| Holy
Bible - King James Version
of 1611
The Old Testament - The
Wisdom |
1:1
The words of the
Preacher, the son of David, king in
Jerusalem.
1:2
Vanity of vanities,
saith the Preacher, vanity of
vanities; all is vanity.
1:3
What profit hath a
man of all his labour which he
taketh under the sun?
1:4
One
generation passeth away, and
another generation cometh: but
the earth abideth for ever.
1:5
The sun also
ariseth, and the sun goeth down, and
hasteth to his place where he arose.
1:6
The wind goeth
toward the south, and turneth about
unto the north; it whirleth about
continually, and the wind returneth
again according to his circuits.
1:7
All the rivers run
into the sea; yet the sea is
not full; unto the place from whence
the rivers come, thither they return
again.
1:8
All things are
full of labour; man cannot utter
it: the eye is not satisfied
with seeing, nor the ear filled with
hearing.
1:9
The thing that hath
been, it is that which shall
be; and that which is done is
that which shall be done: and
there is no new thing
under the sun.
1:10
Is there any
thing whereof it may be said, See,
this is new? it hath been
already of old time, which was
before us.
1:11
There is no
remembrance of former things;
neither shall there be any
remembrance of things that
are to come with those that
shall come after.
1:12
I the Preacher was
king over Israel in Jerusalem.
1:13
And I gave my heart
to seek and search out by wisdom
concerning all things that
are done under heaven: this sore
travail hath God given to the sons
of man to be exercised therewith.
1:14
I have seen all the
works that are done under the sun;
and, behold, all is vanity
and vexation of spirit.
1:15
That which is
crooked cannot be made straight: and
that which is wanting cannot be
numbered.
1:16
I communed with mine
own heart, saying, Lo, I am come to
great estate, and have gotten more
wisdom than all they that
have been before me in Jerusalem:
yea, my heart had great experience
of wisdom and knowledge.
1:17
And I gave my heart
to know wisdom, and to know madness
and folly: I perceived that this
also is vexation of spirit.
1:18
For in much wisdom
is much grief: and he that
increaseth knowledge increaseth
sorrow.
2:1
I said in mine
heart, Go to now, I will prove thee
with mirth, therefore enjoy
pleasure: and, behold, this also
is vanity.
2:2
I said of laughter,
It is mad: and of mirth, What
doeth it?
2:3
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 the heaven all the
days of their life.
2:4
I made me great
works; I builded me houses; I
planted me vineyards:
2:5
I made me gardens
and orchards, and I planted trees in
them of all kind of fruits:
2:6
I made me pools of
water, to water therewith the wood
that bringeth forth trees:
2:7
I got me
servants and maidens, and had
servants born in my house; also I
had great possessions of great and
small cattle above all that were in
Jerusalem before me:
2:8
I gathered me also
silver and gold, and the peculiar
treasure of kings and of the
provinces: I gat me men singers and
women singers, and the delights of
the sons of men, as musical
instruments, and that of all sorts.
2:9
So I was great, and
increased more than all that were
before me in Jerusalem: also my
wisdom remained with me.
2:10 And
whatsoever mine eyes desired I kept
not from them, I withheld not my
heart from any joy; for my heart
rejoiced in all my labour: and this
was my portion of all my labour.
2:11
Then I looked on all
the works that my hands had wrought,
and on the labour that I had
laboured to do: and, behold, all
was vanity and vexation of
spirit, and there was no
profit under the sun.
2:12
And I turned myself
to behold wisdom, and madness, and
folly: for what can the man
do that cometh after the
king? even that which hath
been already done.
2:13
Then I saw that
wisdom excelleth folly, as far as
light excelleth darkness.
2:14
The wise man’s eyes
are in his head; but the fool
walketh in darkness: and I myself
perceived also that one event
happeneth to them all.
2:15 Then said I
in my heart, As it happeneth to the
fool, so it happeneth even to me;
and why was I then more wise? Then I
said in my heart, that this also
is vanity.
