Chapter 12:
| 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
Ecclesiastes 12
Complete Concise
The wise and penitent preacher is here closing his sermon; and
he closes it, not only lie a good orator, but like a good preacher, with that
which was likely to make the best impressions and which he wished might be
powerful and lasting upon his hearers. Here is, I. An exhortation to young
people to begin betimes to be religious and not to put it off to old age (v. 1),
enforced with arguments taken from the calamities of old age (v. 1-5). and the
great change that death will make upon us (v. 6, 7). II. A repetition of the
great truth he had undertaken to prove in this discourse, the vanity of the
world (v. 8). III. A confirmation and recommendation of what he had written in
this and his other books, as worthy to be duly weighed and concluded, with a
charge to all to be truly religious, in consideration of the judgment to come
(v. 13, 14).
Verses 1-7
Here is, I. A call to young people to think of God, and mind
their duty to him, when they are young:
Remember now thy Creator in the days
of thy youth. This is, 1. The royal preacher's application of his sermon
concerning the vanity of the world and every thing in it. "You that are
young flatter yourselves with expectations of great things from it, but believe
those that have tried it; it yields no solid satisfaction to a soul; therefore,
that you may not be deceived by this vanity, nor too much disturbed by it,
remember
your Creator, and so guard yourselves against the mischiefs that arise from
the vanity of the creature." 2. It is the royal physician's antidote
against the particular diseases of youth, the love of mirth, and the indulgence
of sensual pleasures, the vanity which childhood and youth are subject to; to
prevent and cure this,
remember thy Creator. Here is, (1.) A great duty
pressed upon us, to
remember God as our
creator, not only to
remember that God is our Creator, that he
made us and not we ourselves,
and is therefore our rightful Lord and owner, but we must engage ourselves to
him with the considerations which his being our Creator lay us under, and pay
him the honour and duty which we owe him as our Creator.
Remember thy
Creators; the word is plural, as it is Job 35:10,
Where is God my Makers?
For God said,
Let us make man, us, Father, Son, and Holy Ghost. (2.) The
proper season for this duty
in the days of thy youth, the
days of
thy choice (so some), thy choice days, thy choosing days. "Begin in the
beginning of thy days to remember him from whom thou hadst thy being, and go on
according to that good beginning. Call him to mind when thou art young, and keep
him in mind throughout all the days of thy youth, and never forget him. Guard
thus against the temptations of youth, and thus improve the advantages of it."
II. A reason to enforce this command:
While the evil days
come not, and the years of which thou shalt say I have no pleasure in them.
1. Do it quickly, (1.) "Before sickness and death come. Do
it while thou livest, for it will be too late to do it when death has removed
thee from this state of trial and probation to that of recompence and
retribution." The days of sickness and death are
the days of evil,
terrible to nature,
evil days indeed to those that have forgotten their
Creator. These
evil days will
come sooner or later; as yet they
come
not, for God is
long-suffering to us-ward, and gives us
space to
repent; the continuing of life is but the deferring of death, and, while
life is continued and death deferred, it concerns us to prepare, and get the
property of death altered, that we may die comfortably. (2.) Before old age
comes, which, if death prevent not, will come, and they will be
years of
which we shall say, We have no pleasure in them,when we shall not relish
the delights of sense, as Barzillai (2 Sa. 19:35),when we shall be loaded
with bodily infirmities, old and blind, or old and lame,when we shall be
taken off from our usefulness, and our
strength shall be
labour and
sorrow,when we shall either have parted with our relations, and all our
old friends, or be afflicted in them and see them weary of us,when we shall
feel ourselves die by inches. These
years draw nigh, when
all that
comes will be
vanity, the remaining months all months of vanity, and
there will be
no pleasure but in the reflection of a good life on earth
and the expectation of a better life in heaven.
