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Ecclesiastes 5-8
Ecclesiastes 5
1Guard your steps when you go to the house of God. Better to approach in obedience than to offer the sacrifice as fools do, for they ignorantly do wrong.
2Do not be hasty to speak, and do not be impulsive to make a speech before God. God is in heaven and you are on earth, so let your words be few.
3Just as dreams accompany much labor, so also a fool’s voice comes with many words.
4When you make a vow to God, don’t delay fulfilling it, because he does not delight in fools. Fulfill what you vow.
5Better that you do not vow than that you vow and not fulfill it.
6Do not let your mouth bring guilt on you, and do not say in the presence of the messenger that it was a mistake. Why should God be angry with your words and destroy the work of your hands?
7For many dreams bring futility, so do many words. Therefore, fear God.
8If you see oppression of the poor and perversion of justice and righteousness in the province, don’t be astonished at the situation, because one official protects another official, and higher officials protect them.
9The profit from the land is taken by all; the king is served by the field.
10The one who loves silver is never satisfied with silver, and whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with income. This too is futile.
11When good things increase, the ones who consume them multiply; what, then, is the profit to the owner, except to gaze at them with his eyes?
12The sleep of the worker is sweet, whether he eats little or much, but the abundance of the rich permits him no sleep.
13There is a sickening tragedy I have seen under the sun: wealth kept by its owner to his harm.
14That wealth was lost in a bad venture, so when he fathered a son, he was empty-handed.
15As he came from his mother’s womb, so he will go again, naked as he came; he will take nothing for his efforts that he can carry in his hands.
16This too is a sickening tragedy: exactly as he comes, so he will go. What does the one gain who struggles for the wind?
17What is more, he eats in darkness all his days, with much frustration, sickness, and anger.
18Here is what I have seen to be good: It is appropriate to eat, drink, and experience good in all the labor one does under the sun during the few days of his life God has given him, because that is his reward.
19Furthermore, everyone to whom God has given riches and wealth, he has also allowed him to enjoy them, take his reward, and rejoice in his labor. This is a gift of God,
20for he does not often consider the days of his life because God keeps him occupied with the joy of his heart.
Ecclesiastes 6
1Here is a tragedy I have observed under the sun, and it weighs heavily on humanity:
2God gives a person riches, wealth, and honor so that he lacks nothing of all he desires for himself, but God does not allow him to enjoy them. Instead, a stranger will enjoy them. This is futile and a sickening tragedy.
3A man may father a hundred children and live many years. No matter how long he lives, if he is not satisfied by good things and does not even have a proper burial, I say that a stillborn child is better off than he.
4For he comes in futility and he goes in darkness, and his name is shrouded in darkness.
5Though a stillborn child does not see the sun and is not conscious, it has more rest than he.
6And if a person lives a thousand years twice, but does not experience happiness, do not both go to the same place?
7All of a person’s labor is for his stomach, yet the appetite is never satisfied.
8What advantage then does the wise person have over the fool? What advantage is there for the poor person who knows how to conduct himself before others?
9Better what the eyes see than wandering desire. This too is futile and a pursuit of the wind.
10Whatever exists was given its name long ago, and it is known what mankind is. But he is not able to contend with the one stronger than he.
11For when there are many words, they increase futility. What is the advantage for mankind?
12For who knows what is good for anyone in life, in the few days of his futile life that he spends like a shadow? Who can tell anyone what will happen after him under the sun?
Ecclesiastes 7
1A good name is better than fine perfume, and the day of one’s death is better than the day of one’s birth.
2It is better to go to a house of mourning than to go to a house of feasting, since that is the end of all mankind, and the living should take it to heart.
3Grief is better than laughter, for when a face is sad, a heart may be glad.
4The heart of the wise is in a house of mourning, but the heart of fools is in a house of pleasure.
5It is better to listen to rebuke from a wise person than to listen to the song of fools,
6for like the crackling of burning thorns under the pot, so is the laughter of the fool. This too is futile.
