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Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 2:3

Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 2:3

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.

3. to give myself unto wine ] Literally, and more vividly, to cherish my flesh with wine. The Hebrew word for “give” is unusual and obscure. The primary meaning is “to draw out,” that of the word for “acquainting” is “to guide” or “drive,” as in Exo 3:1; 2Sa 6:3. Possibly, as Lewis suggests in Lange’s Commentary, the idea is like that of the parable in the Phdrus of Plato (p. 54) and the seeker gives the rein to pleasure, yet seeks to guide or drive the steed with his wisdom. The words point to the next stage in the progress of the pleasure seeker. Pleasure as such, in its graceful, lighter forms, soon palls, and he seeks the lower, fiercer stimulation of the wine cup. But he did this, he is careful to state, not as most men do, drifting along the current of lower pleasures

“Till the seared taste, from foulest wells

Is fain to quench its fires,”

but deliberately, “yet guiding mine heart with wisdom.” This also was an experiment, and he retained, or tried to retain, his self-analysing introspection even in the midst of his revelry. All paths must be tried, seeming folly as well as seeming wisdom, to see if they gave any adequate standard by which the “sons of men” might guide their conduct, any pathway to the “chief good” which was the object of the seeker’s quest.

Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges

I sought … – Rather, I resolved (literally I turned in my heart) to draw my flesh with wine (see the margin), my heart guiding me with wisdom. In the course of his attempt to answer the question of Ecc 1:3, while his heart was directing him (as a charioteer directs his horses or a shepherd his sheep) with wisdom, and while he was following that guidance, he determined to draw with him his flesh by wine, thus making his flesh, which he speaks of as distinct from himself (compare Rom 7:25), a confederate and subsidiary in his attempt.

Fuente: Albert Barnes’ Notes on the Bible

Verse 3. To give myself unto wine, (yet acquainting [ noheg, “guiding”] mine heart with wisdom,)] I did not run into extremes, as when I gave up myself to mirth and pleasure. There, I threw off all restraint; here, I took the middle course, to see whether a moderate enjoyment of the things of the world might not produce that happiness which I supposed man was created to enjoy here below.

Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible

To give myself unto wine; to relax and gratify my flesh with delicious meats and drinks, synecdochically expressed by wine here, as also Pro 9:2; Son 2:4, &c., as necessary food is by bread, Amo 7:12, compared with Amo 8:2.

Yet acquainting my heart with wisdom; yet resolving to use my wisdom; either,

1. To set bounds to my pleasures. Or rather,

2. That I might try whether I could not arrive at satisfaction, by mixing wine and wisdom together, by using wine to sweeten and allay the toils of wisdom, and wisdom to prevent that destruction which many bring upon themselves by intemperate pleasures whilst they seek for satisfaction, that so I might have the comfort without the danger and mischief of pleasures.

To lay hold on folly; to pursue and addict myself to carnal pleasures, which was my folly.

Till I might see, & c.; till by trying several methods I might find out the true way to contentment and satisfaction, during this mortal life.

Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole

3-11. Illustration more at largeof Ecc 2:1; Ecc 2:2.

I soughtI resolved,after search into many plans.

give myself untowineliterally, “to draw my flesh,” or “body towine” (including all banquetings). Image from a captive drawnafter a chariot in triumph (Rom 6:16;Rom 6:19; 1Co 12:2);or, one “allured” (2Pe 2:18;2Pe 2:19).

yet acquainting . . .wisdomliterally, “and my heart (still) was behaving,or guiding itself,” with wisdom [GESENIUS].MAURER translates: “wasweary of (worldly) wisdom.” But the end of Ec2:9 confirms English Version.

follynamely, pleasuresof the flesh, termed “mad,” Ec2:2.

all the days, c.(SeeMargin and Ecc 6:12Job 15:20).

Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible

I sought in mine heart to give myself unto wine,…. Not in an immoderate way, so as to intoxicate himself with it, in which there can be no pleasure, nor any show of happiness; but in a moderate, yet liberal way, so as to be innocently cheerful and pleasant, and hereby try what good and happiness were to be possessed in this way. By “wine” is meant, not that only, but everything eatable and drinkable that is good; it signifies what is called good living, good eating and drinking: Solomon always lived well; was brought up as a prince, and, when he came to the throne, lived like a king; but being increased in riches, and willing to make trial of the good that was in all the creatures of God, to see if any happiness was in them; determines to keep a better table still, and resolved to have everything to eat or drink that could be had, cost what it will; of Solomon’s daily provision for his household, see 1Ki 4:22; the Midrash interprets it, of the wine of the law. It may be rendered, “I sought in mine heart to draw out my flesh with wine”, or “my body” y; to extend it, and make it fat and plump; which might be reduced to skin and bones, to a mere skeleton, through severe studies after wisdom and knowledge. The Targum is,

“I sought in my heart to draw my flesh into the house of the feast of wine;”

as if there was a reluctance in him to such a conduct; and that he as it were put a force upon himself, in order to make the experiment;

(yet acquainting mine heart with wisdom); or, “yet my heart led [me] in wisdom” z: he was guided and governed by wisdom in this research of happiness; he was upon his guard, that he did not go into any sinful extravagancies, or criminal excesses in eating and drinking;

and to lay hold on folly; that he might better know what folly was, and what was the folly of the sons of men to place their happiness in such things; or rather, he studiously sought to lay hold on folly, to restrain it, and himself from it, that it might not have the ascendant over him; so that he would not be able to form a right judgment whether there is any real happiness in this sort of pleasure, or not, he is, speaking of; for the epicure, the voluptuous person, is no judge of it;

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; where the “summum bonum”, or chief happiness of man lies; and which he should endeavour to seek after and pursue, that he might enjoy it throughout the whole of his life, while in this world: and that he might still more fully know it, if possible, he did the following things.

y “ut diducerem vino carnem meam”, Piscator; “ut protraherem, et inde distenderem carnem meam”, Rambachius. z “et cor meam ducens in sapientia”, Montanus; “interim cor meum ducens in sapientiam”, Drusius.

Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible

“I searched in my heart, (henceforth) to nourish my body with wine, while my heart had the direction by means of wisdom; and to lay hold on folly, till I might see what it was good for the children of men that they should do, all the number of the days of their life.” After he became conscious that unbridled sensual intoxication does not lead to the wished-for end, he looked around him farther, and examined into the following reception for happiness. Inappropriately, Zckl., with Hengst.: “I essayed in my heart to nourish ….” does not mean probare, but explorare, to spy out, Num 10:33, and frequently in the Book of Koheleth (here and at Ecc 1:13; Ecc 7:25) of mental searching and discovery (Targ. ). With there then follows the new thing that is contrived. If we read and in connection, then the idea of drawing a carriage, Isa 5:18, cf. Deu 21:3, and of driving a carriage, 2Sa 6:3, lies near; according to which Hitzig explains: “Wine is compared to a draught beast such as a horse, and he places wisdom as the driver on the box, that his horse may not throw him into a ditch or a morass.” But moshek is not the wine, but the person himself who makes the trial; and noheg is not the wisdom, but the heart, – the former thus only the means of guidance; no man expresses himself thus: I draw the carriage by means of a horse, and I guide it by means of a driv. Rightly the Syr.: “To delight ( , from , oblectare ) my flesh with wine.” Thus also the Targ. and the Venet., by “drawing the flesh.” The metaphor does not accord with the Germ. ziehen = to nourish by caring for (for which is used); it is more natural, with Gesen., to compare the passing of trahere into tractare , e.g., in the expression se benignius tractare (Horace, Ep. 1:17); but apart from the fact that trahere is a word of doubtful etymology,

(Note: Vid., Crossen’s Nachtr. zur lat. Formenlehre, pp. 107-109.)

tractare perhaps attains the meaning of attending to, using, managing, through the intermediate idea of moving hither and thither, which is foreign to the Heb. , which means only to draw, – to draw to oneself, and hold fast ( attractum sive prehensum tenere ). As the Talm. occurs in the sense of “to refresh,” e.g., Chagiga 14 a: “The Haggadists (in contradistinction to the Halachists) refresh the heart of a man as with water”; so here, “to draw the flesh” = to bring it into willing obedience by means of pleasant attractions.

(Note: Grtz translates: to embrocate my body with wine, and remarks that in this lies a raffinement. But why does he not rather say, “to bathe in wine”? If can mean “to embrocate,” it may also mean “to bathe,” and for may be read : in Grecian, i.e., Falernian, Chian, wine.)