2. These two arguments he enlarges upon in the following verses,
only inverting the order, and shows,
(1.) How many are the calamities of old age, and that if we
should live to be old, our days will be such as we shall
have no pleasure in,
which is a good reason why we should return to God, and make our peace with him,
in the days of our youth, and not put it off till we come to be old; for
it will be no thanks to us to leave the pleasures of sin when they have left us,
nor to return to God when need forces us. It is the greatest absurdity and
ingratitude imaginable to give the cream and flower of our days to the devil,
and reserve the bran, and refuse, and dregs of them for God; this is offering
the
torn, and the lame, and the sick for sacrifice; and, besides, old age being
thus clogged with infirmities, it is the greatest folly imaginable to put off
that needful work till then, which requires the best of our strength, when our
faculties are in their prime, and especially to make the work more difficult by
a longer continuance in sin, and, laying up treasures of guilt in the
conscience, to add to the burdens of age and make them much heavier. If the
calamities of age will be such as are here represented, we shall have need of
something to support and comfort us then, and nothing will be more effectual to
do that than the testimony of our consciences for us that we begin betimes to
remember our Creator and have not since laid aside the remembrance of him. How
can we expect God should help us when we are old, if we will not serve him when
we are young? See Ps. 71:17, 18.
[1.] The decays and infirmities of old age are here elegantly
described in figurative expressions, which have some difficulty in them to us
now, who are not acquainted with the common phrases and metaphors used in
Solomon's age and language; but the general scope is plainto show how
uncomfortable, generally, the days of old age are.
First, Then
the sun
and
the light of it,
the moon and
the stars, and the light
which they borrow from it, will
be darkened. They look dim to old people,
in consequence of the decay of their sight; their countenance is clouded, and
the beauty and lustre of it are eclipsed; their intellectual powers and
faculties, which are as lights in the soul, are weakened; their understanding
and memory fail them, and their apprehension is not so quick nor their fancy so
lively as it has been; the days of their mirth are over (light is often put for
joy and prosperity) and they have not the pleasure either of the converse of the
day or the repose of the night, for both
the sun and
the moon are
darkened to them.
Secondly, Then
the clouds return after the rain;
as, when the weather is disposed to wet, no sooner has one cloud blown over than
another succeeds it, so it is with old people, when they have got free from one
pain or ailment, they are seized with another, so that their distempers are
like
a continual dropping in a very rainy day. The end of one trouble is, in this
world, but the beginning of another, and deep calls unto deep. Old people are
often afflicted with defluxions of rheum, like soaking rain, after which still
more clouds return, feeding the humour, so that it is continually grievous, and
therein the body, as it were, melts away.
Thirdly, Then
the keepers of
the house tremble. The head, which is as the watch-tower, shakes, and the
arms and hands, which are ready for the preservation of the body, shake too, and
grow feeble, upon every sudden approach and attack of danger. That vigour of the
animal spirits which used to be exerted for self-defence fails and cannot do its
office; old people are easily dispirited and discouraged.
Fourthly, Then
the
strong men shall bow themselves; the legs and thighs, which used to support
the body, and bear its weight, bend, and cannot serve for travelling as they
have done, but are soon tired. Old men that have been in their time
strong
men become weak and stoop for
age, Zec. 8:4.
God takes no pleasure
in the legs of a man (Ps. 147:10), for their strength will soon fail; but
in
the Lord Jehovah there is everlasting strength; he has everlasting arms.
Fifthly,
Then the
grinders cease because they are few; the teeth, with which we
grind our meat and prepare it for concoction, cease to do their part,
because
they are few. They are rotted and broken, and perhaps have been drawn
because they ached. Some old people have lost all their teeth, and others have
but few left; and this infirmity is the more considerable because the meat, not
being well chewed, for want of teeth, is not well digested, which has as much
influence as any thing upon the other decays of age.
Sixthly, Those that look
out of the windows are
darkened; the eyes wax dim, as Isaac's (Gen.
