Biblical Reparatory and Princeton Review 29 (1857) 419-40.

Public Domain.

 

1857.].         The Book of Ecclesiastes.                            419

 

 

ART. IV.--The Scope and Plan of the Book of Ecclesiastes.

William Henry Green

 

          IN order to the proper understanding of any treatise, it is

necessary to gain clear and correct ideas of its scope and plan.

There is no book of the Old Testament to which this remark

applies with greater force than Ecclesiastes, and none in which

the neglect of it has been and must be attended with more

serious injury to its exposition. Its proverbial dress creates

a special need of taking comprehensive views of the writer's

main design, and not being diverted from this by cleaving too

anxiously to the tenor of each individual expression. The ill

success of too many attempted expositions has shown, that if

the clue thus furnished to all its intricacies and windings be

not discovered or be lost sight of, the book becomes a labyrinth,

within whose mazes the improvident adventurer is hopelessly

entangled; and each verse becomes to him a new passage lead-

ing to fresh perplexity, however honestly and assiduously he

may labour upon its interpretation. The general truths incul-

cated by proverbs of course admit either of being taken in their

widest extent, or of receiving an indefinite number of particular

applications. Which of these expresses the precise intent of

the writer, in each individual case, can never be learned from

the inspection of single sentences by themselves, but only from

a discovery of the place which it holds in the discussion of his

theme. And an erroneous view of this theme or of the method

of its discussion, will necessarily involve attaching meanings to

passages very different from those which they were intended to

bear.

          Another difficulty connected with that just spoken of, and of

a like nature, arises from the absence of particles in every case

to indicate the connection or the relation of dependence which

the various sentences or paragraphs sustain to each other. This

is partly due to the venerable simplicity of the Hebrew language,

in which such particles do not abound, and with which it agrees

better to suggest relations by the juxtaposition of related ideas,

than formally and precisely to state them. It is also partly

due to the proverbial style already referred to, which charac-



420              The Scope and Plan of the                  [JULY

 

teristically delights to state truths in the general and the

absolute, leaving their limitations and specific relations to be

gathered from the connection in which they are adduced.

The inattentive and superficial reader might infer from the

peculiarities now stated, and which would be among the first to

attract his attention, that this book was composed of loose and

detached sentences, without orderly consecution or intimate

coherence. This mistaken view was in fact taken by Grotius,

who supposed that Ecclesiastes contained no proper discussion

of anyone theme, but a miscellaneous collection of the varying

opinions of different sages upon topics connected with human

happiness. He thus explained those contradictions or diversi-

ties of judgment which he imagined to be found in the book;

and likewise escaped the necessity of regarding any sentiment

as authoritative or inspired which he was disinclined to accept.

It is but a slight modification of this opinion of Grotius to

regard the book as a record of the various opinions maintained

in a learned assembly or society presided over by Solomon.

Another view, which rises above this conception of a chaos of

discordant materials, and yet assumes the existence of conflict-

ing sentiments in the book, endeavours to reconcile these into

a common unity by the hypothesis of a dialogue between two

voices, one that of an earnest but rash inquirer, the other his

sage and experienced teacher, who endeavours to curb the hasty

impatience and inconsiderate views of the former, and to incul-

cate upon him the lessons of sobriety and heavenly wisdom.

But the harmony of the sentiments here maintained can be

vindicated without the necessity of this theory, which finds no

support from any intimations in the text itself. The same

may be said of the opinion which supposes instead of different

speakers, different states of mind in the same speaker; who

begins the discussion in a tumult of doubt between conflicting

views, and speaks now under the influence of one, now of

another, as they respectively obtrude themselves upon him,

until at the close of the whole he ultimately reaches clear and

settled convictions.

Among those who admit a single theme consistently dis-

cussed, there is still a divergence as to what that theme is,

arising principally from an undue predominance being given to



1857]                    Book of Ecclesiastes.                         421

 

