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Read the Bible

Good News Translation

Ecclesiastes 2:25

How else could you have anything to eat or enjoy yourself at all?

Bible Study Resources

Concordances:

- Nave's Topical Bible - Happiness;   Wisdom;   The Topic Concordance - Giving and Gifts;   Goodness;   Happiness/joy;   Knowledge;   Sin;   Vanity;   Wisdom;  

Dictionaries:

- Baker Evangelical Dictionary of Biblical Theology - God;   Holman Bible Dictionary - Ecclesiastes, Book of;   Hastings' Dictionary of the New Testament - Winter ;  

Encyclopedias:

- International Standard Bible Encyclopedia - Ecclesiastes, or the Preacher;   Haste;   Here;   The Jewish Encyclopedia - Didascalia;   Solomon;  

Devotionals:

- Every Day Light - Devotion for September 28;  

Parallel Translations

Christian Standard Bible®
because who can eat and who can enjoy life apart from him?
Hebrew Names Version
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I?
King James Version
For who can eat, or who else can hasten hereunto, more than I?
English Standard Version
for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment?
New American Standard Bible
For who can eat and who can have enjoyment without Him?
New Century Version
because no one can eat or enjoy life without him.
Amplified Bible
For who can eat and who can have enjoyment without Him?
World English Bible
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I?
Geneva Bible (1587)
For who could eate, and who could haste to outward things more then I?
Legacy Standard Bible
For who can eat and who can have enjoyment outside of Him?
Berean Standard Bible
For apart from Him, who can eat and who can find enjoyment?
Contemporary English Version
and no one enjoys eating and living more than I do.
Complete Jewish Bible
For who will eat and who will enjoy except me?
Darby Translation
For who can eat, or who be eager, more than I?
George Lamsa Translation
For who can eat or who can drink except he?
Lexham English Bible
For who can eat and drink, and who can enjoy life apart from him?
Literal Translation
For who can eat, or who can enjoy, apart from me?
Miles Coverdale Bible (1535)
For who maye eate, drynke, or brynge eny thige to passe without him? And why?
American Standard Version
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I?
Bible in Basic English
Who may take food or have pleasure without him?
JPS Old Testament (1917)
For who will eat, or who will enjoy, if not I?
King James Version (1611)
For who can eate? or who else can hasten hereunto more then I?
Bishop's Bible (1568)
For who wyll eate or go more lustyly to his worke then I?
Brenton's Septuagint (LXX)
For who shall eat, or who shall drink, without him?
English Revised Version
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I?
Wycliffe Bible (1395)
Who schal deuoure so, and schal flowe in delicis, as Y dide?
Update Bible Version
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I?
Webster's Bible Translation
For who can eat, or who else can hasten [to it] more than I?
New English Translation
For no one can eat and drink or experience joy apart from him.
New King James Version
For who can eat, or who can have enjoyment, more than I? [fn]
New Living Translation
For who can eat or enjoy anything apart from him?
New Life Bible
For who can eat and who can find joy without Him?
New Revised Standard
for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment?
J.B. Rotherham Emphasized Bible
For who could eat and who could enjoy, so well as I?
Douay-Rheims Bible
Who shall so feast and abound with delights as I?
Revised Standard Version
for apart from him who can eat or who can have enjoyment?
Young's Literal Translation
For who eateth and who hasteth out more than I?
New American Standard Bible (1995)
For who can eat and who can have enjoyment without Him?

Contextual Overview

17 So life came to mean nothing to me, because everything in it had brought me nothing but trouble. It had all been useless; I had been chasing the wind. 18 Nothing that I had worked for and earned meant a thing to me, because I knew that I would have to leave it to my successor, 19 and he might be wise, or he might be foolish—who knows? Yet he will own everything I have worked for, everything my wisdom has earned for me in this world. It is all useless. 20 So I came to regret that I had worked so hard. 21 You work for something with all your wisdom, knowledge, and skill, and then you have to leave it all to someone who hasn't had to work for it. It is useless, and it isn't right! 22 You work and worry your way through life, and what do you have to show for it? 23 As long as you live, everything you do brings nothing but worry and heartache. Even at night your mind can't rest. It is all useless. 24 The best thing we can do is eat and drink and enjoy what we have earned. And yet, I realized that even this comes from God. 25 How else could you have anything to eat or enjoy yourself at all? 26 God gives wisdom, knowledge, and happiness to those who please him, but he makes sinners work, earning and saving, so that what they get can be given to those who please him. It is all useless. It is like chasing the wind.

