(1) The words of Koheleth son of David, king in Jerusalem. (2) Utter futility!—said Koheleth— Utter futility! All is futile! (3) What real value is there for a person in all the gains he makes beneath the sun?
2. Hevel hevalim/ "utter futility" is repeated over 30 times in this short book. If we understand that hevel implies a vaporous quality - like mist or air - what do you think Kohelet is getting at? How is life like vapor?
3. Yitron/"real value" implies "profit." If we think about this from an accounting perspective, what specifically is it that Kohelet is saying is not available to us?
Side note: According to R. Benjamin ben Levi in Kohelet Rabbah, the sages worried that this verse would lead to heresy, causing people to equate the study of Torah with toil and to think it is without profit. Upon rethinking the issues, they noted that Kohelet did not write "in all toil" but "in all his toil." Therefore, they rationalized that this verse does not apply to the study of Torah.
(4) One generation goes, another comes, But the earth remains the same forever. (5) The sun rises, and the sun sets— And glides back to where it rises. (6) Southward blowing, Turning northward, Ever turning blows the wind; On its rounds the wind returns. (7) All streams flow into the sea, Yet the sea is never full; To the place [from] which they flow The streams flow back again. (8) All such things are wearisome: No person can ever state them; The eye never has enough of seeing, Nor the ear enough of hearing.
2. How does this description fit in with the concepts of hevel and yitron above?
3. What is the role of us humans in this system?
4. In what way is life wearisome?
(1) A season is set for everything, a time for every experience under heaven: (2) A time for being born and a time for dying, A time for planting and a time for uprooting the planted; (3) A time for slaying and a time for healing, A time for tearing down and a time for building up; (4) A time for weeping and a time for laughing, A time for wailing and a time for dancing; (5) A time for throwing stones and a time for gathering stones, A time for embracing and a time for shunning embraces; (6) A time for seeking and a time for losing, A time for keeping and a time for discarding; (7) A time for ripping and a time for sewing, A time for silence and a time for speaking; (8) A time for loving and a time for hating; A time for war and a time for peace. (9) What value, then, can the person of affairs get from what he earns?
2. In verse 9, Kohelet relates all of this, once again, to the idea of yitron. What does he mean?
(16) For I have set my mind to learn wisdom and to observe the business that goes on in the world—even to the extent of going without sleep day and night— (17) and I have observed all that God brings to pass. Indeed, one cannot guess the events that occur under the sun. For one tries strenuously, but fails to guess them; and even if a sage should think to discover them he would not be able to guess them. (1) For all this I noted, and I ascertained all this: that the actions of even the righteous and the wise are determined by God. Even love! Even hate! A person knows none of these in advance— (2) none! For the same fate is in store for all: for the righteous, and for the wicked; for the good and pure, and for the impure; for the one who sacrifices, and for the one who does not; for the one who is pleasing, and for the one who is displeasing; and for the one who swears, and for the one who shuns oaths.
2. If there is no discernable system of reward and punishment at play in the world, what does that say about how we ought to live?
2. What do you think Kohelet means by "whatever is in your power to do, do with all your might"? How does this relate to various "life lessons" floating around American popular culture?
3. Why does this more happy, hopeful passage end with a reminder of our death?
1. Jewish tradition (think Yom Kippur) requires a very different spiritual practice than what Kohelet suggests. How are they at odds? How do you see them both fitting into your own Jewish life?
2. At different moments in life, this text resonates differently. For example, American teens are very concerned with grades and college applications. Millenials are concerned with acquiring wealth in order set themselves up for success later in life. The question, "is this all there is?" is pervasive during the "mid-life crisis" years, often easing into a sense that if "this" is all there is, that would be okay.
How is Kohelet's message aligned or in tension with your own sense of things at this moment in your life?
