-
Verse 25. _FOR WHO CAN EAT - MORE THAN I?_] But instead of חוץ
ממני _chuts mimmenni, more than I_; חוץ ממנו chuts
mimmennu, without _HIM_, is the reading of _eight_ of _Kennicott's_
and _De Rossi's_ M...
-
Solomon having found that wisdom and folly agree in being subject to
vanity, now contrasts one with the other Ecclesiastes 2:13. Both are
brought under vanity by events Ecclesiastes 2:14 which come on...
-
CHAPTER 2THE RESULTS OF THE SEARCH AND DIFFERENT VANITIES
_ 1. His personal experience (Ecclesiastes 2:1)_
2. Various vanities and a conclusion (Ecclesiastes 2:12)
Ecclesiastes 2:1
-
ECCLESIASTES 1:12 TO ECCLESIASTES 2:26. QOHELETH'S INVESTIGATIONS.
Assuming the character of Solomon the writer tells of his search for
happiness under many forms. The pursuit of wisdom (Ecclesiastes...
-
The best thing for a man is to get what pleasure he can out of life.
And after all this is the Divine scheme of life, the ordinance of God.
No one can eat or be happy apart from Him (see _mg.)._ Eccle...
-
WHO ELSE CAN HASTEN HEREUNTO. who can enjoy?
MORE THAN I. Some codices, with Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic, read
_mimmennu,_ instead of _mimmenni,_ "without Him" (i.e. without His
favour)....
-
_For who can eat_ The sequence of thought is obscure, and many
commentators follow the LXX. and the Syriac version, as implying an
original text which gives a better meaning, WHO CAN EAT AND WHO CAN
H...
-
_THE VANITY OF GATHERING -- ECCLESIASTES 2:24-26:_ Solomon said that
the best thing that a man can do is enjoy in a cheerful and
comfortable manner the good he has received from the hand of God. He
sh...
-
FOR WHO CAN EAT, &C.— _For who shall eat, and who shall enjoy
without him?_ It might also be rendered, _For who shall eat, and who
shall reflect more than I?_ Ecclesiastes 2:26. For he giveth wisdom
a...
-
c. Labor is good only when it is acknowledged as from the hand of God.
Ecclesiastes 2:24-26
TEXT 2:24-26
24
There is nothing better for a man than to eat and drink and tell
himself that his labor i...
-
For who can eat, or who else can hasten hereunto, more than I?
WHO CAN EAT, OR WHO ELSE CAN HASTEN (HEREUNTO), MORE THAN I? -
Hebrew, yaachuwsh (H2363) chuwts (H2351) mimeniy (H4480): Who can
haste...
-
2:25 eager, (f-8) Lit. 'hasten.'...
-
HASTEN] RV 'have enjoyment.' MORE THAN I?] RM 'apart from Him?' i.e.
it is only through God's ordinance that simple bodily pleasures can
change to joy the sadness which is the natural outcome of the p...
-
EPICUREANISM AND WISDOM ALIKE PROFITLESS
1-3. The writer makes enjoyment his quest, while aware that it is
folly, and avoiding excess in a philosophic spirit....
-
THE TEACHER SEARCHES FOR
THE PURPOSE OF OUR LIVES
BOOK OF ECCLESIASTES
_HILDA BRIGHT AND KITTY PRIDE_
CHAPTER 2
THE TEST TO DISCOVER WHAT MAKES A PERSON HAPPY – ECCLESIASTES 2:1-11...
-
HASTEN. — Habakkuk 1:8.
MORE THAN I. — There is a various rendering, which has the authority
of the LXX., and which has every appearance of being right: “without
Him.”...
-
כִּ֣י מִ֥י יֹאכַ֛ל וּ מִ֥י יָח֖וּשׁ
ח֥וּץ
-
Turning from the pursuit of knowledge to the pathway of pleasure, the
king had given himself up to mirth, seeking the false stimulus of
wine. In this also he had been disappointed, finding that mirth...
-
For who can eat, or who else can hasten (q) [to it], more than I?
(q) Meaning, to pleasures....
-
For there is no remembrance of the wise more than of the fool forever;
seeing that which now is in the days to come shall all be forgotten.
And how dieth the wise man? as the fool. (17) Therefore I ha...
-
THE FOLLOWING COMMENTARY COVERS CHAPTER S 1 THROUGH 12.
The Book of Ecclesiastes is, up to a certain point, the converse of
the Book of Proverbs. (see NOTE TO PROVERBS below) It is the
experience of a...