2:16
For there is
no remembrance of the wise more than
of the fool for ever; seeing that
which now is in the days to
come shall all be forgotten. And how
dieth the wise man? as the
fool.
2:17
Therefore I hated
life; because the work that is
wrought under the sun is grievous
unto me: for all is vanity
and vexation of spirit.
2:18
Yea, I hated all my
labour which I had taken under the
sun: because I should leave it unto
the man that shall be after me.
2:19
And who knoweth
whether he shall be a wise man
or a fool? yet shall he have rule
over all my labour wherein I have
laboured, and wherein I have shewed
myself wise under the sun. This
is also vanity.
2:20
Therefore I went
about to cause my heart to despair
of all the labour which I took under
the sun.
2:21
For there is a man
whose labour is in wisdom,
and in knowledge, and in equity; yet
to a man that hath not laboured
therein shall he leave it for
his portion. This also is
vanity and a great evil.
2:22
For what hath man of
all his labour, and of the vexation
of his heart, wherein he hath
laboured under the sun?
2:23
For all his days
are sorrows, and his travail
grief; yea, his heart taketh not
rest in the night. This is also
vanity.
2:24
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. This also
I saw, that it was from the
hand of God.
2:25
For who can eat, or
who else can hasten hereunto,
more than I?
2:26
For God giveth
to a man that is good in his
sight wisdom, and knowledge, and
joy: but to the sinner he giveth
travail, to gather and to heap up,
that he may give to him that is
good before God. This also is
vanity and vexation of spirit.
3:1
To every thing
there is a season, and a time to
every purpose under the heaven:
3:2
A time to be born,
and a time to die; a time to plant,
and a time to pluck up that which
is planted;
3:3
A time to kill, and
a time to heal; a time to break
down, and a time to build up;
3:4
A time to weep, and
a time to laugh; a time to mourn,
and a time to dance;
3:5
A time to cast away
stones, and a time to gather stones
together; a time to embrace, and a
time to refrain from embracing;
3:6
A time to get, and a
time to lose; a time to keep, and a
time to cast away;
3:7
A time to rend, and
a time to sew; a time to keep
silence, and a time to speak;
3:8
A time to love, and
a time to hate; a time of war, and a
time of peace.
3:9
What profit hath he
that worketh in that wherein he
laboureth?
3:10
I have seen the
travail, which God hath given to the
sons of men to be exercised in it.
3:11
He hath made every
thing beautiful in his time:
also he hath set the world in their
heart, so that no man can find out
the work that God maketh from the
beginning to the end.
3:12
I know that there
is no good in them, but for a
man to rejoice, and to do good
in his life.
3:13
And also that every
man should eat and drink, and enjoy
the good of all his labour, it is
the gift of God.
3:14 I know
that, whatsoever God doeth, it shall
be for ever: nothing can be put to
it, nor any thing taken from it: and
God doeth it, that men
should fear before him.
3:15
That which hath been
is now; and that which is to be hath
already been; and God requireth that
which is past.
3:16
And moreover I saw
under the sun the place of judgment,
that wickedness was
there; and the place of
righteousness, that iniquity
was there.
3:17 I said in
mine heart, God shall judge the
righteous and the wicked: for
there is a time there for every
purpose and for every work.
3:18
I said in mine heart
concerning the estate of the sons of
men, that God might manifest them,
and that they might see that they
themselves are beasts.
3:19
For that which
befalleth the sons of men befalleth
beasts; even one thing befalleth
them: as the one dieth, so dieth the
other; yea, they have all one
breath; so that a man hath no
preeminence above a beast: for all
is vanity.
3:20
All go unto one
place; all are of the dust, and all
turn to dust again.
3:21 Who knoweth
the spirit of man that goeth upward,
and the spirit of the beast that
goeth downward to the earth?
3:22
Wherefore I perceive
that there is nothing better,
than that a man should rejoice in
his own works; for that is
his portion: for who shall bring him
to see what shall be after him?
