Charles Ellicott Commentary Luke 12:19

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Luke 12:19

1819–1905
Anglican
Charles Ellicott
Charles Ellicott

Charles Ellicott Commentary

Luke 12:19

1819–1905
Anglican
SCRIPTURE

"And I will say to my soul, Soul, thou hast much goods laid up for many years; take thine ease, eat, drink, be merry." — Luke 12:19 (ASV)

Eat, drink, and be merry.—These words remind us of St. Paul’s Let us eat and drink, for to-morrow we die (1 Corinthians 15:32), and may possibly have suggested them. There is, however, a suggestive difference in the context.

Extremes meet. The life of self-indulgence may spring either from an undue expectation of a lengthened life or from unduly dwelling on the fact of its shortness, without taking into account the judgment that comes after it.

The latter perspective, as seen in the “carpe diem” of Horace (Odes, i. 11, 8), was the current language of popular Epicureanism; the former seems to have been more characteristic of a corrupt Judaism .

In acting on this, the Jew, with his far outlook into the future (as he dreamt), was sinking to the level of the dissolute heathen, who was content to live in and for the present only.