The phrase which follows: velibbi noheg bahhochmah , is conditioning: While my heart had the direction by means of wisdom; or, perhaps in accordance with the more modern usus loq. While my heart guided, demeaned, behaved itself with wisdom. Then the inf. limshok, depending on tarti as its obj., is carried forward with veleehhoz besichluth . Plainly the subject treated of is an intermediate thing (Bardach: ). He wished to have enjoyment, but in measure, without losing himself in enjoyment, and thereby destroying himself. He wished to give himself over to sweet desipere, but yet with wise self-possession (because it is sadly true that ubi mel ibi fel ) to lick the honey and avoid the gall. There are drinkers who know how to guide themselves so that they do not end in drunken madness; and there are habitual pleasure-seekers who yet know how so far to control themselves, that they do not at length become rous. Koheleth thus gave himself to a foolish life, yet tempered by wisdom, till there dawned upon him a better light upon the way to true happiness.

The expression of the donec viderem is old Heb. Instead of , quidnam sit bonum in indirect interrog. (as Ecc 11:6, cf. Jer 6:16), the old form (Heb 6:12) would lie at least nearer. Asher yaasu may be rendered: quod faciant or ut faciant ; after Ecc 2:24; Ecc 3:22; Ecc 5:4; Ecc 7:18, the latter is to be assumed. The accus. designation of time, “through the number of days of their life,” is like Ecc 5:17; Ecc 6:12. We have not, indeed, to translate with Knobel: “the few days of their life,” but yet there certainly lies in the idea that the days of man’s life are numbered, and that thus even if they are not few but many (Ecc 6:3), they do not endure for ev.

The king now, in the verse following, relates his undertakings for the purpose of gaining the joys of life in fellowship with wisdom, and first, how he made architecture and gardening serviceable to this new style of life.

Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament

CRITICAL NOTES.

Ecc. 2:3. I sought in mine heart.] The word has the meaning not of thinking or reflecting, but to prove or assayto make a moral experiment.

Ecc. 2:8. The peculiar treasure of Kings.] The treasure forced from vanquished heathen rulers, and the voluntary gifts of friendly rulers such as the Queen of Sheba. The delights of the Sons of Men. An obvious reference to Solomons excessive animal indulgence.

MAIN HOMILETICS OF THE PARAGRAPH.Ecc. 2:3-11

THE WORTH OF THIS WORLDS PLEASURES FAIRLY TESTED

The experiment to ascertain whether the pleasures of this life have any abiding value for man, was conducted, in this instance, with perfect fairness.

I. It was tried on a sufficient number and variety of cases. Solomon had ample opportunity of tasting every pleasure the age could afford. He did not, like one from some obscure retreat, despise those glories he could not share. He tried them all.

1. He tried coarse pleasures. I sought in my heart to give myself unto wine. The excessive indulgence of the lower appetitessuch as the intoxication of the senses with winepromises us a brief happiness. We forget the miseries and painful aspects of life, and enjoy a temporary elevation of soul. The feelings become intense, the mind seems half inspired, life appears as if lighted up with a sudden glare. The graces of intellect and feeling, and even of religious rapture, are imitated in the condition produced by wine. Be not drunk with wine, but filled with the Spirit, implies as much. The indulgence of animal instincts was also tried. The delights of the children of men. Solomon was a melancholy example of a great soul debased by a wild indulgence of animal passion.

2. He tried those pleasures which feed the desire of display. There is a feeling of pride in human nature which has a natural outlet in parade and show. We court admiration, and the distinction of being an object of envy. Solomon had great riches, tribute from foreign kings, numerous servants, houses, and gardensall that could support splendour and magnificence. The homage paid to great estate and grandeur increases the outward happiness of this life. Men make wealth and display the standard of honour.

