Showing posts with label Work. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Work. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 9, 2014

Paul the Tentmaker (Acts 18:3)

What was Paul’s occupation? Tentmaker (Acts 18:3)

During Paul’s second missionary journey, the apostle travels from Athens to Corinth (Acts 18:1). In Corinth, he stays with a Jewish husband and wife named Aquila and Priscilla who have been banished from Rome by the Edict of Claudius (Acts 18:2). Paul also joins the couple in their trade of tentmaking (Acts 18:3).

And he found a Jew named Aquila, a native of Pontus, having recently come from Italy with his wife Priscilla, because Claudius had commanded all the Jews to leave Rome. He came to them, and because he was of the same trade, he stayed with them and they were working, for by trade they were tent-makers. (Acts 18:2-3 NASB)
Despite not having been previously referenced, Acts casually reports that Paul works as a tentmaker as if his trade is common knowledge (Acts 18:3). This is one of the few biographical facts Acts provides about the famous missionary (Acts 18:3).

David Wenham (b. 1945) compiles:

In the book of Acts Paul first appears on the scene as a ‘young man’ at the killing of Stephen (Acts 7:58). Acts gives us very little information about his background; but we gather that he had a Hebrew and a Roman name (Saul and Paul respectively). Born in Tarsus he was a citizen of that city (Acts 21:39, 22:3), and also a Roman citizen by birth (Acts 16:38, 22:26, 27). By trade he was a tent-maker (or leather-worker) (Acts 18:3). A ‘Pharisee and son of Pharisees’, he trained in Jerusalem under Gamaliel, ‘educated strictly according to our ancestral law, being zealous for God’ (Acts 22:3, 23:6). He was fluent in Hebrew/Aramaic (Acts 22:2) but apparently associated with the Greek-speaking synagogues of Jerusalem (to judge from his involvement with Stephen; cf. Acts 6:9 and also Acts 9:29). (Bruce W. Winter [b. 1939] and Andrew D. Clarke, “Acts and the Pauline Corpus II. The Evidence of Parallels”, The Book of Acts in its First Century Setting: Ancient Literary Setting 216-17)
Robert L. Brawley (b. 1939) sees Acts’ character sketch as supporting its historicity:
Paul’s highly repetitious references to himself, especially in the Miletus address and the defense speeches, point to a literal character. In addition, Acts individuates Paul as a persecutor of Christians [Acts 9:4-5, 22:4, 7-8, 26:14-15], a Pharisee [Acts 23:6] educated under Gamaliel [Acts 22:3], a tentmaker [Acts 18:3], and a Roman citizen [Acts 22:26-29, 23:27] (cf. Jacob Jervell [1925-2014] 1972:154, 161-63)—characteristics that have no symbolic counterpart in Christianity as a whole. He faces some typical opponents, but others confront him uniquely (e.g., Acts 21:21, 28, 24:5). (Brawley, Centering on God: Method and Message in Luke-Acts, 156)
Though he enters the text eleven chapters earlier (Acts 7:58), this is the first time that Acts mentions that Paul works in this capacity (Acts 18:3). Either he has never previously plied his trade while on the mission field and he is adapting his strategy to correct a deficiency or he has always worked and there had simply been no cause to mention this activity previously.

James Montgomery Boice (1938-2000) speculates:

This is the first time in the missionary journeys of Paul, so far as we can tell, that he found it necessary to support himself by making tents...How had he managed before? No doubt those who sent him had given him sufficient money. (Boice, Acts: An Expositional Commentary, 306)
Kenneth O. Gangel (1935-2009) adds:
Paul wrote often about his “secular occupation” and seemed to take a good bit of heathy pride in his self-support (I Corinthians 4:12; I Thessalonians 2:9; II Corinthians 11:7). Only here, however, does the Bible tell us Paul was a tentmaker...Willingness to work to support oneself while proclaiming the gospel served as a life principle for Paul. (Gangel, Acts (Holman New Testament Commentary), 303)
Though Paul does not specify the type of manual labor he performs in his letters, he alludes to it. Luke Timothy Johnson (b. 1943) introduces:
Paul...makes a considerable point of his “working with his hands” (I Thessalonians 2:9; II Thessalonians 3:6-8; I Corinthians 4:12, 9:6), in this following one ideal for teachers of wisdom, found among at least some of the Rabbis (see Pirke Aboth 2:2, 4:7; Aboth de Rabbi Nathan 11), as well as among certain Cynic Philosophers (see Diogenes Laertius [third century], Lives of Eminent Philosophers 7:168 (Cleanthes [331-232 BCE]); Epictetus [55-135], Discourses 3,26, 23; Musonius Rufus [first century], fragment 11). (Johnson, Acts (Sacra Pagina), 322)
Mikeal C. Parsons (b. 1957) informs:
Like Paul, Aquila and Priscilla were also tentmakers [Acts 18:3]...This characterization of Paul as an artisan who worked with his hands coheres with the picture Paul paints of himself in his letters (I Corinthians 4:12, 9:6; I Thessalonians 2:9; II Thessalonians 3:6-8). If the Paul of the letters viewed such manual labor negatively (so Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1978, 555-64; but cf. now Todd D. Still [b. 1966] 2006, 781-95), there is no indication he does so in Acts (cf. also Acts 20:34-35). Paul stayed and worked with Aquila and Priscilla [Acts 18:2-3]. Paul moves from intellectual debate with Athenian philosophers to manual labor with Corinthian artisans, and in so doing “becomes all things to all people” (I Corinthians 9:22). His economic self-sufficiency was no doubt important, not only given the length of his stay (eighteen months; cf. Acts 18:11), but also because of Corinth’s reputation for hosting philosophical charlatans and other “peddlers” who sold their intellectual “wares” to the highest bidders...It is little wonder...for an audience familiar with such practices that Luke would characterize Paul as engaging in work for self-support in order to distinguish himself from these hucksters in much the same way that Paul in writing to the Corinthians would seek to distance himself from “so many who are peddlers of God’s word” (II Corinthians 2:17). (Parsons, Acts (Paideia: Commentaries on the New Testament), 250-51)
While Paul does not make a direct reference to tentmaking in his writings, he does present a related analogy. James F. Kay (b. 1948) connects:
In II Corinthians 5:1 Paul, the tentmaker (Acts 18:3), switches his metaphors. The “body” (II Corinthians 5:8) is likened to a destructible “earthly tent” in contrast to a “house...eternal in the heavens.” Our tattered flesh, in which the treasured gospel finds embodiment, strains forward to God’s permanent provision for risen life. Treasured by God, eternal security awaits us in glory when we shall be “at home with the Lord” (II Corinthians 5:8). “So we do not lose heart” (II Corinthians 4:16, 1), and “we are always confident” (II Corinthians 5:6) amid our present struggles on behalf of the gospel. (Roger E. Van Harn [b. 1932], “Third Sunday after Pentecost, Year B”, The Second Readings: Acts and the Epistles (The Lectionary Commentary: Theological Exegesis for Sunday’s Texts, 253)
Aquila, Priscilla and Paul presumably work closely together as in this era people sharing a trade worked in close proximity (Acts 18:2-3). This practice still holds in some areas. For instance, many Oriental rug distributors sell in the same region of Atlanta.

Bruce J. Malina (b. 1933) and John J. Pilch (b. 1936) report:

In the ancient Mediterranean world, artisans lived in their respective quarters. Hence, tentmakers lived in one place and Paul, who plied this trade, would very naturally seek lodging there. We agree with Ekkehard W. Stegemann [b. 1945] and Wolfgang Stegemann [b. 1945] (1999:300) that by Paul’s own testimony (I Thessalonians 2:9; I Corinthians 4:12; II Corinthians 11:7) he worked hard, day and night, with fellow tradespersons for a daily wage in workshops. (Malina and Pilch, Social-science Commentary on the Book of Acts, 130)
Bruce B. Barton (b. 1943) explains:
Since ancient craftsmen did not compete as merchants do today but rather formed cooperative trade guilds and often lived in close proximity, it is not surprising that Paul and Aquila worked together [Acts 18:2-3]. Because many of the trade guilds had adopted pagan practices, two God-fearing artisans would have been delighted to work together. (Barton, Romans (Life Application Bible Commentary, 311)
In addition to living in close proximity, Aquila, Priscilla and Paul share other common bonds, three especially important: race, religion and occupation. Given this commonality, it is not surprising that the trio bonds and becomes lifelong friends (Acts 18:2, 18; Romans 16:3; I Corinthians 16:19; II Timothy 4:19).

Robert C. Tannehill (b. 1934) deduces:

Aquila and Priscilla are introduced in Acts 18:2. They are important, first of all, because they enable Paul to work at his trade. Later they will travel with Paul from Corinth to Ephesus (Acts 18:18) and will play a role in the mission as teachers during Paul’s absence from Ephesus (Acts 18:26). Thus they are more than employers. The reference to Paul working with them at a trade in Acts 18:3 prepares for Paul’s statement in his farewell speech that he supported himself and others with his own hands (Acts 20:33-35). His statement there indicates that he did hand labor not only in Corinth but also later in Ephesus. (Tannehill, The Narrative Unity of Luke-Acts: A Literary Interpretation, Volume 2: The Acts of the Apostles, 221)
Though there is some debate, most assume that all three, including Priscilla, work as tentmakers (Acts 18:2-3). Luise Schottroff (b. 1934) researches:
There are two versions of Acts 18:3 in the handwritten manuscripts. One version...says that Prisca, Aquila, and Paul worked in the trade of tentmaking (“he stayed with them and they worked”). The other version uses the singular—“and he [Paul] worked”—creating the impression that Paul is living with people of the same trade and, on that basis, pursues his work...The more reliable and older version leaves the impression that Aquila, Prisca, and Paul live together and, for that reason, also work together. The change to the singular, which makes no mention of Prisca working, belongs to the recognizable intention of one part of the handwritten communication of Acts, which was to push Prisca into the background. Even Adolf von Harnack [1851-1930], who had clearly brought this matter to attention and had commented extensively on Prisca, devotes to her work the singular notice that she and her husband made tents. In more recent commentaries, I find either that Aquila and Prisca were a well-to-do couple who owned a tentmaking business and that Paul was employed by them or that Aquila and Prisca were tentmakers. Reference to Prisca’s work is missing even where the vocation of tentmaking is discussed as the vocation of Aquila and Paul or of Aquila and Prisca. The conditions under which women live are no subject matter for traditional interpretation even when the text, as in this case, speaks about them directly. Extensive analysis of and theological reflection on women’s work in the New Testament can be found particularly in the work of Ivoni Richter Reimer [b. 1959], a woman scholar of feminist liberation theology. (Schottroff, Lydia’s Impatient Sisters: A Feminist Social History of Early Christianity, 88)
The work in which the trio is engaged is described by the Greek skēnopoiós. The term is almost universally translated as tentmakers with only the grammatical construction varying: “tentmaker(s)” (ESV, HCSB, KJV, NIV, NKJV, NLT, NRSV, RSV), “tent makers” (ASV, CEV), “tent-makers” (NASB) or “tentmaking” (MSG).

This is in fact, the literal meaning of the term. Though the word’s scope is broader, the translation of tentmaker is so pervasive that even contemporary paraphrases like The Message and The Voice retain it.

James M.M. Francis (b. 1944) recognizes:

To be sure it would be more accurate to refer to Paul as a leather worker but the description of tentmaker has come to predominate, so much so that in the United States of America non-stipendiary ministry is regularly preferably described as a tentmaking ministry, harking back to the example of Paul [Acts 18:3]. (Francis and Leslie J. Francis [b. 1947], “Biblical Perspectives”, Tentmaking: Perspectives on Self-Supporting Ministry, 1)
Despite the consistency among translators, the word’s precise meaning is disputed. Instead of simply indicating a tentmaker, skēnopoiós is commonly thought to be an umbrella term encompassing a variety of skills pertaining to leather working.

