John Gill Commentary Ecclesiastes 3

John Gill Commentary

Ecclesiastes 3

1697–1771
Reformed Baptist
John Gill
John Gill

John Gill Commentary

Ecclesiastes 3

1697–1771
Reformed Baptist
Verse 1

"For everything there is a season, and a time for very purpose under heaven:" — Ecclesiastes 3:1 (ASV)

To every [thing there is] a season
A set determined time, when everything shall come into being, how long it shall continue, and in what circumstances; all things that have been, are, or shall be, were foreordained by God, and he has determined the times before appointed for their being, duration, and end; which times and seasons he has in his own power:

there was a determined time for the whole universe, and for all persons and things in it; a settled fixed moment for the world to come into being; for it did not exist from everlasting, nor of itself, nor was formed by the fortuitous concourse of atoms, but by the wisdom and power of God; nor could it exist sooner or later than it did; it appeared when it was the will of God it should; in the beginning he created it, and he has fixed the time of its duration and end; for it shall not continue always, but have an end, which when it will be, he only knows:

so there is a determined time for the rise, height, and declension of states and kingdoms in it; as of lesser ones, so of the four great monarchies; and for all the distinct periods and ages of the world; and for each of the seasons of the year throughout all ages; for the state of the church in it, whether in suffering or flourishing circumstances; for the treading down of the holy city; for the prophesying, slaying, and rising of the witnesses; for the reign and ruin of antichrist; for the reign of Christ on earth, and for his second coming to judgment, though of that day and hour knows no man:

and as there is a set time in the counsels and providence of God for these more important events, so for every thing of a lesser nature; and a time to every purpose under the heaven ;

to every purpose of man that is carried into execution; for some are not, they are superseded by the counsel of God; some obstruction or another is thrown in the way of them, so that they cannot take place; God withdraws men from them by affliction or death, when their purposes are broken; or by some other way; and what are executed he appoints a time for them, and overrules them to answer some ends of his own; for things the most contingent, free, and voluntary, fall under the direction and providence of God.

And there is a time for every purpose of his own; all things done in the world are according to his purposes, which are within himself wisely formed, and are eternal and unfrustrable; and there is a time fixed for the execution of them, for every purpose respecting all natural and civil things in providence; and for every purpose of his grace, relating to the redemption of his people, the effectual calling of them, and the bringing them to eternal glory; which are the things that God wills, that he takes delight and pleasure in, as the word F5 signifies.

The Septuagint and Vulgate Latin versions render it, "to everything under the heaven there is a time"; and Jarchi observes that in the Misnic language the word used so signifies. The Targum is, "to every man a time shall come, and a season to every business under heaven."


FOOTNOTES:

  • F5: (Upx lkl) "omni voluntati", Montanus, Mercerus, Cocceius; i.e. "rei proprie capitae ac desideratae", Drusius
Verse 2

"a time to be born, and a time to die; a time to plant, and a time to pluck up that which is planted;" — Ecclesiastes 3:2 (ASV)

A time to be born
The Targum is,

``to beget sons and daughters;'' but rather it is to bear them, there being a time in nature fixed for that, called the hour of a woman, (Job 14:1) ; and a time to die ;
the time of a man's coming into the world and going out of it, both being fixed by the Lord F6 : this is true of all men in general, of all men that come into the world, for whom it is appointed that they shall die; and particularly of Christ, whose birth was at the time appointed by the Father, in the fulness of time; and whose death was in due time, nor could his life be taken away before his hour was come, (John 7:30) (8:20) (13:1) ; and this holds good of every individual man; his birth is at the time God has fixed it; that any man is born into the world, is of God; no man comes into it at his own pleasure or another's, but at the will of God, and when he pleases, not sooner nor later; and the time of his going out of the world is settled by him, beyond which time he cannot live, and sooner he cannot die, (Job 14:5) ; and though no mention is made of the interval of life between a man's birth and death, yet all events intervening are appointed by God; as the place of his abode; his calling and station of life; all circumstances of prosperity and adversity; all diseases of body, and what lead on to death, and issue in it: the reason why these two are put so close together is, to show the certainty of death; that as sure as a man is born, so sure shall he die; and the frailty and shortness of life, which is but an hand's breadth, passes away like a tale that is told, yea, is as nothing; so that no account is made of it, as if there was no time allotted it, or that it deserved no mention; and also to observe that the seeds of mortality and death are in men as soon as they are born; as soon as they begin to live they begin to die, death is working in them; a time to plant ;
a tree, as the Targum, or any herb; and a time to pluck up [that which is] planted ;
a tree or herb, as before, when grown to its ripeness, and fit for use; or when grown old, barren, and unfruitful; there are particular seasons for planting plants, and some for one and some for another. This may be applied in a civil sense to planting and plucking up kingdoms and states; see (Jeremiah 1:10) (18:7-10) ; as it is by the Jews, particularly to the planting and plucking up of the kingdom of Israel; the people of Israel were a vine brought out of Egypt and planted in the land of Canaan, and afterwards plucked up and carried captive into Babylon; and afterwards planted again, and then again plucked up by the Romans; and will be assuredly planted in their own land again; see (Psalms 80:8) (Jeremiah 45:4) (31:28) (32:41) ; It may be illustrated in a spiritual sense by the planting of the Jewish church, sometimes compared to a vineyard; and the plucking it up, abolishing their church state and ordinances; and by planting Gospel churches in the Gentile world, and plucking them up again, as in the seven cities of Asia; or removing the candlestick out of its place; and by planting particular persons in churches, and removing them again: some indeed that are planted in the house of the Lord are planted in Christ, and rooted and grounded in the love of God; are plants which Christ's Father has planted, and will never be rooted up; but there are others who are planted through the external ministry of the word, or are plants only by profession, and these become twice dead, plucked up by the roots; and there are times for these things, (Psalms 92:14) (Matthew 15:13) (1 Corinthians 3:6–8) (Jude 1:12) .

