Chapter 11:
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Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Proverbs Song of Solomon
Ecclesiastes 11
Complete Concise
In this chapter we have, I. A pressing exhortation to works of
charity and bounty to the poor, as the best cure of the vanity which our worldly
riches are subject to and the only way of making them turn to a substantial good
account (v. 1-6). II. A serious admonition to prepare for death and judgment,
and to begin betimes, even in the days of our youth, to do so (v. 7-10).
Verses 1-6
Solomon had often, in this book, pressed it upon rich people to
take the comfort of their riches themselves; here he presses it upon them to do
good to others with them and to abound in liberality to the poor, which will,
another day, abound to their account. Observe,
I. How the duty itself is recommended to us, v. 1. 1.
Cast
thy bread upon the waters, thy
bread-corn upon the low places (so
some understand it), alluding to the husbandman, who
goes forth, bearing
precious seed, sparing bread-corn from his family for the seedness, knowing
that without that he can have no harvest another year; thus the charitable man
takes from his bread-corn for seed-corn, abridges himself to supply the poor,
that he may
sow beside all waters (Isa. 32:20), because as he sows so he
must
reap, Gal. 6:7. We read of the
harvest of the river, Isa.
23:3. Waters, in scripture, are put for multitudes (Rev. 16:5), and there are
multitudes of poor (we do not want objects of charity); waters are put also for
mourners: the poor are men of sorrows. Thou must give
bread, the
necessary supports of life, not only give good words but
good things, Isa.
58:7. It must be
thy bread, that which is honestly got; it is no charity,
but injury, to give that which is none of our own to give; first
do justly,
and then
love mercy. "Thy bread, which thou didst design for
thyself, let the poor have a share with thee, as they had with Job, ch. 31:17.
Give freely to the poor, as that which is
cast upon the waters. Send it a
voyage, send it as a venture, as merchants that trade by sea. Trust it
upon
the waters; it shall not sink."
2.
"Give a portion to seven and also to eight, that
is, be free and liberal in works of charity." (1.) "Give much if thou
hast much to give, not a pittance, but
a portion, not a bit or two, but a
mess, a meal; give a large dole, not a paltry one; give
good measure (Lu.
6:38); be generous in giving, as those were when, on festival days, they
sent
portions to those for whom nothing was prepared (Neh. 8:10), worthy
portions." (2.) "Give to many,
to seven, and also to eight; if
thou meet with seven objects of charity, give to them all, and then, if thou
meet with an eighth, give to that, and if with eight more, give to them all too.
Excuse not thyself with the good thou hast done from the good thou hast further
to do, but hold on, and mend. In hard times, when the number of the poor
increases, let thy charity be proportionably enlarged." God is rich in
mercy to all, to us, though unworthy; he
gives liberally, and upbraids not
with former gifts, and we must be merciful as our heavenly Father is.
II. The reasons with which it is pressed upon us. Consider,
1. Our reward for well-doing is very certain. "Though thou
cast
it upon the waters, and it seem lost, thou thinkest thou hast given thy good
word with it and art likely never to hear of it again, yet
thou shalt find it
after many days, as the husbandman finds his seed again in a plentiful
harvest and the merchant his venture in a rich return. It is not lost, but well
laid out, and well laid up; it brings in full interest in the present gifts of
God's providence, and graces and comforts of his Spirit; and the principal is
sure, laid up in heaven, for it is
lent to the Lord." Seneca, a
heathen, could say,
Nihil magis possidere me credam, quam bene donataI
possess nothing so completely as that which I have given away. Hochabeo
quodcunque dedi; hae sunt divitiae certae in quacunque sortis humanae levitateWhatever
I have imparted I still possess; these riches remain with me through all the
vicissitudes of life. "Thou shalt find it, perhaps not quickly,
but
after many days; the return may be slow, but it is sure and will be so much
the more plentiful." Wheat, the most valuable grain, lies longest in the
ground. Long voyages make the best returns.