27:1), and Ahijah's, 1 Ki. 14:4. Moses was a rare instance of one who, when
120 years old, had good eye-sight, but ordinarily the sight decays in old people
as soon as any thing, and it is a mercy to them that art helps nature with
spectacles. We have need to improve our sight well while we have it, because the
light of the eyes may be gone before the light of life.
Seventhly, The doors
are shut in the streets. Old people keep within doors, and care not for
going abroad to entertainments. The lips, the doors of the mouth, are shut in
eating, because the teeth are gone and
the sound of the grinding with
them
is low, so that they have not that command of their meat in their
mouths which they used to have; they cannot digest their meat, and therefore
little grist is brought to the mill.
Eightly, Old people
rise up at
the voice of the bird. They have no sound sleep as young people have, but a
little thing disturbs them, even the chirping of a bird; they cannot rest for
coughing, and therefore rise up at cock-crowing, as soon as any body is
stirring; or they are apt to be jealous, and timorous, and full of care, which
breaks their sleep and makes them rise early; or they are apt to be
superstitious, and
rise up as in a fright,
at those voices of birds,
as of ravens, or screech-owls, which soothsayers call ominous.
Ninthly,
With them
all the daughters of music are
brought low. They have
neither voice nor ear, can neither sing themselves nor take any pleasure, as
Solomon had done in the days of his youth, in
singing men, and singing women,
and musical instruments, ch. 2:8. Old people grow hard of hearing, and unapt
to distinguish sounds and voices.
Tenthly, They are
afraid of that
which is high, afraid to go to the top of any high place, either because,
for want of breath, they cannot reach it, or, their heads being giddy or their
legs failing them, they dare not venture to it, or they frighten themselves with
fancying that
that which is high will fall upon them.
Fear is
in
the way; they can neither ride nor walk with their former boldness, but are
afraid of every thing that lies in their way, lest it throw them down.
Eleventhly,
The almond-tree flourishes. The old man's hair has grown white, so that
his head looks like an almond-tree in the blossom. The almond-tree blossoms
before any other tree, and therefore fitly shows what haste old age makes in
seizing upon men; it prevents their expectations and comes faster upon them than
they thought of. Gray hairs are here and there upon them, and they perceive it
not.
Twelfthly, The grasshopper is a burden and desire fails. Old men can
bear nothing; the lightest thing sits heavily upon them, both on their bodies
and on their minds, a little thing sinks and breaks them. Perhaps
the
grasshopper was some food that was looked upon to be very light of digestion
(John Baptist's meat
was locusts), but even that lies heavily upon an
old man's stomach, and therefore
desire fails, he has no appetite to
his meat, neither shall he
regard the desire of woman, as that king, Dan.
11:37. Old men become mindless and listless, and the pleasures of sense are to
them tasteless and sapless.
[2.] It is probable that Solomon wrote this when he was himself
old, and could speak feelingly of the infirmities of age, which perhaps grew the
faster upon him for the indulgence he had given himself in sensual pleasures.
Some old people bear up better than others under the decays of age, but, more or
less, the days of old age are and will be
evil days and of little
pleasure. Great care therefore should be taken to pay respect and honour to old
people, that they may have something to balance these grievances and nothing may
be done to add to them. And all this, put together, makes up a good reason why
we should
remember our Creator in the days of our youth, that he may
remember us with favour when these
evil days come, and his comforts may
delight our souls when the delights of sense are in a manner worn off.
(2.) He shows how great a change death will make with us, which
will be either the prevention or the period of the miseries of old age. Nothing
else will keep them off, nor any thing else cure them. "Therefore
remember
thy Creator in the days of thy youth, because death is certainly before
thee, perhaps it is very near thee, and it is a serious thing to die, and thou
shouldst feel concerned with the utmost care and diligence to prepare for it."