The exact meaning of the term cannot be established with confidence. F.J. Foakes-Jackson (1855-1941) acknowledges:

Σκηνοποιός is a difficult word. It is rendered ‘tent-maker’ in the Authorized Version [Acts 18:3]. In the Vulgate there is no attempt to translate the word, which is rendered scenofactoriae artis. One Latin manuscript has lectari (lectarii)—makers of couches. The rendering workers in leather, found in some Latin versions, is open to the alleged objection that this was considered an unclean trade, and consequently one not likely to be chosen by a family of strict Pharisees, like Paul’s [Acts 26:5; Philippians 2:5]. Paul is popularly called a ‘tent-maker’; and there we must leave it. (Foakes-Jackson, Acts (Moffat Commentary), 169)
Frank Stagg (1911-2001) admits:
The common trade which brought Paul and Aquila together is usually held to have been that of tentmaker [Acts 18:3]. The Greek word means just that etymologically, but early writers refer the term to leather-workers. This latter is not a likely trade for a Jew, because of the “defiling” force of skins; and cloth made of goat hair would have offered Paul a ready trade, since it was the special product of Cilicia...The reader is faced with inconclusive evidence and in honesty must plead ignorance. In view of the uncertainty of the evidence, there is little reason for departing from the traditional view that Paul was a tentmaker. (Stagg, The Book of Acts: The Early Struggle for an Unhindered Gospel, 189)
Ivoni Richter Reimer (b. 1959) explicates:
The word σκηνοποιοί, “tentmakers,” is a New Testament hapax legomenon [Acts 18:3]. Therefore no New Testament passage can be adduced to explain it; nor is it found in the Septuagint, although there we do find σκηνή, “tent” (e.g., Genesis 4:20: “those who live in tents...”. As far as I can tell, the word σκηνοποιός is attested only twice in literary sources, and not at all in Greek inscriptions. It is a composite of the two words σκηνή and ποιέω, which in the active voice means “to make tents,” not in the sense of “pitching tents,” but in that of producing them. (Reimer, Women in the Acts of Apostles: A Feminist Liberation Perspective, 199)
Several potential meanings have been posited. Beverly Roberts Gaventa (b. 1948) presents:
Disputes persist about the exact nature of the labor Luke identifies as skēnopoioi (NRSV: tentmakers), whether it refers to leather work, the actual construction of tents, weaving, or even the construction of theatrical sets (Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1980, 20-21; [Walter Bauer [1870-1960], F. Wilbur Gingrich [1901-1993], William F. Arndt [1880-1957] and Frederick W. Danker [1920-2012] 928-29). Paul’s letters refer to his labor, but not to a specific trade (I Corinthians 4:12). Similarly, interpreters differ in their estimates of the income and status attached to this labor. That Aquila and Priscilla are able to accommodate Paul at least suggests that they do not operate at a mere subsistence level, but that fact scarcely places them among the elite. In addition, nothing in the syntax permits identifying Aquila and Paul, but not Priscilla, as laborers (Ivoni Richter Reimer [b. 1959] 1995:195-226). (Gaventa, Acts (Abingdon New Testament Commentaries), 256)
Darrell L. Bock (b. 1953) contemplates:
Paul and these two make an immediate connection because they share the same trade (τέχνη, technē). I Corinthians 4:12 refers to how Paul labored with his hands to earn a living (also I Thessalonians 2:9). They are tentmakers, which likely included working with leather in general, so that they can be considered leatherworkers (Wilhelm Michaelis [1896-1965], Theological Dictionary of the New Testament 7:393-94, speaks of primarily leatherwork, which also could include tents; Jacob Jervell [b. 1925] 1998:458). They are not weavers of goat hair as some suggest (correctly, Gerhard Schneider [1926-2004] 1982:249; William J. Larkin [1945-2014] 1995:262-63n). (Bock, Acts (Baker Exegetical Commentary on the New Testament), 578)
Some have posed the alternate theory that Paul is in actuality a stage maker. L.L. Welborn (b. 1953) relates:
The term used by Acts to describe their occupation, σκηνοποιός, is traditionally translated “tent-maker” [Acts 18:3]; but Frederick W. Danker [1920-2012], the editor of A Greek-English Lexicon of the New Testament, has...argued, on the basis of contemporary usage, that readers of Acts in urban areas would have thought of σκηνοποιός in reference to matters theatrical, and so he has proposed the translation “maker of stage properties.” Whether as a “tent-maker” or a “prop-maker,” Paul lived and worked with Jewish artisans in one of the little ships scattered throughout the city, perhaps in the Peribolos of Apollo just off the Lechaeum Road, or in the North Market, or along East Theater Street. (Mark Harding [b. 1951] and Alanna Nobbs [b. 1944], All Things to All Cultures: Paul Among Jews, Greeks, and Romans, 208)
Bartosz Adamczewski (b. 1967) directs:
Luke’s description of Paul as tentmaker, a trade that was hardly profitable in a great city and that, moreover, was referred to by Luke with a neologism in this meaning (σκηνοπσιός: Acts 18:3), probably alludes to II Corinthians 5:1.4. For a suggestion that this noun meant “maker of stage properties” and as such it alluded to I Corinthians 4:9, see William O. Walker, Jr. [b. 1930], ‘The Portrayal of Aquila and Priscilla in Acts: The Question of Sources’, 488-89. (Adamczewski, Heirs of the Reunited Church: The History of the Pauline Mission in Paul’s Letters, in the So-Called Pastoral Letters, and in the Pseudo-Titus Narrative of Acts, 127)
Eckhard J. Schnabel (b. 1955) counters:
Frederick W. Danker [1920-2012] suggests that the Greek term skēnopoios, which is usually translated as “tent-maker,” should be interpreted in the sense of “maker of stage properties” for theatrical productions (Walter Bauer [1870-1960], F. Wilbur Gingrich [1901-1993], William F. Arndt [1880-1957] and Frederick W. Danker [1920-2012], 928-29). Note, however, the Jewish objections toward the theater; cf. Emil Schürer [1844-1910], History of the Jewish People, 2:54-55. (Schnabel, Paul the Missionary: Realities, Strategies and Methods, 105)
Some have posited that Paul’s trade is that of weaving in conjunction with a purported connection to his home territory, Cilicia (Acts 21:39, 22:3, 23:34). F.F. Bruce (1910-1990) opines:
Paul’s trade was probably connected with the chief manufacture of his native province, cilicium, a cloth of goats’ hair from which were made coverings designed to give protection against cold and wet. While the etymological sense of σκηνοποιός is “tent-maker,” it was used in the wider sense of “leather-worker” (cf. English “saddler,” which has a wider sense than “maker of saddles”). Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944], who puts Paul’s manual work in a Hellenistic social setting (cf. “Paul’s Tentmaking and the Problem of his Social Class,” Journal of Biblical Literature 97 [1978], pp. 555-64; “The Workshop as a Social Setting for Paul’s Missionary Preaching,” Catholic Biblical Quarterly 41 [1979], pp.438-50; and The Social Context of Paul’s Ministry: Tentmaking and Apostleship [Philadelphia, 1980]), finds a polemic note in Paul’s own references to it; whether that is so or not, there is no such note in Luke’s present reference. (Bruce, The Acts of the Apostles: The Greek Text with Introduction and Commentary, 392)
David G. Peterson (b. 1944) refutes:
Some have argued that ‘Paul’s trade was probably connected with the chief manufacture of his native province, cilicium, a cloth of goats’ hair from which were made coverings designed to give protection against cold and wet’. However, the same occupation is ascribed to Priscilla and Aquila, though they were from Pontus [Acts 18:2], and Paul probably did not learn his trade until he began his formal theological education in Jerusalem (Acts 22:3). It is more likely that his trade involved working with leather rather than with weaving. (Peterson, The Acts of the Apostles (Pillar New Testament Commentary), 508)
Christopher R. Little (b. 1959) expounds:
The better one understands Saul the Jew the more clearly one comprehends Paul the apostle (Martin Hengel [1926-2009] 1991:xiii). This is especially true in terms of his trade. Some have supposed that Paul’s trade should be linked to his upbringing in Tarsus where it is known that the tentmaking material cilicium was manufactured (Franz Delitzsch [1813-1890] 1883:81-82; J.B. Lightfoot [1828-1889]1895:27; Colin J. Hemer [1930-1987] 1989:119; Roy B. Zuck [1932-2013] 1998:22). However, there are several reasons to doubt this viewpoint...Paul spent his childhood in Jerusalem not Tarsus...In relation to this Brian Raspke [b. 1952] says: “Trying to connect Paul with Tarsus/Cilicia in this way is irrelevant. He moved to Jerusalem while still very young...The fact that the same occupation is ascribed to Aquila and Priscilla though they are from Pontus shows the link to be unnecessary” (1994:107). Also, it is misleading to associate Paul with cilicium. This material, which derived it name from the province of Cilicia, was “a coarse cloth woven from goats’ hair” (Wilhelm Michaelis [1896-1965] 1971:394). It was used in the production of tent-fabric and carpets (Michaelis 1971:394). Because weaving was an occupation reserved for women, Jewish men who undertook this trade were disqualified from the priesthood and even despised (Michaelis 1971:394; W. Hulitt Gloer [b. 1950] 1988:792; Raspke 1994:107). “It is therefore highly improbable that Paul would have chosen to be, or have been trained as, a weaver by profession” (Rapske 1994:107). Thus, “The thesis that Paul wove tentcloth from the goats’ hair...should once and for all be dropped” (Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1980:66). (Little, Mission in the Way of Paul: Biblical Mission for the Church in the Twenty-First Century, 27)
Ernest Haenchen (1894-1975) concurs:
It was natural to conjecture that Paul in his homeland had learned the weaving of cilicium as a trade. But cilicium served neither exclusively nor particularly for tents; they were rather made chiefly from leather: Theodor Zahn [1838-1933] 633. We must with Joachim Jeremias [1900-1979] (Zeitschrift für die Neutestamentliche Wissenschaft 30 (1931), 299) understand by σκηνποιός a leather-worker. This was already the explanation of the ancients with their explanation σκυτοτόμος (Rufinus [340-410], probably after Origen [184-253]) and σκηνοράψος (John Chrystostom [347-407]): Zahn 632, n. 10. (Haenchen, The Acts of the Apostles: A Commentary, 534)
The weaver’s tools would likely be too cumbersome to transport for a persistent traveler such as Paul. Brian M. Raspke (b. 1952) scrutinizes:
If Paul’s overland journeys were generally undertaken on foot, the recently popular explanation of Acts 18:3,that Paul was a weaver of tentcloth made from goats hair or linen, whatever its other problems, is rendered even less probable. Such an occupation, requiring tools and equipment inconvenient in size, weight and shape, is hardly in keeping with the impression in Acts of a highly mobile Paul — even less so a pedestrian like Paul. The maker/repairer of tents and other leather products, carrying his bag of cutting tools, awls, sharpening stone and such, presents a more consistent and more credible picture. (David W. J. Gill [b. 1946] and Conrad Gempf [b. 1955], “Acts, Travel and Shipwreck”, The Book of Acts in Its First Century Setting: Graeco-Roman Setting, 7)
The most prevalent theory identifies Paul as a leather worker (Acs 18:3). Brian Raspke (b. 1952) argues:
Acts...affirms that he [Paul] plied a trade (Acts 20:33-35) and specifies that he was a σκηνοποιοὶς (Acts 18:3). This term, appearing only this once in the New Testament, is also rare in non-New Testament sources. Wilhelm Michaelis [1896-1965] writes: “...one cannot rule out the possibility that σκηνοποιοὶς is used for the trade of “tent-maker.” For one thing this meaning is wholly within the range allowed by the etymology and it is indeed the most natural, since a construct with -ποιοὶς can hardly denote a casual and not a permanent activity.”...It seems best to understand that Paul was a leather-worker. First, tents during the period with which we are concerned were usually made of leather and not textiles. Second, the earliest versional renderings noted above by and large presume that Paul’s trade, whatever it actually entailed, had something to do with working leather. Third, while tanning was considered an unclean trade, no stigma attached to the Jew who worked already-prepared leather. Finally, the tools needed to work leather, certainly less onerous a burden to carry from place to place than weaver’s equipment, lend themselves well to the picture of Paul found in Acts. We may cite Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944]’s comments in summary: “Leatherworking, then, was Paul’s trade; the specialized title ‘tentmaker’ reflects a widespread tendency among artisans to use specialized titles, even though they made more products than their titles would suggest. We must thus picture Paul as making tents and other products of leather.” (Rapske, The Book of Acts in its First Century Setting: Paul in Roman Custody, 106-08)
Christopher R. Little (b. 1959) bolsters:
