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												Verse 1Ecclesiastes 3:1. To every 
												thing, &c. — Solomon having 
												mentioned God’s overruling 
												providence in the latter end of 
												the foregoing chapter, proceeds 
												in this to illustrate the 
												imperfection of human wisdom, 
												which is confined to a certain 
												season for all things that it 
												would effect, which if we 
												neglect, or let slip, all our 
												contrivances signify nothing. He 
												then shows that the utmost 
												perfection at which our wisdom 
												can arrive in this world, 
												consists, 1st, In being 
												contented with this order in 
												which God hath placed all 
												things, and not disquieting 
												ourselves about that which it is 
												not in our power to alter. 2d, 
												In observing and taking the 
												fittest opportunity of doing 
												every thing, as the most certain 
												means to tranquillity. 3d, In 
												taking the comfort of what we 
												have at present, and making a 
												seasonable and legitimate use of 
												it; and, lastly, in bearing the 
												vicissitudes which we find in 
												all human things with an equal 
												mind; because they are ordered 
												by a powerful, wise, and 
												gracious Providence. These were 
												the things he had suggested in 
												the conclusion of the former 
												chapter, and this may be 
												considered as having a relation 
												to every one of them. See Bishop 
												Patrick. There is a season — A 
												certain time appointed by God 
												for its being and continuance, 
												which no human wisdom or 
												providence can alter. And by 
												virtue of this appointment of 
												God, all vicissitudes which 
												happen in the world, whether 
												comforts or calamities, come to 
												pass; which is here added to 
												prove the principal proposition, 
												that all things below are vain, 
												and happiness is not to be found 
												in them, because of their great 
												uncertainty, and mutability, and 
												transitoriness, and because they 
												are so much out of the reach and 
												power of men, and wholly in the 
												disposal of God. And a time to 
												every purpose — Not only things 
												natural, but even the voluntary 
												actions of men, are ordered and 
												disposed by God. But it must be 
												considered, that he does not 
												here speak of a time allowed by 
												God, wherein all the following 
												things may lawfully be done, but 
												only of a time fixed by God, in 
												which they are actually done.
 
 Verses 2-8
 Ecclesiastes 3:2-8. A time to 
												die — And as there is a time to 
												die, so there is a time to rise 
												again, a set time, when they 
												that lie in the grave shall be 
												remembered. A time to kill — 
												When men die a violent death. A 
												time to heal — When he who 
												seemed to be mortally wounded is 
												healed. A time to weep — When 
												men have just occasion for 
												weeping, as they frequently have 
												in the present life, both for 
												their own sins and for the sins 
												and miseries of mankind. “It is 
												in vain,” says Castalio, here, 
												“to expect our happiness in this 
												world: for this is no more the 
												time and the place for it, than 
												the seed- time is the harvest. 
												But we must stay till the next 
												life for it; which is the proper 
												time for complete happiness: 
												here we must be content with a 
												great many tears.” A time to 
												cast away stones — Which were 
												brought together in order to the 
												building of a wall, or house, 
												but are now castaway, either 
												because the person who gathered 
												them hath changed his mind, and 
												desists from his project, or for 
												other causes. A time to embrace 
												— When persons enter into 
												friendship, and perform all 
												friendly offices one to another; 
												and a time to refrain, &c. — 
												Either through alienation of 
												affection, or grievous 
												calamities. A time to get, and a 
												time to lose — “In our traffic 
												and commerce one with another, 
												there is a time of gaining much; 
												but there are other times, when 
												a man must be content to lose by 
												his commodities.” A time to 
												keep, &c. — “Sometimes also it 
												is fit for a man to keep and lay 
												up what he hath gotten; but at 
												another time it will be as fit 
												for him to spend or to give it 
												away to those that need.” A time 
												to rend — When men rend their 
												garments, as they did in great 
												and sudden griefs. A time to 
												love — When God stirs up love, 
												or gives occasion for the 
												exercise of it.
 
