Ecclésiaste 12:8

8 Vanité des vanités, dit l'Ecclésiaste, tout est vanité.

Ecclésiaste 12:8 Meaning and Commentary

Ecclesiastes 12:8

Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher
The wise man, or preacher, set out in the beginning of the book with this doctrine, or proposition, which he undertook to prove; and now having proved it by an induction of particulars, instanced in the wisdom, wealth, honours, pleasures, and profit of men, and shown the vanity of them, and that the happiness of men lies not in these things, but in the knowledge and fear of God; he repeats it, and most strongly asserts it, as an undoubted truth beyond all dispute and contradiction, that all things under the sun are not only vain, but vanity itself, extremely vain, vain in the superlative degree; all [is] vanity;
all things in the world are vain; all creatures are subject to vanity; man in every state, and in his best estate, is altogether vanity: this the wise man might with great confidence affirm, after he had shown that not only childhood and youth are vanity, but even old age; the infirmities, sorrows, and distresses of which he had just exposed, and observed that all issue in death, the last end of man, when his body returns to the earth, and his soul to God the giver of it.

Ecclésiaste 12:8 In-Context

6 avant que le cordon d'argent se détache, que le vase d'or se brise, que le seau se rompe sur la source, et que la roue se casse sur la citerne;
7 avant que la poussière retourne à la terre, comme elle y était, et que l'esprit retourne à Dieu qui l'a donné.
8 Vanité des vanités, dit l'Ecclésiaste, tout est vanité.
9 Outre que l'Ecclésiaste fut un sage, il a encore enseigné la science au peuple, et il a examiné, sondé, mis en ordre un grand nombre de sentences.
10 L'Ecclésiaste s'est efforcé de trouver des paroles agréables; et ce qui a été écrit avec droiture, ce sont des paroles de vérité.
The Louis Segond 1910 is in the public domain.