some one part of the book or class of passages in it, instead of

each being held in its just subordination and relations. Some

have paid too exclusive attention to what is said of the vanity

of earthly pursuits. So Jerome, and after him the commenta-

tors of the middle ages, generally made of it an argument for

the renunciation of the world and a life of monasticism. So

in modern times Umbreit thought it to be a treatise on the

chief good, which the author tinged with scepticism and gloom

endeavours to show is unattainable. Others, looking solely at

such passages as declare. that it is good for a man: to eat and

to drink and to enjoy life, have charged the author with Epi-

curean sentiments, as though worldly pleasure were in his

esteem the highest form of good, and what men should chiefly

strive after. This view, and that first stated are directly antag-

onistic and mutuallydestructive. The author cannot teach both

that earthly pleasure is vanity and that it is the chief good. The

book will be involved in endless complication and self-contra-

diction upon either of these views. The only way to harmonize

it is to suffer one class of statements to modify and assist in

explaining the other. To him whose heart is inordinately set

on earthly things, and who fancies that by accumulating what

ever affords gratification, he can fill and satisfy his' soul, every

thing will prove vanity as regards this impracticable end which

he is seeking; for his desires invariably outrun his acquisitions

his feverish toil is incompatible with serene enjoyment; their

continued possession in the future is uncertain and their loss" at

death inevitable.  Still, he who knows how to use the world,

who contentedly and thankfully receives the good things which

God gives him, and without immoderate desires partakes of

them rationally and in obedience to the will of God, will find

in them much real satisfaction. This life has a positive value;

which should not be overlooked; and it is a lesson of no small

consequence, how it may be rendered most peaceful and happy.

The enjoyment of life, which this book commends, is as far as

possible from a 'Wild and senseless revelry, which it denominates

insane and profitless, ii. 1, 2; it is an enjoyment which is con-

nected with doing good, iii. 12, and is indulged with a constant

recollection of the judgment of God, xi. 9. Piety holds the key

to the chamber of happiness. There is no entrance but by



422              The Scope and Plan of the                           [JULY

 

her aid. He who would really extract from the world such

enjoyment as it is capable of affording, can only do so by obe-

dience to her injunctions. Otherwise, be a man's possessions

what they may, they will end in vanity and emptiness. This

,is the aspect under which the happiness of men in the present

life is here presented, and if this is Epicurean, the whole Bible

is so too.

Others have given too exclusive prominence to such passages

as i. 4-11, iii. 1-15, vii. 13, 14, ix. 11, in which the fixed

and permanent order of things in the universe is insisted upon,

and the regulation of everything is referred to the will of God;

and they have hence drawn the conclusion th.at the book con-

tains fatalistic sentiments, teaching the doctrine of an undeviat-

ing, inexorable fate, which leaves no room for human freedom,

and allows no man to obtain profit from his labour. This fate

it is vain to think of resisting; man mus~ just submit and get

whatever good his present circumstances put within his reach.

But this is as much as the preceding a distortion of what is

here taught. It is indeed asserted that man is not the un con-

trolled arbiter of his own fortune; not, however, because he is

a creature of fate, but because he is a subject of the Wise and

righteous government of God. The doctrine is not that of fate,

but of Providence: and this, too, is intimately connected with

the theme here discussed. As we look upon the world, every-

thing seems to be moving at random, or to be directed by man's .

free will.' Men act as they please, and the allotments distri-

buted to each bear no manifest relation their respective cha-

racters.  There is much that, superficially viewed, has the

appearance of disordered confusion. But that this is the real

state of the case is here emphatically denied. The assertion is

made and the proof given, that instead of confusion the most

perfect and beautiful order prevails. Whether men see his hand

or not, God is guiding and directing all; and everything is, as

respects hIS consummate plan, Just as It should be. He has dis-

sociated sin and happiness; and no man can alter that arrange-

ment so as to bring together what have been thus divinely

separated. He who seeks for happiness in ways of worldliness

and sin, seeks for what" by the very constitution of the uni-

verse, cannot be.



1857]                    Book of Ecclesiastes.                         423

 

Too great prominence has again been sometimes given to such

passages as iii. 17, v. 8, xi. 9, xii, 7, 14, and on the basis of

these the future state and the coming judgment have been made

the grand lesson here inculcated, as though it were the intention

of the writer to turn the thoughts of his readers from, the seem-

ing inequalities of this world to; the world to come, where all

shall be rectified or explained. The error in this view is simply

that of limiting the discussion within too narrow a range. The

future judgment is explicitly asserted, and is one of the ele-

ments in the proper presentation of the subject. But this is not

the sole view that is here' taken, nor the sole answer which is

returned to the perplexing problem of human life. It is most

unaccountable how some writers have been able so utterly to

misconceive the teachings of this book as to deny to its author

any confident persuasion of the immortality of the soul, or any-

thing more than a hesitating admission of its possibility. In

basing this opinion upon iii.19-21 and ix. 4-6, they not, only

interpret these passages incorrectly even altering, the text for

this purpose, as will be seen hereafter, but bring them into irre-

concilable conflict, with such passages as those referred to

above; a difficulty from which Knobel endeavours to escape by

a German critic's ready weapon, the denial of the genuineness of

xii. 9~14.

