the Second Week after Easter
Click here to learn more!
Read the Bible
THE MESSAGE
Ecclesiastes 7:11
Bible Study Resources
Concordances:
- Nave'sDictionaries:
- BridgewayEncyclopedias:
- InternationalDevotionals:
- EveryParallel Translations
Wisdom is as good as an inheritanceand an advantage to those who see the sun,
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance. Yes, it is more excellent for those who see the sun.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance: and by it there is profit to them that see the sun.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, an advantage to those who see the sun.
Wisdom along with an inheritance is good, And an advantage to those who see the sun.
Wisdom is better when it comes with money. They both help those who are alive.
Wisdom along with an inheritance is good And an [excellent] advantage for those who see the sun.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance. Yes, it is more excellent for those who see the sun.
Wisedome is good with an inheritance, and excellent to them that see the sunne.
Wisdom along with an inheritance is goodAnd an advantage to those who see the sun.
Wisdom, like an inheritance, is good, and it benefits those who see the sun.
Having wisdom is better than an inheritance.
Wisdom is good, along with possessions, an advantage to all who see the sun.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance, and profitable to them that see the sun.
Wisdom is better if you also have property. Wise people will get more than enough wealth.
Wisdom is better than weapons; yea, it is better for those who see the light of the truth.
Everyone who lives ought to be wise; it is as good as receiving an inheritance
Wisdom is good with an inheritance; it benefits the living.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance; yea, a gain to those who see the sun.
Wy?dome is better then riches, yee moch more worth then the eye sight.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance; yea, more excellent is it for them that see the sun.
Wisdom together with a heritage is good, and a profit to those who see the sun.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, yea, a profit to them that see the sun.
Wisedome is good with an inheritance: and by it there is profite to them that see the sunne.
Wysdome with inheritaunce is good, yet better is it with them that without care may beholde the sunne:
Say not, What has happened, that the former days were better than these? for thou dost not enquire in wisdom concerning this.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance: yea, more excellent is it for them that see the sun.
Forsothe wisdom with richessis is more profitable, and profitith more to men seynge the sunne.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance; yes, more excellent is it for those that see the sun.
Wisdom [is] good with an inheritance: and [by it there is] profit to them that see the sun.
Wisdom, like an inheritance, is a good thing; it benefits those who see the light of day.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, And profitable to those who see the sun.
Wisdom is even better when you have money. Both are a benefit as you go through life.
Wisdom with a gift passed down from father to son is good and a help to those who see the sun.
Wisdom is as good as an inheritance, an advantage to those who see the sun.
Good is wisdom, with an inheritance, - and a profit, to such as see the sun.
(7-12) Wisdom with riches is more profitable, and bringeth more advantage to them that see the sun.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, an advantage to those who see the sun.
Wisdom [is] good with an inheritance, And an advantage [it is] to those beholding the sun.
Wisdom along with an inheritance is good And an advantage to those who see the sun.
Contextual Overview
Bible Verse Review
from Treasury of Scripure Knowledge
good with an inheritance: or, as good as an inheritance, yea, better too. Ecclesiastes 9:15-18, 1 Kings 3:6-9, Luke 16:8, Luke 16:9, 1 Timothy 6:17-19
them: Ecclesiastes 11:7
Reciprocal: 1 Kings 3:9 - to judge Job 22:2 - as he that Proverbs 8:10 - General Proverbs 14:24 - crown Proverbs 21:20 - treasure Ecclesiastes 1:3 - under Ecclesiastes 2:13 - I saw Ecclesiastes 10:19 - but
Cross-References
"I'm going to bring a flood on the Earth that will destroy everything alive under Heaven. Total destruction.
Noah did everything God commanded him.
Noah was 600 years old when the floodwaters covered the Earth. Noah and his wife and sons and their wives boarded the ship to escape the flood. Clean and unclean animals, birds, and all the crawling creatures came in pairs to Noah and to the ship, male and female, just as God had commanded Noah. In seven days the floodwaters came.
It was the six-hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month that it happened: all the underground springs erupted and all the windows of Heaven were thrown open. Rain poured for forty days and forty nights.
The floodwaters took over for 150 days.
The attendant on whom the king leaned for support said to the Holy Man, "You expect us to believe that? Trapdoors opening in the sky and food tumbling out?" "You'll watch it with your own eyes," he said, "but you will not eat so much as a mouthful!"