7Surely, the practice of extortion turns a wise person into a fool, and a bribe corrupts the mind.
8The end of a matter is better than its beginning; a patient spirit is better than a proud spirit.
9Don’t let your spirit rush to be angry, for anger abides in the heart of fools.
10Don’t say, “Why were the former days better than these?” since it is not wise of you to ask this.
11Wisdom is as good as an inheritance and an advantage to those who see the sun,
12because wisdom is protection as silver is protection; but the advantage of knowledge is that wisdom preserves the life of its owner.
13Consider the work of God, for who can straighten out what he has made crooked?
14In the day of prosperity be joyful, but in the day of adversity, consider: God has made the one as well as the other, so that no one can discover anything that will come after him.
15In my futile life I have seen everything: someone righteous perishes in spite of his righteousness, and someone wicked lives long in spite of his evil.
16Don’t be excessively righteous, and don’t be overly wise. Why should you destroy yourself?
17Don’t be excessively wicked, and don’t be foolish. Why should you die before your time?
18It is good that you grasp the one and do not let the other slip from your hand. For the one who fears God will end up with both of them.
19Wisdom makes the wise person stronger than ten rulers of a city.
20There is certainly no one righteous on the earth who does good and never sins.
21Don’t pay attention to everything people say, or you may hear your servant cursing you,
22for in your heart you know that many times you yourself have cursed others.
23I have tested all this by wisdom. I resolved, “I will be wise,” but it was beyond me.
24What exists is beyond reach and very deep. Who can discover it?
25I turned my thoughts to know, explore, and examine wisdom and an explanation for things, and to know that wickedness is stupidity and folly is madness.
26And I find more bitter than death the woman who is a trap: her heart a net and her hands chains. The one who pleases God will escape her, but the sinner will be captured by her.
27“Look,” says the Teacher, “I have discovered this by adding one thing to another to find out the explanation,
28which my soul continually searches for but does not find: I found one person in a thousand, but none of those was a woman.
29Only see this: I have discovered that God made people upright, but they pursued many schemes.”
Ecclesiastes 8
1Who is like the wise person, and who knows the interpretation of a matter? A person’s wisdom brightens his face, and the sternness of his face is changed.
2Keep the king’s command because of your oath made before God.
3Do not be in a hurry; leave his presence, and don’t persist in a bad cause, since he will do whatever he wants.
4For the king’s word is authoritative, and who can say to him, “What are you doing?”
5The one who keeps a command will not experience anything harmful, and a wise heart knows the right time and procedure.
6For every activity there is a right time and procedure, even though a person’s troubles are heavy on him.
7Yet no one knows what will happen because who can tell him what will happen?
8No one has authority over the wind to restrain it, and there is no authority over the day of death; no one is discharged during battle, and wickedness will not allow those who practice it to escape.
9All this I have seen, applying my mind to all the work that is done under the sun, at a time when one person has authority over another to his harm.
10In such circumstances, I saw the wicked buried. They came and went from the holy place, and they were praised in the city where they did those things. This too is futile.
11Because the sentence against an evil act is not carried out quickly, the heart of people is filled with the desire to commit evil.
12Although a sinner does evil a hundred times and prolongs his life, I also know that it will go well with God-fearing people, for they are reverent before him.
13However, it will not go well with the wicked, and they will not lengthen their days like a shadow, for they are not reverent before God.
14There is a futility that is done on the earth: there are righteous people who get what the actions of the wicked deserve, and there are wicked people who get what the actions of the righteous deserve. I say that this too is futile.
15So I commended enjoyment because there is nothing better for a person under the sun than to eat, drink, and enjoy himself, for this will accompany him in his labor during the days of his life that God gives him under the sun.
16When I applied my mind to know wisdom and to observe the activity that is done on the earth (even though one’s eyes do not close in sleep day or night),
17I observed all the work of God and concluded that a person is unable to discover the work that is done under the sun. Even though a person labors hard to explore it, he cannot find it; even if a wise person claims to know it, he is unable to discover it.