Ecclesiastes 1:3 - John Trapp Complete Commentary

Bible Comments

What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?

Ver. 3. What profit hath a man?] What durable profit? Quid residui? what excess? what more than will serve to satisfy back and belly? Our life is called, "the life of our hands," Isa 57:10 because it is maintained by the labour of our hands. Si ventri bene, si lateri, as he in Horace saith, If the belly may be filled, the back fitted, that's all that can here be had, and that most men care to have; which if they have (some have but prisoners' pittance, so much as will keep life and soul together), yet quid amplius? as the Vulgate renders this text, what have they more to pay them for their pains? Surely, when all the account is subducted, such a labouring man's happiness resolved into its final issue and conclusion, there resteth nothing but ciphers. This should make us more moderate in our desires and endeavours after earthly things, since we do but "labour in the very fire, and weary ourselves for very vanity." Heb 2:13 They that seek after the philosopher's stone, they must use so much gold, and spend so much gold, and then they can turn as much into gold by it as they have spent in making of it; and so they have their labour for their pains. Quid emolumenti? What profit hath a man? Do we not see many take a great deal of pains to go to hell? whereinto at length they are turned as a sumpter horse is at night, after all his hard travail, with his back full of galls and bruises.

Ecclesiastes 1:3

3 What profit hath a man of all his labour which he taketh under the sun?