27 Look! this I have seen, said the Preacher, taking one thing after another to get the true account,
The words of the Preacher, the son of David, king in Jerusalem. All is to no purpose, said the Preacher, all the ways of man are to no purpose.
All things are to no purpose, says the Preacher, all is to no purpose. And because the Preacher was wise he still gave the people knowledge; searching out, testing, and putting in order a great number of wise sayings. The Preacher made search for words which were pleasing, but his writing was in words upright and true.
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Commentary on Ecclesiastes 7 Matthew Henry Commentary
Chapter 7
Solomon had given many proofs and instances of the vanity of this world and the things of it; now, in this chapter,
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1. Care of our reputation (v. 1).
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2. Seriousness (v. 2-6).
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3. Calmness of spirit (v. 7-10).
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4. Prudence in the management of all our affairs (v. 11, 12).
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5. Submission to the will of God in all events, accommodating ourselves to every condition (v. 13-15).
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6. A conscientious avoiding of all dangerous extremes (v. 16-18).
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7. Mildness and tenderness towards those that have been injurious to us (v. 19-22).
In short, the best way to save ourselves from the vexation which the vanity of the world creates us is to keep our temper and to maintain a strict government of our passions.Ecc 7:1-6
In these verses Solomon lays down some great truths which seem paradoxes to the unthinking part, that is, the far greatest part, of mankind.
Ecc 7:7-10
Solomon had often complained before of the oppressions which he saw under the sun, which gave occasion for many melancholy speculations and were a great discouragement to virtue and piety. Now here,
Ecc 7:11-22
Solomon, in these verses, recommends wisdom to us as the best antidote against those distempers of mind which we are liable to, by reason of the vanity and vexation of spirit that there are in the things of this world. Here are some of the praises and the precepts of wisdom.
Ecc 7:23-29
Solomon had hitherto been proving the vanity of the world and its utter insufficiency to make men happy; now here he comes to show the vileness of sin, and its certain tendency to make men miserable; and this, as the former, he proves from his own experience, and it was a dear-bought experience. He is here, more than any where in all this book, putting on the habit of a penitent. He reviews what he had been discoursing of already, and tells us that what he had said was what he knew and was well assured of, and what he resolved to stand by: All this have I proved by wisdom, v. 23. Now here,
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First, Those that allow themselves in other sins, by which their minds are blinded and their consciences debauched, are the more easily drawn to this.
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Secondly, it is just with God to leave them to themselves to fall into it. See Rom. 1:26, 28; Eph. 4:18, 19.
Thus does Solomon, as it were, with horror, bless himself from the sin in which he had plunged himself.