Ecclesiastes 4:9 - John Trapp Complete Commentary

Bible Comments

Two [are] better than one; because they have a good reward for their labour.

Ver. 9. Two are better than one.] Friendly society is far beyond that wretched "aloneness" of the covetous wretch; Ecc 4:8 he "joins house to house and land to land, that he may live alone in the midst of the earth." Isa 5:8

“Quin sine rivali, seque et sua solus amato.” - Horat.

Let him enjoy his moping solitariness, if he can. "It is not good for man to be alone," saith God; Gen 2:18 and he that loves to be alone is either a beast or a god, saith the philosopher a Man is ζωον πολιτικον, a sociable creature - he is "nature's good fellow," and holds this for a rule, Optimum solarium sodalitium. There is great comfort in good company: next to communion with God is the communion of saints. Christ sent out his apostles by two and two. Mar 6:7 He himself came from heaven to converse with us; and shall we, like stoics, stye up ourselves, and not daily run into good company? The evil spirit is for solitariness, God is for society. b He dwells in the "assembly of his saints"; yea, there he hath a delight to dwell, calling the Church his Hephzibah, Isa 62:4 and the saints were David's Hephzibam, "his delight." Psa 16:3 Neither doth God nor good men take pleasure in a stern, froward austerity, or wild retiredness, but in a mild affableness and amiable conversation.

a Aristot., Polit. i.

b Dupla et compaginata pleraque fecit Deus, ut coelum et terram, solem et lunam, marem et feminam. - Orig. in Gen. i. Vide Erasm. in Adagio. Sυν τε δυ ερχομενω

Ecclesiastes 4:9

9 Two are better than one; because they have a good reward for their labour.