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Bible Commentaries
Sutcliffe's Commentary on the Old and New Testaments Sutcliffe's Commentary
The Futility of Human Endeavors and Life.Chapter 2
The Pursuit of Pleasure and Wisdom's Vanity.Chapter 3
A Time for Everything; Divine Purpose.Chapter 4
The Advantages of Companionship and the Futility of Toil.Chapter 5
Warnings about Wealth, Vows, and Divine Justice.Chapter 6
The Vanity of Wealth and Human Dissatisfaction.Chapter 7
Wisdom in Adversity and the Limitations of Human Understanding.Chapter 8
The Mysteries of Justice and the Futility of Human Control.Chapter 9
Life's Unpredictability and the Value of Wisdom.Chapter 10
The Effects of Folly and Wisdom in Leadership.Chapter 11
Encouragement to Enjoy Life and Invest Wisely.Chapter 12
The Conclusion: Fear God and Keep His Commandments.
- Ecclesiastes
by Joseph Sutcliffe
ECCLESIASTES, OR THE PREACHER.
This book is called in Hebrew קהלת CHOHELETH, convocator, or one who has collected the systems of moralists; but Ecclesiastes, or the Preacher, as in the Greek of the LXX, is thought more elegant. It comprises a review of life, in which five speakers at least are introduced: the disgusted courtier the philosopher the stoick the epicure the preacher. Hence it abounds with variation of opinion, with discordant sentiments, and systems at issue with one another. For want of distinguishing those speakers, whose notions the preacher attacks, as in chap. 12., men have wrested the sentiments in this book to their own destruction. They are ignorant that the preacher, towards the close especially, speaks like himself, and as a sincere believer in Moses and the prophets. “Fear God, and keep his commandments, for this is the whole duty of man.” As nature is not to be reproached for the discordant systems of philosophers, so neither is religion to be blamed for the wild theories of divines, who have misread her pages. Any doubts suggested by hypercritics respecting the author of this book, because some Chaldaic words are introduced, can have no weight against the faith of the Hebrew nation. Solomon was acquainted with the literature of Chaldea, of India, and of Egypt; and learned men of every age, and of every nation, have always introduced foreign words and phrases. The Hebrew book, SEDER ÔLAM, affirms, that Solomon wrote three books by the Holy Spirit; the Canticum, or Song of Songs, when young; the Proverbs, when a man; and the Ecclesiastes, when old.