Exegetical and Hermeneutical Commentary of Ecclesiastes 3:8
A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
8. A time to love, and a time, to hate ] Greek thought again supplies us with a parallel,
;
,
,
,
,
.
“Shall not we too learn
Our lesson of true wisdom? I indeed
Have learnt but now that we should hate a foe
Only so far as one that yet may love,
And to a friend just so much help I’ll give
As unto one that will not always stay.”
Soph. Aias, 680 686.
a time of war, and a time of peace ] The change in the Hebrew, as in the English, from verbs in the infinitive to substantives is probably intended to emphasize the completion of the list. The words are of course closely connected with the “love” and “hate” of the preceding clause, but differ in referring to the wider range of national relations. Here also the wisdom of a king or statesman lies in discerning the opportuneness of war or peace, in seeing when the maxim “ si vis pacem para bellum ” is applicable or inapplicable.
It may be well to repeat here what was said at the outset in reference to this list of times and seasons, that the idea of a Necessity, Fate, Predestination, which many interpreters, bent on finding traces of a Stoic fatalism, have read into the teaching of the section, is really foreign to the writer’s thoughts. That which he insists on is the thought that the circumstances and events of life form part of a Divine Order, are not things that come at random, and that wisdom, and therefore such a measure of happiness as is attainable, lies in adapting ourselves to the order and accepting the guidance of events in great things and small, while shame and confusion come from resisting it. The lesson is in fact identical with one very familiar to us at once in the commonest of all proverbs, “Take time by the forelock;” “Time and tide wait for no man,” and in a loftier strain,
“There is a tide in the affairs of men
Which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune;
Omitted, all the remnant of their lives
Is bound in shallows and in miseries.”
Shakespeare, Julius Caesar, iv. 3.
It is well to remember such counsels of prudence. It is well also to remember that a yet higher wisdom bids us in the highest work “to be instant, in season, out of season” ( , , 2Ti 4:2).
Fuente: The Cambridge Bible for Schools and Colleges
Verse 8. A time to love, – hate, – of war, – of peace.]
“Love turns to hatred; interest or caprice
Dissolves the firmest knot by friendship tied.
O’er rival nations, with revenge inflamed,
Or lust of power, fell Discord shakes awhile
Her baleful torch: now smiling Peace returns.
The above paraphrase on the verses cited contains a general view of the principal occurrences of time, in reference to the human being, from his cradle to his grave, through all the operations of life.
Fuente: Adam Clarke’s Commentary and Critical Notes on the Bible
A time to love; when God will stir up the affection of love, or give occasion for the exercise or discovery of it to others.
Fuente: English Annotations on the Holy Bible by Matthew Poole
8. hatefor example, sin,lusts (Lu 14:26); that is, tolove God so much more as to seem in comparison to hate“father or mother,” when coming between us and God.
a time of war . . . peace(Lu 14:31).
Fuente: Jamieson, Fausset and Brown’s Commentary Critical and Explanatory on the Whole Bible
A time to love, and a time to hate,…. For one to love his friend, and to hate a man, a sinner, as the Targum; to love a friend while he continues such, and hate him, or less love him, when he proves treacherous and unfaithful; an instance of a change of love into hatred may be seen in the case of Amnon, 2Sa 13:15. A time of unregeneracy is a time of loving worldly lusts and sinful pleasures, the company of wicked men, and all carnal delights and recreations; and a time of conversion is a time to hate what was before loved, sin, and the conversion of sinners, the garment spotted with the flesh, the principles and practices, though not the persons, of ungodly men; and even to hate, that is, less love, the dearest friends and relations, in comparison of, or when in competition with, Christ;
a time of war, and a time of peace; for nations to be engaged in war with each other, or to be at peace, which are continually revolving; and there is a time when there will be no more war. In a spiritual sense, the present time, or state of things, is a time of war; the Christian’s life is a warfare state, though it will be soon accomplished, in which he is engaging in fighting with spiritual enemies, sin, Satan, and the world: the time to come, or future state, is a time of peace, when saints shall enter into peace, and be no more disturbed by enemies from within or from without. In the Midrash, all the above times and seasons are interpreted of Israel, and applied to them.