[1.] Death will fix us in an unchangeable state:
Man shall then
go to
his long home, and all these infirmities and decays of age are harbingers of
and advances towards that awful remove. At death
man goes from this world
and all the employments and enjoyments of it. He has gone for good and all, as
to his present state. He has gone
home, for here he was a stranger and
pilgrim; both soul and body go to the place whence they came, v. 7. He has gone
to his rest, to the place where he is to fix. He has gone
to his home, to the
house of his world (so some), for this world is not his. He has gone
to
his long home, for the days of his lying in the grave will be many. He has
gone
to his house of eternity, not only to his house whence he shall
never return to this world, but to the house where he must be for ever. This
should make us willing to die, that, at death, we must
go home; and why
should we not long to go to our Father's house? And this should quicken us to
get ready to die, that we must then go to our
long home, to an
everlasting
habitation. [2.] Death will be an occasion of sorrow to our friends that
love us. When
man goes to his long home the mourners go about the streetsthe
real mourners, and those, as now with us, distinguished by their habits as they
go along the streets,the mourners for ceremony, that were hired to weep for
the dead, both to express and to excite the real mourning. When we die we not
only remove to a melancholy house before us, but we leave a melancholy house
behind us. Tears are a tribute due to the dead, and this, among other
circumstances, makes it a serious thing to die. But in vain do we
go to the
house of mourning, and see
the mourners go about the streets, if it
do not help to make us serious and pious mourners in the closet. [3.] Death will
dissolve the frame of nature and take down the earthly house of this tabernacle,
which is elegantly described, v. 6. Then shall
the silver cord, by which
soul and body were wonderfully fastened together,
be loosed, that sacred
knot untied, and those old friends be forced to part; then shall
the golden
bowl, which held the waters of life for us,
be broken; then shall
the
pitcher with which we used to fetch up water, for the constant support of
life and the repair of its decays,
be broken, even
at the fountain,
so that it can fetch up no more; and
the wheel (all those organs that
serve for the collecting and distributing of nourishment) shall be
broken,
and disabled to do their office any more. The body shall become like a watch
when the spring is broken, the motion of all the wheels is stopped and they all
stand still; the machine is taken to pieces; the heart beats no more, nor does
the blood circulate. Some apply this to the ornaments and utensils of life; rich
people must, at death, leave behind them their clothing and furniture of
silver
and
gold, and poor people their earthen
pitchers, and the drawers
of water will have their
wheel broken. [4.] Death will resolve us into
our first principles, v. 7. Man is a strange sort of creature, a ray of heaven
united to a clod of earth; at death these are separated, and each goes to the
place whence it came.
First, The body, that clod of clay,
returns to
its own
earth. It is made of
the earth; Adam's body was so, and
we are of the same mould; it is a house of clay. At death it is laid in
the
earth, and in a little time will be resolved into earth, not to be
distinguished from common earth, according to the sentence (Gen. 3:19),
Dust
thou art and therefore
to dust thou shalt return. Let us not
therefore indulge the appetites of the body, nor pamper it (it will be worms'
meat shortly), nor let
sin reign in our mortal bodies, for they are
mortal, Rom. 6:12.
Secondly, The soul, that beam of light,
returns to
that
God who, when he
made man of the dust of the ground, breathed
into him the breath of life, to make him
a living soul (Gen. 2:7),
and forms the spirit of every man within him. When the fire consumes the wood
the flame ascends, and the ashes
return to the earth out of which the
wood grew. The soul does not die with the body; it is
redeemed from the power
of the grave (Ps. 49:15); it can subsist without it and will in a state of
separation from it, as the candle burns, and burns brighter, when it is taken
out of the dark lantern. It removes to the world of spirits, to which it is
allied. It goes
to God as a Judge, to give account of itself, and to be
lodged either with
the spirits in prison (1 Pt. 3:19) or with
the
spirits in paradise (Lu. 23:43), according to what was done in the body.
This makes death terrible to the wicked, whose souls go to God as an avenger,
and comfortable to the godly, whose souls go to God as a Father, into whose
hands they cheerfully commit them, through a Mediator, out of whom sinners may
justly dread to think of going
to God.