Attention has sometimes been directed to too great an extent

to we seemingly miscellaneous character of the proverbs, in

such passages as iv. 5, 6, 9-13, v. l-7, vii. 1-9, 21, 22,

x. l-xi. 6, and the conclusion has hence been drawn that the

design of the book. is to give rules for the conduct of life, and

to teach wisdom in general.  This goes to the extreme of ex-

tending the theme too widely, as the preceding to that of unduly

restricting it. Its aim becomes thus too vague and indefinite,

and the main drift of the discussion is lost sight of.  The writer

does not spread his thoughts over the whole range of, human

action or the proprieties of life; but he has one definite subject

before him, to which a proper treatment of the book will show

that all his remarks are directed, and that with a closeness of

argument and a clearness of presentation worthy of the wise

king of Israel.

The problem really discussed is the seeming inequalities of



424              The Scope and Plan of the                           [JULY

 

divine providence. These are here reconciled with the justice

of God, as they are in the book of Job reconciled with his mercy

and goodness. In other words, while Job had especially to do

with the sufferings of the pious, Ecclesiastes contemplates the

same subject chiefly from the side of the prosperity of the

wicked. The difficulty to be explained is thus stated by the

writer, vii. 15, "There is a just man that perisheth in his right-

eousness, and there is a wicked man that prolongeth his life in

his wickedness." And viii. 14, "There is a vanity which is

done upon the earth; that there be just men unto whom it hap-

peneth according to the work of the wicked; again, there be

wicked men to whom it happeneth according to the work of the

righteous." This apparent anomaly is shown not to be incon-

sistent with the righteousness of God's government. The posi-

tion taken and established is, viii. 12, 13, "Though a sinner do

evil an hundred times and his days be prolonged, yet surely I

know that it shall be well with them that fear God, which fear

before him; but it shall not be well with the wicked, neither

shall he prolong his days, which are as a shadow; because he

feareth not before God." The solution which is furnished is

twofold:--1. A proper estimate of men's fortunes and of their

characters will show these inequalities to be much fewer than

they appear to be. 2. There is a righteous government to rec-

tify whatever inequalities may temporarily exist.

It is most interesting to observe the harmony of the grand

lessons inculcated by Job and by Ecclesiastes. No two books

could well be more unlike in their style and method of discus-

sion. The problem upon which they are engaged is one of the

most perplexing of human life. They approach it, too, from

quarters the most diverse. And yet the principles which under-

lie their solutions are identical: The book of Job reconciles the

sufferings of the pious by saying, (a) Their afflictions though a

seeming evil are a real good. (b) The perfections of God are

an ample security for the rectitude and goodness of his dispen-

sations. Ecclesiastes says of the prosperity of the wicked,

(a) It yields no real good, but vanity and vexation of spirit.

(b) The justice of God secures that all is and shall be right

under his holy government.

That the main design of this book has been correctly stated,



1857.]                   Book of Ecclesiastes.                         425

 

shall be shown hereafter in detail. Before proceeding to this,

however, it may be readily established in a general way by the

testimony of the author himself. This is in the first place given

in a formal manner at the close of the book, xii. 13, 14, "Let

us hear the conclusion of the whole matter: Fear God and keep

his commandments; for this is the whole duty of man," i. e., the

whole of his duty and destiny, his entire welfare, all that con-

cerns him is centered here and depends on this single thing.

"For God shall bring every work into judgment with every

secret thing, whether it be good, or whether it be evil." In

other words, man's true welfare is only to be secured by fearing

God and obeying his will; for in spite of any present appear-

ances to the contrary, every good deed, open or secret, shall be

divinely rewarded, and every evil deed divinely punished. This

is given by the author as the final result of the experience,

observations, and reasonings recorded in his book. And this is

precisely what has been already represented to be its aim.

