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(1.00) (Ecc 6:4)

sn The name of the stillborn is forgotten.

(0.67) (Ecc 6:4)

tn Heb “he”; the referent (“the stillborn child”) has been specified in the translation for clarity.

(0.58) (Ecc 6:4)

sn The birth of the stillborn was in vain—it did it no good to be born.

(0.50) (Ecc 6:3)

sn The point of 6:3-6 is that the futility of unenjoyed wealth is worse than the tragedy of being stillborn.

(0.50) (Job 3:16)

tn The word עֹלְלִים (ʿolelim) normally refers to “nurslings.” Here it must refer to infants in general since it refers to a stillborn child.

(0.42) (Job 3:17)

sn The reference seems to be death, or Sheol, the place where the infant who is stillborn is either buried (the grave) or resides (the place of departed spirits) and thus does not see the light of the sun.

(0.33) (Ecc 6:3)

tn The noun נֶפֶל (nefel) denotes “miscarriage” and by metonymy of effect, “stillborn child” (e.g., Ps 58:9; Job 3:16; Eccl 6:3); cf. HALOT 711. The noun is related to the verb נָפַל (nafal, “to fall,” but occasionally “to be born”; see Isa 26:18); cf. HALOT 710 s.v. נפל 5.

(0.29) (Ecc 6:6)

tn Heb “Do not all go to the same place?” The rhetorical question is an example of erotesis of positive affirmation, expecting a positive answer, e.g., Ps 56:13 [14] (see E. W. Bullinger, Figures of Speech, 947). It affirms the fact that both the miserly rich man who lives two thousand years, as well as the stillborn who never lived one day, both go to the same place—the grave. And if the miserly rich man never enjoyed the fruit of his labor during his life, his fate was no better than that of the stillborn who never had opportunity to enjoy any of the blessings of life. In a sense, it would have been better for the miserly rich man to have never lived than to have experienced the toil, anxiety, and misery of accumulating his wealth, but never enjoying any of the fruits of his labor.



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