can prompt a man who is not actually mad to this terrible deed?
I. Severe trials. The feeling that Solomon had
rushes into the soul
of not a few at times. The children of Israel in the wilderness had it when they
said
“Would God that we had died in the land of Egypt.” Elijah had it when he
said
“It is enough now
O Lord! take away my life.” Job had it when he said
“I loathe it: I would not live alway.”
II. Sickening satiety. The men of leisure and affluence
who are freed
from tile necessity of work
enterprise
and business
who fare sumptuously
every day
and run the round of fashionable life and sensuous enjoyment
have
always shown the greatest susceptibility to this disgust with life.
Over-indulgence in worldly pleasures seldom fails to produce a moral nausea.
There is what the French call the ennui that comes out of it
“that
awful yawn
” says Byron
“that sleep cannot abate.” As a proof of this
in the
countries where luxuries most abound
suicides are the most numerous. Whilst in
Sweden there is only one suicide to every ninety-two thousand people
in Paris
there is one to every three thousand.
III. Spiritual disgust. Men whose moral susceptibilities are
exquisitely tender
whose intellectual eye is keen and strong enough to
penetrate into the motives that govern society
and whose sympathies run
strongly with the right
the true
and the divine
often experience such an
inexpressible revulsion at certain popular developments of character and phases
of society
as to lead them to say with Solomon
“I hated life; because the
work that is wrought under the sun is grievous unto me.”
IV. Temperamental melancholy. So oppressive does the dark atmosphere
of their irritable tempers become
that they are ready to seize the rope or the
razor
or to plunge into the river.
V. Inordinate emotionality. There are those whose emotional natures
seem stronger than their intellectual force. The winds and the waves of passion
are too strong for the helmsman. Their emotional nature is like a deep and
tumultuous sea
whose billows are ever breaking over the walls of their
understanding. Sometimes
for example
revenge is a passion that prompts the
deed. Samson was an example of this. Sometimes humiliation prompts the deed.
Something occurs which overwhelms the man with shame. Ahithophel is an example
of this. Sometimes desperation prompts the deed. Sometimes fear overwhelms the
man
and prompts the deed. It was thus with the Philippian jailor. Sometimes
remorse prompts the self-destroying deed. No passion that can seize the soul is
so unbearable as this; “A wounded spirit
who can bear?” Thus Judas
when he
saw that Christ
whom he had betrayed
was condemned to death
his guilty
conscience made life so intolerable that he went out and hanged himself. Other
passions may be mentioned
such as jealousy
which perhaps is the most prolific
parent of suicides of all the passions. I learn from this subject--
1. That the poor need not envy the condition of the rich.
2. That all men have not an equal love of life.
3. That confidence in the redemptive Providence that is over us is
the only security for a happy life.
The
voice of Providence to every man is
not only “Do thyself no harm”: but free
thyself from all anxious cares
and trust in the love and guidance of the great
Father King. (Homilist.)
Disgust with
life
The
connection of our text with preceding and following verses
and its perfect
harmony with the design of the wise man
which was to decry the world and its
pleasures
and by his own experience to undeceive such as made idols of them
authorize us to consider the words as proceeding from the mouth of Solomon
himself
expressive of his own sentiments and not those of others
and what he
thought after his reconversion
and not what his opinion was during his
dissipation.
I. On this principle we will first rid the text of several false
meanings
which it may seem at first sight to countenance; for as there is a disgust
with the world
and a contempt of life
which wisdom inspires
so there is a
hatred of the world
that ariseth from evil dispositions.
1. We may hate life because we are melancholy. Only he whose ideas
are disconcerted by a dark and gloomy temper can say fully and without
qualification
“I hate life.” To attribute such a disposition to the wise man
is to insult the Holy Spirit who animated him.
