Eclesiastés 11

1 Echa tu pan sobre las aguas, que después de muchos días lo hallarás.
2 Reparte tu porción con siete, o aun con ocho, porque no sabes qué mal puede venir sobre la tierra.
3 Si las nubes están llenas, derraman lluvia sobre la tierra; y caiga el árbol al sur o al norte, donde cae el árbol allí se queda.
4 El que observa el viento no siembra, y el que mira las nubes no siega.
5 Como no sabes cuál es el camino del viento, o cómo se forman los huesos en el vientre de la mujer encinta, tampoco conoces la obra de Dios que hace todas las cosas.
6 De mañana siembra tu simiente y a la tarde no des reposo a tu mano, porque no sabes si esto o aquello prosperará, o si ambas cosas serán igualmente buenas.
7 Agradable es la luz, y bueno para los ojos ver el sol.
8 Ciertamente, si un hombre vive muchos años, que en todos ellos se regocije, pero recuerde que los días de tinieblas serán muchos. Todo lo por venir es vanidad.
9 Alégrate, joven, en tu mocedad, y tome placer tu corazón en los días de tu juventud. Sigue los impulsos de tu corazón y el gusto de tus ojos; mas sabe que por todas estas cosas, Dios te traerá a juicio.
10 Por tanto, aparta de tu corazón la congoja y aleja el sufrimiento de tu cuerpo, porque la mocedad y la primavera de la vida son vanidad.

Eclesiastés 11 Commentary

Chapter 11

Exhortation to liberality. (1-6) An admonition to prepare for death, and to young persons to be religious. (7-10)

Verses 1-6 Solomon presses the rich to do good to others. Give freely, though it may seem thrown away and lost. Give to many. Excuse not thyself with the good thou hast done, from the good thou hast further to do. It is not lost, but well laid out. We have reason to expect evil, for we are born to trouble; it is wisdom to do good in the day of prosperity. Riches cannot profit us, if we do not benefit others. Every man must labour to be a blessing to that place where the providence of God casts him. Wherever we are, we may find good work to do, if we have but hearts to do it. If we magnify every little difficulty, start objections, and fancy hardships, we shall never go on, much less go through with our work. Winds and clouds of tribulation are, in God's hands, designed to try us. God's work shall agree with his word, whether we see it or not. And we may well trust God to provide for us, without our anxious, disquieting cares. Be not weary in well-doing, for in due season, in God's time, you shall reap, ( Galatians 6:9 ) .

Verses 7-10 Life is sweet to bad men, because they have their portion in this life; it is sweet to good men, because it is the time of preparation for a better; it is sweet to all. Here is a caution to think of death, even when life is most sweet. Solomon makes an effecting address to young persons. They would desire opportunity to pursue every pleasure. Then follow your desires, but be assured that God will call you into judgment. How many give loose to every appetite, and rush into every vicious pleasure! But God registers every one of their sinful thoughts and desires, their idle words and wicked words. If they would avoid remorse and terror, if they would have hope and comfort on a dying bed, if they would escape misery here and hereafter, let them remember the vanity of youthful pleasures. That Solomon means to condemn the pleasures of sin is evident. His object is to draw the young to purer and more lasting joys. This is not the language of one grudging youthful pleasures, because he can no longer partake of them; but of one who has, by a miracle of mercy, been brought back in safety. He would persuade the young from trying a course whence so few return. If the young would live a life of true happiness, if they would secure happiness hereafter, let them remember their Creator in the days of their youth.

Chapter Summary

INTRODUCTION TO ECCLESIASTES 11

This chapter begins with an exhortation to liberality to the poor, enforced by several reasons and arguments, and the objections to it removed; and the whole illustrated by various similes, Ec 11:1-6; and then it is observed, that a life attended with outward prosperity and inward peace, and spent in doing good, is very delightful, and very desirable it is to have it continued; yet it should be remembered this will not be always, that many days of darkness in the grave will come; and after all the whole of a man's life is vanity, as is often inculcated, Ec 11:7,8; and the chapter is closed with an ironic address to young men, designed to show them the folly and danger of sinful courses, to reform them from them, and to put them in mind of a future judgment, Ec 11:9,10.

Eclesiastés 11 Commentaries

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