Paul is reported to have been a “σκηνοποιός.” This term, translated as “tent-maker” (Acts 18:3), is best rendered “leather-worker” (Wilhelm Michaelis [1896-1965] 1971:394). The testimony of early church fathers confirms the view “that Paul was a leatherworker of some sort” (W. Hulitt Gloer [b. 1950] 1988:792). Leatherworkers produced a wide variety of good from leather, not just tents (Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1980:21; Gloer 1988:792). According to Ronald Hock: “Leatherworking involved two essential tasks: cutting the leather, which required round-edge and straight-edge knives; and sewing the leather, which required various awls” (1980:24). Hence, Paul is more accurately described as a “leatherworker” who carried the easily portable tools of his trade during his missionary travels in order to sustain himself (Hock 1980:25; Brian Raspke [b. 1952] 1994:107). (Little, Mission in the Way of Paul: Biblical Mission for the Church in the Twenty-First Century, 27)
This task required arduous labor if not skill. Marie Noël Keller (b. 1943) describes:
Today most scholars think all three missionaries worked with leather, and they picture the three of them working for long hours, bent forward on a stool by a workbench. All that was needed was a set of basic tools, which included round-edge and straight-edge knives to cut the leather and awls, needles, and thread to sew it. So little was necessary, it made “tenting” a portable thriving trade. Indeed, Acts 28:30 may even imply Paul worked when he was in custody in Rome. More onerous was the abundance of strength and patience that were also needed, for as Paul later comments, “We grow weary from the work of our own hands” (I Corinthians 4:12 NRSV). (Keller, Priscilla and Aquila: Paul’s Coworkers in Christ Jesus, 15)
An advantage to leather working is that the trade was in steady demand during Paul’s lifetime. Jerome Murphy-O’Connor (b. 1935) enlightens:
In cities several types of awning were in demand. They all involved sewing strips of canvas of various weights together. Those in sailcloth shading the theatre and forum could be moved backwards and forwards on guy wires. The courtyards of private houses had to be protected from the summer sun. Inscribed awnings both advertised and shaded shop fronts. Those who went to the beach used linen pavilions to provide shade without impeding the cooling breezes...The market for tents in the strict sense was also far from negligible. Inns needed them to accommodate overflow customers, which occurred on the occasion of great festivals. Shrewd travellers took the precaution of providing themselves with tents in case an accident should prevent them from reaching an inn at night. If they planned to travel any distance by boat, tents were indispensable. There were no ferries, and cargo boats had no cabins. Without tent deck passengers could not protect themselves from sun or spray, and had nowhere to sleep when the ship docked at nightfall...Every town with a temple had its festival, when traders erected their leather or canvas booths around the sanctuary...Minor repairs were also a valuable source of income...Paul had chosen to arm himself with a skill that virtually guaranteed him jobs on every road he walked and on every sea he sailed. (Murphy-O’Connor, Paul: His Story, 29-30)
This demand might have been especially high in Corinth. David W. J. Gill (b. 1946) reveals:
If Paul stayed in Corinth for eighteen months (Acts 18:11) and was present during the governorship of Gallio [Acts 18:12, 14, 17], one of the events he would have witnessed would have been the biennial agonistic festival held at nearby Isthmia and which was the responsibility of the colony. This festival was linked to the sanctuary of Poseidon where the temple was refurbished in the early days of the colony with its interior being partly revetted in marble. Oscar Broneer [1894-1992] has suggested that as Aquila and Priscilla were tentmakers or σκηνοπιοι (Acts 18:3), they may been involved with the making of awnings or skenai for the festival of Isthmia which would have been held in April-May 51. Certainly this is an attractive possibility, though they could have been making skenai for the theatre and other such areas at Corinth itself. (Gill and Conrad Gempf [b. 1955], “Achaia”, The Book of Acts in Its First Century Setting: Graeco-Roman Setting, 452)
There are many advantages that accompany Paul’s selection of this particular trade. Jerome Murphy-O’Connor (b. 1935) evaluates:
To us this seems a rather bizarre choice. Paul exercised his ministry in an urban environment, and what need have city dwellers of tents? From a first-century perspective, however, it was a very clever decision...The skill involved was minimal, so was quickly learned. It was essentially the ability to cut and shape lengths of leather and canvas, and then to sew them together with a neat turned-over seam. The tools were simple and light. Paul needed a half-moon knife to cut heavy leather of canvas, an awl to make the holes to take the waxed thread, and curved needles. The lot fitted neatly into a small wallet. Exercise of this trade developed muscular shoulders and strong calloused hands. The stitch was set by a sudden outward jerk of both hands into which the thread bit. Little wonder that Paul could write only with awkward large letters (Galatians 6:11)—a sign that he had plenty of work. (Murphy-O’Connor, Paul: His Story, 29)
Some have seen some symbolic connection associated with Paul’s secular trade (Acts 18:3). Bernard Aubert (b. 1972) bridges:
Paul’s occupation as a tentmaker is relevant to the issue of his relationship to the countryside. Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] argues that Paul’s occupation as a tentmaker indicates his willingness to lower himself on the social scale. In the context of the city, Paul’s manual labor corresponds to the labors of shepherds. Consequently, there is a loose correlation between Paul’s occupation (Acts 20:34) and the servant-shepherding ministry (Acts 20:19, 28). More importantly, whether “tentmaking” (Acts 18:3) refers to work with “goats’ hair” (cilicium) or “leatherworking,” Paul was working with material from flocks. Thus Paul in his trade, must have been at least indirectly connected with herdsmen responsible for raising animals. (Aubert, The Shepherd-Flock Motif in the Miletus Discourse (Acts 20:17-38) Against Its Historical Background, 46)
Robert Wall (b. 1947) consociates:
There are a few intriguing allusions to the first part of the Amos citation [Amos 9:11-12] (Acts 15:16) that facilitate a more reflexive reading between the two. For example, the promise the God ‘will rebuild the tent (σκηνήν) of David’ is picked up in Acts 18:3 where Paul’s occupation is described as a ‘tentmaker’ (σκηνοποιός). The irony of this narrative detail is clear: Paul is actually God’s appointed ‘tentmaker’ by whose Gentile mission the Davidic/Messianic kingdom is reconstituted and restored according to Scripture (cf., Acts 1:6). (I. Howard Marshall [b. 1934] and David G. Peterson [b. 1944)], “Israel and the Gentile Mission in Acts and Paul: A Canonical Approach”, Witness to the Gospel: The Theology of Acts, 450)
The Bible does not state how Paul acquires his vocational skill. Two primary explanations have been offered. Gerd Lüdemann (b. 1946) supplies:
Paul’s activity as a tentmaker or leatherworker (Acts 18:3; cf. I Thessalonians 2:9; I Corinthians 4:12, 9:6-18, etc.) either derives from the rabbinical custom of learning a trade or stems from a familial context, likely from his father. If the latter is true, “Paul’s family may have acted in accordance with specifically Jewish prescriptions, but we need to realize that the plausibility structure for their action extended far beyond the Jewish community.” (Lüdemann, Paul: The Founder of Christianity, 94)
Christopher R. Little (b. 1959) details:
There is a difference of opinion on how Paul would have acquired his trade in Jerusalem (W. Hulitt Gloer [b. 1950] 1988:792). Some assert that Paul obtained it during his studies under Gamaliel in connection with the Rabbinic injunction to combine the study and teaching of the Torah with the practice of a trade (Joachim Jeremias [1900-1979] 1969:112-13; Martin Hengel [1926-2009] 1991:16; Brian Raspke [b. 1952] 1004:107). However, Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] contends that “the ideal of combining Torah and a trade is difficult to establish much earlier than the middle of the second century A.D., that is, long after Paul” (1980:22; cf. Jerome Murphy-O’Connor [b. 1935] 1996:86). Others believe that “since it was a general rule that the son followed the trade of his father” (Franz Delitzsch [1813-1890] 1883:81), it is best to see Paul coming form a long line of leatherworkers (Richard Wallace [b. 1941] and Wynne Williams [b. 1941] 1998:140). In this fashion, Paul’s profession would have been passed on to him by his father (W.C. Van Unnik [1910-1978] 1973:300; Gloer 1988:792) in accordance with the common maxim of the day: “Whoever does not teach his son a craft teaches him to be a robber” (Arthur T. Geoghegan [1914-2006] 1945:108). Even though there is disagreement on the manner in which Paul obtained his trade, the reasons for which he was taught it are quite clear. (Little, Mission in the Way of Paul: Biblical Mission for the Church in the Twenty-First Century, 28)
Traditionally Paul’s tentmaking is consider a product of his religious training. F.F. Bruce (1910-1990) educates:
Paul’s maintaining himself by his own manual work is traditionally illustrated by the rabbinical insistence that religious instruction should be gratuitous (cf. Pirqê ’Abôt 4.7: “Rabbi Zadok [first century] said, ‘...Make not of the Torah a crown with which to aggrandize thyself, nor a spade with which to dig.’ So also used Hillel [110 BE-10 CE] to say, ‘He who makes a worldly use of the crown of the Torah shall waste away.’ Hence thou mayest infer that whosoever derives a profit for himself from the words of the Torah is helping on his own destruction”). A later teacher, Gamaliel III [third century CE], said that the study of the Torah was excellent if combined with a secular occupation (Pirqê ’Abôt 2.2). Greek culture, by contrast, tended to despise manual labor; an exception is presented by scientific writers, who speak respectfully of τεχνιται. Loveday C.A. Alexander finds in the attitude of scientific writers a possible background for Luke’s totally matter-of-fact record of Paul’s practice her (“Luke’s Preface in the Context of Greek Preface-Writing,” Novum Testamentum, pp. 48-74, especially p. 70). Cf. Acts 20:34, and Paul’s reference to his policy in I Thessalonians 2:9; I Corinthians 9:12b-18; II Corinthians 11:7-12. (Bruce, The Acts of the Apostles: The Greek Text with Introduction and Commentary, 391-92)
Lee Martin McDonald (b. 1942) interjects:
In the Mishnah, a Rabban Gamaliel [third century], son of Rabbi Judah the Patriarch, says: “Excellent is study of the Law together with worldly occupation, for toil in them both puts sin out of mind. But all study of the Law without labour comes to naught at the last and brings sin in its train. And let all them that labour with the congregation labour with them for the sake of heaven, for the merit of their fathers supports them and their righteousness endures for ever (m. Aboth 2.2, Herbert Danby [1889-1953] translation)...Similar attitudes were found among the Greeks and those philosophers who also worked with their hands were praised. The practical Stoic philosopher Epictetus (ca. 54-120 A.D.) admonished all in his guild to combine their scholarly activity with practical work. Showing his disdain for those who refused to work with their hands he concludes that they, “have only to learn the life of healthy men—how the slaves live, the workmen, the genuine philosophers, how Socrates [470-399 BCE] lived—he too with a wife and children—how Diogenes [412-323 BCE] lived, how Cleanthes [331-232 BCE], who combined going to school with pumping water. If this is what you want, you will have it everywhere, and will live with full confidence” (Discourses 3.26.23-24, Loeb Classical Library). He goes on to ask why those in his guild have made themselves so useless that no one would take them in. (Discourses 3.26.23-24, Loeb Classical Library). (Craig A. Evans [b. 1952], Acts—Philemon (Bible Knowledge Background Commentary), 125-26)
Ernest Haenchen (1894-1975) objects:
At this juncture it is usually pointed out...that the Rabbis were in the habit of learning a trade. But Paul was not a Rabbi and also did not want to imitate the Rabbis: Alfred Loisy [1857-1940] 689. (Haenchen, The Acts of the Apostles: A Commentary, 534)
Sadami Takayama (b. 1955) exposes:
In Jewish tradition any occupation was considered to be a distraction from the study of the Law. All the evidence of rabbis practising trades originates in the post-AD 70 period when conditions in Jerusalem had starkly changed. The rabbis had to support themselves by working and this necessity created a maxim, “All study of Law without (worldly) labour comes to naught at the last and brings sin in its train. (Takayama, Shinran [1173-1263]’s Conversion in the Light of Paul's Conversion, 159)
Paul’s performing manual labor is a far cry from his intellectualizing with philosophers in Athens seen in the previous pericope (Acts 17:16-34). There has been much discussion regarding the perception Paul would have accrued working as a secular artisan.