2. Some are disgusted with life from a principle of misanthropy. What
is a misanthrope
or a hater of mankind? lie is a man who avoids society only
to free himself from the trouble of being useful to it. He is a man who
considers his neighbours only on the side of their defects
not knowing the art
of combining their virtues with their vices
and of rendering the imperfections
of other people tolerable by reflecting on his own. What a society would that
be which should be composed of people without charity
without patience
without condescension! My text doth not inculcate such sentiments as these. The
wise man had met with a great many disagreeable events in society which had
given him a great deal of pain
but
far from being driven out of it
he
continued to reside in the world
and to amend and improve it by his wise
counsel and good example.
3. Sometimes a spirit of discontent produces disgust with the world
and contempt of life. To hear the people I mean
one would think it was
impossible that this world should be governed by a wise being
because
forsooth
they are doomed with the rest of mankind to live in a valley of
trouble. But who art thou
thou miserable man
to conceive ideas so false
and
to form opinions so rash!
4. We are sometimes disgusted with the world through an excess of
fondness for the world
and hate life through an over-valuation of it. Man
enters the world as an enchanted place. While the charm lasts
the man I speak
of is in raptures
and thinks he hath found the supreme good. He imagines that
riches have no wings
that splendid fortune hath no reverse
that the great
have no caprice
that friends have no levity
that health and youth are
eternal; but as it is not long before he recovers his senses
he becomes
disgusted with the world in the same proportion as he had been infatuated with
it
and his hatred of life is exactly as extravagant as his love of it had
been.
5. It is not in any of these senses that the wise man saith
“I hated
life.” He would have us understand that the earth hath more thorns than
flowers--that our condition here
though incomparably better than we deserve
is
however
inadequate to our just and constitutional desires--that our inconveniences
in this life would seem intolerable unless we were wise enough to direct them
to the same end that God proposed by exposing us to suffer them--in a word
that nothing but hope in a future state formed on another plan can render the
disorders of this world tolerable. So much may serve to explain the meaning of
the wise man.
II. Let us now proceed to justify the sense given. The phantoms that
seduced Solomon during his dissipation may be reduced to two classes. The first
suppose in the dissipated man very little knowledge
and very little taste; and
it is astonishing that a man so eminently endowed with knowledge could set his
heart upon them. The second may more easily impose on an enlightened and
generous mind. I put these into three classes. In the first I put the
advantages of science--in the second the pleasures of friendship--in the third
the privileges
I mean the temporal privileges
of virtue and heroism. I will
endeavour to unmask these three figures
and to prove that the very dispositions
which should contribute most to the pleasure of life
mental abilities
tenderness of heart
rectitude and delicacy of conscience
are actually
dispositions which contribute most of all to embitter life.
1. If ever possessions could make man happy
Solomon must certainly
have been the happiest of mankind. Imagine the most proper and the most
effectual means of acquiring knowledge
joined to an avidity to obtain it
both
were united in the person of this prince. Now what saith this great man
concerning science? He acknowledgeth indeed that it was preferable to
ignorance
the wise man’s eyes
saith he
are in his head
that is
a man of
education is in possession of some prudential maxims to regulate his life
whereas an illiterate man walketh in darkness; but yet saith he
“it happeneth
even to me
as it happeneth to the fool
and why was I then wise?”
2. The second disposition
which seems as if it would contribute much
to the pleasure of life
but which often embitters it
is tenderness of heart.
It is clear by the writings of Solomon
and more so by the history of his life
that his heart was very accessible to this kind of pleasure. How often doth he
write encomiums on faithful friends (Proverbs 17:17; Proverbs 18:24). But where is this friend who sticketh closer than a brother?
Where is this friend who loveth at all times? What an airy phantom is human
friendship!
3. If anything seem capable to render life agreeable
and if anything
in general render it disagreeable
it is rectitude
and delicacy of conscience.
