Rather than saying, "All work is vanity,"Solomon made the same point by asking this rhetorical question that expects a negative response. He used this literary device often throughout the book (cf. 2:2; 3:9; 6:8, 11-12; et al.).
"Advantage"(Heb. yitron) refers to what remains in the sense of a net profit. Solomon was not saying there is nothing good about work or that it is worse than being unemployed. He only meant that all the work a person may engage in does not yield really long-term profit even though it may yield short-term profit including financial security (cf. Mark 8:36).19
"Under the sun,"used 29 times in Ecclesiastes and nowhere else in the Old Testament, simply means "on the earth,"that is, in terms of human existence (1:9, 14; 2:11, 17, 18, 19, 20, 22; 3:16; 4:1, 3, 7, 15; 5:13, 18; 6:1, 5, 12; 8:9, 15, 17; 9:3, 6, 9, 11, 13; 10:5; cf. 1:13; 2:3; 3:1). The phrase shows that the writer's perspective was universal, not limited to his own people and land.20
"You think you have all the dishes washed and from a bedroom or a bathroom there appears, as from a ghost, another dirty glass. And even when all the dishes are washed, it is only a few hours until they demand washing again. So much of our work is cyclical, and so much of it futile."21



untuk merubah tampilan teks alkitab dan catatan hanya seukuran layar atau memanjang. [