Marianne Palmer Bonz (b. 1942) reports:

As Richard I. Pervo [b. 1942] has so eloquently observed, it is absurd to claim (as Luke does) that Paul was a tentmaker who somehow gained the favor of Ephesian Asiarchs (Profit with Delight: The Literary Genre of the Acts of the Apostles [Philadelphia: Fortress Press, 1987], 10). (Bonz, The Past as Legacy: Luke-Acts and Ancient Epic, 169)

David G. Peterson (b. 1944) investigates:

F.F. Bruce [1910-1990], 391-92, supports the view that Luke’s background is that of the Greek scientific writers who were more respectful of manual labourers. However, Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944], The Social Context of Paul’s Ministry: Tentmaking and Apostleship, 36, argues that tentmakers belonged to a class of humble artisans who were looked down upon by aristocrats and some leisured intellectuals. Hock, 42, discusses the workshop as a social setting for Paul’s missionary preaching, but Bradley Blue [b. 1960], ‘Acts and the House Church’, in David W. J. Gill [b. 1946] and Conrad Gempf [b. 1955], The Book of Acts in Its Graeco-Roman Setting, 172-77, argues for the household as the standard base for ministry outside the synagogue. Cf. Hock, ‘Paul’s Tentmaking and the Problem of his Social Class’, Journal of Biblical Literature 97 (1978), 555-64...Jewish tradition encouraged rabbis to support themselves with some other occupation, while giving religious instruction (cf. Pirke ’Aboth 2,2, 4.7). Greek culture, however, tended to despise manual labour, which makes Luke’s matter-of-fact record of Paul’s practice...unusual. ‘By lodging with an artisan couple and, beyond that, actually joining them in their trade, Paul suddenly appears no longer as the rising star among noble ladies and gentlemen and lofty academicians.’ In his farewell speech to the Ephesian elders, Paul makes much of the fact that he worked with his own hands, to support himself and his companions, while engaging in ministry (Acts 20:33-35). Although he urged Christians to share all good things with those who taught them (Galatians 6:6). Paul did not normally avail himself to such rights (I Corinthians 9:3-18). Two reasons are given in Acts 20:33-35 for what we know to have been his practice in Ephesus, Thessalonica (I Thessalonians 2:3-9; II Thessalonians 3:6-8), and Corinth (I Corinthians 4:12, 9:6; II Corinthians 11:7). Negatively, Paul sought to avoid any hint of covetousness. Positively, he was determined to help ‘the weak’, inspired by an otherwise unrecorded saying of Jesus about the blessedness of giving instead of receiving [Acts 20:35]. Paul’s behaviour thus reflected his trust in God and God’s generosity to his people, demonstrating two important aspects of the message he preached. (Peterson, The Acts of the Apostles (Pillar New Testament Commentary), 508-09)
F. Scott Spencer (b. 1956) delineates:
To determine the position of Priscilla, Aquila and Paul in Corinthian society, we must understand the nature and status of their ‘tentmaking’ trade. The main skills associated with the craft involved the cutting and stitching of leather material with specially designed knives and awls. It was hard work, demanding long hours hunched over a workbench to make ends meet. As for their social position, Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] has demonstrated that tentmakers belonged to a class of humble artisans clustered in the marketplace who were looked down upon by aristocrats and some leisured intellectuals...“Stigmatized as slavish, uneducated, and often useless, artisans [like tentmakers], to judge from scattered references, were frequently reviled or abused, often victimized, seldom if ever invited to dinner, never accorded status, and even excluded from one Stoic utopia (Hock, 36)”...By lodging with an artisan couple and, beyond that, actually joining in their trade, Paul suddenly appears no longer as the rising star among noble ladies and gentlemen and lofty academicians. Rather, he restores his links with lowly cloth-handlers, like Lydia (cf. Acts 16:13-15), and builds new tie with the rabble of market laborers (agoraioi) who previously were turned against him (cf. Acts 17:4-5)...It is thus becoming increasingly difficult to construct a consistent portrait of Paul’s social identity in Acts. We seem to be facing a more idealistic than realistic image of the great missionary as a kind of ‘everyman’, able to span the spectrum of human society. It is, nonetheless, an image in keeping with one who himself claimed in correspondence with the Corinthians: ‘I have become all things to all people, that I might by all means save some’ (I Corinthians 9:22; cf. I Corinthians 9:19-23). (Spencer, Acts (Readings: A New Biblical Commentary), 178-79)
Paul’s willingness to perform manual labor has called his social standing and background into question. Christopher R. Little (b. 1959) inquires:
Church fathers such as John Chrystostom [347-407], Gregory of Nyssa [335-394], and Theodoret [393-457] believed that Paul, in view of his labor-intensive lifestyle as a leatherworker, fell among the lower social levels of the first-century world (Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1978:556). Adolf Deissmann [1866-1937] renewed this position in the modern era by postulating that Paul “came from the unliterary lower classes and remained one of them...[H]e belongs far more to the middle and lower classes than to the upper class...[And] to the great mass of the weary and heavy-laden” (1926:48, 51, 74). However, in rejection of this hypothesis, a new consensus has emerged in contemporary scholarship regarding Paul’s place in ancient society. This place can be ascertained by examining his social status, his education, and his wealth. (Little, Mission in the Way of Paul: Biblical Mission for the Church in the Twenty-First Century, 7)
Craig L. Blomberg (b. 1955) inspects:
From his autobiographical remarks in the epistles and from the data of Acts, we learn that Paul’s own socio-economic background seems to have been relatively prosperous, at least by ancient standards. Tutored in Jerusalem under the rabbi Gamaliel (Acts 22:3), after a probable elementary-school education in Tarsus, a centre of Greek culture, Paul would have been among the top few percent in his society in terms of level of education. He also had training in leather-working, of which tent-making was one common application (Acts 18:3). As one who inherited Roman citizenship from his father, he also would have been among just a handful of non-Romans in the empire with this privilege (Acts 22:28). Gillian Clark (1985:111) concludes, ‘The chances are that Paul, though prepared for the sake of the gospel to identify himself with the artisans, was at home in the more prosperous levels of society.’ Nils Dahl [1911-2001] (1977:35) occurs, adding that Paul probably came from a rather well-to-do family. (Blomberg, Neither Poverty Nor Riches: A Biblical Theology of Possessions, 177)
Ryan S. Schellenberg considers:
Luke’s Paul is evidently a man of elevated status: he is always aristocratically self-possessed; he comfortably converses with the likes of Felix and Festus [Acts 24:10-23, 25:6-12]; he capably addresses the Athenians in the Areopagus (Acts 17:16-34). Such a man could only have been a tentmaker incidentally. And, indeed, this is precisely how Luke, like many subsequent biographers, deals with Paul’s labor: he mentions it in passing (Acts 18:3). (Schellenberg, Rethinking Paul’s Rhetorical Education: Comparative Rhetoric and 2 Corinthians 10-13, 20-21)
Ben Witherington III (b. 1951) illuminates:
Some Cynic philosophers were known to frequent workshops, and so even when Paul did practice his trade, it would not necessarily have sent the signal that he was a person of low social status. Martin Hengel [1926-2009] makes reference to a man named Isaac, a linen merchant from Tarsus who was an elder in the Jewish community in Jaffa. He was, in short, a relatively high-status person in his own community, yet like Paul he was not reluctant to practice a trade—indeed, his work is proudly mentioned on this tombstone! But also like Paul, Isaac had lived in more than one social world, and while he may have had high status in the microcosmic Jewish community in Tarsus and in the Holy Land, elsewhere he would have been seen as a Jew and an artisan, which in the anti-Semitic environment of the Roman Empire would have represented two strikes against him. (Witherington, The Paul Quest: The Renewed Search for the Jew of Tarsus, 129)
John B. Polhill (b. 1939) footnotes:
Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] notes that Paul’s references to his work by such terms as “enslaved” (see I Corinthians 9:19) and “demeaning myself” (see II Corinthians 11:7) and being “a spectacle to the world” (see I Corinthians 4:9, 12) reflect a decidedly upper-class attitude toward work and may, along with Roman citizenship, indicate his coming from a higher social level (“Paul’s Tentmaking and the Problem of his Social Class,” Journal of Biblical Literature 97 [1978], pp. 555-64). (Pohill, Acts (New American Commentary), 381)
While his social standing is debated, Acts certainly presents Paul as being self sufficient. Thomas E. Phillips characterizes:
Although Paul’s hosts in Corinth, Aquila and Priscilla, are said to share a common vocation with him, Acts never records any of Paul’s traveling companions engaging in labor of any kind. Barnabas, Paul’s traveling companion in Acts 13:2-15:39, may have been independently wealthy [Acts 4:36-37], but according to Acts, Paul provided economic support for his later traveling companions, including Silas, Timothy, and the narrator of Acts. The Paul of Acts is a tentmaker who takes pride not only in the financial independence that the revenue from his labor provides [Acts 18:3], but also in his ability to support his fellow missionaries and the poor within the community [Acts 20:33-35]. The Paul of Acts experiences shipwrecks [Acts 27:27-44], beatings [Acts 16:22], and persecution, but he does not experience unaddressed physical needs for food, clothing, or shelter. In fact, the Paul of Acts has sufficient resources that he can claim to “give” rather than “receive” (Acts 20:35)...In Acts, Paul, the tentmaker and Christian missionary, is a hardworking and generous artisan. In fact, the degree of Paul’s generosity is somewhat surprising for a mere artisan in the Greco-Roman world. Not only can Paul support his fellow missionaries, but upon his arrival in Jerusalem, James assumes that Paul can afford to pay the expenses associated with the fulfillment of a vow for himself and four other persons (Acts 21:23-24), and the governor Felix assumes that Paul could afford to offer him a bribe for his freedom (Acts 24:26). Paul’s apparently flush financial situation in Acts is hardly consistent with the resources typically derived from work as an artisan, a fact that has caused some interpreters to speculate that the Paul of Acts had benefited from inherited wealth. (Phillips, Paul, His Letters, and Acts, 115-16)
While there has been some discussion about how Paul’s day job would have been perceived, it cannot be denied that he is proud of his labor (Acts 20:33-35). He owns it. He knows who he is: Paul is a worker.