2. Our opportunity for well-doing is very uncertain:
"Thou
knowest not what evil may be upon the earth, which may deprive thee of thy
estate, and put thee out of a capacity to do good, and therefore, while thou
hast wherewithal, be liberal with it, improve the present season, as the
husbandman in sowing his ground, before the frost comes." We have reason to
expect
evil upon the earth, for we are born to trouble; what the evil may
be we
know not, but that we may be ready for it, whatever it is, it is
our wisdom, in the day of prosperity, to be in good, to be doing good. Many make
use of this as an argument against giving to the poor, because they know not
what hard times may come when they may want themselves; whereas we should
therefore the rather be charitable, that, when
evil days come, we may
have the comfort of having done good while we were able; we would then hope to
find mercy both with God and man, and therefore should now show mercy. If by
charity we trust God with what we have, we put it into good hands against bad
times.
III. How he obviates the objections which might be made against
this duty and the excuses of the uncharitable.
1. Some will say that what they have is their own and they have
it for their own use, and will ask, Why should we
cast it thus
upon
the waters? Why should
I take my bread, and my flesh, and give it to I
know not whom? So Nabal pleaded, 1 Sa. 25:11. "Look up, man, and
consider how soon thou wouldest be starved in a barren ground,
if the clouds
over thy head should plead thus, that they have their waters for themselves; but
thou seest, when they are
full of rain, they empty themselves upon the earth,
to make it fruitful, till they are wearied and spent with watering it, Job
37:11. Are the heavens thus bountiful to the poor earth, that is so far below
them, and wilt thou grudge thy bounty to thy poor brother, who is
bone of thy
bone? Or thus: some will say, Though we give but little to the poor, yet,
thank God, we have as charitable a heart as any." Nay, says Solomon,
if
the clouds be full of rain, they will empty themselves; if there be charity
in the heart, it will show itself, Jam. 2:15, 16. He that
draws out his soul
to the hungry will reach forth his hand to them, as he has ability.
2. Some will say that their sphere of usefulness is low and
narrow; they cannot do the good that they see others can, who are in more public
stations, and therefore they will sit still and do nothing. Nay, says he,
in
the place where the tree falls, or happens to be,
there it shall be,
for the benefit of those to whom it belongs; every man must labour to be a
blessing to that place, whatever it is, where the providence of God casts him;
wherever we are we may find good work to do if we have but hearts to do it. Or
thus: some will say, "Many present themselves as objects of charity who are
unworthy, and I do not know whom it is fit to give it to." "Trouble
not thyself about that" (says Solomon); "give as discreetly as thou
canst, and then be satisfied that, though the person should prove undeserving of
thy charity, yet, if thou give it with an honest heart, thou shalt not lose thy
reward; which way soever the charity is directed,
north or
south,
thine shall be the benefit of it." This is commonly applied to death;
therefore
let us do good, and, as good trees,
bring forth the fruits of righteousness,
because death will shortly come and cut us down, and we shall then be determined
to an unchangeable state of happiness or misery according to what was done in
the body. As the tree falls at death, so it is likely to lie to all eternity.
3. Some will object the many discouragements they have met with
in their charity. They have been reproached for it as proud and pharisaical;
they have but little to give, and they shall be despised if they do not give as
others do; they know not but their children may come to want it, and they had
better lay it up for them; they have taxes to pay and purchases to make; they
know not what use will be made of their charity, nor what construction will be
put upon it; these, and a hundred such objections, he answers, in one word (v.
4):
He that observes the wind shall not sow, which signifies doing good;
and
he that regards the clouds shall not reap, which signifies getting good. If
we stand thus magnifying every little difficulty and making the worst of it,
starting objections and fancying hardship and danger where there is none, we
shall never go on, much less go through with our work, nor make any thing of it.
If the husbandman should decline, or leave off, sowing for the sake of every
flying cloud, and reaping for the sake of every blast of wind, he would make but
an ill account of his husbandry at the year's end. the duties of religion are
as necessary as sowing and reaping, and will turn as much to our own advantage.
The discouragements we meet with in these duties are but as winds and clouds,
which will do us no harm, and which those that put on a little courage and
resolution will despise and easily break through. Note, Those that will be
deterred and driven off by small and seeming difficulties from great and real
duties will never bring any thing to pass in religion, for there will always
arise some wind, some cloud or other, at least in our imagination, to discourage
us. Winds and clouds are in God's hands, are designed to try us, and our
Christianity obliges us to endure hardness.