3. He tried those pleasures which minister to a sense of refinement. There are pleasures more exalted than the indulgence of our lower instinctsmore worthy of the dignity of our nature. The royal sage employed himself in works of constructive skillnoble architecture, vineyards, gardens, pools of water, groves. He enjoyed the delights of music. Such pleasures engage some of the noblest powers of the mind, they lend a grace and elegance to life, they assuage the troubles of the heart, and they fill up the pauses of sensual pleasures which so soon tire the power of enjoyment. They are more congenial to our better nature. They take us beyond the mere things themselves, and are not unworthy to represent spiritual delights. They furnish a parable of Divine joys. Worldly refinement is a close imitation of religion. They yield but a temporary joy. For my heart rejoiced in all my labour. Misery can exist beneath them all, and as they vanish with life they cannot be our chief good. God permits some men to run through the entire scale of human happiness to show others that the best of this world cannot fill the soul.

II. It was tried under the Restraints and Control of Wisdom. Yet acquainting mine heart with wisdom. Wisdom remained with me. He did not rush headlong into sensual enjoyments, but tested them with calm reflection and composure. He did not allow himself to be blindly led by passion, but was under the guidance of a mind regulated by prudence.

1. Such a course is distinguished from that of the mere voluptuary. Such plunge into pleasure and do not allow the control of the higher faculties. Wisdom is left behind. The man is a slave to passion. Unless the mind retains its supremacy and dignity, our trial of wordly pleasure cannot even merit the poor name of an experiment.

2. Such a course may be expected to yield a hopeful result.

(1.) It saves the soul from utter debasement. When the voice of reason is hushed, and a man is abandoned entirely to sensuality, there is but little prospect that he will escape the snare.

(2.) Conscience is on the side of reason and right; and is effectual when reason is released from the control of passion.

(3.) A man is not condemned to hopeless slavery while his mind is free. He preserves an instrument which can help him to recover his liberty.

III. It was tried with an Honest Endeavour to discover what was the Chief Good of Man. Till I might see what was good for the sons of men, &c. It was not the love of pleasure for its own sake that prompted him. The experiment was made in all honesty to find out what, on the whole, was best for the sons of men. We must expect that like experiments will be made in such a world as this.

1. It is not always evident, at first, what is best. A life devoted to wisdom has superior advantages over one of pleasure, yet, for aught we know, the enjoyment of the worlds pleasure may be better for us than a cold and severe wisdom, which only serves to increase our pains and anxieties. The mystery and uncertainty of human things is some justification for making a trial of this kind

2. Practical wisdom can only be gained by experience. This requires repeated trials. We can only be said really to know that of human life which we have ascertained by trial. It is well when lifes solemn lessons are quickly learned, and we become truly wise before worldly pleasure completely injures our moral force, and claims us for her own.

SUGGESTIVE COMMENTS ON THE VERSES

Ecc. 2:3. He who indulges in the coarse mirth excited by wine, with the hope that a superior wisdom will preserve him from moral danger, runs the risk of being shorn of his strength in the lap of luxury.

He who gives the reins to pleasure may never recover his command.
Human life is so short and uncertain that we should come to an early decision concerning our Chief Good.
How much use of wit and reason soever men may have in the pursuance of earthly delights, yet while they are seeking in their hearts to give themselves away to these things, they are but taking hold of folly. And though the foolish sinner does not look upon his way while he is pursuing his idols, yet when God awakes him, whether in wrath or mercy, he will see and be forced to say that he hath been doing nothing but taking hold on folly [Nisbet].

The original goes thus, in the number of the days of their life, as showing the fewness of mans days, so that they may be numbered. For as the Poet speaketh, Pauperis est numerare pecus. It is a sign of a poor man to number his cattle; so it is a proof of the scantiness of mans days that number doth so easily measure them [Jermin].

Ecc. 2:4. In producing works of utility and adornment, man enjoys a pleasure beyond the value of the things themselves.

Some kind of activity is necessary for the happiness of those whose lot does not require them to toil for subsistence. No one can be happy in a life of soft enjoymentpassively receiving the gifts of pleasure. There must be some means of employing the active powers of the mind.
The power of constructing great works is part of the likeness of the Divine Nature. The beginning of all these things is laid in the thought of mans mind. All the devices of human industry and skill have been developed from ideas. And what is creation, but the Divine thought taking form and expression in eternal things? It is God-like to possess the power to devise and produce great works.
For how much the magnificence is greater in the structure of houses, either in respect of their multitude or cost, by so much the shame is greater, that the soul is not adorned. Let that be built up carefully; let humility be the pavement of it, let hope be the roof of it, let faith be the pillars of it; on this side let justice be towards men, on that side devotion towards God. And let love, an excellent artificer, neatly join all these together, and then there will be a house for wisdom to dwell in [Jermin].