4:1
So I returned, and
considered all the oppressions that
are done under the sun: and behold
the tears of such as were
oppressed, and they had no
comforter; and on the side of their
oppressors there was power;
but they had no comforter.
4:2
Wherefore I praised
the dead which are already dead more
than the living which are yet alive.
4:3
Yea, better is he
than both they, which hath not yet
been, who hath not seen the evil
work that is done under the sun.
4:4
Again, I considered
all travail, and every right work,
that for this a man is envied of his
neighbour. This is also
vanity and vexation of spirit.
4:5
The fool foldeth his
hands together, and eateth his own
flesh.
4:6
Better is an
handful with quietness, than
both the hands full with
travail and vexation of spirit.
4:7
Then I returned, and
I saw vanity under the sun.
4:8
There is one
alone, and there is not a
second; yea, he hath neither child
nor brother: yet is there no
end of all his labour; neither is
his eye satisfied with riches;
neither saith he, For whom do
I labour, and bereave my soul of
good? This is also vanity,
yea, it is a sore travail.
4:9
Two are
better than one; because they have a
good reward for their labour.
4:10
For if they fall,
the one will lift up his fellow: but
woe to him that is alone when
he falleth; for he hath not
another to help him up.
4:11
Again, if two lie
together, then they have heat: but
how can one be warm alone?
4:12
And if one prevail
against him, two shall withstand
him; and a threefold cord is not
quickly broken.
4:13
Better is a
poor and a wise child than an old
and foolish king, who will no more
be admonished.
4:14
For out of prison he
cometh to reign; whereas also he
that is born in his kingdom
becometh poor.
4:15 I
considered all the living which walk
under the sun, with the second child
that shall stand up in his stead.
4:16
There is no
end of all the people, even
of all that have been before them:
they also that come after shall not
rejoice in him. Surely this also
is vanity and vexation of
spirit.
5:1
Keep thy foot when
thou goest to the house of God, and
be more ready to hear, than to give
the sacrifice of fools: for they
consider not that they do evil.
5:2
Be not rash with thy
mouth, and let not thine heart be
hasty to utter any thing
before God: for God is in
heaven, and thou upon earth:
therefore let thy words be few.
5:3
For a dream cometh
through the multitude of business;
and a fool’s voice is known
by multitude of words.
5:4
When thou vowest a
vow unto God, defer not to pay it;
for he hath no pleasure in
fools: pay that which thou hast
vowed.
5:5
Better is it
that thou shouldest not vow, than
that thou shouldest vow and not pay.
5:6
Suffer not thy mouth
to cause thy flesh to sin; neither
say thou before the angel, that it
was an error: wherefore
should God be angry at thy voice,
and destroy the work of thine hands?
5:7
For in the multitude
of dreams and many words there
are also divers vanities:
but fear thou God.
5:8
If thou seest the
oppression of the poor, and violent
perverting of judgment and justice
in a province, marvel not at the
matter: for he that is higher
than the highest regardeth; and
there be higher than they.
5:9
Moreover the profit
of the earth is for all: the king
himself is served by the field.
5:10
He that loveth
silver shall not be satisfied with
silver; nor he that loveth abundance
with increase: this is also
vanity.
5:11
When goods increase,
they are increased that eat them:
and what good is there to the
owners thereof, saving the beholding
of them with their eyes?
5:12
The sleep of a
labouring man is sweet,
whether he eat little or much: but
the abundance of the rich will not
suffer him to sleep.
5:13
There is a sore evil
which I have seen under the
sun, namely, riches kept for
the owners thereof to their hurt.
5:14
But those riches
perish by evil travail: and he
begetteth a son, and there is
nothing in his hand.
5:15
As he came forth of
his mother’s womb, naked shall he
return to go as he came, and shall
take nothing of his labour, which he
may carry away in his hand.
5:16 And this
also is a sore evil, that
in all points as he came, so shall
he go: and what profit hath he that
hath laboured for the wind?
