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Ecclesiastes 11:7 World English Bible (WEB)

7 Truly the light is sweet, And a pleasant thing it is for the eyes to see the sun.

Cross Reference

Ecclesiastes 7:11 WEB

Wisdom is as good as an inheritance. Yes, it is more excellent for those who see the sun.

Matthew 5:45 WEB

that you may be children of your Father who is in heaven. For he makes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the just and the unjust.

Job 33:28 WEB

He has redeemed my soul from going into the pit, My life shall see the light.'

Job 33:30 WEB

To bring back his soul from the pit, That he may be enlightened with the light of the living.

Psalms 56:13 WEB

For you have delivered my soul from death, And prevented my feet from falling, That I may walk before God in the light of the living.

Psalms 84:11 WEB

For Yahweh God is a sun and a shield. Yahweh will give grace and glory. He withholds no good thing from those who walk blamelessly.

Proverbs 15:30 WEB

The light of the eyes rejoices the heart. Good news gives health to the bones.

Proverbs 29:13 WEB

The poor man and the oppressor have this in common: Yahweh gives sight to the eyes of both.

Ecclesiastes 6:5 WEB

Moreover it has not seen the sun nor known it. This has rest rather than the other.

Worthy.Bible » Commentaries » Keil & Delitzsch Commentary » Commentary on Ecclesiastes 11

Commentary on Ecclesiastes 11 Keil & Delitzsch Commentary


Verse 1

“Let thy bread go forth over the watery mirror: for in the course of many days shalt thou find it.” Most interpreters, chiefly the Talm., Midrash, and Targ.,

(Note: The Midrash tells the following story: Rabbi Akiba sees a ship wrecked which carried in it one learned in the law. He finds him again actively engaged in Cappadocia. What whale, he asked him, has vomited thee out upon dry land? How hast thou merited this? The scribe learned in the law thereupon related that when he went on board the ship, he gave a loaf of bread to a poor man, who thanked him for it, saying: As thou hast saved my life, may thy life be saved. Thereupon Akiba thought of the proverb in Ecclesiastes 11:1. Similarly the Targ.: Extend to the poor the bread for thy support; they sail in ships over the water.)

regard this as an exhortation to charity, which although practised without expectation of reward, does not yet remain unrewarded at last. An Aram. proverb of Ben Sira's ( vid ., Buxtorf's Florilegium , p. 171) proceeds on this interpretation: “Scatter thy bread on the water and on the dry land; in the end of the days thou findest it again.” Knobel quotes a similar Arab. proverb from Diez' Denkwürdigkeiten von Asien (Souvenirs of Asia), II 106: “Do good; cast thy bread into the water: thou shalt be repaid some day.” See also the proverb in Goethe's Westöst. Divan , compared by Herzfeld. Voltaire, in his Précis de l'Ecclésiaste en vers , also adopts this rendering:

Repandez vos bien faits avec magnificence,

Même aux moins vertueux ne les refusez pas.

Ne vous informez pas de leur reconnaissance -

Il est grand, il est beau de faire des ingrats