FOOTNOTES:


  1. F6 "Stat sua cuique dies, breve et irreparabile tempus omnibus est vitae"; Virgil. Aeneid. l. 10.
Verse 3

"a time to kill, and a time to heal; a time to break down, and a time to build up;" — Ecclesiastes 3:3 (ASV)

A time to kill, and a time to heal A time to kill may be meant of a violent death, as a time to die is of a natural one; so the Targum, ``a time to kill in war;'' or else, by the hand of the civil magistrate, such who deserve death.

Aben Ezra interprets it "to wound", because of the opposite "to heal"; and so there is a time when wounds and diseases are incurable, and baffle all the skill of the physician, being designed unto death; and there is a time when, by the blessing of God on means, they are healed; the wound or sickness not being unto death: so the Targum paraphrases the last clause, ``to heal one that lies sick.''

This may be applied in a civil sense to calamities in kingdoms, and a restoration of peace and plenty to them; which is the property of God alone, who in this sense kills and makes alive in his own time, (Deuteronomy 32:39) (1 Samuel 2:9) (Hosea 6:1) ;

And in a spiritual sense to the ministers of the word, who are instruments of slaying souls by the law, which is the killing letter, and of healing them by the Gospel, which pours in the oil and wine of peace and pardon through the blood of Christ, and so binds up and heals the broken hearted; and there is a time for both;

a time to break down, and a time to build up To break down a building, and build a waste, as the Targum; to break down cities and the walls of them, as the of Jerusalem by Nebuchadnezzar; and to build them up: as in the times of Nehemiah and Zerubbabel:

and so in a spiritual sense to break down the church of God, the tabernacle of David, and to raise up and repair the breaches of it; to build up Zion, and the walls of Jerusalem, or to restore the Gospel church state to its glory, for which there is a set time; see (Amos 9:11) (Psalms 102:13Psalms 102:16) .

Verse 4

"a time to weep, and a time to laugh; a time to mourn, and a time to dance;" — Ecclesiastes 3:4 (ASV)

A time to weep, and a time to laugh

There is a time for these things, as it goes ill or well with persons, as to their health, estate, or friends; and as it goes ill or well with kingdoms and states.

The Jews wept when they were in Babylon, and their mouths were filled with laughter when their captivity was returned, (Psalms 137:1) (Psalms 126:1Psalms 126:2) ;

and as it goes ill or well with the church of Christ, when there are corruptions in doctrine and worship, a neglect of ordinances, declensions in faith and practice, few instances of conversion, and there are divisions and contentions, it is a time for the mourners in Zion to weep but when God creates Jerusalem a rejoicing, and her people a joy, or makes her an eternal excellency, and the praise of the whole earth, then it is a time to rejoice and be glad, (Isaiah 61:3) (65:18) ;

and as it is, with believers, when Christ is withdrawn from them, it is a time to lament, but, when the bridegroom is with them, it is a time of joy; when it is a night of darkness and desertion, weeping endures, but when the morning comes, the day breaks, and the sun of righteousness arises, joy comes with it, (Matthew 9:15) (John 16:19John 16:20) (Psalms 30:5) .

Now in the present state is the saints' weeping time; in the time to come they will laugh, or be filled with joy unspeakable and full of glory, (Luke 6:21) ;

a time to mourn, and a time to dance ;

to mourn at funerals, and to dance at festivals; in a spiritual sense, God sometimes turns the mourning of his people into dancing, or joy, which that is expressive of; see (Psalms 30:11) .

Verse 5

"a time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones together; a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing;" — Ecclesiastes 3:5 (ASV)

A time to cast away stones, and a time to gather stones
together
To cast stones out of a field or vineyard where they are hurtful, and to gather them together to make walls and fences of, or build houses with;

And may be understood both of throwing down buildings, as the temple of Jerusalem, so that not one stone was left upon another; of pouring out the stones of the sanctuary, and of gathering them again and laying them on one another; which was done when the servants of the Lord took pleasure in the stones of Zion, and favoured the dust thereof.

Some understand this of precious stones, and of casting them away through luxury, wantonness, or contempt, and gathering them again: and it may be applied, as to the neglect of the Gentiles for a long time, and the gathering of those stones of which children were raised to Abraham; so of the casting away of the Jews for their rejection of the Messiah, and of the gathering of them again by conversion, when they shall be as the stones of a crown, lifted up as an ensign on his land, (Zechariah 9:16) ;

a time to embrace, and a time to refrain from embracing : or "to be far from" F7 it; it may not only design conjugal embraces F8 , but parents embracing their children, as Jacob did his; and one brother embracing another, as Esau Jacob, and one friend embracing another; all which is very proper and agreeable at times:

but there are some seasons so very calamitous and distressing, in which persons are obliged to drop such fondnesses:

it is true, in a spiritual sense, of the embraces of Christ and believers, which sometimes are, and sometimes are not, enjoyed, (Proverbs 4:8) (Song of Solomon 2:6Song of Solomon 2:9) (3:1-3) .


FOOTNOTES:

  • F7: (qxrl te) "tempus elongandi se", Pagninus, Montanus; "tempus longe fieri", V. L.
  • F8: "Optatos dedit amplexus", Virgil. Aeneid. 8. v. 405.

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