5:17
All his days also he
eateth in darkness, and he hath
much sorrow and wrath with his
sickness.
5:18
Behold that
which I have seen: it is good
and comely for one to eat and
to drink, and to enjoy the good of
all his labour that he taketh under
the sun all the days of his life,
which God giveth him: for it is
his portion.
5:19
Every man also to
whom God hath given riches and
wealth, and hath given him power to
eat thereof, and to take his
portion, and to rejoice in his
labour; this is the gift of
God.
5:20
For he shall not much
remember the days of his life;
because God answereth him in
the joy of his heart.
6:1
There is an evil
which I have seen under the sun, and
it is common among men:
6:2
A man to whom God
hath given riches, wealth, and
honour, so that he wanteth nothing
for his soul of all that he
desireth, yet God giveth him not
power to eat thereof, but a stranger
eateth it: this is vanity,
and it is an evil disease.
6:3
If a man beget an
hundred children, and live
many years, so that the days of his
years be many, and his soul be not
filled with good, and also that
he have no burial; I say, that
an untimely birth is better
than he.
6:4
For he cometh in
with vanity, and departeth in
darkness, and his name shall be
covered with darkness.
6:5
Moreover he hath not
seen the sun, nor known any
thing: this hath more rest than
the other.
6:6
Yea, though he live
a thousand years twice told,
yet hath he seen no good: do not all
go to one place?
6:7
All the labour of
man is for his mouth, and yet
the appetite is not filled.
6:8
For what hath the
wise more than the fool? what hath
the poor, that knoweth to walk
before the living?
6:9
Better is the
sight of the eyes than the wandering
of the desire: this is also
vanity and vexation of spirit.
6:10
That which hath been
is named already, and it is known
that it is man: neither may
he contend with him that is mightier
than he.
6:11
Seeing there be many
things that increase vanity, what
is man the better?
6:12
For who knoweth what
is good for man in this
life, all the days of his vain life
which he spendeth as a shadow? for
who can tell a man what shall be
after him under the sun?
7:1
A good name is
better than precious ointment; and
the day of death than the day of
one’s birth.
7:2
It is better
to go to the house of mourning, than
to go to the house of feasting: for
that is the end of all men; and the
living will lay it to his
heart.
7:3
Sorrow is
better than laughter: for by the
sadness of the countenance the heart
is made better.
7:4
The heart of the
wise is in the house of
mourning; but the heart of fools
is in the house of mirth.
7:5
It is better
to hear the rebuke of the wise, than
for a man to hear the song of fools.
7:6
For as the crackling
of thorns under a pot, so is
the laughter of the fool: this also
is vanity.
7:7
Surely oppression
maketh a wise man mad; and a gift
destroyeth the heart.
7:8
Better is the
end of a thing than the beginning
thereof: and the patient in
spirit is better than the
proud in spirit.
7:9
Be not hasty in thy
spirit to be angry: for anger
resteth in the bosom of fools.
7:10
Say not thou, What is
the cause that the former
days were better than these? for
thou dost not enquire wisely
concerning this.
7:11
Wisdom is
good with an inheritance: and by
it there is profit to them that
see the sun.
7:12
For wisdom is
a defence, and money is
a defence: but the excellency of
knowledge is, that wisdom
giveth life to them that have it.
7:13
Consider the work of
God: for who can make that
straight, which he hath made
crooked?
7:14
In the day of
prosperity be joyful, but in the day
of adversity consider: God also hath
set the one over against the other,
to the end that man should find
nothing after him.
7:15
All things
have I seen in the days of my
vanity: there is a just man
that perisheth in his righteousness,
and there is a wicked man
that prolongeth his life in
his wickedness.
7:16
Be not righteous
over much; neither make thyself over
wise: why shouldest thou destroy
thyself?
7:17
Be not over much
wicked, neither be thou foolish: why
shouldest thou die before thy time?
7:18
It is good
that thou shouldest take hold of
this; yea, also from this withdraw
not thine hand: for he that feareth
God shall come forth of them all.
