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 (
1 Remember now thy Creator in the days of thy youth, while the evil days come not, nor the years draw nigh, when thou shalt say, I have no pleasure in them; 2 While the sun, or the light, or the moon, or the stars, be not darkened, nor the clouds return after the rain: 3 In the day when the keepers of the house shall tremble, and the strong men shall bow themselves, and the grinders cease because they are few, and those that look out of the windows be darkened, 4 And the doors shall be shut in the streets, when the sound of the grinding is low, and he shall rise up at the voice of the bird, and all the daughters of music shall be brought low; 5 Also when they shall be afraid of that which is high, and fears shall be in the way, and the almond tree shall flourish, and the grasshopper shall be a burden, and desire shall fail: because man goeth to his long home, and the mourners go about the streets: 6 Or ever the silver cord be loosed, or the golden bowl be broken, or the pitcher be broken at the fountain, or the wheel broken at the cistern. 7 Then shall the dust return to the earth as it was: and the spirit shall return unto God who gave it.
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
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. 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
[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 plain—to 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,
[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,
8 Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher; all is vanity. 9 And moreover, because the preacher was wise, he still taught the people knowledge; yea, he gave good heed, and sought out, and set in order many proverbs. 10 The preacher sought to find out acceptable words: and that which was written was upright, even words of truth. 11 The words of the wise are as goads, and as nails fastened by the masters of assemblies, which are given from one shepherd. 12 And further, by these, my son, be admonished: of making many books there is no end; and much study is a weariness of the flesh.
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 (
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 preacher—and 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,
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 (
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 (
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,
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,
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 (
13 Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God, and keep his commandments: for this is the whole duty of man. 14 For God shall bring every work into judgment, with every secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil.
The great enquiry which Solomon prosecutes
in this book is, What is that good which the sons of men should
do?
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
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,