A second mode in which the writer declares himself as to this

point, is by certain forms of statement which recur again and

again from the beginning to the close. We cannot be mistaken

in deducing from these the topic which is ever in his thoughts,

and to whose illustration his whole argument is directed. There

are two series of these statements; one of which contains the

negative, and the other the positive view of his subject. Their

combination will give a just conception of his idea. The first

consists of those in which it is repeatedly declared of all those

accumulations and sources of gratification which men so eagerly

covet, and after which they so unceasingly toil, that they are

vanity and pursuit of wind, (Eng. ver., vexation of spirit,) They

are no real good, but constantly disappoint their possessors of the

satisfaction which they had hoped by this means to obtain. The

second series consists of those, in which it is declared that there

is nothing better for a man than to, eat and to drink, and to

enjoy the fruit of his labour; and this is the gift of God to

them that please him. That this is not an Epicurean sentiment,

has been already seen. The eating and drinking which Solo-

mon commends, is not the gratification of sensual appetite. To

eat and to drink, by a common figure in all languages, denotes

to partake of what may he either pleasurable or painful. Comp.

 

VOL. XXIX.--NO. III.              54



426                       The Scope and Plan of the                  [JULY

 

Ps. xxxiv. 8, xxxvi. 8; Heb. vi. 4, 5; Job xxi. 20; Matt. xx.

23. Here the connection determines it to refer to what is plea-

surable. In ii. 24, iii. 13, v. 18, "to eat and to drink" is

explained by the parallel phrase, "to enjoy good," and in iii.

22, "to rejoice," stands as its equivalent. In ii. 25, "Who can

eat more than I" certainly does not mean who is a greater

glutton, but who has more sources of gratification at his com-

mand? And in v.19, vi. 2, to eat riches, wealth, and honour,

can only mean to enjoy them. The meaning of this class of

passages then is, that enjoyment, pleasure, happiness is a greater

good than all these vain acquisitions which are attended with so

little satisfaction. And enjoyment is God's gift to them that

are pleasing in his sight. We thus reach once more the theme

before propounded. Outward prosperity may be in possession

of the wicked; but this is empty and unsubstantial. It does

not necessarily confer happiness. This is only for the good.

The scope of the book being thus settled, we proceed to con-

sider its plan. It is of course conceivable that the writer might

discuss his theme without any orderly arrangement or methodi-

cal disposition of parts. He might merely give expression to

his reflections upon it as they spontaneously occurred to him

or were suggested by accidental association, without aiming to

govern himself by any strict logical sequence. Some have

maintained that this is the case with the book of Ecclesiastes.

It is so with another book of Solomon's, the Proverbs. It is to

some extent the case with other books of the Old Testament as

well as with admired productions of uninspired genius. And it

would cast no reflection upon the ability or excellence of this

book to admit the same thing here.

Others have been of the opinion that the writer had a general

plan in his mind, which he followed in the main, yet not so

strictly but that he has indulged upon occasion in considerable

digressions. Others have thought that there was a plan origin-

ally, but it has been obscured by negligent transcription and .

derangement of the text; and attempts have been made by

transpositions and re-arrangement to restore it to its supposed

original form and thus bring to light its proper plan; but the

results have been as unsatisfactory as the procedure was unau-

thorized and the premises groundless. We must take the text

 



1857.]                    Book of Ecclesiastes.                         427

 

as we find it, which there is no reason to believe has been

corrupted. The deficiency of arrangement which has been

alleged, does not exist; and the alterations which have been

proposed are not improvements.  There is a clear and consistent

plan in the book of Ecclesiastes, which needs no changes nor

mutilations in order to its discovery; one in fact of the most

strictly logical and methodical kind.  Not only is the argument

we conducted, conclusive and complete, but its various points

are so admirably; disposed, its divisions so regular and its differ-

ent parts so conformed in structure, as to give evidence, that the

whole was carefully considered and  well digested before it was

put together. This differs' perhaps from; the prevailing opinion;

but we are convinced; that , they who complain, of a want of

method, haerent in cortice.

It would be tedious and confusing to enumerate in; all their

details the various divisions proposed by different commentators.

Very many of them, however diverse in their minor subdivisions,

will be found to rest ultimately upon the same essential scheme,

the division or the book into two parts or grand leading sections.

These are sometimes made unequal by assigning four chapters

to the first and eight to the second; at other times equal, so that

each contains six, chapters; The principle assumed as the basis

of the division is in either" case the same, that the first contains

the theoretical and the second the practical portion of the sub-

ject; the first establishes the vanity of earthly things, and the

second the duties and obligations which this involves, and how

man should demean himself in this vain world. There is so far

a foundation for these schemes, that the tone of the book does

become more hortatory and practical as it approaches its close;

but the line of separation between its doctrine and exhortation

is not so sharply defined as to render such a division between

them practicable, as is shown in fact by the divided sentiment

of those who undertake it. Hitzig's division into three parts

of four chapters each, appears to be a lame attempt to mediate

between the views already recited.