The Landscape Will Be a Moonscape Danger ahead! God 's about to ravish the earth and leave it in ruins, Rip everything out by the roots and send everyone scurrying: priests and laypeople alike, owners and workers alike, celebrities and nobodies alike, buyers and sellers alike, bankers and beggars alike, the haves and have-nots alike. The landscape will be a moonscape, totally wasted. And why? Because God says so. He's issued the orders. The earth turns gaunt and gray, the world silent and sad, sky and land lifeless, colorless. Earth is polluted by its very own people, who have broken its laws, Disrupted its order, violated the sacred and eternal covenant. Therefore a curse, like a cancer, ravages the earth. Its people pay the price of their sacrilege. They dwindle away, dying out one by one. No more wine, no more vineyards, no more songs or singers. The laughter of castanets is gone, the shouts of celebrants, gone, the laughter of fiddles, gone. No more parties with toasts of champagne. Serious drinkers gag on their drinks. The chaotic cities are unlivable. Anarchy reigns. Every house is boarded up, condemned. People riot in the streets for wine, but the good times are gone forever— no more joy for this old world. The city is dead and deserted, bulldozed into piles of rubble. That's the way it will be on this earth. This is the fate of all nations: An olive tree shaken clean of its olives, a grapevine picked clean of its grapes. But there are some who will break into glad song. Out of the west they'll shout of God 's majesty. Yes, from the east God 's glory will ascend. Every island of the sea Will broadcast God 's fame, the fame of the God of Israel. From the four winds and the seven seas we hear the singing: "All praise to the Righteous One!" But I said, "That's all well and good for somebody, but all I can see is doom, doom, and more doom." All of them at one another's throats, yes, all of them at one another's throats. Terror and pits and booby traps are everywhere, whoever you are. If you run from the terror, you'll fall into the pit. If you climb out of the pit, you'll get caught in the trap. Chaos pours out of the skies. The foundations of earth are crumbling. Earth is smashed to pieces, earth is ripped to shreds, earth is wobbling out of control, Earth staggers like a drunk, sways like a shack in a high wind. Its piled-up sins are too much for it. It collapses and won't get up again. That's when God will call on the carpet rebel powers in the skies and Rebel kings on earth. They'll be rounded up like prisoners in a jail, Corralled and locked up in a jail, and then sentenced and put to hard labor. Shamefaced moon will cower, humiliated, red-faced sun will skulk, disgraced, Because God -of-the-Angel-Armies will take over, ruling from Mount Zion and Jerusalem, Splendid and glorious before all his leaders.
"The Message of God , the Master: ‘When I turn you into a wasted city, a city empty of people, a ghost town, and when I bring up the great ocean deeps and cover you, then I'll push you down among those who go to the grave, the long, long dead. I'll make you live there, in the grave in old ruins, with the buried dead. You'll never see the land of the living again. I'll introduce you to the terrors of death and that'll be the end of you. They'll send out search parties for you, but you'll never be found. Decree of God , the Master.'"
Gill's Notes on the Bible
Wisdom [is] good with an inheritance,.... It is good of itself. Or, "is as good as an inheritance" n, as it may be rendered; it is a portion of itself, especially spiritual and divine wisdom. The Targum interprets it, the wisdom of the law, or the knowledge of that; but much more excellent is the wisdom of the Gospel, the wisdom of God in a mystery, the hidden wisdom; the knowledge of which, in an experimental way, is preferable to all earthly inheritances: but this with an inheritance is good, yea, better than without one; for wisdom, without riches, is generally overlooked and despised in men; see Ecclesiastes 9:16; when wealth, with wisdom, makes a man regarded; this commands respect and attention; as well as he is in a better condition to do good, if willing to share, and ready to distribute;
and [by it there is] profit to them that see the sun; mortals in this present state, who are described as such that see the sun rise and set, and enjoy the heat and light of it, receive much advantage from men who are both wise and rich: or, "and [it is] an excellency to them that see the sun"; it is an excellency to mortals and what gives them superiority to others, that they have both wisdom and riches.
n עם נחלה "aeque ac haereditas", Gejerus, Schmidt.
Barnes' Notes on the Bible
And by it there is profit ... - literally, And is profitable to the living. The same word as in Ecclesiastes 6:11, to the question in which it looks like an answer.
Clarke's Notes on the Bible
Verse Ecclesiastes 7:11. Wisdom is good with an inheritance — In this chapter Solomon introduces many observations which appear to be made by objectors against his doctrine; and as he was satisfied of their futility, he proposes them in their own full strength, and then combats and destroys them. It is quite necessary to attend to this; else we shall take the objector's words for those of Solomon; and think, as some have done, that the wise man contradicts and refutes himself. Observations, reflections, and objections of friends and adversaries are frequently introduced in the works of ancient authors, without mentioning them as such. This is frequent, more particularly in ethic writers; and we have many specimens in Horace; and without this distinction, it would be impossible to make sense of some of his writings. Here, an objector, who had listened to the wise man declaiming in favour of wisdom, suddenly interrupts him, and says in effect, "I grant the truth of what you have said. Wisdom is very good in its place; but what is it without property? A man who has a good inheritance may be profited by wisdom, because it will show him how to manage it to the best advantage."