We may use our means of living to administer to our necessity, and the culture of our mind and taste; or to feed the desire of display and vain show.
A Greek Father says, that Solomons confession of the planting of vineyards contains a catalogue of his vain affections, that Wine immoderately taken is the nourishment of intemperancy, the bane of youth, the reproach of old age, the shame of women, the prison of madness.

Ecc. 2:5. Man still finds his delight in what is but the degenerate imitation of Paradise. Buildings and palaces would soon cease to please. He must have the pleasures of the open air, the sweet refreshments of gardens.

Let those to whom God hath afforded these delights have in their gardens, as Joseph had, a sepulchrethat is, let them in their pleasures remember their death. And as Joesphs sepulchre in his garden was made the sepulchre of Christ, so it were good also that such in their gardensthat is, in their delightswould think of the misery which He suffered for them [Jermin].

The church is the true garden of God, enclosed from the wilderness of the world, and tended with special care. All possible varieties are compelled to grow in the garden, so the church includes every variety of mind, temper, and disposition; affording special encouragements and means of spiritual growth for each. Yet God has some garden plants in the wilderness; the fruits of the Spirit may be brought forth outside the domain of Christendom.

Ecc. 2:6. Large pools were necessary for watering the gardens and orchards. The Church of God needs her fountains near.

Nature, though free with her bountiful blessings, leaves much for man to do. Water is provided, but human contrivance is necessary to conduct it to every place where it is required. We have our part to do in preparing our souls to be proper receptacles of the plentiful grace of God.
But that from these pools of water, we may draw something that shall be wholesome for us; let us make our eyes pools of water, that so a sorrow for our sins may wash them away with the watering of it, and cleanse us from them by the current of amendment in the course of our life. Or else let us make pools of charity, therewith to water the decayed trees of misery; therewith to moisten the dry ground of want and necessity. Charity is Rehoboth, the well of breadth, a name given by Isaac to a well which his servants digged; for charity doth spread abroad her waters wheresoever is need of them [Jermin].

Let us make us pools by digging into the depths of heavenly knowledge. There is nothing better than this Divine fountain, by which the dryness and barrenness of our souls is made wet and moistened, by which virtues do spring up in us, so that even a grove of good desires and works doth sprout forth in our lives [Gregory Nyssenus].

Ecc. 2:7. The vanity of man is fed by that display of grandeur which raises the admiration of others.

Servants born in the house would be endowed with natural fidelity. Men make use of natural laws to serve their own ambition.
It is not the lot of all to be attended by numerous trains of servants, but if we are the sons of the heavenly king, the angels wait upon us. The heirs of salvation have, even under the disadvantages of the present state, some signs of royal dignity.
In the heavenly household, the greatest, waits upon the least. Man is greatest, not when exacting, but when performing service.

Ecc. 2:8. The love of gold and silver tends to burden the heart more than the love of large possessions in cattle, &c. A man is more likely to worship the image of wealth than wealth itself.

The homage paid to wealth is a strong temptation to indulge the illusion of superiority.
Gifts persuade even the gods, and gold is more potent with men than a thousand arguments [Plato].

Wealth honours wealth; income pays respect to income; but it is wont to cherish in its secret heart an unmeasured contempt for poverty. It is the possession of wealth, and of the social power which is conferred by wealth, which constitutes the title to honour. To believe that a man with 60 a year is just as much deserving of respect as a man with 6000, you must be seriously a Christian. A philosophical estimate of men and things is not really proof against the inroads of the sentiment which makes the possession of mere income the standard of honour [Liddon].

The most obvious danger which worldly possessions present to our spiritual welfare is, that they become practically a substitute in our hearts for that One Object to which our supreme devotion is due. They are present; God is unseen. They are means at hand of effecting what we want: whether God will hear our petitions for those wants is uncertain; or rather, I may say, certain in the negative. Thus they promise and are able to be gods to us, and such gods too as require no service, but, like dumb idols, exalt the worshipper, impressing him with a notion of his own power and security. Religious men are able to repress, nay extirpate, sinful desires; but as to wealth, they cannot easily rid themselves of a secret feeling that it gives them a footing to stand uponan importance, a superiority; and in consequence they get attached to the world, lose sight of the duty of bearing the Cross, become dull and dim-sighted, and lose their delicacy and precision of touch, are numbed (so to say) in their fingers ends, as regards religious interests and prospects [J. H. Newman].