-
FOR WHO CAN EAT?.... Who should eat, but such a man that has laboured
for it? or, who has a power to eat, that is, cheerfully, comfortably,
and freely to enjoy the good things of life he is possessed...
-
For who can eat, or who else can hasten [hereunto], more than I?
Ver. 25. _For who can eat, or who can hasten? &c._] And yet I have
found - and so shall you - that tranquillity and true happiness, th...
-
_For who can eat_, &c. For the truth of this you may rely upon my
experience: for who can more freely and fully enjoy the comforts of
this life than I did? _Or who else can hasten hereunto more than I...
-
For who can eat, or who else can hasten hereunto, to the enjoyment of
God's gifts, MORE THAN I? Christians may profit by the sad experiment
which Solomon made without paying the high price which the J...
-
THE VANITY OF LABOR IN ITSELF...
-
"FOR WHO CAN EAT AND WHO CAN HAVE ENJOYMENT WITHOUT HIM?"
I can't truly enjoy the things "under the sun" until my mind is set on
things above the sun (Colossians 3:1-2; Philippians 4:11ff). God has
en...
-
18-26 Our hearts are very loth to quit their expectations of great
things from the creature; but Solomon came to this at length. The
world is a vale of tears, even to those that have much of it. See...
-
Who can more freely and fully enjoy the comforts of this life than I
did? This verse is added to confirm what he said in the foregoing
verse from his own experience, which was the more considerable,
b...
-
Ecclesiastes 2:25 eat H398 (H8799) enjoyment H2363 (H8799) more H2351
who can - Ecclesiastes 2:1-12;
-
HIS PRELIMINARY CONCLUSION (ECCLESIASTES 2:24).
Ecclesiastes 2:24
‘There is nothing better for a man than that he should eat and
drink, and make his soul enjoy good as a result of (in) his efforts. I...
-
Ecclesiastes 1:12-2
I. As was natural in so wise a man, the Preacher turns first to
wisdom. It is the wisdom that is born of wide and varied experience,
not of abstract study. He acquaints himself wit...
-
CONTENTS: Solomon shows that there is no true happiness and
satisfaction to be had in mirth, pleasure and the delights of sense.
CHARACTERS: God, Solomon.
CONCLUSION: True and lasting happiness and...
-
Ecclesiastes 2:1. _Enjoy pleasure._ The first doctrine of Epicurus,
whose system is here rebutted. Acts 17:18.
Ecclesiastes 2:2. _I said of laughter,_ of all forced and frantic joy,
_it is mad._ Chald...
-
_There is nothing better for a man, than that he should eat and drink,
and that he should make his soul enjoy good in his labour._
THE SIMPLE JOYS OF GODLY INDUSTRY
We are not to regard these words a...
-
_Go to now, I will prove thee with mirth._
THE THREEFOLD VIEW OF HUMAN LIFE
Three views of human life are given in this remarkable chapter.
I. The theatrical view of life (Ecclesiastes 2:1). The wri...
-
ECCLESIASTES—NOTE ON ECCLESIASTES 2:24 If a person does not believe
his work will have a lasting impact on the world, the best he can hope
for is to FIND ENJOYMENT in TOIL and in God’s simple gifts of...
-
CRITICAL NOTES.—
ECCLESIASTES 2:24. THERE IS NOTHING BETTER FOR A MAN THAN THAT HE
SHOULD EAT AND DRINK] Not in the Epicurean sense, worshipping the
triad of sensual life—eat, drink, and be merry; bu...
-
EXPOSITION
ECCLESIASTES 2:1
Section 2. _Vanity of striving after pleasure and wealth._
ECCLESIASTES 2:1
Dissatisfied with the result of the pursuit of wisdom, Koheleth
embarks on a course of sensua...
-
So I said in my heart, Go to now, I'm going to prove thee with
[pleasure,] with mirth, therefore enjoy pleasure: but, behold, this
was vanity (Ecclesiastes 2:1).
So we read in the New Testament the ep...
-
WHAT IS GOOD IN THIS LIFE
Ecclesiastes 2:24; Ecclesiastes 3:1
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
We come now to the second great question in the Book of Ecclesiastes.
It is expressed in Chapter s 6 and 12: "Who kno...
-
VANITY AND VEXATION UNDER THE SUN
Ecclesiastes 2:11
INTRODUCTORY WORDS
We shall introduce our study with quotations from our booklet on
Ecclesiastes. Solomon had tried everything which his heart co...
-
More than I — Therefore he could best tell whether they were able of
themselves, without God's special gift, to yield a man content, in the
enjoying of them. Who can pursue them with more diligence, o...