The most satisfactory division is, in our judgment, that into

four parts, which was proposed by Vaihinger in the," Studien

und Kritiken," for 1848, and has since been adopted by Keil

and others. It is a modification of that of Ewald, (whom Heilig-



428                       The Scope and Plan of the                  [JULY

 

stedt follows,) which is itself an improvement upon that of J

Koster, all of whom assume the same number of sections. "His

scheme is the following, viz.

I. i. 2-ii. 26.

II. iii. 1-v. 20.

III. vi. 1-viii. 15.

IV. viii. 16-xii. 14.

It has a sanction of an external kind, inasmuch as it seems

to be indicated by the writer himself, winding up each part by

a formal statement of the conclusion of his argument, which in

the first three is given in almost identical terms. This is the

more worthy of note, as Solomon has indicated the divisions "of

his Song in a precisely similar way by the recurrence of a

refrain. Its full justification depends upon its being shown that

it is coincident with the actual course of the discussion, and

that every part, without forcing or the assumption of arbitrary

senses, fits into the scheme thus presented. Vaihinger was

prevented from exhibiting this in a satisfactory manner by

his predilection for strophes of equal length, into which he

fancied the whole to be in the most precise manner subdivided.

This encumbered his view and rendered it too artificial; while

his too zealous pursuit of a merely mechanical regularity led

him to lose sight of the proper divisions of the thought and of

that regular structure which actually does exist. Each section

contains, in addition to a brief conclusion, three subdivisions,

not counted off into precisely the same number of verses, but

with entire freedom as to length, and arising out of the nature

of the subject discussed. Of the four principal sections the first

and second are preliminary, the third contains the main body of

the argument, and the fourth is supplementary.

The first and second sections/are intended to pave the way

for the discussion proper, by presenting facts and reasonings,

upon which the considerations alleged for the settlement of the

question at issue are then based. The first section, chaps. i.

and ii., contains a preliminary argument from Solomon's own

experience, designed to show that happiness is not in man's

own power; that all his striving and toiling, though it may

surround him with every source of gratification his heart can

desire, is powerless to give that gratification itself. After



1857.]                   Book of Ecclesiastes.                         429

 

announcing, i. 1, the author, he proceeds to state his theme,

i. 2, 3, the vanity of men's toil and acquisitions; they cannot

yield the happiness so confidently expected from them. To the

illustration of this theme he now proceeds. He first, i. 4-11,

lays down the postulate essential to the validity of any general

deductions from an individual experience of the uniformity of

sequences in the world, where the same phenomena are con-

stantly repeating themselves. The earth, with its established

laws, abides through every shifting generation. The sun, the

wind, the rivers in their constant motions, maintain their uni-

formity. The same is true, ver. 8, of every thing; one would

never have done' telling, seeing, hearing the numberless exam-

ples of like purport. The thing that hath been, it is that which

shall be. There is nothing new. Things will happen in all

time to come just as they have done in the past; though there

is too little disposition to remember and profit by the lessons

of experience.

Having thus established the universality and permanence of

uniform sequences in the world, he proceeds to state his own

experience with its results. The same results must, from the

principle just laid down, follow. in every like case; whence he

is warranted in drawing from these premises the universal con-

clusion at which he is aiming. His experience is given first in

general, i. 12-18, and then with more detail, ii. 1-11. The

general account of it is rendered more emphatic py its repeti-

tion in precisely the same form, vs.12-15, vs. 16-18. He

describes first his favourable situation for trying a satisfactory

experiment, ver. 12, ver. 16, he was a king, and superior to all

former dwellers in Jerusalem; the experiment itself, vs. 13, 14 a,

ver. 17 a, he tested everything, whether wise or foolish; the

result, vs. 14 b, 15, vs.17 b, 18, it was all empty and unsatis-

factory. There was in everything he attempted something

crooked that could not be made straight, or deficient that could

not be rendered complete. There was always something to

render the unalloyed happiness that he sought, unattainable;

and that something could not be got rid of, for it arose from a

vice inherent in earthly things. He then goes on, ii. 1-11,

to specify more particularly some of the methods in which he

sought happiness but failed to find it; merriment, conviviality,



430              The Scope and Plan of the                           [JULY

 

splendid buildings, fine grounds, retinues, wealth, music. In

fine, he surrounded himself with everything his heart desired;

and yet surveying it all while still in the secure possession of

it, he found it emptiness and vanity. It did not yield him

happiness.

In addition to the unsatisfactory nature of these things in