I know Solomon seems here to contradict himself
and the author of the Book of
Proverbs seems to refute the author of the Book of Ecclesiastes. The author of
the Book of Ecclesiastes informs us that virtue is generally useless and
sometimes hurtful in this world; but according to the author of the Book of
Proverbs virtue is most useful in this world. How shall we reconcile these
things? To say
as some do
that the author of Proverbs speaks of the spiritual
rewards of virtue
and the author of Ecclesiastes of the temporal state of it
is to cut the knot instead of untying it. Of many solutions there is one that
bids fair to remove the difficulty; that is
that when the author of the Book
of Proverbs makes temporal advantages of the rewards of virtue
he speaks of
some rare periods of society
whereas the author of the Book of Ecclesiastes
describes the common general state of things. Perhaps the former refers to the
happy time in which the example of the piety of David being yet recent
and the
prosperity of his successor not having then infected either the heart of the
king or the morals of his subjects
reputation
riches and honours were
bestowed on good men; but the second
probably
speaks of what came to pass
soon after. In the first period life was amiable
and living in the world
delicious; but of the second the wise man saith
“I hated life because the work
that is wrought under the sun is grievous unto me.” To which of the two periods
doth the age in which we live belong? Judge by the description given by the
Preacher
as he calls himself. Then mankind were ungrateful
the public did not
remember the benefits conferred on them by individuals
and their services were
unrewarded (Ecclesiastes 9:14-15). Then courtiers mean and ungrateful basely forsook their old
master
and paid their court to the heir apparent (Ecclesiastes 4:15). Then the strong oppressed the weak (Ecclesiastes 4:1). Then the courts of justice were corrupt (Ecclesiastes 3:16). Such is the idea the wise man gives us of the world. Yet these
vain and precarious objects
this world so proper to inspire a rational mind
with disgust
this life so proper to excite hatred in such as know what is
worthy of esteem
this is that` which hath always fascinated
and which yet
continues to fascinate the bulk of mankind. (J. Saurin.)
Life with and
without God
Contrast
this verdict of the Preacher with that calm
clear
victorious utterance of the
great apostle
ringing like a clarion
as he urges the words
“Lay hold on the
life that is life indeed
” and you will have the subject of my sermon--life
without God
and life with God--the misery and disappointment of the one
the
fulness and satisfaction of the other; the one vanity and vexation of spirit
the other life which is life indeed.
I. Let us look at life without God. Let me frankly acknowledge that
there are some things in life even without God which are pleasant
and
delightful and beautiful. First of all we begin life as “little children
and
to children the next` pleasure is quite enough to make life worth living; their
little hearts are not troubled with the deep problems of life
and God forbid
they should be. And then I do not deny that there is some real satisfaction and
pleasure
as every one knows
in all healthy activity. Then
too
no one can
doubt that there is very much that is very beautiful in human love. Some young
people in the golden days of their early married life
when love is very
beautiful
and real
and fresh
bright as a spring morning
may be tempted to
think that is enough. “We want no other life
this satisfies us.” Now
I admit
of this freely and frankly; but oh
it does not settle the question. The
question comes back
“Does it satisfy?” There are very many indications in this
present day that the world is finding out what this old preacher found out
that life without God is vanity and vexation of the spirit. Let me just give
you one of them. Have you ever noticed the very remarkable fact that much of
our higher poetry is unutterably sad? Take
for example
the poems of Matthew
Arnold: they are Greek
in perfection of form and in their faultless beauty
but how sad they are! That
deep sadness that lay over the world of which he so pathetically sings broods
like a cloud over his own poetry. And when you come to examine the reason why
he so depresses you
the answer is because there is no living personal God in
it--it is the loss of God which explains it all. Do not misunderstand me. I am
not imagining that life is to be lived solely with religious aims and religious
objects. I do not take a narrow view
I trust
of human life. God has given us
various and ample powers
and each one of them has to find its own appropriate
satisfaction. I do not condemn any of the generous ambitions of youth. I would
not oven forbid the loss noble ambitions of life so long as they are kept
subordinate to the will of God. Let a man earn knowledge or fame
or
distinction
or wealth
or influence
and if he earn them honestly
well; but I
do desire to impress upon you this one lesson--that it does not matter what the
end you set before yourselves in life may be
whether it be pleasure
or
intellectual eminence
or wealth
if you leave God out it will so disappoint
you
miserably disappoint you
and you will have a time
in your own
experience
when you will turn from it with the muttered curse
“All is vanity
and vexation of spirit.”