4. Some will say, "We do not see in which way what we
expend in charity should ever be made up to us; we do not find ourselves ever
the richer; why should we depend upon the general promise of a blessing on the
charitable, unless we saw which way to expect the operation of it?" To this
he answers,
"Thou knowest not the work of God, nor is it fit thou
shouldst. Thou mayest be sure he will make good his word of promise, though he
does not tell thee how, or which way, and though he works in a way by himself,
according to the counsels of his unsearchable wisdom. He will work, and none
shall hinder; but then he will work and none shall direct or prescribe to him.
The blessing shall work insensibly but irresistibly. God's work shall
certainly agree with his word, whether we see it or no." Our ignorance of
the work of God he shows, in two instances:(1.) We
know not what is the
way of the Spirit, of the wind (so some), we
know not whence it comes, or
whither it goes, or when it will turn; yet the seamen lie ready waiting for
it, till it turns about in favour of them; so we must do our duty, in
expectation of the time appointed for the blessing. Or it may be understood of
the human soul; we know that God made us, and gave us these souls, but how they
entered into these bodies, are united to them, animate them, and operate upon
them, we know not; the soul is a mystery to itself, no marvel then that
the
work of God is so to us. (2.) We know not
how the bones are fashioned in
the womb of her that is with child. We cannot describe the manner either of
the formation of the body or of its information with a soul; both, we know, are
the
work of God, and we acquiesce in his work, but cannot, in either, trace the
process of the operation. We doubt not of the birth of the child that is
conceived, though we know not how it is formed; nor need we doubt of the
performance of the promise, though we perceive not how things work towards it.
And we may well trust God to provide for us that which is convenient, without
our anxious disquieting cares, and therein to recompense us for our charity,
since it was without any knowledge or forecast of ours that our bodies were
curiously wrought in secret and our souls found the way into them; and so the
argument is the same, and urged to the same intent, with that of our Saviour
(Mt. 6:25),
The life, the living soul that God has given us,
is more
than meat; the body, that God has made us,
is more than raiment; let
him therefore that has done the greater for us be cheerfully depended upon to do
the less.
5. Some say, "We have been charitable, have given a great
deal to the poor, and never yet saw any return for it; many days are past, and
we have not
found it again," to which he answers (v. 6), "Yet
go on, proceed and persevere in well-doing; let slip no opportunity.
In the
morning sow thy seed upon the objects of charity that offer themselves
early,
and in the evening do not withhold thy hand, under pretence that
thou art weary; as thou hast opportunity, be doing good, some way or other, all
the day long, as the husbandman follows his seedness from morning till night.
In
the morning of youth lay out thyself to do good; give out of the little thou
hast to begin the world with;
and in the evening of old age yield not to
the common temptation old people are in to be penurious; even then
withhold
not thy hand, and think not to excuse thyself from charitable works by
purposing to make a charitable will, but do good to the last,
for thou
knowest not which work of charity and piety
shall prosper, both as to
others and as to thyself,
this or that, but hast reason to hope that
both
shall be alike good. Be not weary of well-doing, for in due season, in God's
time and that is the best time,
you shall reap," Gal. 6:9. This is
applicable to spiritual charity, our pious endeavours for the good of the souls
of others; let us continue them, for, though we have long laboured in vain, we
may at length see the success of them. Let ministers, in the days of their
seedness, sow both morning and evening;
for who can tell
which shall
prosper?
Verses 7-10
Here is an admonition both to old people and to young people, to
think of dying, and get ready for it. Having by many excellent precepts taught
us how to live well, the preacher comes now, towards the close of his discourse,
to teach us how to die well and to put us in mind of our latter end.
