Parallel Bible results for "ecclesiastes 5"

Ecclesiastes 5

NLT

CJB

1 As you enter the house of God, keep your ears open and your mouth shut. It is evil to make mindless offerings to God.
1 Watch your step when you go to the house of God. Offering to listen is better than fools offering sacrifices, because they don't discern whether or not they are doing evil.
2 Don’t make rash promises, and don’t be hasty in bringing matters before God. After all, God is in heaven, and you are here on earth. So let your words be few.
2 Don't speak impulsively - don't be in a hurry to give voice to your words before God. For God is in heaven, and you are on earth; so let your words be few.
3 Too much activity gives you restless dreams; too many words make you a fool.
3 For nightmares come from worrying too much; and a fool, when he speaks, chatters too much.
4 When you make a promise to God, don’t delay in following through, for God takes no pleasure in fools. Keep all the promises you make to him.
4 If you make a vow to God, don't delay in discharging it. For God takes no pleasure in fools, so discharge your vow!
5 It is better to say nothing than to make a promise and not keep it.
5 Better not to make a vow than to make a vow and not discharge it.
6 Don’t let your mouth make you sin. And don’t defend yourself by telling the Temple messenger that the promise you made was a mistake. That would make God angry, and he might wipe out everything you have achieved.
6 Don't let your words make you guilty, and don't tell the temple official that you made the vow by mistake. Why give God reason to be angry at what you say and destroy what you have accomplished?
7 Talk is cheap, like daydreams and other useless activities. Fear God instead.
7 For [this is what happens when there are too] many dreams, aimless activities and words. Instead, just fear God!
8 Don’t be surprised if you see a poor person being oppressed by the powerful and if justice is being miscarried throughout the land. For every official is under orders from higher up, and matters of justice get lost in red tape and bureaucracy.
8 If you see the poor oppressed, rights violated and justice perverted in the province, don't be surprised; for a high official has one higher watching him, and there are others above them.
9 Even the king milks the land for his own profit!
9 But the greatest advantage to the country is when the king makes himself a servant to the land.
10 Those who love money will never have enough. How meaningless to think that wealth brings true happiness!
10 The lover of money never has enough money; the lover of luxury never has enough income. This too is pointless.
11 The more you have, the more people come to help you spend it. So what good is wealth—except perhaps to watch it slip through your fingers!
11 When the quantity of goods increases, so does the number of parasites consuming them; so the only advantage to the owner is that he gets to watch them do it.
12 People who work hard sleep well, whether they eat little or much. But the rich seldom get a good night’s sleep.
12 The sleep of a working man is sweet, whether he eats little or much; but the overfullness of the rich won't let them sleep at all.
13 There is another serious problem I have seen under the sun. Hoarding riches harms the saver.
13 Here is a gross evil which I have seen under the sun: the owner of wealth hoards it to his own hurt.
14 Money is put into risky investments that turn sour, and everything is lost. In the end, there is nothing left to pass on to one’s children.
14 Due to some misfortune, the wealth turns to loss; and then if he has fathered a son, he has nothing to leave him.
15 We all come to the end of our lives as naked and empty-handed as on the day we were born. We can’t take our riches with us.
15 Just as he came from his mother's womb, so he will go back naked as he came, and for his efforts he will take nothing that he can carry away in his hand.
16 And this, too, is a very serious problem. People leave this world no better off than when they came. All their hard work is for nothing—like working for the wind.
16 This too is a gross evil, that in every respect as he came, so will he go; thus what profit does he have after toiling to earn the wind?
17 Throughout their lives, they live under a cloud—frustrated, discouraged, and angry.
17 All his life he eats in darkness, in frustration, in sickness and in anger.
18 Even so, I have noticed one thing, at least, that is good. It is good for people to eat, drink, and enjoy their work under the sun during the short life God has given them, and to accept their lot in life.
18 This is what I have seen to be good: that it is appropriate for a person to eat, drink and enjoy the good that results from all his work that he engages in under the sun for all the days of his life that God has given him, for this is his allotted portion.
19 And it is a good thing to receive wealth from God and the good health to enjoy it. To enjoy your work and accept your lot in life—this is indeed a gift from God.
19 Also, everyone to whom God has given riches and wealth, along with the power to enjoy it, so that he takes his allotted portion and finds pleasure in his work - this is a gift of God;
20 God keeps such people so busy enjoying life that they take no time to brood over the past.
20 for he will not brood over the fact that his life is short, since God keeps him occupied with what will bring him joy.
Holy Bible. New Living Translation copyright© 1996, 2004, 2007, 2013 by Tyndale House Foundation. Used by permission of Tyndale House Publishers Inc., Carol Stream, Illinois 60188. All rights reserved.
Complete Jewish Bible Copyright 1998 by David H. Stern. Published by Jewish New Testament Publications, Inc. All rights reserved. Used by permission.