7:19 Wisdom
strengtheneth the wise more than ten
mighty men which are in the
city.
7:20 For
there is not a just man upon
earth, that doeth good, and sinneth
not.
7:21
Also take no heed
unto all words that are spoken; lest
thou hear thy servant curse thee:
7:22
For oftentimes also
thine own heart knoweth that thou
thyself likewise hast cursed others.
7:23
All this have I
proved by wisdom: I said, I will be
wise; but it was far from me.
7:24 That which
is far off, and exceeding deep, who
can find it out?
7:25
I applied mine heart
to know, and to search, and to seek
out wisdom, and the reason of
things, and to know the
wickedness of folly, even of
foolishness and madness:
7:26 And I find
more bitter than death the woman,
whose heart is snares and
nets, and her hands as
bands: whoso pleaseth God shall
escape from her; but the sinner
shall be taken by her.
7:27 Behold,
this have I found, saith the
preacher, counting one by
one, to find out the account:
7:28
Which yet my soul
seeketh, but I find not: one man
among a thousand have I found; but a
woman among all those have I not
found.
7:29
Lo, this only have I
found, that God hath made man
upright; but they have sought out
many inventions.
8:1
Who is as the
wise man? and who knoweth the
interpretation of a thing? a man’s
wisdom maketh his face to shine, and
the boldness of his face shall be
changed.
8:2
I counsel thee
to keep the king’s commandment, and
that in regard of the oath of
God.
8:3
Be not hasty to go
out of his sight: stand not in an
evil thing; for he doeth whatsoever
pleaseth him.
8:4
Where the word of a
king is, there is power: and
who may say unto him, What doest
thou?
8:5
Whoso keepeth the
commandment shall feel no evil
thing: and a wise man’s heart
discerneth both time and judgment.
8:6
Because to every
purpose there is time and judgment,
therefore the misery of man is
great upon him.
8:7
For he knoweth not
that which shall be: for who can
tell him when it shall be?
8:8
There is no
man that hath power over the spirit
to retain the spirit; neither
hath he power in the day of
death: and there is no
discharge in that war;
neither shall wickedness deliver
those that are given to it.
8:9
All this have I
seen, and applied my heart unto
every work that is done under the
sun: there is a time wherein
one man ruleth over another to his
own hurt.
8:10
And so I saw the
wicked buried, who had come and gone
from the place of the holy, and they
were forgotten in the city where
they had so done: this is
also vanity.
8:11
Because sentence
against an evil work is not executed
speedily, therefore the heart of the
sons of men is fully set in them to
do evil.
8:12
Though a sinner do
evil an hundred times, and his
days be prolonged, yet surely I
know that it shall be well with them
that fear God, which fear before
him:
8:13
But it shall not be
well with the wicked, neither shall
he prolong his days, which
are as a shadow; because he
feareth not before God.
8:14 There is a
vanity which is done upon the earth;
that there be just men, unto
whom it happeneth according to the
work of the wicked; again, there be
wicked men, to whom it
happeneth according to the work of
the righteous: I said that this also
is vanity.
8:15
Then I commended
mirth, because a man hath no better
thing under the sun, than to eat,
and to drink, and to be merry: for
that shall abide with him of his
labour the days of his life, which
God giveth him under the sun.
8:16
When I applied mine
heart to know wisdom, and to see the
business that is done upon the
earth: (for also there is that
neither day nor night seeth sleep
with his eyes:)
8:17
Then I beheld all the
work of God, that a man cannot find
out the work that is done under the
sun: because though a man labour to
seek it out, yet he shall not
find it; yea further; though
a wise man think to know
it, yet shall he not be able to
find it.
9:1
For all this I
considered in my heart even to
declare all this, that the
righteous, and the wise, and their
works, are in the hand of God: no
man knoweth either love or hatred
by all that is before
them.
