-
Verse Ecclesiastes 2:3. _TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO WINE_, (_YET
ACQUAINTING_ [נהג noheg, "guiding"] _MINE HEART WITH WISDOM,)_] I
did not run into _extremes_, as when I gave up myself to _mirth_ and
_pleas...
-
I SOUGHT ... - Rather, I resolved (literally “I turned in my
heart”) to draw my flesh with wine (see the margin), my heart
guiding me with wisdom. In the course of his attempt to answer the
question o...
-
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...
-
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...
-
IN MINE HEART: i.e. resolved.
TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO: or, how to enlist, by wine, my very flesh [in the
work]: i.e. the work of proving the heart with mirth "yet retaining
wisdom".
WINE. Hebrew. _yayin...
-
_to give myself unto wine_ Literally, and more vividly, TO CHERISH MY
FLESH WITH WINE. The Hebrew word for "give" is unusual and obscure.
The primary meaning is "to draw out," that of the word for
"ac...
-
_THE VANITY OF SELF-INDULGENCE -- ECCLESIASTES 2:1-11:_ All through
the book of Ecclesiastes we observe Solomon as he thought and reasoned
within himself. He had looked upon and tried all the good, pl...
-
I SOUGHT, &C.— _I sought in mine heart that I might force my senses
into a habit of drinking wine,_ (_yet leading my heart into wisdom,_)
_and that I might apprehend what is in folly, until I should s...
-
c. Wisdom is used in the exploration of sensuous pleasure.
Ecclesiastes 2:1-11
TEXT 2:1-11
1
I said to myself, Come now, I will test you with pleasure. So enjoy
yourself. And behold, it too was fut...
-
I sought in mine heart to give myself unto wine, yet acquainting mine
heart with wisdom; and to lay hold on folly, till I might see what was
that good for the sons of men, which they should do under...
-
2:3 men (b-38) Or 'sons of the _ Adam_ ;' often in this book. The _
Adam_ is also frequent. see Genesis 1:27 . practising (e-14) Or
'exercising.' all (f-46) Lit. 'the number of.' so chs. 5.18; 6.12....
-
TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO] RV'to cheer my flesh with.' YET ACQUAINTING MINE
HEART] RV'mine heart yet guiding me.' Whatever indulgences he may
yield to, he is careful not to drift, and so vitiate his experim...
-
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...
-
SOUGHT. — The word translated “search out” (Ecclesiastes 1:13).
“Draw,” margin. There is no Biblical parallel for the use of the
word in this sense. The general meaning is plain.
ACQUAINTING. — Rathe...
-
תַּ֣רְתִּי בְ לִבִּ֔י לִ מְשֹׁ֥וךְ
בַּ †...
-
FIRST SECTION
The Quest Of The Chief Good In Wisdom And In Pleasure
Ecclesiastes 1:12; Ecclesiastes 2:1
OPPRESSED by his profound sense of the vanity of the life which man
lives amid the play of pe...
-
24-26, VAIN UNDERTAKINGS
Ecclesiastes 2:1-17
At the beginning of his search for happiness Solomon erected a
splendid home and planned all kinds of delights of an artistic and
sensuous nature. There w...
-
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...
-
I sought in my heart to give myself to wine, yet acquainting my heart
with (b) wisdom; and to lay hold on folly, till I might see what [was]
that good for the sons of men, which they should do under t...
-
_Wine, and to lead a temperate life. (Calmet) --- Protestants, "to
give myself unto wine, (yet acquainting mine heart with wisdom) and to
lay hold on folly," &c. (Haydock) --- I wished to indulge myse...
-
I said in mine heart, Go to now, I will prove thee with mirth,
therefore enjoy pleasure: and, behold, this also is vanity. (2) I said
of laughter, It is mad: and of mirth, What doeth it? (3) I sought...
-
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...
-
I SOUGHT IN MINE HEART TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO WINE,.... Not in an
immoderate way, so as to intoxicate himself with it, in which there
can be no pleasure, nor any show of happiness; but in a moderate, yet...
-
I sought in mine heart to give myself unto wine, yet acquainting mine
heart with wisdom; and to lay hold on folly, till I might see what
[was] that good for the sons of men, which they should do under...
-
_I sought to give myself unto wine_ To gratify myself with delicious
meats and drinks; _yet acquainting_, &c. Yet resolving to use my
wisdom, that I might try whether I could not arrive at satisfactio...
-
I sought in mine heart to give myself unto wine, to comfort himself by
its use, either with the object of nourishing the body or to have the
sensual pleasure afforded by the exhilaration produced by t...
-
Solomon's own Example...
-
TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO WINE:
_ Heb._ to draw my flesh with wine
ALL THE DAYS OF THEIR LIFE:
_ Heb._ the number of the days of their life...
-
"I EXPLORED WITH MY MIND HOW TO STIMULATE MY BODY WITH WINE WHILE MY
MIND WAS GUIDING ME WISELY, AND HOW TO TAKE HOLD OF FOLLY, UNTIL.
COULD SEE WHAT GOOD THERE IS FOR THE SONS OF MEN TO DO UNDER HEAV...
-
1-11 Solomon soon found mirth and pleasure to be vanity. What does
noisy, flashy mirth towards making a man happy? The manifold devices
of men's hearts, to get satisfaction from the world, and their...
-
TO GIVE MYSELF UNTO WINE; to relax and gratify my flesh with delicious
meats and drinks, synecdochically expressed by _wine_ here, as also
PROVERBS 9:2 SONG OF SOLOMON 2:4, &c., as necessary food is b...
-
Ecclesiastes 2:3 searched H8446 (H8804) heart H3820 gratify H4900
(H8800) flesh H1320 wine H3196 guiding H5090
-
CHAPTER 2 THE SEARCH FOR PLEASURE.
Experimenting With Good Things (Ecclesiastes 2:1).
Ecclesiastes 2:1
‘I said in my heart, “Go at it now, I will test out merriment.
Therefore enjoy pleasure (or ‘g...
-
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...
-
_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...
-
CRITICAL NOTES.—
ECCLESIASTES 2:3. I SOUGHT IN MINE HEART.] The word has the meaning
not of thinking or reflecting, but to prove or assay—to make a moral
experiment.
ECCLESIASTES 2:8. THE PECULIAR TR...
-
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...
-
1 Samuel 25:36; 2 Corinthians 6:15; Ecclesiastes 1:17; Ecclesiastes
12:13;...
-
To wine — To gratify myself with delicious meats and drinks. Yet —
Yet resolving to use my wisdom, that I might try whether I could not
arrive at satisfaction, by mixing wine and wisdom together. To l...