What a wonderful book! My previous experiences of reading Ecclesiastes usually left me with it's all vanity, and I missed just how rich the little book in the Bible is. This time, after digging deeper with Kinder's commentary, I was left with how much joy we get to experience because we have eternity set in our hearts.
"Although as time-dwellers we see God's work in tantalizing flashes, the very fact that we can ask about the whole design and long to see it, is evidence that we are not entirely prisoners of our world. In more promising words, it is evidence of not only how but for Whom we have been made."
I wanted to like this more, due to Kidner's reputation and the help he has given me in other commentaries. But his style in this work was not exegetical, nor really expository. It was more like musings or thoughts on the verses in Ecclesiastes. Helpful at times, but it didn't really fit any specific needs that a student, teacher, or preacher would have.
Kidner never wrote wordy commentaries, he was a master of succinct and punchy sentences. But this one is brief not only in page count, but also in what it says. And I think that claim that Ecclesiastes doesn't believe in an afterlife is a mistake that colours much of interpretation, and limits usefulness of a commentary on this book.
Like in my previous reviews, I am going to say - read CL Seow (expensive!), and if you have time (and some money left), then supplement him with Provan.
EDIT - decided to raise one star. He is better than 'just OK'.
"nothing in our search has led us home; nothing that we are offered under the sun is ours to keep. but... this very passage points us beyond anything under the sun, in the words, 'your Creator,' and it invites response to him."
an incredibly thorough study that has me looking at life as fleeting but good. yes, all is vain... but only under this sun, and only apart from a Creator God.
The most consistently helpful commentary I used whilst preaching Ecclesiastes. Succinct, reliable, insightful. Not comprehensive - offered a single point of view on most issues rather than canvassing every possibility.
Ecclesiastes is, for me, one of the hardest books in the Bible to interpret. Our small group from church just finished a study of the book--and I learned the most outside of our discussion from reading Kidner's little volume.
As usual, Kidner is concise, precise, and incisive. Though brief, this commentary covers all of the big things. He's careful with his statements but makes exegetical decisions. I can tell that the 1984 NIV Study Bible notes lean heavily on this book, too.
I don't have all of my questions answered yet, but of all the things I've read on Ecclesiastes, this is the one I trust the most. Recommended.
Kidner is excellent on Ecclesiastes even if a bit too terse. He's obviously brilliant and has a great grasp on the text but the commentary sometimes leaves you wishing he had written a few more sentences to explain. The last section on chapter 11-12 is solid gold though.
Kidner’s book on Ecclesiastes provides a solid overview of the subject matter and themes of the book. Although the style can be a little dry, there is some great insight and structure that help explain some of the mysteries of Ecclesiastes. Not amazing, but good.
Kidner commentaries are some of the best out there. This was the shortest I read but it did not disappoint, straight to the point and clear. A blessing to read
Philosophers have always, in my view had a vague or morbid view of life, little did I know that Derek Kidner would show me that Solomon plunged the depths of the meaning of life in Ecclesiastes. Reading this book has once again shown the value of reading passages in context. Inasmuch as one can take passages from the book of Ecclesiastes in Isolation and get benefit from it there is so much more that can be gotten from taking the journey through Solomon. In my usual fashion I will mention two things that stood out for me as I read this amazing book.
Through the eyes of Solomon we get to glimpse life to the extremes of creativity, wealth and brilliance. What would I know and feel if I had free license of my creative wit, endless amounts of money and the brilliance that gravitates people to myself. Solomon shows this and like a very good writer he tells us what we will find at the end before we get caught up in the maze of life and living. And much like life we do get lost in the hustle and bustle of the rat race and the end is disappointing because 'Time and Chance' are cruel in dealing with all of us.
Life is meaningless! One may store up treasures just for them to be squandered or even if they are kept they are not enjoyed by the one who made them. And if our hope is to remain in people's memories, even that does not do. Solomon does a very good job in showing that regardless of what we pursue in life, whether it be wealth, family, pleasure or wisdom, if there is no God in it then it is all just a waste of life.
God has placed Eternity in our hearts that cannot be filled up by anything but him. It is a shame a lot of people only realize this on their deathbeds, by which point it is too late
I found Kidner's introduction: "What is this Book doing in the Bible - a reconnaissance" helpful, but the rest of the commentary was so short, I did not find it as helpful.
"He [author of Ecclesiastes] is demolishing to build. The searching questions he has asked are those that life puts to us, if we will only listen. He can afford to ask them, because in the final chapters has has good news for us, once we can stop pretending that what is mortal is enough for us, who have been given a capacity for the eternal." (p. 19)
"We face the appalling inference that nothing has meaning, nothing matters under the sun. It is then that we can hear, as the good news which it is, that everything matters - for God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil." (p. 20)
“Triviality is more stifling than tragedy, and the shrug is the most hopeless of all comments on life. The function of Ecclesiastes is to bring us to the point where we begin to fear that such a comment is the only honest one. So it is, if everything is dying. We face the appalling inference that nothing has meaning, nothing matters under the sun. It is then that we can hear, as good news which it is, that everything matters—‘for God will bring every deed into judgment, with every secret thing, whether good or evil.’”, p. 20
Excellent little commentary. Derek Kidner is the king of the concise commentary! This excellent entry in The Bible Speaks Today series is a perfect example. Rarely will you find a commentator who can pack so much in so little space. In addition, he also writes with beauty. So in a "quick" read, one can still also have a deep and meaningful read. This commentary is a great resource for both the pastor and the lay-person. Would recommend for personal study or as a small-group resource.
A decent, slim commentary. Kidner does a pretty good job analyzing the structure of Ecclesiastes, though I disagree with some of his choices for outlining the book. His commentary on the first six chapters was quite strong but then got weaker in the second half. But the second half is harder to pin down. My biggest complaints are that the intro is too short and that Kidner reads too much New Testament theology back into Ecclesiastes.
A brief and readable commentary of the Book of Ecclesiastes by Derek Kidner, who passed away in November of 2008. This book, first published in 1976, is very well-written and thought provoking. I do enjoy reading The Bible Speaks Today Commentary series edited by J. A. Motyer and John R. W. Stott, both deceased.
One of the best commentaries I've read on Ecclesiastes. The author is brilliant in the way he explains the verses. The first half is spectacular, but I give it 4 stars, because the second half is a bit more complex. The author draws conclusions that aren't intuitive to me (most likely because the author gets them from the Hebrew).
I love Kidner. One of the first places I turn when studying an OT text. This was probably my least favorite so far. It was fine, but often he simply gives an overview of the message of the section without much comment on the specifics. I realize that is in keeping with this series, but you would still like a bit more on the text. As always, he has brilliant things to say with an economy of words.
This is the first commentary by Kidner that I’ve read. It was a delightful read. Kidner is deep, concise, and clear. Ecclesiastes is one of my favorite books of the Bible. I was pleased by the scholarly insights and keen lessons for godly living through the voice of Qoheleth.
Positives: Insightful, resonant, tight Negatives: Perhaps marches through the text at such a consistent pace that he doesn't pause to meditate on some of the broader themes.