9:2
All things come
alike to all: there is one
event to the righteous, and to the
wicked; to the good and to the
clean, and to the unclean; to him
that sacrificeth, and to him that
sacrificeth not: as is the
good, so is the sinner;
and he that sweareth, as he
that feareth an oath.
9:3
This is an
evil among all things that
are done under the sun, that
there is one event unto all:
yea, also the heart of the sons of
men is full of evil, and madness is
in their heart while they live, and
after that they go to the
dead.
9:4
For to him that is
joined to all the living there is
hope: for a living dog is better
than a dead lion.
9:5
For the living know
that they shall die: but the dead
know not any thing, neither have
they any more a reward; for the
memory of them is forgotten.
9:6
Also their love, and
their hatred, and their envy, is now
perished; neither have they any more
a portion for ever in any thing
that is done under the sun.
9:7
Go thy way, eat thy
bread with joy, and drink thy wine
with a merry heart; for God now
accepteth thy works.
9:8
Let thy garments be
always white; and let thy head lack
no ointment.
9:9
Live joyfully with
the wife whom thou lovest all the
days of the life of thy vanity,
which he hath given thee under the
sun, all the days of thy vanity: for
that is thy portion in
this life, and in thy labour
which thou takest under the sun.
9:10
Whatsoever thy hand
findeth to do, do it with thy
might; for there is no work,
nor device, nor knowledge, nor
wisdom, in the grave, whither thou
goest.
9:11
I returned, and saw
under the sun, that the race is
not to the swift, nor the battle to
the strong, neither yet bread to the
wise, nor yet riches to men of
understanding, nor yet favour to men
of skill; but time and chance
happeneth to them all.
9:12
For man also knoweth
not his time: as the fishes that are
taken in an evil net, and as the
birds that are caught in the snare;
so are the sons of men snared
in an evil time, when it falleth
suddenly upon them.
9:13
This wisdom have I
seen also under the sun, and it
seemed great unto me:
9:14 There
was a little city, and few men
within it; and there came a great
king against it, and besieged it,
and built great bulwarks against it:
9:15
Now there was found
in it a poor wise man, and he by his
wisdom delivered the city; yet no
man remembered that same poor man.
9:16 Then said
I, Wisdom is better than
strength: nevertheless the poor
man’s wisdom is despised, and
his words are not heard.
9:17
The words of wise
men are heard in quiet more than
the cry of him that ruleth among
fools.
9:18
Wisdom is
better than weapons of war: but one
sinner destroyeth much good.
10:1
Dead flies cause the
ointment of the apothecary to send
forth a stinking savour: so doth
a little folly him that is in
reputation for wisdom and
honour.
10:2
A wise man’s heart
is at his right hand; but a
fool’s heart at his left.
10:3 Yea also,
when he that is a fool walketh by
the way, his wisdom faileth him,
and he saith to every one that
he is a fool.
10:4
If the spirit of the
ruler rise up against thee, leave
not thy place; for yielding
pacifieth great offences.
10:5
There is an evil
which I have seen under the sun,
as an error which proceedeth
from the ruler:
10:6
Folly is set in
great dignity, and the rich sit in
low place.
10:7 I have seen
servants upon horses, and princes
walking as servants upon the earth.
10:8
He that diggeth a
pit shall fall into it; and whoso
breaketh an hedge, a serpent shall
bite him.
10:9
Whoso removeth
stones shall be hurt therewith;
and he that cleaveth wood shall
be endangered thereby.
10:10 If the
iron be blunt, and he do not whet
the edge, then must he put to more
strength: but wisdom is
profitable to direct.
10:11
Surely the serpent
will bite without enchantment; and a
babbler is no better.
10:12
The words of a wise
man’s mouth are gracious; but
the lips of a fool will swallow up
himself.
10:13
The beginning of the
words of his mouth is
foolishness: and the end of his talk
is mischievous madness.
10:14
A fool also is full
of words: a man cannot tell what
shall be; and what shall be after
him, who can tell him?