The fact that Paul works may be more important than the specific job he holds. Despite being stated so incidentally, it is remarkable that Acts presents one of its leading figures engaging in manual labor (Acts 18:3).

Loveday Alexander divulges:

Celsus [second century]’s complaint about the Christians in the second century includes the fact that they meet in ‘cobblers’ shops and fullers’ shops’, and Tertullian [160-225] lists a wide variety of crafts practised by Christians (and causing problems of conscience) including those of plasterers, painters, marble masons and bronze-workers. Luke’s own narrative features a number of craftsmen and women in leading roles: Aquila and Priscilla, Lydia and Paul himself are presented as artisans or traders (Acts 16:14, 18:1-3)...For Luke, as much as for the other evangelists, Jesus the carpenter’s son and Paul the leather-worker figure without a trace of irony as actors in and mediators of events of world-shattering religious significance. (Alexander, The Preface to Luke’s Gospel: Literary Convention and Social Context in Luke 1:1-14 and Acts 1:1, 177)
The tentmaker becomes a world maker (Acts 18:3). In Christianity, all have a chance to serve and perform great works regardless of social standing.

Which bonds Paul and Aquila and Priscilla more, shared religious beliefs or mutual work (Acts 18:2-3)? Where have you seen similar artisans working in close proximity? In today’s world, is it natural to bond with people of the same trade? Who are you closer to, fellow church members or your coworkers? What is Paul’s motivation for performing manual labor; is it out of financial necessity, to correct a perceived problem in his ministry, both or neither? How many of the ideas from Paul’s Jewish education did he retain after he accepted Jesus? In what ways is Paul a model for contemporary tentmakers?

Many have imagined Paul conducting workplace evangelism while Paul “moonlights” as a tentmaker. William J. Larkin (1945-2014) speculates:

Paul engaged in leatherworking to offer his gospel without charge and model a good work ethic (Acts 20:34-35; I Corinthians 4:12, 9:15, 18; I Thessalonians 2:9; II Thessalonians 3:8). He probably used his workshop as a place of witness, as some Greek philosophers used theirs as a teaching venue (Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] 1979). His departure from the workshop and exclusive devotion to preaching after Timothy and Silas’s arrival from Macedonia probably shows that he did not view his leatherworking as essential to his evangelism strategy (Acts 18:5). (Larkin, Acts (IVP New Testament Commentary Series), 263)
Ronald J. Allen (b. 1949) agrees:
Priscilla, Aquila, and Paul are, evidently, all tentmakers [Acts 18:2-3]... They worked in the marketplace. People often came to the market place to discuss philosophy in the stalls operated by workers. The detail that Paul was a tentmaker helps explain how the missionary financed the mission and also how he witnessed in the marketplace. (Allen, Acts of the Apostles (Fortress Biblical Preaching Commentaries), 143)
Grace Preedy Barnes (b. 1938) discusses:
While the reader might assume that Paul roved about looking for people to argue with (Acts 18:4), archaeology reveals that tentmaking stalls tended to be in or near markets in Corinth, allowing ample opportunity for Paul to engage with those who passed by or sought to do business. Thus Paul probably shared his faith naturally while at work. This suggests another emerging principle: All work is sacred if done unto the Lord and for God’s purposes in this world. (Robert L. Gallagher [b. 1949] and Paul Hertig [b. 1955], “The Art of Finishing Well: Paul as Servant Leader, Acts 18:1-28 and Acts 20:17-38”, Mission in Acts: Ancient Narratives in Contemporary Context, 242)
William H. Willimon (b. 1946) preaches:
From Athens Paul journeys to another great city of Greece—Corinth, where he is the guest of two Jewish refugees from Rome, Aquila and Priscilla [Acts 18:2-3]...While in their home, Paul practices his tentmaking trade (Acts 18:3, cf. I Thessalonians 2:9; II Thessalonians 3:7-8), though his work does not hinder his preaching in the Corinthian synagogue (Acts 18:4), particularly after the arrival of Silas and Timothy (with a gift? II Corinthians 11:9; Philippians 4:15). Paul regards his tentmaking work as an opportunity for evangelization: “...You remember, brothers, our work and toil. It was while we were laboring day and night, in order not to burden any of you, that we proclaimed to you the gospel of God” (I Thessalonians 2:9; author’s translation). Christian witness is not only for the synagogue or place of Sunday worship. (Willimon, Acts (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Teaching and Preaching), 145)
It is entirely possible that the two buildings where Paul worked and taught were one and the same, particularly if Aquila and Priscilla hosted a house church (Romans 16:3-5). John B. Polhill (b. 1939) reports:
Paul...may have witnessed in the context of the workshop as he pursued his tent-making trade. Homes were often connected with shops. Paul thus may have lodged, witnessed, and worked all in the same place when he took up with Aquila and Priscilla at Corinth (Acts 18:3). (Polhill, Paul and His Letters, 99)
Bradley Blue (b. 1960) rejects:
Ronald F. Hock [b. 1944] attempted to demonstrate that a shop such as the one Paul would have shared with Aquila ‘...was recognized as a conventional social setting for intellectual discourse’ and would have been suitable for Paul’s missionary purposes as an Artisan-Missionary. Paul, however, seems to have preferred the local synagogue or a publicly recognized location which was used exclusively for the purpose of preaching. (David W. J. Gill [b. 1946] and Conrad Gempf [b. 1955], “Acts and the House Church”, The Book of Acts in Its First Century Setting: Graeco-Roman Setting, 172-73)
Paul’s ministry may have benefited from his trade. Tentmaking gives Paul an “in” with the Corinthian society. There are certainly financial benefits; tent makers are rent makers. He may also have used his business experience in operating his mission.

Loveday Alexander conjectures:

Paul’s own ability to deploy a complex network of co-workers may well owe something to his business experience. Travelling artisans had a recognized place in the life of the city, without the special privileges of citizens but accepted (and taxed) as resident aliens. The workshop of Aquila and Priscilla provides a long-term base for Paul’s operations, and solves the problem he had experienced in Philippi, Thessalonica and Athens. No one could just turn up in a Greek city (especially if it’s also a Roman colony) and start preaching, but the shopfront of a typical workshop, opening directly onto the marketplace, could provide an ideal location for engaging in conversation with passers-by. The shop also gave Paul financial independence, something that was to prove useful in later years in his somewhat stormy relationship with his Corinthian hosts (see I Corinthians 9:6). (Alexander, Acts (Daily Bible Commentary: A Guide for Reflection and Prayer), 138)
Paul’s day job also gives him a connection to the working class. Daniel R. Langton discloses:
Shalom Asch [1880-1957]’s Saul is described as ‘all motion and restlessness, as if in his veins ran quicksilver instead of blood,’ an ascetic firebrand who fasts frequently, has taken a vow of chastity, and provokes both admiration and concern for his uncompromising religious fervour...A student of the great Pharisaic authority, Gamaliel the Elder [Acts 5:34], Paul has trouble keeping up with the rabbinic curriculum, not because of any innate inability but because of his determination to follow the rabbinic ideal of learning a trade, which for Saul was tent-making. For Asch, this dedication to an occupation not only gave Saul financial security, reflecting the man’s independent streak, but also provided an opportunity to suggest that, in contrast to other Pharisaic students, Saul learned the ways of life not from legal theory but by contact with reality, with the poor and oppressed of first-century Palestinian society. In contrast to the yeshiva students, then, ‘The young man Saul knew the meaning of life.’ (Langton, “The Novels of Shalom Asch and Samuel Sandmel [1911-1979]”, The Apostle Paul in the Jewish Imagination: A Study in Modern Jewish-Christian Relations, 213)
Bruce Larson (1925-2008) confesses:
Paul sits eight or ten hours a day sewing tents, and by night he continues to be the world’s most exciting evangelist and preacher. I think the Holy Spirit wants that same rhythm for all of us. It’s a strange thing for a preacher to say, but I confess I’m a little suspicious of the religious professionals. It’s a somewhat lopsided focus. It seems to me much healthier to have a job out there in the real world. We need the rhythm of life—prayer and play, work and worship. (Larson, Wind & Fire: Living Out the Book of Acts, 128)
Paul’s experience in Corinth has coined the modern term “tentmaking” as a synonym for bivocational ministry (Acts 18:3). John R.W. Stott (1921-2011) familiarizes:
‘Tentmaking ministries’ have rightly become popular in our day. The expression describes cross-cultural messengers of the gospel, who support themselves by their own professional or business expertise, while at the same time being involved in mission. Dr. J. Christy Wilson, Jr. [1921-1999] has written about it in his book Today’s Tentmakers. The principle of self-support is the same, and the desire not to burden the churches, but the main motivation is different, namely that this may be the only way for Christians to enter those countries which do not grant visas to self-styled ‘missionaries’. (Stott, The Message of Acts (Bible Speaks Today), 297)
William J. Larkin (1945-2014) apprises:
Today “tentmaker” missionaries enter “creative access” countries through secular employment when there is no way to enter as a full-time missionary. If they keep Paul’s motives in mind, they will be able to see their bivocationalism as beneficial to the spiritual health of churches they plant. Not only will they model a work ethic that is essential to sanctification, but they will avoid creating wrongful dependency, for they will be offering the gospel of grace “free of charge.” (Larkin, Acts (IVP New Testament Commentary Series), 263-64)
Ajith Fernando (b. 1948) notes:
There has been a surge of interest in tentmaking ministry over the past two decades. Situations today may require tentmakers for the same two reasons that Paul had: economic necessity and credibility. In certain situations, where there is no trust yet concerning the Christian workers, it may be best for them not to take support from the people to whom they minister (cf. I Corinthians 9:1-27). Sometimes a work cannot afford to support a worker. This is true of churches in poorer areas and in predominantly in non-Christian cultures...Tentmakers bring great enrichment to a ministerial team in that they have much more intimate contact with the world, which can enhance the team’s relevance and impact on the culture. Ruth Siemens [1925-2005] writes, “The secular job is not an inconvenience, but the God-given context in which tentmakers live out the gospel in a winsome, wholesome, non-judgmental way, demonstrating personal integrity, doing quality work and developing caring relationships.”...It is on the mission field that tentmaking is becoming most valuable. In fact Ruth Siemens feels that the international job market, a key feature in today’s business world, “is an argument for tentmaking because it does not exist by accident, but by God’s design.” She describes it as God’s “‘repopulation program,’ transferring millions of hard-to-reach people into freer countries (Turks to Germany, Algerians to France, Kurds to Austria, etc.), and opening doors for Christians in hard-to-enter countries—so that many can hear the gospel!”...When challenging Christians to missions, which we should all be doing, we can also place before them the possibility of going as tentmakers to needy places. (Fernando, Acts (NIV Application Commentary), 498-99)
The efficacy of tentmaking is not universally accepted. Kenneth O. Gangel (1935-2009) notifies:
The wisdom of the ages haunts us today. Many teachers still wonder whether one can make a living at such a task, and many college and seminary students struggle with the potential of “tentmaking” as a means of ministry...In today’s selfish society, such a practice runs against the grain, but we cannot escape its biblical precedent, not only in Paul who apparently practiced it part-time with the primary focus on preaching, but also in Priscilla and Aquila who never left their full-time work to carry out vocational ministry. A major principle surfaces here: there is no secular duty for a Christian; everything we take on, from changing diapers to governing a state, becomes a form of service to Christ (Colossians 3:23-25). (Gangel, Acts (Holman New Testament Commentary), 303)
Definitions of modern tentmaking range in scope. Patrick Lai surveys:
Ed Van Baak [1926-2007]...gives the most common definition of a tentmaker when he writes,”A tentmaker is a missionary in terms of commitment, but is fully self-supporting.” Don Hamilton [b. 1921], in his book Tentmakers Speak, defines a tentmaker as “a Christian who works in a cross-cultural situation, is recognized by members of the host culture as something other than a religious professional, and yet, in terms of his or her commitment, calling, motivation, and training, is a missionary in every way”...Richard Chia puts forward one of the more concise definitions befitting those working in restricted access nations. He sees a tentmaker as, “One who has a calling for full-time missionary service but is unable to enter a country of choice because of restrictions. One whose primary purpose is to do full-time missionary work but because of restrictions has to modify his mode of service.” Ruth Siemens [1925-2005] adds clarity to our understanding in pointing out that “tentmaking cannot be equated with lay ministry because it is a missionary mode, a missions strategy. But some of Paul’s principles are equally applicable to lay ministry.” (Lai, Tentmaking: The Life and Work of Business as Missions, 11-12)
There are different types of tentmakers. Patrick Lai delineates:
Greg Livingstone [b. 1940], the director emeritus of Frontiers, suggests that there are three types of tentmakers: job takers, job makers, and job fakers. Job takers work for national and international companies...Job makers are workers who set up their own businesses, offer social services for nationals or open schools...Job fakers find some legal way to get a resident visa that keeps them free enough to be fully involved in proclamation and discipleship of new believers. Job fakers, like regular missionaries, are supported by their home churches. (Lai, Tentmaking: The Life and Work of Business as Missions, 12)
As in Paul’s day there are advantages to modern tentmaking. Tetsunao Yamamori (b. 1937) catalogs:
Likelihood of being a “tentmaker” (Acts 18:3) would...give the Envoy less time for evangelizing. But it would also produce important benefits. First, the Envoy’s mission activities would be untraceable, since there would be no sending body. Second, the Envoy’s passport profession would create natural working opportunities for witness. And third, there would be no need to leave the mission field at regular intervals to secure funds. Being a tentmaker is also consistent with one of the basic premises of the Special Envoys: they should not compete for resources (that is, mission support) that current traditional missionaries require. (Yamamori, Penetrating Missions’ Final Frontier: A New Strategy for Unreached Peoples, 77)
Though Paul labors in Corinth (Acts 18:2-3), he does not always work a secular job while ministering. John R.W. Stott (1921-2011) reminds:
Paul insisted several times on the right of Christian teachers to be supported by their pupils [I Corinthians 9:3-7; Galatians 6:6]. But he himself voluntarily renounced this right, partly so as not to be a ‘burden’ to the churches and partly to undercut the accusation of ulterior motives by preaching the gospel free of charge [II Corinthians 12:13; I Thessalonians 2:9; II Thessalonians 3:8]. (Stott, The Message of Acts (Bible Speaks Today), 297)
Paul is not afraid to roll up his sleeves. Though the object of much criticism, no one has ever accused Paul of being lazy. Paul is both a blue collar and white collar worker. This enables him to interact with regular Joes, like working stiffs in Corinth (Acts 18:1-18), and the philosophical elite, as in Athens (Acts 17:16-34). Both Paul’s manual labor and striking intellect work for the glory of God (Romans 8:28).