Verses 8-12
Solomon is here drawing towards a close, and is loth to part
till he has gained his point, and prevailed with his hearers, with his readers,
to seek for that satisfaction in God only and in their duty to him which they
can never find in the creature.
I. He repeats his text (v. 8), 1. As that which he had fully
demonstrated the truth of, and so made good his undertaking in this sermon,
wherein he had kept closely to his text, and both his reasons and his
application were to the purpose. 2. As that which he desired to inculcate both
upon others and upon himself, to have it ready, and to make use of it upon all
occasions. We see it daily proved; let it therefore be daily improved:
Vanity
of vanities, all is vanity.
II. He recommends what he had written upon this subject by
divine direction and inspiration to our serious consideration. The words of this
book are faithful, and well worthy our acceptance, for,
1. They are the words of one that was a convert, a penitent,
that could speak by dear-bought experience of the vanity of the world and the
folly of expecting great things from it. He was
Coheleth, one gathered in
from his wanderings and gathered home to that God from whom he had revolted.
Vanity
of vanities, saith the penitent. All true penitents are convinced of the
vanity of the world, for they find it can do nothing to ease them of the burden
of sin, which they complain of.
2. They are the words of one that was wise, wiser than any,
endued with extraordinary measures of wisdom, famous for it among his neighbours,
who all sought unto him
to hear his wisdom, and therefore a competent
judge of this matter, not only wise as a prince, but wise as a preacherand
preachers have need of wisdom to win souls.
3. He was one that made it his business to do good, and to use
wisdom aright.
Because he
was himself
wise, but knew he had
not his wisdom for himself, any more than he had it from himself,
he still
taught the people that
knowledge which he had found useful to
himself, and hoped might be so to them too. It is the interest of princes to
have their people well taught in religion, and no disparagement to them to teach
them themselves
the good knowledge of the Lord, but their duty to
encourage those whose office it is to teach them and to speak comfortably to
them, 2 Chr. 30:22. Let not the people, the common people, be despised, no, not
by the wisest and greatest, as either unworthy or incapable of good knowledge:
even those that are well taught have need to be
still taught, that they
may grow in knowledge.
4. He took a great deal of pains and care to do good, designing
to
teach the people knowledge. He did not put them off with any thing
that came next to hand, because they were inferior people, and he a very wise
man, but considering the worth of the souls he preached to and the weight of the
subject he preached on, he
gave good heed to what he read and heard from
others, that, having stocked himself well, he might
bring out of his treasury
things new and old. He
gave good heed to what he spoke and wrote
himself, and was choice and exact in it; all he did was elaborate. (1.) He chose
the most profitable way of preaching, by proverbs or short sentences, which
would be more easily apprehended and remembered than long and laboured periods.
(2.) He did not content himself with a few parables, or wise sayings, and repeat
them again and again, but he furnished himself with
many proverbs, a
great variety of grave discourses, that he might have something to say on every
occasion. (3.) He did not only give them such observations as were obvious and
trite, but he
sought out such as were surprising and uncommon; he dug
into the mines of knowledge, and did not merely pick up what lay on the surface.
(4.) He did not deliver his heads and observations at random, as they came to
mind, but methodized them, and
set them in order that they might appear
in more strength and lustre.
5. He put what he had to say in such a dress as he thought would
be most pleasing:
He sought to find out acceptable words, words of
delight (v. 10); he took care that good matter might not be spoiled by a bad
style, and by the ungratefulness and incongruity of the expression. Ministers
should study, not for the big words, nor the fine words, but
acceptable
words, such as are likely to please men for their good, to edification, 1
Co. 10:33. Those that would win souls must contrive how to win upon them with
words
fitly spoken.
6. That which he wrote for our instruction is of unquestionable
certainty, and what we may rely upon:
That which was written was upright
and sincere, according to the real sentiments of the penman, even
words of
truth, the exact representation of the thing as it is. Those are sure not to
miss their way who are guided by these words. What good will
acceptable words
do us if they be not
upright and words of truth? Most are for smooth
things, that flatter them, rather than right things, that direct them (Isa.