II. Let us ask what life with God means. “Lay hold on the life which
is life indeed.” Shall I tell you what it is? “This is life eternal to know
Thee
the only true God
and Jesus Christ
whom Thou hast sent.” Those are the
words of Jesus: that is Christ’s own definition of the life indeed--to know
God
the true God
and Jesus Christ
whom He hath sent. No man requires
demonstration that this is life indeed. It needs none: the mere statement of
the truth is its proof. If there be an eternal and infinite God on whom I
depend for all things
if He has created me and loves me with unspeakable love
if He has spent all the riches of His love to redeem me from sin
if I am to
live with Him through eternity a life removed from all the conditions of time
and space--then
of all the self-evident propositions you can put into words
this is the most self-evident and certain
that I am created and redeemed
solely to find my life in God
I am too great to find my life in anything less
than God. Ah
“He that hath the Son hath life
he that hath not the Son hath
not life.” This is the life indeed. And now you see the meaning of what we are
so apt to call the mystery of sorrow
the mystery of pain. The other day I was
reading the diary of a life which in many respects is most instructive and pathetic. It was the
story of a man who had had unusual prosperity
and in looking through this
diary I came across these words: “God has broken silence with me.” Great
crushing sorrow had fallen on him
and that man who had lived many years in the
sunshine of prosperity without God
without ever speaking of God or hearing God
speaking to him
suddenly in the darkness awoke to the fact that God was near
to him
and that God had come to him in the great trouble of his life; and then
he wrote these words
“God has broken silence with me.” Ah
life indeed! That
is its designation. I do not say it will not have its troubles
its
disappointments
perhaps even its failures; but the troubles and
disappointments of that life as little affect it as the storms that sweep
across the Atlantic touch the deep Calm of the ocean beneath. It is life
indeed! Nothing disturbs its central peace
for it is founded upon God. And
then
when the end comes--as it will come to us all--and friends stand round
the bed
and the last farewells are spoken
and the eyes are closed in death
and we make the last journey to that “bourne from which no traveller returns
”
and our feet touch the waters of the cold river--in that supreme and awful hour
will the life indeed fill us then? Listen! The man who wrote these words
“Lay
hold of the life which is life indeed
” tells us what he felt on the verge of
eternity: “I am now ready to be offered.” (G. S. Barrett
D. D.)
Verse 18-19
Yea
I hated all my labour
which I had taken under the sun: because I should leave it unto the man that
shall be after me.
The dirge of the dead hand
Solomon’s life was
complete from the naturalistic standpoint. He sought pleasure with a zest we
should condemn as licence nowadays
but which the spirit of those times was
accustomed to count lawful
at least for kings. And more than that
he gave
himself to great and imposing enterprises
diligently seeking the welfare of
his people as well as his own personal and family aggrandizement. And yet work
upon an unspiritual plane of ideas could not altogether satisfy him. He had an
unhappy forecast of pending changes
for Rehoboam was not an ideal youth. He
already seems to be hearing the cry
“The king is dead: long live the king!”
And how sick at heart he feels as all the signs seem to show that the new king
will be an iconoclast
a reactionary
a fool
or at least a man who does not
think in the same groove as his predecessor! But this heartsick pessimism
like
the same temper everywhere
was misjudging. That which was ignoble in his work
perished
and deserved to perish. His heart-ache
as he thought of how much in
the schemes he had tried to carry out would be altered by his successors
was
relevant only to the lower ranges of his work. But the royal preacher was
thinking not so much of his work as of himself. He wanted to invest his own
dead hand with perpetual power; but that is not permitted to the best of the
children of men in this lament we can find traces of self-idolatry
and
self-idolatry is allied with contempt of our fellows and disbelief of the
living God.