Fuente: John Gill’s Exposition of the Entire Bible
“To love has its time, and to hate has its time; war has its time, and peace has its time.” In the two pairs of contrasts here, the contents of the first are, not exclusively indeed (Psa 120:7), but yet chiefly referred to the mutual relations of peoples. It is the result of thoughtful intention that the quodlibet of 2 x 7 pairs terminates this for and against in “peace;” and, besides, the author has made the termination emphatic by this, that here “instead of infinitives, he introduces proper nouns” (Hitz.).
Fuente: Keil & Delitzsch Commentary on the Old Testament
8. To love to hate Even the movements of human passion are recognised as subject to the inevitable order. Men now “love” and now “hate” each other.
War peace Nations are now at “war,” and again in “peace.” The writer does not commit himself to the approval of any of the things here named. He simply takes twenty-eight illustrations from common life to show how the course of the world goes, and urges that this course is irresistible.
Fuente: Whedon’s Commentary on the Old and New Testaments
Ecc 3:8. A time to love, &c. The third proof the proposition laid down in the beginning, and comprised in Ecc 3:1-8 is taken from the endless vicissitude of things in this world, and especially of those which depend on our choice. There is nothing that a man can fix upon, of which it is in his power to say, I will always be in the same mind with respect to it. The most contradictory resolutions have their time with us, and succeed one another, as appears from the annexed list of contrarieties. Thus we do implicitly acknowledge the vanity of those occupations, which are the results of our determinations: for what is changing, but owning that that which you alter either was not, or at least has ceased to be, proper, and of consequence had no permanent goodness in it?
Fuente: Commentary on the Holy Bible by Thomas Coke
Ecc 3:8 A time to love, and a time to hate; a time of war, and a time of peace.
Ver. 8. A time to love, and a time to hate. ] Yet I like not his counsel that said, Ama tanquam osurus, odi tanquam amaturus, a Let a man choose whom he may love, and then love whom he hath chosen. “Let love be without dissimulation; abhor the evil, cleave to the good.” Rom 12:9 Hate we may, but then it must be, non virum, sed vitium, not the man, but his evil qualities; whereof also we must seek to bereave him, that he may be totus desiderabilis, “altogether lovely.” Son 5:16
A time of war, and a time of peace.
a Cicero De Amicit.
to love. Jer 2:2. Eze 16:8. Dan 1:9. Gal 1:5, Gal 1:13. 2Th 1:3.
to hate. 2Sa 13:15. Psa 105:25. Pro 25:17. Luk 14:26. Pro 11:15; Pro 15:27; Pro 28:16. Joh 12:25. Jud 1:23.
of war. Exo 17:16. Num 1:3, Num 1:20, Num 1:22; Num 26:2. Deu 3:18. Jdg 3:2. 2Sa 3:1. Jer 6:4. Luk 14:31. Rev 12:7; Rev 19:11, Rev 19:19.
of peace. Jos 11:23; Jos 14:15. Lev 26:6. Jdg 4:17. 1Sa 7:14. Psa 72:3; Psa 85:8. Pro 16:7. Isa 9:7. Zec 9:10. Rom 5:1. Eph 4:3.
time to love: Eze 16:8, Psa 139:21, Eph 3:19, Eph 5:25, Eph 5:28, Eph 5:29, Tit 2:4
a time to hate: 2Ch 19:2, Luk 14:26, Rev 2:2
a time of war: Gen 14:14-17, Jos 8:1-29, Jos 11:23, 2Sa 10:6-19, 1Ki 5:4, 2Ch 20:1-29, 2Ch 20:30
Reciprocal: 2Sa 11:1 – after the year
Fuente: John Trapp’s Complete Commentary (Old and New Testaments)
Fuente: Companion Bible Notes, Appendices and Graphics
Fuente: The Treasury of Scripture Knowledge