30:10), but to those that understand themselves, and their own interest,
words
of truth will always be
acceptable words.
7. That which he and other holy men wrote will be of great use
and advantage to us, especially being inculcated upon us by the exposition of
it, v. 11. Here observe, (1.) A double benefit accruing to us from divine truths
if duly applied and improved; they are
profitable for doctrine, for reproof,
for correction, and instruction in righteousness. They are of use, [1.] To
excite us to our duty. They are as goads to the ox that draws the plough,
putting him forward when he is dull and quickening him, to amend his pace. The
truths of God
prick men to the heart (Acts 2:37) and put them upon
bethinking themselves, when they trifle and grow remiss, and exerting themselves
with more vigour in their work. While our good affections are so apt as they are
to grow flat and cool, we have need of these
goads. [2.] To engage us to
persevere in our duty. They are
as nails to those that are wavering and
inconstant, to fix them to that which is good. They are
as goads to such
as are dull and draw back, and
nails to such as are desultory and draw
aside, means to establish the heart and confirm good resolutions, that we may
not sit loose to our duty, nor even be taken off from it, but that what good
there is in us may be
as a nail fastened in a sure place, Ezra 9:8. (2.)
A double way of communicating divine truths, in order to those benefits:[1.]
By the scriptures, as the standing rule, the
words of the wise, that is,
of the prophets, who are called
wise men, Mt. 23:34. These we have in
black and white, and may have recourse to them at any time, and make use of them
as goads and as nails. By them we may teach ourselves; let them but come
with pungency and power to the soul, let the impressions of them be deep and
durable, and the will
make us wise to salvation. [2.] By the ministry. To
make the
words of the wise more profitable to us, it is appointed that
they should be impressed and fastened by the
masters of assemblies.
Solemn assemblies for religious worship are an ancient divine institution,
intended for the honour of God and the edification of his church, and are not
only serviceable, but necessary, to those ends. There must be masters of these
assemblies, who are Christ's ministers, and as such are to preside in them, to
be God's mouth to the people and theirs to God. Their business is to fasten
the
words of the wise, and drive them as
nails to the head, in
order to which the word of God is likewise as
a hammer, Jer. 23:29.
8. That which is written, and thus recommended to us, is of
divine origin. Though it comes to us through various hands (many
wise men,
and many
masters of assemblies), yet it is
given by one and the
same
shepherd, the great
shepherd of Israel, that leads Joseph like a
flock, Ps. 80:1. God is that one Shepherd, whose good Spirit indited the
scriptures, and assists the
masters of the assemblies in opening and
applying the scriptures.
These words of the wise are the true sayings of
God, on which we may rest our souls. From that one Shepherd all ministers must
receive what they deliver, and speak according to the light of the written word.
9. The sacred inspired writings, if we will but make use of
them, are sufficient to guide us in the way of true happiness, and we need not,
in the pursuit of that, to fatigue ourselves with the search of other writings
(v. 12):
"And further, nothing now remains but to tell thee that
that
of making many books there is no end," that is, (1.) Of
writing
many books. "If what I have written, serve not to convince thee of the
vanity of the world, and the necessity of being religious, neither wouldst thou
be convinced if I should write ever so much." If the end be not attained in
the use of those books of scripture which God has blessed us with, neither
should we obtain the end, if we had twice as many more; nay, if we had so many
that the whole world could not contain them (Jn. 21:25), and much study of them
would but confound us, and would rather be
a weariness to the flesh than
any advantage to the soul. We have as much as God saw fit to give us, saw fit
for us, and saw us fit for. Much less can it be expected that those who will not
by these be admonished should be wrought upon by other writings. Let men write
ever so many books for the conduct of human life, write till they have tired
themselves with much study, they cannot give better instructions than those we
have from the word of God. Or, (2.) Of
buying many books, making
ourselves master of them, and masters of what is in them, by much study; still
the desire of learning would be unsatisfied. It will give a man indeed the best
entertainment and the best accomplishment this world can afford him; but if we
be not by these
admonished of the vanity of the world, and human
learning, among other things, and its insufficiency to make us happy without
true piety, alas! there is no end of it, nor real benefit by it; it will weary
the body, but never give the soul any true satisfaction. The great Mr. Selden
subscribed to this when he owned that in all the books he had read he never
found that on which he could rest his soul, but in the holy scripture,
especially Tit. 2:11, 12. By these therefore let us be admonished.
