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Text -- Ecclesiastes 2:1-19 (NET)

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Context
Futility of Self-Indulgent Pleasure
2:1 I thought to myself, “Come now, I will try self-indulgent pleasure to see if it is worthwhile.” But I found that it also is 2:2 I said of partying, “It is folly,” and of self-indulgent pleasure, “It accomplishes nothing!” 2:3 I thought deeply about the effects of indulging myself with wine (all the while my mind was guiding me with wisdom) and the effects of behaving foolishly, so that I might discover what is profitable for people to do on earth during the few days of their lives.
Futility of Materialism
2:4 I increased my possessions: I built houses for myself; I planted vineyards for myself. 2:5 I designed royal gardens and parks for myself, and I planted all kinds of fruit trees in them. 2:6 I constructed pools of water for myself, to irrigate my grove of flourishing trees. 2:7 I purchased male and female slaves, and I owned slaves who were born in my house; I also possessed more livestock– both herds and flocks– than any of my predecessors in Jerusalem. 2:8 I also amassed silver and gold for myself, as well as valuable treasures taken from kingdoms and provinces. I acquired male singers and female singers for myself, and what gives a man sensual delight– a harem of beautiful concubines! 2:9 So I was far wealthier than all my predecessors in Jerusalem, yet I maintained my objectivity: 2:10 I did not restrain myself from getting whatever I wanted; I did not deny myself anything that would bring me pleasure. So all my accomplishments gave me joy; this was my reward for all my effort. 2:11 Yet when I reflected on everything I had accomplished and on all the effort that I had expended to accomplish it, I concluded: “All these achievements and possessions are ultimately profitless– like chasing the wind! There is nothing gained from them on earth.”
Wisdom is Better than Folly
2:12 Next, I decided to consider wisdom, as well as foolish behavior and ideas. For what more can the king’s successor do than what the king has already done? 2:13 I realized that wisdom is preferable to folly, just as light is preferable to darkness: 2:14 The wise man can see where he is going, but the fool walks in darkness. Yet I also realized that the same fate happens to them both. 2:15 So I thought to myself, “The fate of the fool will happen even to me! Then what did I gain by becoming so excessively wise?” So I lamented to myself, “The benefits of wisdom are ultimately meaningless!” 2:16 For the wise man, like the fool, will not be remembered for very long, because in the days to come, both will already have been forgotten. Alas, the wise man dies– just like the fool! 2:17 So I loathed life because what happens on earth seems awful to me; for all the benefits of wisdom are futile– like chasing the wind.
Futility of Being a Workaholic
2:18 So I loathed all the fruit of my effort, for which I worked so hard on earth, because I must leave it behind in the hands of my successor. 2:19 Who knows if he will be a wise man or a fool? Yet he will be master over all the fruit of my labor for which I worked so wisely on earth! This also is futile!
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Names, People and Places:
 · Jerusalem the capital city of Israel,a town; the capital of Israel near the southern border of Benjamin


Dictionary Themes and Topics: Wisdom | Philosophy | Life | Experiment | Pleasure | Worldliness | Investigation | Vanity | Epicureans | Solomon | Death | Industry | FOREST | LABOR | Irrigation | Music | Agriculture | Amusements and Worldly Pleasures | Inheritance | Heir | more
Table of Contents

Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Ecc 2:1 This use of הֶבֶל (hevel) denotes “futile, worthless, fruitless, pointless” (HALOT 237 s.v. I הֶ...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:2 Heb “What does it accomplish?” The rhetorical question “What does it accomplish?” expects a negative answer: “It accompl...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:3 Heb “number of the days.” The Hebrew noun מִסְפַּר (mispar, “number, quantity”...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:4 The expression for myself is repeated eight times in 2:4-8 to emphasize that Qoheleth did not deny himself any acquisition. He indulged himself in acq...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:5 The noun פַּרְדֵּס (pardes, “garden, parkland, forest”) is a foreign loanword that o...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:6 Heb “to water from them a grove” (or “forest).

NET Notes: Ecc 2:7 For location see Map5 B1; Map6 F3; Map7 E2; Map8 F2; Map10 B3; JP1 F4; JP2 F4; JP3 F4; JP4 F4.

NET Notes: Ecc 2:8 Concubines were slave women in ancient Near Eastern societies who were the legal property of their master, but who could have legitimate sexual relati...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:9 Heb “yet my wisdom stood for me,” meaning he retained his wise perspective despite his great wealth.

NET Notes: Ecc 2:10 Heb “and this was my portion from all my toil.”

NET Notes: Ecc 2:11 Heb “under the sun.”

NET Notes: Ecc 2:12 The Hebrew text reads עָשׂוּהוּ (’asuhu, “they have done it”; Qal perfect 3rd ...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:13 Heb “and I saw that there is profit for wisdom more than folly.”

NET Notes: Ecc 2:14 The term כֻּלָּם (kullam, “all of them”) denotes “both of them.” This is an example ...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:15 The word “ultimately” does not appear in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for clarity.

NET Notes: Ecc 2:16 The preposition עִם (’im, “with”) may occasionally function in a comparative sense, meaning “together with; ...

NET Notes: Ecc 2:17 Heb “all,” referring here to the relative advantage of wisdom.

NET Notes: Ecc 2:18 Heb “to a man who will come after me.”

NET Notes: Ecc 2:19 Heb “under the sun.”

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