What benefits does Paul gain from working a secular job in Corinth while ministering (Acts 18:2-3)? What are the reasons for contemporary tentmaking? Do you know any tentmakers? Should clergy learn a secular trade; should this be a component of a seminary’s curriculum? What are the advantages and disadvantages of bivocational ministry? How would you feel if your pastor also worked a secular job? When should a minister not charge for services?

“There are moments when art attains almost to the dignity of manual labor.” - Oscar Wilde (1854-1900)

Tuesday, July 1, 2014

Life is Short; Play Hard (Ecclesiastes 9:10)

Complete: Whatever your hand finds to do, _____________________.” “Do it with your might” (Ecclesiastes 9:10a)

Ecclesiastes is an anthology of wisdom penned by a teacher who refers to himself as Koheleth (Ecclesiastes 1:1). This name is typically translated as “the Preacher” (ASV, ESV, KJV, NASB, NKJV, RSV) or “the Teacher” (HCSB, NIV, NLT, NRSV). The book presents the teacher’s search for the meaning of life.

Koheleth’s advises his readers is to exert effort in whatever they might attempt (Ecclesiastes 9:10).

Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might; for there is no activity or planning or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol where you are going. (Ecclesiastes 9:10 NASB)
Ecclesiastes 9:7-10 forms a unit. Naoto Kamano associates:
The fourth admonition (Ecclesiastes 9:10) shares some feature[s] with the previous three admonitions (Ecclesiastes 9:7-9). First, both Ecclesiastes 9:8 and Ecclesiastes 9:10 include כל in their admonitions: “at any time” and “anything your hand can grasp” (anything you are able to do) in Ecclesiastes 9:10. Second, both Ecclesiastes 9:7 and Ecclesiastes 9:10 require persistence. For Ecclesiastes 9:7, the life of enjoyment must be persistent. For Ecclesiastes 9:10 the persistent action to do whatever one is able to do is commanded. Third, Ecclesiastes 9:9 and Ecclesiastes 9:10 are symmetrical in their literary design: admonition (Ecclesiastes 9:9a, 9:10a) plus a motive clause beginning with כי (Ecclesiastes 9:9b, 9:10b) that includes a relative clause introduced by אשר (Ecclesiastes 9:9bβ, 9:10bβ). The motive clauses of Ecclesiastes 9:9 and Ecclesiastes 9:10, however, are contrasting. Enjoy life with one’s wife because it is only available during one’s lifetime (Ecclesiastes 9:9), but do whatever one can do because nothing is available after death (Ecclesiastes 9:10). Those motive clauses stress a deep schism between life and death. Therefore, Ecclesiastes 9:10 is an admonition for a life of persistence in doing whatever is possible and available. There is a sense of urgency in this admonition. (Kamano, Cosmology and Character: Qoheleth’s Pedagogy from a Rhetorical-Critical Perspective, 199-200)
Tremper Longman III (b. 1952) situates:
This verse [Ecclesiastes 9:10] climaxes Qohelet’s appeal to enjoy life in the present, especially in view of death. He urges his listeners to act now, because death brings everything to a stop. (Longman, The Book of Ecclesiastes (New International Commentary on the Old Testament), 231)
Some have seen Ecclesiastes 9:10 as referencing conventional wisdom. Iain Provan (b. 1957) explains:
The quotation theory holds that in the course of his argument Qohelet often quotes material whose opinions he does not himself agree. He reproduced what is termed “traditional wisdom” only in order to refute it. Verses like Ecclesiastes 2:16 and Ecclesiastes 9:10 were already regarded as quotations—what the “people” say—in earlier times (by the Targum and Abraham Ibn Ezra [1089-1167] respectively. The quotation approach simply builds on these early beginnings, identifying greater or lesser numbers of citations in the text, sometimes to the extent of viewing the overall genre of the book as a dialogue between a master and his students or between two schools of thought. In this way Qohelet’s own thoughts can be distinguished from other, earlier material in the book and a coherent picture of his own philosophy attained...The difficulty with this method of approaching the text, however, it to identify satisfactory criteria for identifying the proverbial wisdom with which Qohelet is thought to disagree. (Provan, Ecclesiastes/Song of Songs (NIV Application Commentary), 31)
There are echoes of Ecclesiastes 9:10 in other sources. Choon-Leong Seow (b. 1952) researches:
The only appropriate response to the certainty of death is to enjoy life while one is able to do so. The call to enjoy life includes feasting (Ecclesiastes 9:7), fresh clothes (Ecclesiastes 9:8a), oil upon one’s head (Ecclesiastes 9:8b), and the love of one’s family (Ecclesiastes 9:9). These are precisely the kind of things enjoined in the Gilgamesh Epic, as evident in the speech by Siduri, the tavern keeper...Gilgamesh Epic iii.6-14...It is remarkable that this passage in the Gilgamesh Epic contains not only the same items that we find in Qohelet’s call for enjoyment, but the items appear in the same order: (1) feasting, (2) fresh clothing, (3) washing one’s head, and (4) family. Moreover, the point of the passage in Gilgamesh, as also in Ecclesiastes, is that life is something that mortals cannot hold on to forever...The gods have ordained death for all humanity, retaining life “in their own hands” (see Ancient Near Eastern Texts Relating to the Old Testament, p. 90) Everything is in the hands of the gods (Ecclesiastes 9:1)...Similar attitudes are reflected in the genre of Egyptian texts known as “Harpers’ Songs,” inscriptions that reflected on death and sometimes on the impossibility of immortality. In the face of the inevitable fate of death, the living are urged to enjoy themselves while they are able (see Ancient Egyptian Literature 1, pp. 196-97). Likewise, in a late Hellenistic tomb found in Jerusalem, one finds an inscription urging those who are able to enjoy themselves: “You who are living, Enjoy!” (see Pierre Benoit [1906-1987], “L’Inscription Greque du Tombeau de Jason,” Israel Exploration Journal 17 [1967], pp. 112-113)...For Qohelet, too, people ought to enjoy life precisely because life is ephemeral. This, he says, is the portion of humanity in life (Ecclesiastes 9:9), a portion that the dead no longer have (Ecclesiastes 9:6). That is the difference between the living and the dead: the living still have a portion (the possibility of enjoyment), the dead do not. Therefore, one is urged to do vigorously all that one is able (Ecclesiastes 9:10), for in Sheol there will no longer be possibilities and opportunities that one may find on earth. However bad things may seem on earth, there is still the possibility of good. (Seow, Ecclesiastes (Anchor Bible), 305-06)
Many have seen parallels to Ecclesiastes 9:10 in the thought of the philosopher, Epicurus (341-270 BCE). Norman Wentworth DeWitt (1876-1958) compares:
There was one form of Necessity which no logical ingenuity of Epicurus [341-270 BCE] could explain away, the inevitably of death. Metrodorus [331-277 BCE] expressed himself on this theme with a mournful and memorable felicity, Vatican Saying 31: “Against all other hazards it is possible for us to gain security for ourselves but so far as death is concerned all of us human beings inhabit a city without walls.” The immediate effect of this is to invest the present with a pressing urgency and to demand the control of experience with respect to the past, the present, and the future. This amounts to the control of our thoughts. A choice of attitude is involved: the past is to be regarded as unalterable, the future as undependable, and the present alone as within our power...The urgency that accrues to the present is admirably expressed by the Jewish Epicurean, Ecclesiastes 9:10...A similar admonition is placed in the mouth of Jupiter by Virgil [70-19 BCE] and with an odd sort of poetic irony, because both he and Hercules, to whom he speaks are immortals...“For every man the day of death stands fixed; for all men the span of life is brief and irremediable, but by good deeds to prolong fame, this is the task of virtue.” (DeWitt, Epicurus & His Philosophy, 182-83)
Matthew J. Ramage (b. 1982) critiques:
St. Bonaventure [1221-1274] does...raise the possibility that the bleak statement “there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going” [Ecclesiastes 9:10] was written from the standpoint of an Epicurean (in persona Epicuri). However, in contrast with many exegetes of the Christian tradition, St. Bonaventure does not allege that troubling passages in Ecclesiastes were being stated as a kind of foil to indicate the position of what things look like from the perspective of an Epicurean who does not have faith in God. St. Bonaventure prefers to accept Ecclesiastes 9:10 from the point of view of Solomon, showing the conclusion a man would draw if the premises were true that one cannot know whether what he does is pleasing to God and whether virtue ultimately will have any reward. As for Ecclesiastes’s dark claim “the dead know nothing, and they have no more reward; but the memory of them is lost [Ecclesiastes 9:5],” St. Bonaventure notes that its literal sense is that the dead neither know the things of this world, nor remain in the memory of those in the world, nor have any affection for things of the world. Knowledge presupposes life, but St. Bonaventure observes that the dead have neither life, nor motion, nor sense...This interpretation of St. Bonaventure is consistent with the medieval understanding of the underworld, a view which retained elements of the traditional Sheol imagery. (Ramage, Dark Passages of the Bible: Engaging Scripture with Benedict XVI [b. 1927] and St. Thomas Aquinas [1225-1274], 240-41)
Instruction similar to Koheleth’s in Ecclesiastes 9:10 is also found elsewhere in the Bible. Douglas B. Miller (b. 1955) canvasses:
This exhortation [Ecclesiastes 9:10] is echoed at various places elsewhere in the Bible. The Israelites in the wilderness are challenged according to their abilities and resources to give to the building of the tabernacle (Exodus 35:4-10). Early New Testament believers model zeal for their faith (Acts 17:11, 18:15; II Corinthians 9:2). Paul urges followers of Jesus to treat their employment as if working directly for the Lord (Colossians 3:22-25) and to do everything for God’s glory (I Corinthians 10:31). Perhaps ironically, Jesus tells Judas, who is about to betray him, “What you do, do quickly” (John 13:27 NASB). Other texts warn people not to attribute success to the might of one’s hand alone (Deuteronomy 8:17) for it is God who has the ability to make strong (I Chronicles 29:12; II Chronicles 20:6). (Miller, Ecclesiastes (Believers Church Bible Commentary, 166)
This is not the only one of the Ecclesiastes’ themes adopted by the New Testament. James Limburg (b. 1935) connects:
Other themes are sounded in Ecclesiastes which are picked up in the New Testament...Work as a gift to be enjoyed (Ecclesiastes 2:24, 3:13, 5:18) and pursued with vigor (Ecclesiastes 9:10); in the New Testament, Jesus works as a carpenter’s son (Matthew 13:55) and Paul makes tents (Acts 18:1-3). (Limburg, Encountering Ecclesiastes: A Book for Our Time, 131)
Koheleth encourages his readers to work with their “might” (ASV, ESV, KJV, NASB, NIV, NKJV, NRSV, RSV), “strength” (HCSB) “hard” (CEV), “heartily” (MSG) or “well” (NLT) (Ecclesiastes 9:10).

