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Text -- Ecclesiastes 6:1-9 (NET)

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Context
Not Everyone Enjoys Life
6:1 Here is another misfortune that I have seen on earth, and it weighs heavily on people: 6:2 God gives a man riches, property, and wealth so that he lacks nothing that his heart desires, yet God does not enable him to enjoy the fruit of his labor– instead, someone else enjoys it! This is fruitless and a grave misfortune. 6:3 Even if a man fathers a hundred children and lives many years– even if he lives a long, long time, but cannot enjoy his prosperity– even if he were to live forever– I would say, “A stillborn child is better off than he is!” 6:4 Though the stillborn child came into the world for no reason and departed into darkness, though its name is shrouded in darkness, 6:5 though it never saw the light of day nor knew anything, yet it has more rest than that man– 6:6 if he should live a thousand years twice, yet does not enjoy his prosperity. For both of them die! 6:7 All of man’s labor is for nothing more than to fill his stomach– yet his appetite is never satisfied! 6:8 So what advantage does a wise man have over a fool? And what advantage does a pauper gain by knowing how to survive? 6:9 It is better to be content with what the eyes can see than for one’s heart always to crave more. This continual longing is futile– like chasing the wind.
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Names, People and Places, Dictionary Themes and Topics

Dictionary Themes and Topics: Philosophy | Life | Instruction | Contentment | Riches | Old Age | Death | Vanity | Poor | HEAVY; HEAVINESS | APPETITE | WEALTH, WEALTHY | more
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Verse Notes / Footnotes
NET Notes

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Commentary -- Verse Notes / Footnotes

NET Notes: Ecc 6:1 Heb “it is great upon men.” The phrase וְרַבָּה הִיא עַ...

NET Notes: Ecc 6:2 Heb “an evil sickness.”

NET Notes: Ecc 6:3 The point of 6:3-6 is that the futility of unenjoyed wealth is worse than the tragedy of being stillborn.

NET Notes: Ecc 6:4 The name of the stillborn is forgotten.

NET Notes: Ecc 6:5 The Hebrew term translated rest here refers to freedom from toil, anxiety, and misery – part of the miserable misfortune that the miserly man of...

NET Notes: Ecc 6:6 Heb “Do not all go to the same place?” The rhetorical question is an example of erotesis of positive affirmation, expecting a positive ans...

NET Notes: Ecc 6:7 The term נֶפֶשׁ (nefesh, “desire; appetite”) is used as a metonymy of association, that is, the soul i...

NET Notes: Ecc 6:8 Heb “ What to the pauper who knows to walk before the living”; or “how to get along in life.”

NET Notes: Ecc 6:9 The term “like” does not appear in the Hebrew text, but is supplied in the translation for clarity and smoothness.

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