Ecclesiastes 5
The Preacher advises prudent worship: guard your steps approaching God's house and listen rather than offer foolish sacrifices. Hasty vows displease Him; it is better to vow nothing than to vow and fail to pay. He warns against excessive words in prayer or before officials, and critiques the oppression of the poor by corrupt bureaucracy. He observes the futility of wealth: the lover of money never satisfies his appetite, wealth brings anxiety and sleeplessness, and accumulated riches cannot be carried at death. Yet he affirms a qualified good: the ability to eat one's own labor and find satisfaction in it is a gift from God. This chapter introduces explicit theological obligations and divine relational norms within the Preacher's framework. The emphasis on restrained, sincere worship rather than elaborate ritual aligns with later prophetic critique of mere external observance. Literarily, the passage employs direct imperatives and vivid imagery—the watchdog official, the sleepless wealthy person—to make abstract warnings concrete and memorable. Theologically, the chapter pivots decisively toward covenantal obedience: while possessions themselves remain transient, right relationship with God through sincere vows and obedient labor constitutes an enduring good. The notion that finding satisfaction in one's work is 'God's gift' introduces grace and divine provision as realities transcending vanity, suggesting that meaning emerges through proper alignment with God rather than through achievement alone.
Ecclesiastes 5:19
The reason that such a person does not much remember the days of their life through the sadness that might otherwise accompany existence is that their mind is occupied with joy and satisfaction. The implication is that those who pursue infinite accumulation remember their lives with sadness, preoccupied with anxiety about loss; yet the contented person, occupied with present goods and gratitude, experiences forgetfulness of life's sorrows. This verse suggests that psychological peace depends less on the amount one possesses than on whether one achieves contentment.
Ecclesiastes 5:20
The final statement of chapter 5 affirms that God keeps the person preoccupied with the joy of their heart, without allowing them to dwell overmuch on the years of their life, consolidates the chapter's message about the gift of contentment. The divine activity of keeping human consciousness focused on present joy rather than on the totality of existence (with its implicit reminder of mortality) represents a form of grace. This verse suggests that happiness depends not on achieving the impossible but on accepting God's gift of present satisfaction.
Ecclesiastes 5:2
The admonition that words are few before God, and that the multitude of dreams comes with much talk, suggests that excessive speech distances one from genuine encounter with the divine. The association of dreams with empty speech implies that fantasies and idle talk proliferate while standing before God; the wise person recognizes God's transcendence by restraining words. This verse privileges silence and listening over self-assertion in the presence of the holy.