I. This
temper represents the mood of one who is doing much of his work under the unwholesome
stimulus of pride and ambition. Why should even Solomon flatter himself that
all his works were so perfect that they were beyond the need of modification
and readjustment? There were wise men before him
and wise men were destined to
come after him
and he had contemporaries who
if not equalling him in the
range of his knowledge
had at least kept themselves from plunging into the
same abysses of folly and self-indulgence; and yet the great king was under the
impression that he was probably the last of the sages
and that the
distinguished race would vanish at his own funeral. We know now how groundless
his assumption was; for in every age the world has had in it men whose gifts
acquisitions
and practical sagacity have far outmatched those of this
much-bepraised king
who was sybarite as well as sage
and who
through
untempered success
over-deep draughts of intoxicating flattery
and
polygamistic animalism
was spoiled into an ignoble old age. The man who looks
upon life from Solomon’s standpoint has obviously set his heart upon achieving
what will be an enduring monument of his own reputation
and
like the
Pyramids
which defend nothing
shelter nothing
protect nothing
teach
nothing
will immortalize
in an indestructible edifice of colossal barrenness
the faded empire of a royal mummy. The vain man wants to do something that will
be sacred from the hands of the would-be reformer
or it will be no true
tribute to his infallibility. Why should posterity
out of mere respect for us
refrain from trying to improve upon our work? Men are sent into the world in
ever fresh tides of young hope and vitality to help the common good of the
race
and not to be our minions and satellites. Others may succeed in
cultivating finer blooms to put into our gardens
trees of nobler stature to
adorn our parks
herbs of more medicinal virtue to plant in our fields: in
substituting rarer and more translucent stones for the crude add unwrought
material with which we reared temples and palaces.
II. This
utterance implied an ungracious disdain of the men who were shortly to step
into power. Of all men in the world Solomon ought not to have been hard upon
the fools. He had not uniformly set the wisest example in his own person
and
the luxurious harems he had acclimatized upon Jewish soil were not likely to be
schools of the sublimest philosophy and breeding-places of the most stalwart
virtue. And in a lukewarm and unspiritual state of society an evil prophecy of
this sort always tends to fulfil itself. Not to trust those who are around us
and who expect to take up our work
is just the way to corrupt and demoralize
them. The effect is the same as that produced by the suspicious head of a
household who keeps every cheap trifle under lock and key. The mistrust of
posterity is
perhaps
a meaner and a more wicked thing than the mistrust of
our contemporaries
for posterity cannot speak for itself and lift up its voice
in protest against this unjust and wholesale condemnation. We do our utmost to
imperil our own work
when we assume that no one will be fit to carry it on
after the sceptre has fallen from our lifeless grasp.
III. This
temper of soul implies a gloomy view of the future of the human race. The wise
man lacked faith in humanity and its unknown possibilities
lacked that faith
which it was the specific intention of the promise made to his forefathers to
produce. To his own complacent estimate it seemed that the race had touched the
high-water mark of intelligence and character in himself
and that now the
inevitable decline must begin. How lure
riot in faith to Samuel
and Elijah
and Elisha
who nurtured schools for the future prophets
and who
in spite of
the stern work they had to do
turned an undespairing outlook upon the future.
Jesus and His apostles expected unbroken files of sowers and reapers to
co-operate with each other and to carry on the victorious work of the kingdom
to the end of time. The Church could not fail
although the gates of hell might
send forth red-hot torrents of rage and opposition; and the lineage of godly
and discerning workers would never be cut off root and branch
like the house
of Eli. If we think
and speak
and act as though future workers would spring
up and worthily carry on our modest beginnings
unborn and ungrown generations will
respond to our confidence
and we shall not lack men to stand before the Lord
in our room for ever. The man is both an atheist and a hater of his kind who
asserts that the world is moving backward into the abyss of barbarism and
folly.
