Bible Commentaries
Arthur Peake's Commentary on the Bible
Ecclesiastes 9
Ecclesiastes 8:16 to Ecclesiastes 9:16. Life's Riddle Baffles the Wisest Quest.—The parenthesis in Ecclesiastes 8:16 b describes the ceaseless effort of the keen student of life, or perhaps the fate of the toiler who is too tired to sleep; with Ecclesiastes 8:17; cf. Ecclesiastes 7:24, Job 11:6-9, and from the Christian standpoint Romans 11:33, Ephesians 3:8 ("unsearchable riches"). By heart (Ecclesiastes 9:1) is meant the whole inner nature, intellectual and emotional; God is the supreme arbiter of human destiny. Whether He regards us with love or hatred we cannot tell; life is so tangled that the Divine attitude is inscrutable. Follow LXX, in adding the first word of Ecclesiastes 8:2 with a slight change to Ecclesiastes 8:1 and read, "All before them is vanity. To all alike, there is one event."
Ecclesiastes 9:2. to the good: see mg. "He that sweareth," the man who abides by his oath; "he that feareth an oath," the man who is afraid to take or carry out a vow. This interpretation is in line with the other comparisons, the good precedes the evil example; but perhaps we should take "sweareth" of profanity and "feareth an oath" of loyal obedience to a vow.
Ecclesiastes 9:3. an evil in all: a supreme evil.—full of evil: full of dissatisfaction. Life is all unrest and madness, and after that—"to the dead."
Ecclesiastes 9:4. a dog is a poor creature in the East, while the lion stands for kingly power.
Ecclesiastes 9:5. Even to know that one must die is superior to being dead. Death ends all, it extinguishes all the passions and emotions, takes a man from the only sphere of activity there is, and even blots out the remembrance of him (cf. Ecclesiastes 8:10 b). This being so, enjoy yourself while you can; God has so arranged the world that this is the only thing you can do, so it must be acceptable to Him.
Ecclesiastes 9:7-9 has a remarkably close parallel in a fragment of the Gilgamesh epic; "Since the gods created man, Death they ordained for man, Life in their hands they hold; Thou O Gilgamesh fill thy belly, Day and night be thou joyful," etc.
Ecclesiastes 9:9 is less a eulogium of quiet home life than advice to a man to enjoy any woman who appeals to him; there is no contradiction to Ecclesiastes 7:26-28.
The advice in Ecclesiastes 8:10 a must be taken as referring to any form of enjoyment; it finds its transfiguration in John 9:4.—the grave: Sheol, described in Isaiah 14:9-11*, Ezekiel 32:18-32. In Ecclesiastes 8:11 Qoheleth takes up the idea again that life's prizes are not bestowed for merit or ability; men are the creatures of time and chance, misfortune attends them till their time is up. Even that hour is unknown, they are trapped unexpectedly like the bird and the fish. The closest historical parallel to the incident pictured in Ecclesiastes 8:13-16 is the siege of Abel-beth-maacah (2 Samuel 20:15-22); Qoheleth would not scruple to change the "wise woman" into a man. Other suggestions are the siege of Dor in 218 B.C. (1 Maccabees 15) or that of Bethsura (1 Maccabees 6:31, 2 Maccabees 13:9). The point of the story is that the wise as well as the righteous are soon forgotten.
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