Albert Barnes Commentary Ecclesiastes 12:5

Albert Barnes Commentary

Ecclesiastes 12:5

1798–1870
Presbyterian
Albert Barnes
Albert Barnes

Albert Barnes Commentary

Ecclesiastes 12:5

1798–1870
Presbyterian
SCRIPTURE

"yea, they shall be afraid of [that which is] high, and terrors [shall be] in the way; and the almond-tree shall blossom, and the grasshopper shall be a burden, and desire shall fail; because man goeth to his everlasting home, and the mourners go about the streets:" — Ecclesiastes 12:5 (ASV)

High - The powerful and the proud, such persons as an old man in his timidity might shrink from opposing or meeting: or, high ground which old men would avoid ascending.

Fears ... in the way - Compare to Proverbs 26:13.

The almond tree - The type of old age. Many modern critics translate, “The almond shall be despised,” that is, pleasant food shall no longer be relished.

The grasshopper - Rather: “the locust.” The clause means that heaviness and stiffness shall take the place of that active motion for which the locust is conspicuous.

Desire - Literally, the caper-berry; which, eaten as a provocative to appetite, shall fail to take effect on a man whose powers are exhausted.

Long home - Literally, “eternal (see Ecclesiastes 1:4 note) house”; man’s place in the next world.

Without attributing to the author of Ecclesiastes that deep insight into the future life which is shown by the writer of the Epistles to the Corinthians, we may observe that He, by whom both writers were inspired, sanctions in both books (see 2 Corinthians 5:1–6) the use of the same expression, “eternal house.”

In 2 Corinthians, it means that spiritual body which shall be hereafter; and it is placed, as it is here , in contrast with that earthly, dissolving house which clothes the spirit of man in this world.

Mourners - The singing women who attend funerals for hire .