Löydetty 1110 Tulokset: Tree Of Life
Work such as hers claims its reward; let her life be spoken of with praise at the city gates. (Proverbs 31, 31)
how I resolved at last to deny myself the comfort of wine, wisdom now all my quest, folly disowned? For I could not rest until I knew where man’s true good lay, what was his life’s true task, here under the sun.✻ (Ecclesiastes 2, 3)
I would have park and orchard, planted with every kind of tree; (Ecclesiastes 2, 5)
Thus I became weary of life itself; so worthless it seemed to me, all that man does beneath the sun, frustration all of it, and labour lost. And I, beneath that same sun, what fond labours I had spent! (Ecclesiastes 2, 17)
Now we take life, now we save it; now we are destroying, now building. (Ecclesiastes 3, 3)
To enjoy his life, to make the best of it, beyond doubt this is man’s highest employment; (Ecclesiastes 3, 12)
After all, man comes to the same ending as the beasts; there is nothing to choose between his lot and theirs; both alike are doomed to die. They have but one principle of life; what has man that the beasts have not? Frustration everywhere; (Ecclesiastes 3, 19)
all his life long the cheerless board, the multitudinous cares, the concern, the melancholy! (Ecclesiastes 5, 16)
Better far, by my way of it, that a man should eat and drink and enjoy the revenues of his own labour, here under the sun, as long as God gives him life; what more can he claim? (Ecclesiastes 5, 17)
What need for man to ask questions that are beyond his scope? There is no knowing how best his life should be spent, this brief pilgrimage that passes like a shadow, and is gone. And what will befall after his death, in this world beneath the sun, who can tell? (Ecclesiastes 7, 1)
Wealth befriends whom wisdom befriends; better still, who learns wisdom wins life. (Ecclesiastes 7, 13)
The breath of life man must resign at last; the day of his death he cannot determine; nor ever does war give release from service, nor sin discharge to the sinner. (Ecclesiastes 8, 8)
