Ecclesiastes 9:14 - Exposition
There was a little city . The substantive verb is, as commonly, omitted. Commentators have amused themselves with endeavoring to identify the city here mentioned. Thus some see herein Athens, saved by the counsel of Themistocles, who was afterwards driven from Athens and died in misery (Justin; 2.12); or Dora, near Mount Carmel, besieged unsuccessfully by Antiochus the Great, B.C. 218, though we know nothing of the circumstances (Polyb; 5.66); but see note on Ecclesiastes 9:13 . The Septuagint takes the whole paragraph hypothetically, "Suppose there was a little city," etc. Wright well compares the historical allusions to events fresh in the minds of his hearers made by our Lord in his parable of the pounds ( Luke 19:12 , Luke 19:14 , Luke 19:15 , Luke 19:27 ). So we may regard the present section as a parable founded on some historical fact well known at the time when the book was written. A great king . The term points to some Persian or Assyrian potentate; or it may mean merely a powerful general (see 1 Kings 11:24 ; Job 29:25 ). Built great bulwarks against it . The Septuagint has χάρακας μεγάλους , "great palisades;" the Vulgate, Extruxitque munitiones per gyrum . What are meant are embankments or mounds raised high enough to overtop the walls of the town, and to command the positions of the besieged. For the same purpose wooden towers were also used (see Deuteronomy 20:20 ; 2 Samuel 20:15 ; 2 Kings 19:32 ; Jeremiah lit. 4). The Vulgate rounds off the account in the text by adding, et perfects est obsidio, " and the beleaguering was completed."
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