Michael V. Fox (b. 1940) defines:

For the Masoretic Text’s bekohăka, “with your strength” (i.e., with your full strength), read kekohăka, “according yo your strength,” with Septuagint (and Syrohexapla) ἡ δύναμίς σου. (In 86 percent of its occurrences in Qohelet, ὡς corresponds to Hebrew ke- [or keše-]. The one other occurrence of ὡς = Masoretic Text be in Qohelet [Ecclesiastes 9:10a], probably reflects kaph in the vorlage.) Qohelet does not recommend all-out expenditure of effort (as would be implied by bekohăka), but only moderate exertions in accordance with one’s abilities. (Fox, A Time to Tear Down & a Time to Build Up: A Rereading of Ecclesiastes, 295)
Jacques Ellul (1912-1994) relates:
The command given to Gideon comes immediately to mind. In the midst of the catastrophes that were overtaking his people, Gideon becomes convinced that God has abandoned Israel. Then God speaks to him: “Go in this your strength and deliver Israel from the hand of Midian” (Judges 6:14 NASB). We must interpret these words in two ways, one positive and the other restrictive. Positively, you have strength. You are to accomplish your task with this might. You may not realize how much strength you have: you may think you lack strength or ability. But Qohelet repeats “with your strength [Ecclesiastes 9:10].” Do not neglect this strength. And since Qohelet says that God gives you work to do, as he gave Gideon, you can count on strength being given you in what you undertake: enough strength to carry it out, strength that gives authority. But you already have might, just like Gideon, who felt so weak...But this command also has a restrictive side...You are to accomplish this work you are about to undertake with your might and nothing else. You must not undertake a task that is too much for you. For instance, you must not count on God to enable you to accomplish some heroic or athletic feat, to break a record or to create a work of art for which you lack the ability. No, you must use your strength, nothing else. You must know your ability and its limitations. Commit your might, but nothing beyond it...This command is personal. We must learn to grow old, then, and not attempt to overcome the aging process when our strength begins to decline, maintaining we can still do what we did twenty years ago. (Ellul, The Reason for Being: A Meditation on Ecclesiastes, 103-04)
The activity which is to be completed mightily is “whatever your hand finds to do”(Ecclesiastes 9:10 NASB). Michael V. Fox (b. 1940) bounds:
The hand “finding” or “reaching” signifies metaphorically the concept of ability or of affording something (most clearly in Leviticus 12:8, 25:28; and Isaiah 10:10). Nowhere does it mean “happen to do (something)” without also implying the ability to do it. Qohelet is advising us to expend effort only in accordance with our abilities, to do what we can manage to do. (Fox, A Time to Tear Down & a Time to Build Up: A Rereading of Ecclesiastes, 295)
James L. Crenshaw (b. 1934) concurs:
The idiom kōl ’ašer timşā yādekā means “everything one is able to do.” The Massoretic accentuation construes the infinitive la‘aśôt with bekōhakā rather than with the imperative ‘aśēh. Following this lead, one should translate: “whatever you are able to do in your strength, do.” However, the ancient versions (Vulgate, Targum, and several Hebrew manuscripts) read the words differently, connecting bekōhakā with ‘aśēh. The point follows naturally from Qohelet’s observation about death’s power. Enjoy a woman as long as that is possible [Ecclesiastes 9:9], and do zealously whatever you can [Ecclesiastes 9:10]. Knowledge that such intensity of feeling will quickly diminish, subsiding completely in Sheol, motivates intense living. (Crenshaw, Ecclesiastes: A Commentary (Old Testament Library), 163)
There has been discussion regarding precisely what actions Koheleth has in mind. Tremper Longman III (b. 1952) informs:
Disagreement exists over exactly what Qohelet is asking his reader to do. Some think this argues for complete license to do whatever one can and wants. Others say that it is a call to work hard. The reference probably cannot be restricted to either. A comparison with other uses of the idiom (Judges 9:33; I Samuel 10:7) indicates that the issue is opportunity. If you have a chance to do something, do it now, because who knows what the future will bring. (Longman, The Book of Ecclesiastes (New International Commentary on the Old Testament), 231)
Michael V. Fox (b. 1940) notes:
Abraham Ibn Ezra [1089-1167], apparently with attention to the preceding context, applies Ecclesiastes 9:10a only to pleasurable acts rather than to other sorts such as work. But since the next sentence (Ecclesiastes 9:10b) motivates this one reference to the entire range of human activities, the broadening of scope probably starts in Ecclesiastes 9:10a. (Fox, A Time to Tear Down & a Time to Build Up: A Rereading of Ecclesiastes, 295)
Ellen F. Davis (b. 1950) interprets:
Koheleth cannot be celebrating human achievement, which is never certain (see Ecclesiastes 9:11-12). Rather, these words should be heard as urging humility...and a realistic appreciation of three limitations that affect all human activity. First is the limitation of time. Work hard now; this is the time for it, while we are under the sun...Jesus...too, affirms that the world is the place for strenuous work: “We must work the works of him who sent me while it is day; night is coming when no one can work” (John 9:4). Second is the limitation of ability...Third is the limitation of chance. When beginning a new endeavor, it is right to pray that God may bring it to a successful conclusion, but there is never any guarantee that I will live to see it. Indeed, if I steadily put my hands, mind, and heart to work, I can be certain that at some unforseen “time of calamity” (Ecclesiastes 9:12), I will leave good and important work unfinished. The great teacher of early Judaism, Rabbi Akiba [40-137], uttered a memorable saying that echoes this passage: “Everything is given in pledge, and a net is spread over all” (Pirke Avot 3:25). Some day we will each have to trust God with the unfinished work we hold most dear. (Davis, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and the Song of Songs (Westminster Bible Companion), 214-15)
Douglas B. Miller (b. 1955) updates:
With regard to toil, the writer begins with a simple statement that exhorts vigor and exudes enthusiasm: Do [your work] with all your might (Ecclesiastes 9:10)...This may be similar to the contemporary saying, “If anything is worth doing, it is worth doing well.” As in Ecclesiastes 9:7b, Qohelet is not urging a “Do whatever feels good” approach to life. Rather, he draws attention to the work to which his readers are committed and advises that they should give it good effort while they can. His rationale is that death is coming, a theme that permeates Ecclesiastes 9:1-10...Just as in Ecclesiastes 7:1-4, the Teacher emphasizes that in order to understand life and develop a healthy lifestyle, one must confront and ponder death. Qohelet is neither superficial about the joys of life (Pleasure! Enthusiasm!) nor despondent about life’s hardships (Toil.. Death...) He shows his reader a way through them both, which means being focused on living in the present. (Miller, Ecclesiastes (Believers Church Bible Commentary, 165)
There are dangers connected to misreading Koheleth’s exhortation (Ecclesiastes 9:10). David G. Moore (b. 1958) warns:
The wise person gives his best effort with the available circumstances and opportunities. The temptation for all of us is to take this wise approach to life and push it to its unbiblical conclusion. For instance, it is irrational to be a workaholic because God ultimately gives us our work. Only he can bring good out of it. We work, but he redeems. This truth need not promote passivity or sloppy work habits, but it does keep us from the folly of thinking that hard work alone will make for a rewarding life...It is also irrational to be a workaholic because relationships will suffer. To have the kind of marriage depicted in Ecclesiastes 9:9 takes a lot of unhurried time. This is an impossibility if we expend all our effort outside the home. The unchecked workaholism of so many people is also foolish because we do not know the day of our death. (Moore and Daniel L. Akin [b. 1957], Ecclesiastes, Songs of Songs (Holman Old Testament Commentary), 107)
There are activities that should obviously not be done vigorously. R.C. Sproul (b. 1939) restrains:
This particular passage from Ecclesiastes is not a universal absolute that says, “Anything you do, do with all your might [Ecclesiastes 9:10].” There are lots of things that we do with our hands that are ungodly, and we ought not to be doing them with any commitment. What the book is saying here is that in the labor to which we are called, in the devotion that we give to God, in those things that are just and proper and good to which we apply ourselves, we are to do these things with determination, not in a casual manner. It’s somewhat similar to Jesus saying that he would rather people be cold or hot, not lukewarm. Those who are lukewarm he said he will spew out of his mouth [Revelation 3:16]. He seems to have more respect for a zealous hostility than for indifference, for example. (Sproul, Now, That’s a Good Question!, 578)
Jacques Ellul (1912-1994) advises:
You must not separate a verse from what comes before and after it. Before this verse we find: “God takes pleasure in what you do”(Ecclesiastes 9:7, Jacques Ellul), and the joy mentioned in this context is to be found in the midst of your work, according to Ecclesiastes 9:9. These comments constitute two limitations, so that “everything” (in Ecclesiastes 9:10) cannot mean “anything at all.” On the one hand, what we choose must be work (and not crime or foolishness); on the other hand, it must constitute pleasure for God. We find a third limitation in the second half of Ecclesiastes 9:10: Do everything during your life, “for there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in the dwelling place of the dead where you are going” (Ecclesiastes 9:10b, Jacques Ellul). “Everything” thus means some work, thought, knowledge, etc. Within the triangle of these three limitations, all activities are welcome, and you need not weigh other factors. You should do whatever you find within your reach. (Ellul, The Reason for Being: A Meditation on Ecclesiastes, 103)
Matt Pastor suggests:
We should...remember that our entire lives should be lived as worship to God...Ecclesiastes 9:10 says, “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with your might.” Let us run after God today with our might. (Pastor, The Great Giver: A Philosophy of Worship, 66)
Douglas B. Miller (b. 1955) applies:
In a letter to his goddaughter, C.S. Lewis [1898-1963] (27) gave this advice: “Remember that there are only three kinds of things anyone ever need do. (1) Things we ought to do. (2) Things we’ve got to do. (3) Things we like doing. I say this because some people seem to spend so much of their time doing things for none of the three reasons, things like reading books they don’t like because other people read them.”...A simple life in which work is done to achieve what is necessary for living, and not out of competition or for display can free persons to do better both what they ought and what they like. The Teacher’s list in Ecclesiastes 9:7-9 is a reminder that doing what we like can be a good thing. (Miller, Ecclesiastes (Believers Church Bible Commentary, 167)
Ecclesiastes 9:10 has often been associated with work. Eric S. Christianson chronicles:
In the first part of Qoheleth’s call to joy in Ecclesiastes 9:7-10, he reflects on the product of one’s labour (food, wine and clothing) and only then moves on to human labour proper. Not surprisingly, readers have identified with the zeal for work and, like Thomas Carlyle (1795-1881), related it to a broader concern for living: ‘Here on earth we are as soldiers, fighting in a foreign land, that understand not the plan of the campaign, and have no need to understand it; seeing well what is at our hand to be done. Let us do it like soldiers, with submission, with courage, with a heroic joy. Whatever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might’ (in W. Robertson Nicoll [1851-1923] and Jane T. Stoddart [1863-1944] 1910:548). In retrospect (such as Qoheleth’s own narratival aspect), the passage can prompt regret, as Thomas Edward Brown (1830-1897) relates in a moving letter to a friend on the death of Brown’s son: “The pain of separation from those we love is so intense that I will not love...He and I might have been intertwined a great deal more, and that we were not appears to me now a great loss. In this, as in everything else, I accept the words of the Ecclesiast – “What thine hand findeth to do, do it with thy might; for” – you know the rest’ (in Nicoll and Stoddart 1910:548). John Ruskin [1819-1900], in a lecture entitled ‘The Mystery of Life and its Arts’ (1868), uses Ecclesiastes 9:10 to reflect on the nature of ‘true work’ in the artistic guilds, as distinct from the futility of most human endeavour. (Christianson, Ecclesiastes Through the Centuries, 213)
Work is presented in a decidedly positive vein and this emphasis is unique. William P. Brown (b. 1958) observes:
Noteworthy is the fact that one prominent element featured in Qoheleth’s commendation is remarkably absent in the Akkadian tale, namely Qoheleth’s commendation of work (Ecclesiastes 9:9b-10). For the biblical sage, work is just as integral to joy as it is a part of humanity’s limiting lot (see also Ecclesiastes 2:24a, 3:13a, 22, 5:18, 8:15b). Here, finally, Qoheleth provides a decisive clue as to why he includes work within joy’s embrace. (Brown, Ecclesiastes (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Preaching and Teaching, 95)
Eunny P. Lee (b. 1968) attends:
For Qohelet, enjoyment is not to be equated with the pursuit of gain or profit. The enjoyment of life’s simple gifts—sustaining meals and sleep that rejuvenates in the night—displaces the vain prospect for gain. Hence, as William P. Brown [b. 1958] notes, joy is “both trivialized and elevated.” Qohelet has, in effect, “integrated the solemn Sabbath command into the mundane rhythms of daily living, and in so doing consecrated them.” Qohelet refuses to let toil take over and have the decisive word. Indeed, the word itself tapers off toward the end of his discourse, and human work is described in increasingly positive terms (see especially Ecclesiastes 9:10, 11:6). (Lee, The Vitality of Enjoyment in Qohelet’s Theological Rhetoric, 61)
William P. Brown (b. 1958) expounds:
Despite the burdensome nature of toil, Qoheleth urges his readers to work for all their worth [Ecclesiastes 9:10]...Work is not an option; it is an ethical duty. Sisyphus, that tragic character of Greek mythology who was condemned by the gods to roll a boulder up a hill only to see it roll back down into the valley whence it came, is the classical example of meaningless toil. Yet Albert Camus [1913-1960] finds in Sisyphus a certain inviolable dignity: “One sees merely the whole effort of a body straining to raise the huge stone, to roll it and push it up a slope a hundred times over; one sees the face screwed up, the cheek tight against the stone, the shoulder gracing the clay-covered mass, the foot wedging it, the fresh start with arms outstretched, the wholly human security of two earth-clotted hands.”...As Qoheleth has consistently claimed, the value of work is not derived from the gain that one’s labors may yield but, rather, is found in the very doing of work, in the challenge of formidable toil. Qoheleth finds inalienable dignity in the strain of toil during one’s ephemeral life. Moreover, the sage acknowledges a degree of freedom in the exercise of work (“whatever your hand finds to do”). The point is not the kind of work to which one devotes himself or herself but the integrity that is exercised in the very act of toiling. To state the obvious, work is an opportunity that does not avail itself in death. Before the great equalizer, work is revealed to be a privileged duty, the self-satisfying expenditure of power, in short, a blessing. In order for one’s labors to be meaningful, sufficient rest is a prerequisite, hence, Qoheleth’s stress on the essential rhythm of rest and work, of sustenance and toil. Devoid of work and wisdom, death is the vacuum to which all life is headed. Like joy, work concretely embodies the vitality of life. Slowly and subtly, Qoheleth has turned the toil of work into a celebration of the power of life. Gradually, Qoheleth has stripped the weariness from the toil and transformed burdensome labor into life-affirming vocation, developed and sustained in relationship to others (Ecclesiastes 4:9). Like Sisyphus, Qoheleth finds a measure of dignity in the very act of toiling. But unlike Sisyphus, Qoheleth’s joyful toiler is no lone ranger. Community is essential to meaningful labor (see Ecclesiastes 4:7-12). (Brown, Ecclesiastes (Interpretation: A Bible Commentary for Preaching and Teaching, 95)
Humans should do something with the life God has given them. Myles Munroe (b. 1954) implores:
We have a responsibility before God to be faithful in the tasks He places before us, because he does not want us to take our gifts, talents, and abilities to the grave unused...Ecclesiastes gives us good counsel here: “Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might, for in the grave, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom” (Ecclesiastes 9:10). God did not create us to do nothing. He has endowed us with intelligence, creativity, spiritual gifts, and natural abilities, and He expects us to use them, to pour them out in service to others for the glory of His name. (Munroe, The Glory of Living: Keys to Releasing Your Personal Glory, 61)
Wesley J. Fuerst (1930-2007) rewords:
What God has given you to do, do it with all your might, for this is the sense and ultimate vindication of life, insofar as you can ever know it. You cannot live in your dreams or aspirations, or in the world of what you think you ought to be; you cannot postpone finding sense in life until your death; and you cannot imagine some celestial levelling of accounts after death. While it is good not to press too hard to establish yourself in goodness or evil (cp. Ecclesiastes 7:16), in the sense of making that the obsessive pursuit of your life, do what is given you to do as energetically and forcefully as possible. (Fuerst, The Books of Ruth, Esther, Ecclesiastes, The Song of Songs, Lamentations: The Five Scrolls (Cambridge Bible Commentary), 141)
We should do something and this exertion should involve “elbow grease”. Charles R. Swindoll (b. 1934) instructs:
Throw Yourself Fully into... Whatever (Ecclesiastes 9:10)...Solomon instructed us to do whatever we do in this life with vim and vigor. Don’t wait until you retire to start enjoying life. How do you know you’ll make it that long? If you were to die today, would your family be left with memories or just material possessions?...We need to be active in pursuing the good gifts God has given us. To neglect His gifts or to pick at them delicately may show a lack of appreciation to the Giver. As we partake of God’s blessings, we must also remember to do all things to the glory of God and in awe of Him (I Corinthians 10:31; Colossians 3:17, 23). Wise living balances an enjoyment of the gifts with a love for the Giver, never forgetting that “from Him and through Him and to Him are all things” (Romans 11:36). (Swindoll, Living on the Ragged Edge Workbook: Finding Joy in a World Gone Mad)
When undertaking any task, we must do our due diligence and do it with gusto. If not for ourselves, for our God.

