Ecclesiastes 4

1Again I saw all the oppressions that take place under the sun: the tears of the victims with none to comfort them! From the hand of their oppressors comes violence, and there is none to comfort them![#: the author obviously feels deeply about the plight of the oppressed, but he seems to feel powerless to do anything. The repetition of “none to comfort” is purposeful, and emphatic.; #Eccl 3:16; 5:7; 9:4–5.]

2And those now dead, I declared more fortunate in death than are the living to be still alive.[#Eccl 6:3–5.]

3And better off than both is the yet unborn, who has not seen the wicked work that is done under the sun.

4Then I saw that all toil and skillful work is the rivalry of one person with another. This also is vanity and a chase after wind.

5“Fools fold their arms

and consume their own flesh”—

6Better is one handful with tranquility

than two with toil and a chase after wind!

Companions and Successors.

7Again I saw this vanity under the sun:

8those all alone with no companion, with neither child nor sibling—with no end to all their toil, and no satisfaction from riches. For whom do I toil and deprive myself of good things? This also is vanity and a bad business.

9Two are better than one: They get a good wage for their toil.

10If the one falls, the other will help the fallen one. But woe to the solitary person! If that one should fall, there is no other to help.

11So also, if two sleep together, they keep each other warm. How can one alone keep warm?

12Where one alone may be overcome, two together can resist. A three-ply cord is not easily broken.[#: an ancient proverb known centuries before biblical times. The progression (“two together…three-ply”) seems to imply, “If two are good, three are even better.”]

13Better is a poor but wise youth than an old but foolish king who no longer knows caution;[#This passage deals with kingship and succession, but is obscure.]

14for from a prison house he came forth to reign; despite his kingship he was born poor.

15I saw all the living, those who move about under the sun, with the second youth who will succeed him.[#The king is no sooner dead than the people transfer their allegiance to his successor.]

16There is no end to all this people, to all who were before them; yet the later generations will not have joy in him. This also is vanity and a chase after wind.

Vanity of Many Words.

17Guard your step when you go to the house of God. Draw near for obedience, rather than for the fools’ offering of sacrifice; for they know not how to keep from doing evil.[#1 Sm 15:22; Ps 40:7–9; Prv 15:8; 21:3; Hos 6:6.; #: the Temple in Jerusalem. : the Temple was the place not only for sacrifice but also for instruction in the Law. Sacrifice without obedience was unacceptable; cf. 1 Sm 15:22; Hos 6:6.]

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