IV. This
temper indicates a deep and ominous lack of religious faith. He who speaks in
any such strain has for the time being lost faith in the providential
sovereignty of God. There is a touch of Manichaeism in this heartsick
pessimism. It sees a mere Puck installed over the universe and clothed with
infinite attributes
satisfying his soul with mischief
and encouraging the
fools who make havoc with the achievements of the wise. All such vapourings
show that there is a heathen or an infidel half in our personalities
sadly
needing to be exorcised so that we may become sane
and useful
and happy men.
Faith in God is one with the gift of prophecy; and if this royal preacher had
always stirred up the gift which was in him
he would have felt how all that
was best in his work would be preserved through apparent decline and reaction
till at last one wiser and greater than Solomon had appeared
to gather up into
His plans all the true and unselfish work of the past
and to fulfil the fair
and holy dreams of the world’s ardent youth.
V. This
unhappy
corrosive temper may eat into our hearts
not so much because we
repudiate the doctrine of God’s providential sovereignty
but because we are
not living and working in high harmony with His counsels. In catering so
lavishly for his own lusts and luxuries
this king was doing his own will and
work
rather than God’s
and it may have been the appointed penalty of his
ornate selfishness that fools should make havoc of his accomplished dreams just
as soon as he had passed away. He speaks of parks
pleasure gardens
fountains
artificial lakes
palace orchestras
fortune making
personal enrichment
material aggression. It is true there was a point at which he became patriotic
and sought his people’s prosperity; but that seems to have been his second
thought rather than his first. And this policy of self-aggrandize-ment was
identified with foreign marriages and heathen coalitions
which had such a
demoralizing effect upon his own successors and the nation at large
and which
prepared the way for the schisms and tragic apostasies of the coming times. If
we cherish no higher views of life
we cannot fairly count upon the good
offices of Divine Providence in protecting our enterprise from the pranks of
fools. What right has that man to look for the enduring blessing of God who
chooses his tasks in selfishness and pride? Let our work be holy
unselfish
spiritual
and God will accept it as a sacrifice for Himself
and preserve it
in the unknown future from violation; for the sons of light
seen by the seer
of Patmos
who compass the divine altar in heaven
hover in their strong
ministries about every altar upon earth where lies the accepted oblation of
unselfish toil. (Thomas G. Selby.)
Verses 24-26
There is nothing better
for a man
than that he should eat and drink
and that he should make his soul
enjoy good in his labour.
The simple joys of Godly
industry
We are not to regard these
words as at all akin to the utterance of the baser Epieureanism
“Let us eat
and drink
for to-morrow we die!” We are not to suppose that the Jewish
philosopher
looking around him
and finding all to be “vanity and feeding on
wind
” concludes that the best thing a man can do
under the circumstances
is
to give himself up to a life of sensuous enjoyment. This cannot possibly be his
meaning here; for he has already shown the emptiness of a life of sensuous
gratification
and he has also recorded it as his conviction that “wisdom is
better than folly.” Moreover
the words themselves do not point to mere idle
self-indulgence; for they speak of a man’s “enjoying good in his labour.”
Ecclesiastes seems to have before his mind a life in which hearty and honest
toil is blended with a contented enjoyment of the fruits of toil. In the maxim
“Let us eat and drink
for to-morrow we die
” eating and drinking stand for all
kinds of sensuous gratification
and even of sensual excess. But here
to “eat
and drink” seems to stand rather for the simpler forms of living
as contrasted
with luxurious and excessive self-indulgence. That this is the meaning of
Ecclesiastes here is further evident from the manner in which he goes on to
speak of the conditions of this contented and cheerful enjoyment of life. “This
also I saw
that it is from the hand of God.” This introduction of the thought
of God is itself sufficient to show that Ecclesiastes is not here speaking as a
sensualist
or as a mere pleasure-seeker. Amidst the many anomalies of life
Ecclesiastes
clings to the assurance that there is a moral government of God in this world.