 Verse 9
 Ecclesiastes 3:9. What profit 
												hath he that worketh, &c. — 
												Seeing then all events are out 
												of man’s power, and no man can 
												do or enjoy any thing at his 
												pleasure, but only when God 
												pleaseth, as has been shown in 
												many particulars, and is as true 
												and certain in all others, hence 
												it follows that all men’s 
												labours, without God’s blessing, 
												are unprofitable, and utterly 
												insufficient to make them happy.
 
 Verse 10
 Ecclesiastes 3:10. I have seen 
												the travail, &c. — I have 
												diligently observed men’s 
												various employments, and the 
												different successes of them. 
												Which God hath given, &c. — 
												Which God hath imposed upon men 
												as their duty; to which 
												therefore men ought quietly to 
												submit. To be exercised — That 
												hereby they might have constant 
												matter of exercise for their 
												diligence, and patience, and 
												submission to God’s will and 
												providence.
 
 Verse 11
 Ecclesiastes 3:11. He hath made 
												every thing beautiful in his 
												time — This seems to be added as 
												an apology for God’s providence, 
												notwithstanding all the contrary 
												events and confusions which are 
												in the world. He hath made — Or, 
												doth make, or do, by his 
												providence in the government of 
												the world; every thing — Which 
												he doth, either immediately, or 
												by the ministry of men, or other 
												creatures; beautiful — 
												Convenient, so that, all things 
												considered, it could not have 
												been better; in its time — Or 
												season, when it was most fit to 
												be done. Many events seem to 
												men’s shallow judgments to be 
												very irregular and unbecoming, 
												as when wicked men prosper and 
												good men are oppressed; but when 
												men shall thoroughly understand 
												God’s works, and the whole frame 
												and contexture of them, and see 
												the end of them, they will say, 
												All things were done wisely. He 
												hath set the world, &c. — It is 
												true, God hath put the world 
												into men’s hearts, or made them 
												capable of observing all his 
												dispensations in the world; but 
												this is to be understood with a 
												limitation, because there are 
												some more mysterious works of 
												God which no man can fully 
												understand, because he cannot 
												search them out from the 
												beginning to the end.
 
 Verse 12-13
 Ecclesiastes 3:12-13. I know — 
												By clear reason, and my own long 
												and certain experience; that 
												there is no good in them — No 
												other satisfaction or felicity 
												that a man can enjoy in 
												creatures or worldly things; but 
												for a man to rejoice and to do 
												good — To employ them freely and 
												cheerfully in acts of charity 
												and liberality toward others, or 
												to use them to the glory of God, 
												living in his fear, which is 
												necessary to the happiness of 
												this as well as of the other 
												life. And also that every one 
												should eat, &c. — Use what God 
												hath given him. See the note on 
												Ecclesiastes 2:24.
 
 Verse 14
 Ecclesiastes 3:14. Whatsoever 
												God doeth, it shall be for ever 
												— All God’s counsels or decrees 
												are eternal and unchangeable. 
												Nothing can be put to it — Men 
												can neither do any thing against 
												God’s counsel and providence, 
												nor hinder any work or act of 
												it. God doth it, that men should 
												fear before him — That, by the 
												consideration of his power, in 
												the disposal of all persons and 
												things, men should learn to 
												trust in him, to submit to him, 
												to fear to offend him, and more 
												carefully study to please him.
 
 Verse 15
 Ecclesiastes 3:15. That which 
												hath been is now — Things past, 
												present, and to come, are all 
												ordered by one constant counsel, 
												in all parts and ages of the 
												world. There is a continual 
												return of the same motions of 
												the heavenly bodies, of the same 
												seasons of the year, and a 
												constant succession of new 
												generations of men and beasts, 
												but all of the same quality. God 
												requireth — Or reneweth, as the 
												Hebrew יבקשׁ, may be rendered; 
												that which is past — That time 
												and those things which are 
												irrecoverably gone in 
												themselves; but are, as it were, 
												recalled, because others of the 
												same kind arise and come in 
												their stead.
 