I. He applies himself to the aged, writes to them as fathers, to
awaken them to think of death, v. 7, 8. Here is, 1. A rational concession of the
sweetness of life, which old people find by experience:
Truly the light is
sweet; the light of
the sun is so; it is
a pleasant thing for the
eyes to behold it. Light was the first thing made in the formation of the
great world, as the eye is one of the first in the formation of the body, the
little world. It is pleasant to see the light; the heathen were so charmed with
the pleasure of it that they worshipped the sun. It is pleasant by it to see
other things, the many agreeable prospects this world gives us. The light of
life is so. Light is put for life, Job 3:20, 23. It cannot be denied that life
is sweet. It is sweet to bad men because they have
their portion in this
life; it is sweet to good men because they have this life as the time of
their preparation for a better life; it is sweet to all men; nature says it is
so, and there is no disputing against it; nor can death be desired for its own
sake, but dreaded, unless as a period to present evils or a passage to future
good. Life is sweet, and therefore we have need to double a guard upon
ourselves, lest we love it too well. 2. A caution to think of death, even in the
midst of life, and of life when it is most sweet and we are most apt to forget
death:
If a man live many years, yet let him remember the days of darkness
are coming. Here is, (1.) A summer's day supposed to be enjoyedthat life
may continue long, even many years, and that, by the goodness of God, it may be
made comfortable and a man may
rejoice in them all. There are those that
live
many years in this world, escape many dangers, receive many mercies, and
therefore are secure that they shall want no good, and that no evil shall befal
them, that the pitcher which has come so often from the well safe and sound
shall never come home broken. But who are those that
live many years and
rejoice in them all? Alas! none; we have but hours of joy for months of
sorrow. However, some rejoice in their years, their many years, more than
others; if these two things meet, a prosperous state and a cheerful spirit,
these two indeed may do much towards enabling a man to
rejoice in them all,
and yet the most prosperous state has its alloys and the most cheerful spirit
has its damps; jovial sinners have their melancholy qualms, and cheerful saints
have their gracious sorrows; so that it is but a supposition, not a case in
fact, that a man should
live many years and rejoice in them all. But,
(2.) Here is a winter's night proposed to be expected after this summer's
day:
Yet let this hearty old man
remember the days of darkness, for
they shall be many. Note, [1.] There are
days of darkness coming, the
days of our lying in the grave; there the body will lie in the dark; there the
eyes see not, the sun shines not. The darkness of death is opposed to the light
of life; the grave is a
land of darkness, Job 10:21. [2.] Those
days
of darkness will
be many; the days of our lying under ground will be
more than the days of our living above ground. They are many, but they are not
infinite; many as they are, they will be numbered and finished when
the
heavens are no more, Job 14:12. As the longest day will have its night, so
the longest night will have its morning. [3.] It is good for us often to
remember those
days of darkness, that we may not be lifted up with pride,
nor lulled asleep in carnal security, nor even transported into indecencies by
vain mirth. [4.] Notwithstanding the long continuance of life, and the many
comforts of it,
yet we must
remember the days of darkness, because
those will certainly come, and they will come with much the less terror if we
have thought of them before.
II. He applies himself to the young, and writes to them as
children, to awaken them to think of death (v. 9, 10); here we have,
1. An ironical concession to the vanities and pleasures of
youth:
Rejoice, O young man! in thy youth. Some make this to be the
counsel which the atheist and the epicure give to the young man, the poisonous
suggestions against which Solomon, in the close of the verse, prescribes a
powerful antidote. But it is more emphatic if we take it, as it is commonly
understood, by way of irony, like that of Elijah to the priests of Baal
(Cry
aloud, for he is a god), or of Micaiah to Ahab
(Go to Ramoth-Gilead, and
prosper), or of Christ to his disciples,
Sleep on now. "Rejoice, O
young man! in thy youth, live a merry life, follow thy sports, and take thy
pleasures;
let thy heart cheer thee in the days of thy youth, cheer thee
with its fancies and foolish hopes; entertain thyself with thy pleasing dreams;
walk
in the ways of thy heart; do whatever thou hast a mind to do, and stick at
nothing that may gratify the sensual appetite.
Quicquid libet, licet
Make
thy will thy law. Walk in the ways of thy heart, and let thy heart walk
after
thy eyes, a rambling heart after a roving eye; what is pleasing in
thy own eyes do it, whether it be pleasing in the eyes of God or no."
Solomon speaks thus ironically to the young man to intimate, (1.) That this is
that which he would do, and which he would fain have leave to do, in which he
places his happiness and on which he sets his heart. (2.) That he wishes all
about him would give him this counsel, would prophesy to him such smooth things
as these, and cannot brook any advice to the contrary, but reckons those his
enemies that bid him be sober and serious. (3.) To expose his folly, and the
great absurdity of a voluptuous vicious course of life. The very description of
it, if men would see things entirely, and judge of them impartially, is enough
to show how contrary to reason those act that live such a life. The very opening
of the cause is enough to determine it, without any argument. (4.) To show that
if men give themselves to such a course of life as this it is just with God to
give them up to it, to abandon them to their own heart's lusts, that they may
walk
in their own counsels, Hos. 4:7.