There are indeed perplexing problems in relation to this moral government
which he felt he could not solve
and which led him to look forward to a world
beyond death where the dealings of God with men would be completed and
vindicated. But still
looking at the broad facts of human life
and excluding
cases apparently exceptional and perplexing
he saw that God does make a
distinction
even here and now
between the “sinner” and the “man who pleaseth
Him.” The virtuous and godly man has an advantage
even in this world
over the
wicked. He receives from God a “wisdom and knowledge” which are associated with
“joy.” He finds a pleasure in his work
and is contented to eat the simple
fruits of his toil. He may be a poor man
labouring for daily bread; and yet he
may receive from God this gift of thankful enjoyment. Whereas
on the other
hand
Ecclesiastes saw that the “sinner”--the man who has no thought of God’s
commandments--may “gather together” and “heap up” riches
and yet have no heart
to enjoy his own wealth. Now
the lesson which Ecclesiastes here sets before us
is one of which we all need to be continually reminded. Patent as the fact may
be to us that the higher happiness of life is far more closely associated with
unanxious labour
simple habits
and cheerful contentment
than with wealth or
luxury
we are all more or less apt to live in forgetfulness of it. The social
atmosphere which we breathe is too feverish and restless. We are apt to lose
the blessings of to-day through over-anxiety about the morrow. We are apt to
miss the enjoyment which God has put for us into the simple
common blessings
of life
through our eager pursuit of something more which may not really be
anything better. It might be a desirable thing for some men who are spoiling
their lives through selfish ambition or sordid Mammonism
to sit for a little
while even at the feet of Epicurus! But far better for all of us to sit at the
feet of Christ. All that was really true and valuable in the higher
Epieureanism is to be found
in a more exalted form
in Christianity. It does
not bid us proudly trample on either pleasure or pain; but it bids us cultivate
an inner peace and strength which shall prevent us from becoming the mere
victims and slaves of circumstance. Without despising any “creature of God
” it
nevertheless teaches us to estimate things according to their relative
importance. And if only our hearts were set more steadfastly on higher things
if only we were more bent on “pleasing God
” we would be the better able to
“eat and drink and enjoy good in our labour”--to enjoy with a more serene and
contented spirit the simple
ordinary blessings which are common to humanity. (T.
C. Finlaysen.)
Verse 26
For God giveth to a man that is good in His sight.
True goodness
I. He who is good
before God is good.
1. A man may be good in his own esteem
and yet not be really so. The
way in which we sometimes mistake ourselves is altogether pitiable.
2. A man may be good in the estimate of society
and yet not be
really so. Dr. Bushnell relates how he was much struck by the remark of an
elderly gentleman touching hero-worship: “From the moment of my leaving college
to this present hour I have been gradually losing my respect for great names.”
3. A man may be accepted as good by the Church
and yet not be really
so. The diamond fields of South Africa produce large numbers of diamonds whose
yellow colour lessens immensely the value of the gem
and rogues have hit on an
ingenious method for the falsification of these jewels; they are put into some
chemical solution
and for a while after the bath the yellow diamond appears
perfectly white
deceiving the very elect. Character also is capable of
falsification; we may appear to ourselves and to others brighter and costlier
than we intrinsically are.
4. But they who are good before God are good. He who has the
testimony that he pleases God needs no more.
II. Who is thus
good before God? Who is this man
this woman
this child? The goodness that is
good before God is the goodness that God inspires
and that He maintains in our
heart and life by His Holy Spirit. Whatever is truly good is made so by its
motive
its principle
its aim; and he who is truly good acts from the purest
motive
obeys the loftiest rule
aspires to the supremest end. Well then
the
purest motive is the love of God; the loftiest rule is the will of God; the supremest
end is the glory of God. In a word
the essence of goodness is godliness; and
where there is no godliness there is no goodness in the deep scriptural
signification of that word. But the goodness that comes from God
that lives
through Him
that gives
acts
suffers
hopes for His name’s sake--that is
goodness indeed. (W. L. Watkinson.)