Music is a kind of language, and has a voice independent of the forms of speech. It has an universal eloquence, a power to withdraw even the dull and the sensual for awhile from their grosser existence. It is a luxury to feel strongly, and to allow the soul to be dissolved in harmony. But whatever exalts the feelings without leading to right practice inflicts moral injury.
We may understand the delights of the sons of men of music generally, great being the power which the delight of music hath upon men. Of which King Theodoric writing to Boetius in Cassiodore saithWhen she cometh from the secret of nature, as it were the Queen of the senses, adorned with her musical figures; other thoughts skip away, and she causeth all things to be cast out, that there may be a delight only of hearing her. She sweeteneth grief, mollifieth rage, mitigateth cruelty, quickeneth laziness, giveth rest to the watchful, maketh her chaste who hath been defiled with unclean love, and that which is a most blessed kind of curing, by most sweet pleasures driveth away the passions of the mind, and by the subjection of things that are insensible obtaineth command over the senses. But though this be the delight of the sons of men, let the delight of the sons of God be the music and harmony of their lives unto Gods commandments [Jermin].

Ecc. 2:9. Solomon compares his greatness as a worldly-wise man, not with private characters, but with official. He was great, yet it was only more than they that were before him in Jerusalem, not more than they that were in virtue and holiness before him. Worldly greatness is not to be compared with spiritual.

Men imagine that the greatness of their works and possessions is transferred to themselves, that their magnificence can be determined by measures of surface. The Rich Fool thought that the enlarging of his barns would make the foundations of his life surer and more lasting.
The most exalted human wisdom cannot save us from becoming a prey to vanity. We may by means of it conquer sensuality, and yet end in the worship of ourselves.
While the outward man revels in pleasure, the inward man may be yearning for a higher life.
There is some hope for a man who has made even a foolish experiment upon principles of reason. He who leaves wisdom behind him, when he plunges into worldly pleasures, destroys the bridge by which alone he can return.
Solomon could not have come to the conclusion that all was vanity, unless he discovered that there was something in himself which was not vanitythus, wisdom remained with him. Hugh of S. Victor says, He was able to speak that against vanity not vainly.

So prone are men enjoying plenty of outward delights to lose even the exercise of common prudence and reason, and to give themselves up as beasts to the leading of their sensual appetites, that it is a mercy much to be marked and acknowledged for a man to have any measure of the exercise thereof continued in that case. For Solomon speaks of this as a remarkable thing, which hardly would be expected by many, that he having all the delights of the sons of men, being so great and increased more than all that had been before him, might yet truly say this, Also my wisdom remaineth with me [Nisbet].

Ecc. 2:10. The heart is often led by the eye, the seat of moral power becomes subject to the senses.

The eye, the guardian of our safety, may be allured by a false light that leads to bewilder, and dazzles to blind,by false philosophies, pleasures, religions.

Man received the first wounds of sin through the eye. The very sentinel placed aloft by heaven to guard us must be defended by Gods especial grace.
Let us remember how unhappily their eyes were opened unto them that were in Paradise, which were enlightened so long as they had them shut unto sin. Where we read the eye is the light of the body, the Greek is, the lamp, the candle of the body: for as a lamp burneth very well, and giveth good light so long as it is shut up and kept close within some room; but if it be set in the open air, is soon blown out by the wind; so the eye, if it be kept shut from vanity by a watchful carefulness, then it giveth the best light to the body. But if it be wantonly and negligently opened, then the good light of it is soon put out [Jermin].

There is some earthly recompense for human labours; but, at best, man is never truly rewarded here for all his pains. A transitory joy is but a poor compensation to set over against the infinite sadness of life, and the terrible forebodings of the heart.
The eye, the most far-reaching of all our powers, cannot give us lasting joy. It may range freely over every delight, but the spirit of man will remain in bondage till it is delivered by the coming of the Holy Ghost.
Labour there was in the seeking of it, labour in the possession of it, and yet this is the All which man seeketh of all his labour. This is the portion which the Preacher saith he had; there being no sickness, no enemy, no other cross either in mind or body, at home or abroad, to deprive him of it. So that we have here under the law, the Prodigal under the Gospel, asking his portion of his father, which is divided to him, and spent by him in the far country of this world upon worldly delights [Jermin].