2. A powerful check given to these vanities and pleasures:
"Know
thou that for all these things God shall bring thee into judgment, and duly
consider that, and then live such a luxurious life if thou canst, if thou darest."
This is a
kolasteµrion
a
corrective to the foregoing concession, and plucks in the reins he had laid
on the neck of the young man's lust.
"Know then, for a certainty,
that, if thou dost take such a liberty as this, it will be thy everlasting ruin;
thou hast to do with a God who will not let it go unpunished." Note, (1.)
There is a judgment to come. (2.) We must every one of us be brought into
judgment, however we may now put far from us that evil day. (3.) We shall be
reckoned with for all our carnal mirth and sensual pleasures in that day. (4.)
It is good for all, but especially for young people, to know and consider this,
that they may not, by the indulgence of their youthful lusts,
treasure up
unto themselves wrath against that day of wrath, the wrath of the Lamb.
3. A word of caution and exhortation inferred from all this, v.
10. Let young people look to themselves and manage well both their souls and
their bodies, their heart and their flesh. (1.) Let them take care that their
minds be not lifted up with pride, nor disturbed with anger, or any sinful
passion:
Remove sorrow, or anger,
from thy heart; the word
signifies any disorder or perturbation of the mind. Young people are apt to be
impatient of check and control, to vex and fret at any thing that is humbling
and mortifying to them, and their proud hearts rise against every thing that
crosses and contradicts them. They are so set upon that which is pleasing to
sense that they cannot bear any thing that is displeasing, but it goes with
sorrow to their heart. Their pride often disquiets them, and makes them uneasy.
"Put that away, and the love of the world, and lay thy expectations low
from the creature, and then disappointments will not be occasions of sorrow and
anger to thee." Some by sorrow here understand that carnal mirth described
v. 9, the end of which will be bitterness and sorrow. Let them keep at a
distance from every thing which will be sorrow in the reflection. (2.) Let them
take care that their bodies be not defiled by intemperance, uncleanness, or any
fleshly lusts:
"Put away evil from the flesh, and let not the
members of thy body be instruments of unrighteousness. The evil of sin will be
the evil of punishment, and that which thou art fond of, as good for the flesh,
because it gratifies the appetites of it, will prove evil, and hurtful to it,
and therefore put it far from thee, the further the better."
III. The preacher, to enforce his admonition both to old and young, urges, as
an effectual argument, that which is the great argument of his discourse, the
vanity of all present things, their uncertainty and insufficiency. 1. He reminds
old people of this (v. 8):
All that comes is vanity; yea, though
a man
live many years and rejoice in them all, All that has come already, and all
that is yet to come, how much soever men promise themselves from the concluding
scenes, it is all
vanity. What will be will do no more to make men happy
than what has been.
All that come into the world are
vanity; they
are altogether so, at their best estate. 2. He reminds young people of this:
Childhood
and youth are vanity. The dispositions and actions of childhood and youth
have in them a great deal of impertinence and iniquity, sinful vanity, which
young people have need to watch against and get cured. The pleasures and
advantages of childhood and youth have in them no certainty, satisfaction, nor
continuance. They are passing away; these flowers will soon wither, and these
blossoms fall; let them therefore be knit into good fruit, which will continue
and abound to a good account.
Chapter 11:
| Darby
| Geneva
| Gill
| Jamieson Faussett Brown
| Matthew Henry
| Matthew Henry Concise
| Wesley
| Index
| Bible Gateway |
Introduction 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 Proverbs Song of Solomon
Genesis
Exodus
Leviticus
Numbers
Deuteronomy
Joshua
Judges
Ruth
1 Samuel
2 Samuel
1 Kings
2 Kings
1 Chronicles
2 Chronicles
Ezra
Nehemiah
Esther
Job
Psalm
Proverbs
Ecclesiastes
Song of Solomon
Isaiah
Jeremiah
Lamentations
Ezekiel
Daniel
Hosea
Joel
Amos
Obadiah
Jonah
Micah
Nahum
Habakkuk
Zephaniah
Haggai
Zechariah
Malachi
Matthew
Mark
Luke
John
Acts
Romans
1 Corinthians
2 Corinthians
Galatians
Ephesians
Philippians
Colossians
1 Thessalonians
2 Thessalonians
1 Timothy
2 Timothy
Titus
Philemon
Hebrews
James
1 Peter
2 Peter
1 John
2 John
3 John
Jude
Revelation
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