Wisdom
and knowledge
and
joy.--
Joy in religion
I wish to call your attention to the last gift here
mentioned--joy. To have goodness is by many supposed to inherit grief in
proportion. The bestowment of wisdom and knowledge is considered to carry with
it the addition of many troubles. The text tells us that God gives to those who
have found favour in His sight “wisdom and knowledge”--“joy
” or the sense of
enjoyment
the pleasant appreciation of the delights of true wisdom and
knowledge
is added to counteract and enliven the weariness and depression
which ever accompany the possession of great learning. Joy comes after
not
before
wisdom and knowledge--as we have it in the text. It is the rapturous
outcome of acquired wisdom--the balance given
the beauty bestowed
the relish
awarded to dissipate the despondent gloom which is too often the result of
mental activity. Now
what is true in secular things is clearly and even more
true in spiritual matters. When Christ is made to us wisdom and true knowledge
He gives the soul joy--His joy; and the real Christian not only rejoices in the
Lord
but he will rejoice in every good thing which the Lord his God hath given
unto him. He will have a joyous
buoyant
glad nature
exulting in God’s
favour
and opening his mouth to sing and laugh and be merry; and in this and
other ways he will strive to show forth his Lord’s praises before the world.
There are some who are wont to urge that the Christian believer must
necessarily
from the condition of things
be a shrinking
grave
and even
melancholy being; that in bearing
and cast of countenance
and conduct he must
be the very reverse of a joyous
light-hearted
laughter-loving creature of the
world. With his own sins
past and present
to mourn over
the ever-recurring
shortcomings of duty
the never-ending slips of temper
the coldness of feeling
and the too slow approach of the new life to the fixed standard of that
perfection which is the Father’s in heaven
how can that man
it is often
asked
be otherwise than tearful in word and look? Truly this is all wrong
producing results of a most painful kind
and life runs with slow
unvaried
saddening sound
till all presented to the eye or ear fills the lone soul with
misery
and grief
and fear. I believe that this is a true picture of some who
being morbidly and ghastly grief-struck by some deep and immedieable wound
are
ever looking with melancholy eyes upon the night side of things until the sense
of present evils never ceases to annoy them. Fretful
feverish
gloomy
excusing nothing and accusing every one
the tired brain never gets relief from
the heavy heart. Now this ought not so to be in the Christian character
and
when they exist the most strenuous exertions ought to be made
the most
determined efforts of the will
to get rid of them. He who made us made us
capable of joy. It is a holy necessity of man’s nature. If God had meant us to
be always grave
and serious
and down-looking
lie might have constituted us
so that we could have been nothing else: lie would not have chosen as the
emblem and image of His chiefest blessing
even the blessing of redeeming love
the glad symbol of the festive scene
that His Son would give us “beauty for
ashes
the oil of joy for mourning
and the garment of praise for the spirit of
heaviness.” The truly Christian mind
filled with the love of the Saviour
will
sanctify everything lawful by the presence of a holy
kindly feeling
and will
derive benefit from such allowance
consciously or unconsciously. But the
indulgence of our susceptibilities to pleasurable impressions is itself an end
which
in due mode and measure
Christian men may seek and the happy God of
love not disapprove. God giveth joy. He not only re-bestows the gift in Christ
but He made us originally susceptible of the keenest enjoyment. The gift is to
be cherished; the susceptibility is to be encouraged and strengthened; but it
is most important that a cheerful and chastened exercise of the gift should
vindicate the joyfulness of saints
and present a safe and suitable example to
the world. One of the strongest prejudices felt against religion is because of
its supposed gloomy character. Those who are destitute of a religious spirit
can find little or no enjoyment in religious occupation
and are naturally
disposed to think that others must be like themselves. It has been too often
the fault or the misfortune of Christians to confirm this erroneous impression;
and it behoves them
by every lawful method
to endeavour to remove it. If we
are Christ’s
let us pray and strive that our religion may be one of
sunshine--a religion of happiness
a rejoicing religion. (G. H. Conner
M.
A.)
──《The Biblical Illustrator》