 Verse 16
 Ecclesiastes 3:16. And moreover, 
												&c. — This is another argument 
												of the vanity of worldly things, 
												and a hinderance of that comfort 
												which men expect in this life, 
												because they are oppressed by 
												their rulers. I saw the place of 
												judgment — In the thrones of 
												princes, and tribunals of 
												magistrates, where judgment 
												should be duly executed. Solomon 
												is still showing that every 
												thing in this world, without the 
												fear of God, is vanity. In these 
												verses he shows that power, of 
												which men are so ambitious, and 
												life itself, are nothing worth 
												without it.
 
 Verse 17
 Ecclesiastes 3:17. I said in my 
												heart — I was sorely grieved at 
												this, but I quieted myself with 
												this consideration. God shall 
												judge, &c. — Absolving the just, 
												and condemning the wicked. For 
												there is a time there — Namely, 
												at the judgment-seat of God; a 
												time fixed by God’s unalterable 
												decree. He implies, that as this 
												life is the sinner’s time, in 
												which he doth whatsoever seemeth 
												good in his own eyes, so God 
												will have his time to reckon 
												with sinners, and rectify all 
												these disorders; for every 
												purpose, and for every work — 
												For examining not only men’s 
												actions, but all their thoughts 
												and purposes. The design of this 
												verse is both to strike a terror 
												into oppressing potentates, and 
												to satisfy the doubts and 
												support the spirits of good men, 
												who are oppressed in this life.
 
 Verse 18
 Ecclesiastes 3:18. I said in my 
												heart, &c. — And I further 
												considered concerning their 
												condition in this present world. 
												That God might manifest them — 
												God suffers these disorders 
												among men, that he might 
												discover men to themselves, and 
												show what strange creatures they 
												are, and what vile hearts they 
												have. That they are beasts — 
												That although God made them men, 
												yet they have made themselves 
												beasts by their brutish 
												practices, and that, considered 
												only with respect to the present 
												life, they are as vain and 
												miserable creatures as the 
												beasts themselves.
 
 Verse 19
 Ecclesiastes 3:19. For that 
												which befalleth, &c. — They are 
												subject to the same diseases, 
												pains, and casualties. So dieth 
												the other — As certainly, and no 
												less painfully. They have all 
												one breath — One breath of life, 
												which is in their nostrils; by 
												which the beasts perform the 
												same animal functions. For he 
												speaks not here of man’s 
												rational and immortal spirit, 
												nor of the future life. So that 
												a man hath no pre-eminence, &c. 
												— In respect of the present 
												life.
 
 Verse 20-21
 Ecclesiastes 3:20-21. All go 
												unto one place — To the earth, 
												as it is expressed Ecclesiastes 
												3:21, out of which they were 
												both taken. All turn to dust 
												again — All their bodies, as it 
												is explained Ecclesiastes 12:7. 
												Who knoweth the spirit of a man 
												— True it is, there is a 
												difference, which is known by 
												good men, but the generality of 
												mankind never mind it; their 
												hearts are wholly set on present 
												and sensible things, and take no 
												thought for the things of the 
												future and invisible world.
 
 Verse 22
 Ecclesiastes 3:22. I perceive 
												there is nothing better — For a 
												man’s present satisfaction, and 
												the happiness of this life; than 
												that a man should rejoice in his 
												own works — That he should 
												comfortably enjoy what God hath 
												given him, and not disquiet 
												himself with cares about future 
												events. He seems to speak this 
												not in the person of an epicure, 
												but as his own judgment, which 
												also he declares, Ecclesiastes 
												2:24; Ecclesiastes 5:18-19; 
												Ecclesiastes 8:15. For that is 
												his portion — This is the 
												benefit of his labours: he hath 
												no more than he uses, for what 
												he leaves behind him is not his, 
												but another man’s. For who shall 
												bring him to see, &c. — When 
												once he is dead he shall never 
												return to see into whose hands 
												his estate falls, and how it is 
												either used or abused; nor is he 
												at all concerned in those 
												matters.
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