Verses 13-14
The great enquiry which Solomon prosecutes in this book is,
What
is that good which the sons of men should do? ch. 2:3. What is the true way
to true happiness, the certain means to attain our great end? He had in vain
sought it among those things which most men are eager in pursuit of, but here,
at length, he has found it, by the help of that discovery which God anciently
made to man (Job 28:28), that serious godliness is the only way to true
happiness:
Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter, the return
entered upon the writ of enquiry, the result of this diligent search; you shall
have all I have been driving at in two words. He does not say,
Do you hear
it, but
Let us hear it; for preachers must themselves be hearers of
that word which they preach to others, must hear it as from God; those are
teachers by the halves who teach others and not themselves, Rom. 2:21. Every
word of God is pure and precious, but some words are worthy of more special
remark, as this; the Masorites begin it with a capital letter, as that Deu. 6:4.
Solomon himself puts a
nota bene before it, demanding attention in these
words,
Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter. Observe here,
I. The summary of religion. Setting aside all matters of
doubtful disputation, to be religious is to
fear God and keep his
commandments. 1. The root of religion is fear of God reigning in the heart,
and a reverence of his majesty, a deference to his authority, and a dread of his
wrath.
Fear God, that is, worship God, give him the honour due to his
name, in all the instances of true devotion, inward and outward. See Rev. 14:7.
2. The rule of religion is the law of God revealed in the scriptures. Our fear
towards God must be taught by his commandments (Isa. 29:13), and those we must
keep and carefully observe. Wherever the fear of God is uppermost in the heart,
there will be
a respect to all his commandments and care to keep them. In
vain do we pretend to fear God if we do not make conscience of our duty to him.
II. The vast importance of it:
This is the whole of man;
it is all his business and all his blessedness; our whole duty is summed up in
this and our whole comfort is bound up in this. It is the concern of every man,
and ought to be his chief and continual care; it is the common concern of all
men, of their whole time. It is nothing to a man whether he be rich or poor,
high or low, but it is the main matter, it is all in all to a man, to fear God
and do as he bids him.
III. A powerful inducement to this, v. 14. We shall see of what vast
consequence it is to us that we be religious if we consider the account we must
every one of us shortly give of himself to God; thence he argued against a
voluptuous and vicious life (ch. 11:9), and here for a religious life:
God
shall bring every work into judgment. Note, 1. There is a judgment to come,
in which every man's eternal state will be finally determined. 2. God himself
will be the Judge, God-man will, not only because he has a right to judge, but
because he is perfectly fit for it, infinitely wise and just. 3.
Every work
will then be
brought into judgment, will be enquired into and called over
again. It will be a day to
bring to remembrance every thing done in the body.
4. The great thing to be then judged of concerning
every work is whether
it be good or evil, conformable to the will of God or a violation of it. 5. Even
secret things, both good and evil, will be brought to light, and brought
to account, in the judgment of the great day (Rom. 2:16); there is no good work,
no bad work, hid, but shall then be made manifest. 6. In consideration of the
judgment to come, and the strictness of that judgment, it highly concerns us now
to be very strict in our walking with God, that we may
give up our account
with joy.
Chapter 12:
| 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
Classic Bible CommentariesCourtesy of E-Word Today
Copyright 2000-2009 BibleClassics.com