Ecc. 2:11. All the works.

1. In collecting riches.
2. In increasing the magnificence of the State.
3. In multiplying the means of social enjoyment.

It is well that we should look upon the works we have wrought in the world, till we discover that, apart from God, they are labour, weariness; and pain upon every remembrance of them. To think upon our ways, to survey our position, is the first step towards obtaining our true good.
The pangs of spiritual faminethe want of God, may be felt by one whose lot it is to live in the midst of a profusion of this worlds plenty and pleasure.
Our works in the world often outlast our joy. The Royal Moralist did not look upon his joy, but upon his labours.
Vanity has two ingredientshollowness and aimlessness. Without God, all things are unsubstantial; they have no solid and lasting worth. Human labour, when not inspired by the Divine idea, reaches no worthy goal. God had His witnesses for this truth in the old heathen world. Thus, in the poem of Lucretius, we readTherefore the race of men labours always fruitlessly, and in vain; and life is consumed in empty cares.
The wisdom which is concerned with what is under the sun can only give us negative conclusions; can only say of true happinessIt is not here. Religion has a positive truth to set over against thisEvery good gift and every perfect gift is from above.
That is vain which is empty, when there is a name, but not anything at all. A name of riches, but not the thing; a name of glory, but without the thing; a name of power, but the name only is to be found. Who is therefore so senseless as to seek after names which have not the things, and to follow after empty things which should be shunned [St. Chrysostom].

The Fortunate Islands, which anyone may talk of, are but mere dreams, not lying anywhere under the suns light [Jermin].

Fuente: The Preacher’s Complete Homiletical Commentary Edited by Joseph S. Exell

(3) Sought.The word translated search out (Ecc. 1:13).

Draw, margin. There is no Biblical parallel for the use of the word in this sense. The general meaning is plain.

Acquainting.Rather, guiding. The word is used of the driver of an animal or the shepherd of a flock (2Sa. 6:3; Psa. 80:1; Isa. 63:4). Kohleth contemplated not an unrestrained enjoyment of pleasure, but one controlled by prudence.

All the days.(See margin). This phrase occurs again in Ecc. 5:17; Ecc. 6:12. We have men of number in the sense of fewi.e., so few that they can be numbered (Gen. 34:30, and often elsewhere). So we may translate here for their span of life.

Fuente: Ellicott’s Commentary for English Readers (Old and New Testaments)

3. Yet acquainting Hebrew, My mind still guiding with wisdom. The sense seems to be, that not rashly or impulsively, but with reflection and self-counsel, he sought to determine whether real enjoyment could be found in merely sensual pleasures.

To lay hold on Hebrew, to enlarge or reinforce. Strengthening by wine, after Koheleth’s idea, is thus stated by an Arabian poet,

Tis we who steal the sense of wine,

Not wine that robbeth us of wit.”

All the days Better, The limited days of their lives; necessarily few.

Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

Ecc 2:3. I sought, &c. I sought in mine heart that I might force my senses into a habit of drinking wine, (yet leading my heart into wisdom,) and that I might apprehend what is in folly, until I should see, where is that good for the children of men, which they pursue under heaven every day of their life. Desvoeux. Solomon’s design, as here represented, was, to catch hold of whatever he should find in folly, rather for the improvement of his knowledge, than for the sake of present enjoyment. This verse contains a fine instance of the antithesis; where the flesh or sensual appetite is opposed to the heart, the one being drawn unto wine, the other led into wisdom; where we have the two ends toward which each of these subjects is carried, wine and wisdom, and the manner in which each of them is influenced to take these different courses. The verb nahag, applied to the heart means to guide, to lead from one place to another; and is constantly made use of with respect to animated creatures, men or tame animals, who use their activity towards attaining the end proposed. The meaning of the verb mashak, employed with respect to the flesh is, to draw with violence: in the proper sense, it is always applied to mere passive beings; and in the figurative, it always retains a notion of force and constraint. Thus it seems the sacred writer wanted to inform his hearers, that he could not be brought into a habit of drinking without putting some violence upon his own inclinations; whereas his natural bent prompted him to the search after wisdom; that he put this force upon his own inclination with no other view, but that he might acquire an experimental knowledge of what so many men call happiness, and might thereby be enabled to judge of its value; and lastly, that at the same time he pursued this course, he did not grow passionate for wine, which must have disqualified him for judging; but preserved such a command over that habit, as to be led from it by wisdom, whenever he should find he knew enough of it to form a right judgment. And, lest his meaning should be misunderstood, he does not say positively that he put that force upon his flesh; but that he took pains, or sought to do it: whereas, with respect to the leading of his heart to wisdom, he directly ascribes it to himself, or to the propensity of his soul that way. There is still another opposition, relating to the time spent in pursuing that course into which he took pains to force himself. The lovers of wine will make the drinking of it a good or happiness to themselves under heaven, as long as they live; but he gave way to that foolish and sinful habit no longer than it was necessary for his wise purpose of being thoroughly acquainted with the nature of that wherein men of pleasure place their happiness. Until I should see where that good, or happiness, lies for the children of men, which they will pursue under heaven the number of the days of their life.

Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke

Ecc 2:3 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.

Ver. 3. Yet acquainting my heart with wisdom, ] i.e., Resolving to retain my wisdom; but that could not be, “For whoredom, and wine, and new wine take away the heart”; Hos 4:11 they dull and disable nature, and so set us in a greater distance from grace; they “fight against the soul,” 1Pe 2:11 and take away all scent and sense of heavenly comforts: much like that parcel of ground in Sicily, that sendeth such a strong smell of fragrant flowers to all the fields thereabouts, that no hound can hunt there. a And here I believe began Solomon’s apostasy, his laying the reins on the neck to pursue sinful pleasures, pleasing himself in a conceit that he could serve God and his lusts too. A Christian hath ever God for his chief end, and never sins with deliberation about this end; he will not forego God upon any terms; only he errs in the way, thinking he may fulfil such a lust, and keep God too. But God and sin cannot cohabit; and God’s graces groaning under our abuses in this kind cry unto him for help, who gives them thereupon, as he did to the wronged Church, Rev 12:14 the wings of an eagle: after which, one lust calls upon another, as they once did upon their fellow soldiers, “Now Moab to the spoil,” till the heart be filled with as many corruptions as Solomon had concubines.

a Arist., De Mirab. Auscul., lib. viii.

Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)

in mine heart: i.e. resolved.

to give myself unto: or, how to enlist, by wine, my very flesh [in the work]: i.e. the work of proving the heart with mirth “yet retaining wisdom”.

wine. Hebrew. yayin. App-27.

wisdom. See note on Ecc 1:13. men. Hebrew. ‘adam. App-14. Note the use of this word in Ecc. See note on Ecc 1:13.

under the heaven. See note on Ecc 1:3. Some codices, with Septuagint, Syriac, and Vulgate, read “sun”, to which it is equivalent.

all the days = the numbered days.

Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics

sought: Ecc 1:17, 1Sa 25:36

give myself unto wine: Heb. draw my flesh with wine

yet: Pro 20:1, Pro 31:4, Pro 31:5, Eph 5:18

and to lay: Ecc 7:18, Pro 20:1, Pro 23:29-35, Mat 6:24, 2Co 6:15-17

till: Ecc 6:12, Ecc 12:13

all: Heb. the number of, Gen 47:9, Job 14:14, Psa 90:9-12

Reciprocal: Psa 4:6 – many Psa 34:12 – that he Ecc 3:1 – under Ecc 6:11 – General 1Pe 3:10 – see

Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge

Ecc 2:3. I sought to give myself unto wine To gratify myself with delicious meats and drinks; yet acquainting, &c. 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 on folly, &c. To pursue sensual pleasure, which was my folly; till I might see, &c. Till I might find out the true way to contentment and satisfaction, during this mortal life.

Fuente: Joseph Bensons Commentary on the Old and New Testaments

2:3 I sought in my heart to give myself to wine, yet acquainting my heart with {b} 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.

(b) Even though I gave myself to pleasures, yet I thought to keep wisdom and the fear of God in my heart, and govern my affairs by the same.

Fuente: Geneva Bible Notes