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Text -- Ecclesiastes 2:1-4 (NET)

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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.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Pleasure | Epicureans | Experiment | Life | Philosophy | Worldliness | Wisdom | Investigation | Vanity | Solomon | Wine | Vineyard | Happiness | ECCLESIASTES, THE PREACHER | GIVE | GUIDE | Agriculture | Amusements and Worldly Pleasures | more
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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...

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