Bible Verse Review
  from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge

who can: Ecclesiastes 2:1-12, 1 Kings 4:21-24

Reciprocal: Genesis 48:15 - fed me Ecclesiastes 2:12 - I turned 1 Corinthians 7:31 - use

Cross-References

Genesis 2:10
A stream flowed in Eden and watered the garden; beyond Eden it divided into four rivers.
Genesis 2:11
The first river is the Pishon; it flows around the country of Havilah.
Genesis 3:7
As soon as they had eaten it, they were given understanding and realized that they were naked; so they sewed fig leaves together and covered themselves.
Exodus 32:25
Moses saw that Aaron had let the people get out of control and make fools of themselves in front of their enemies.
Psalms 25:3
Defeat does not come to those who trust in you, but to those who are quick to rebel against you.
Psalms 31:17
I call to you, Lord ; don't let me be disgraced. May the wicked be disgraced; may they go silently down to the world of the dead.
Isaiah 44:9
All those who make idols are worthless, and the gods they prize so highly are useless. Those who worship these gods are blind and ignorant—and they will be disgraced.
Isaiah 47:3
People will see you naked; they will see you humbled and shamed. I will take vengeance, and no one will stop me."
Isaiah 54:4
Do not be afraid—you will not be disgraced again; you will not be humiliated. You will forget your unfaithfulness as a young wife, and your desperate loneliness as a widow.
Jeremiah 6:15
Were they ashamed because they did these disgusting things? No, they were not at all ashamed; they don't even know how to blush. And so they will fall as others have fallen; when I punish them, that will be the end of them. I, the Lord , have spoken."

Gill's Notes on the Bible

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 of, unless it be given him of God? see Ecclesiastes 6:1;

or who else can hasten [hereunto] more than I? the word "chush", in Rabbinical language, is used of the five senses, seeing, hearing, feeling, smelling, and tasting: and R. Elias says c, there are some that so interpret it here, "who has [his] sense better than I?" a quicker sense, particularly of smelling and tasting what be eats, in which lies much of the pleasure of eating; and this is of God; which interpretation is not to be despised. Or, "who can prepare?" according to the Arabic sense of the word d; that is, a better table than I? No man had a greater affluence of good things than Solomon, or had a greater variety of eatables and drinkables; or had it in the power of his hands to live well, and cause his soul to enjoy good; or was more desirous to partake of pleasure, and hasten more to make the experiment of it in a proper manner; and yet he found, that a heart to do this was from the Lord; that this was a gift of his; and that though he abounded in the blessings of life, yet if God had not given him a heart to use them, he never should have really enjoyed them.

c In Tishbi, p. 109. d Vid. Rambachium in loc.

Barnes' Notes on the Bible

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 the wise man and the feel alike from without - death and oblivion Ecclesiastes 2:16, uncertainty Ecclesiastes 2:19, disappointment Ecclesiastes 2:21 - all happening by an external law beyond human control. Amidst this vanity, the good (see Ecclesiastes 2:10 note) that accrues to man, is the pleasure felt Ecclesiastes 2:24-26 in receiving God’s gifts, and in working with and for them.

Ecclesiastes 2:12

What can the man do ... - i. e., “What is any man - in this study of wisdom and folly - after one like me, who, from my position, have had such special advantages (see Ecclesiastes 1:16, and compare Ecclesiastes 2:25) for carrying it on? That which man did of old he can but do again: he is not likely to add to the result of my researches, nor even to equal them.” Some hold that the “man” is a reference to Solomon’s successor - not in his inquiries, but in his kingdom, i. e., Jeroboam.

Ecclesiastes 2:14

Event - Or, “hap” Ruth 2:3. The verb from which it is derived seems in this book to refer especially to death. The word does not mean chance (compare Ecclesiastes 9:1-2), independent of the ordering of Divine Providence: the Gentile notion of “mere chance,” or “blind fate,” is never once contemplated by the writer of this book, and it would be inconsistent with his tenets of the unlimited power and activity of God.

Ecclesiastes 2:16

Seeing that ... - Compare Ecclesiastes 1:11. Some render, “as in time past, so in days to come, all will be forgotten;” others, “because in the days to come all will have been long before forgotten.”

Ecclesiastes 2:17

I hated life - Compare this expression, extorted from Solomon by the perception of the vanity of his wisdom and greatness, with Romans 8:22-23. The words of Moses Numbers 11:15, and of Job Job 3:21; Job 6:9, are scarcely less forcible. With some people, this feeling is a powerful motive to conversion Luke 14:26.

Ecclesiastes 2:19

Labour - Compare Ecclesiastes 2:4-8.

Ecclesiastes 2:20

I went about - i. e., I turned from one course of action to another.

Ecclesiastes 2:23

Are sorrows ... grief - Rather, sorrows and grief are his toil. See Ecclesiastes 1:13.

Ecclesiastes 2:24

Nothing better for a man, than that ... - literally, no good in man that etc. The one joy of working or receiving, which, though it be transitory, a man recognizes as a real good, even that is not in the power of man to secure for himself: that good is the gift of God.

Ecclesiastes 2:26

The doctrine of retribution, or, the revealed fact that God is the moral Governor of the world, is here stated for the first time (compare Ecclesiastes 3:15, Ecclesiastes 3:17 ff) in this book.

This also is vanity - Not only the travail of the sinner. Even the best gifts of God, wisdom, knowledge, and joy, so far as they are given in this life, are not permanent, and are not always (see Ecclesiastes 9:11) efficacious for the purpose for which they appear to be given.

Clarke's Notes on the Bible

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 MSS., as also of the Septuagint, Syriac, and Arabic.

"For who maye eat, drynke, or bring enythinge to pass without him?" - COVERDALE.

I believe this to be the true reading. No one can have a true relish of the comforts of life without the Divine blessing. This reading connects all the sentences: "This also I saw, that it was from the hand of God;-for who can eat, and who can relish without HIM? For God giveth to man that is good." It is through his liberality that we have any thing to eat or drink; and it is only through his blessing that we can derive good from the use of what we possess.


 
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