10:15
The labour of the
foolish wearieth every one of them,
because he knoweth not how to go to
the city.
10:16
Woe to thee, O land,
when thy king is a child, and
thy princes eat in the morning!
10:17
Blessed art
thou, O land, when thy king is
the son of nobles, and thy princes
eat in due season, for strength, and
not for drunkenness!
10:18
By much slothfulness
the building decayeth; and through
idleness of the hands the house
droppeth through.
10:19
A feast is made for
laughter, and wine maketh merry: but
money answereth all things.
10:20
Curse not the king,
no not in thy thought; and curse not
the rich in thy bedchamber: for a
bird of the air shall carry the
voice, and that which hath wings
shall tell the matter.
11:1
Cast thy bread upon
the waters: for thou shalt find it
after many days.
11:2
Give a portion to
seven, and also to eight; for thou
knowest not what evil shall be upon
the earth.
11:3 If the
clouds be full of rain, they empty
themselves upon the earth:
and if the tree fall toward the
south, or toward the north, in the
place where the tree falleth, there
it shall be.
11:4
He that observeth
the wind shall not sow; and he that
regardeth the clouds shall not reap.
11:5
As thou knowest not
what is the way of the
spirit, nor how the bones
do grow in the womb of her that
is with child: even so thou knowest
not the works of God who maketh all.
11:6
In the morning sow
thy seed, and in the evening
withhold not thine hand: for thou
knowest not whether shall prosper,
either this or that, or whether they
both shall be alike good.
11:7
Truly the light
is sweet, and a pleasant
thing it is for the eyes to
behold the sun:
11:8
But if a man live
many years, and rejoice in
them all; yet let him remember the
days of darkness; for they shall be
many. All that cometh is
vanity.
11:9
Rejoice, O young
man, in thy youth; and let thy heart
cheer thee in the days of thy youth,
and walk in the ways of thine heart,
and in the sight of thine eyes: but
know thou, that for all these
things God will bring thee into
judgment.
11:10
Therefore remove
sorrow from thy heart, and put away
evil from thy flesh: for childhood
and youth are vanity.
12:1
Remember now thy
Creator in the days of thy youth,
while the evil days come not, nor
the years draw nigh, when thou shalt
say, I have no pleasure in them;
12:2
While the sun, or
the light, or the moon, or the
stars, be not darkened, nor the
clouds return after the rain:
12:3
In the day when the
keepers of the house shall tremble,
and the strong men shall bow
themselves, and the grinders cease
because they are few, and those that
look out of the windows be darkened,
12:4
And the doors shall
be shut in the streets, when the
sound of the grinding is low, and he
shall rise up at the voice of the
bird, and all the daughters of
musick shall be brought low;
12:5
Also when
they shall be afraid of that
which is high, and fears
shall be in the way, and the
almond tree shall flourish, and the
grasshopper shall be a burden, and
desire shall fail: because man goeth
to his long home, and the mourners
go about the streets:
12:6
Or ever the silver
cord be loosed, or the golden bowl
be broken, or the pitcher be broken
at the fountain, or the wheel broken
at the cistern.
12:7
Then shall the dust
return to the earth as it was: and
the spirit shall return unto God who
gave it.
12:8
Vanity of vanities,
saith the preacher; all is
vanity.
12:9
And moreover,
because the preacher was wise, he
still taught the people knowledge;
yea, he gave good heed, and sought
out, and set in order many
proverbs.
12:10
The preacher sought
to find out acceptable words: and
that which was written was
upright, even words of truth.
12:11
The words of the
wise are as goads, and as
nails fastened by the masters of
assemblies, which are given
from one shepherd.
12:12
And further, by
these, my son, be admonished: of
making many books there is no
end; and much study is a
weariness of the flesh.
12:13
Let us hear the
conclusion of the whole matter: Fear
God, and keep his commandments: for
this is the whole duty
of man.
12:14
For God shall bring
every work into judgment, with every
secret thing, whether it be
good, or whether it be evil. |