How would you restate Ecclesiastes 9:10? How does Jesus’ life embody this exhortation? Is there intrinsic value in working hard? When have you seen someone work passionately? Does Ecclesiastes 9:10 characterize your work ethic? How can a reader gage whether or not she is exhibiting enough intensity; what is the litmus test? What is God calling you to do with your might?

The catalyst for humanity’s earnestness is the inevitability of death (Ecclesiastes 9:10). Michael V. Fox (b. 1940) notifies:

Ma‘ăśeh here means “action” rather than “events.” The reason for being active in life (Ecclesiastes 9:10a) is the absence of any activity afterwards (Ecclesiastes 9:10b). (Fox, A Time to Tear Down & a Time to Build Up: A Rereading of Ecclesiastes, 295)
This rationale is typical of Koheleth. Philip Graham Ryken (b. 1966) comments:
As usual...the Preacher ends by reminding us that our days are numbered. Here is his sober motivation for working with all our might: “for there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going” (Ecclesiastes 9:10). (Ryken, Ecclesiastes: Why Everything Matters (Preaching the Word), 219)
Naoto Kamano footnotes:
For “going” (הלך) as a euphemism of death, see Ecclesiastes 3:20, 5:14, 15, 6:4, 6, 9:10, 12:5. For “coming” (בא) as a euphemism of birth, see Ecclesiastes 2:12, 5:14, 15, 6:4, 11:8. (Kamano, Cosmology and Character: Qoheleth’s Pedagogy from a Rhetorical-Critical Perspective, 51)
Koheleth alludes to death by referencing Sheol (Ecclesiastes 9:10). As there is no precise equivalent to Sheol in contemporary thought the word is often transliterated rather than translated (ASV, ESV, HCSB, NASB, NRSV, RSV). When it is translated it is presented as “the grave” (KJV, NJV, NLT), “company of the dead” (MSG), “realm of the dead” (NIV) or “world of the dead” (CEV).

Richard Alan Fuhr, Jr. (b. 1971) acclimates:

The Hebrew שאול (Sheol) is found 65 times in the Old Testament, depicting the dwelling place of the dead (whether this refers to the simple grave or the underworld is a matter of considerable debate, but semantic flexibility is apparent from the various contexts in which the word is found), described as a place of gloom and deep darkness, and metaphorically speaking, an enemy to be avoided. In Sheol, all hope in future blessing ceases and there is no longer opportunity to express praise in the Lord. References to the surviving consciousness of the individual in Sheol are vague at best, and the notion of the enduring reality of the “soul” is difficult to maintain from the Old Testament alone. (Fuhr, An Analysis of the Inter-Dependency of the Prominent Motifs Within the Book of Qohelet, 118)
W. Sibley Towner (b. 1933) adds:
Sheol, the abode of the dead, is not the Hellenistic hades or the hell of later Judaism and Christianity. It is not the antithesis of heaven (although the reluctance of the NIV to use the term suggests that it wishes to reserve the concept of an underworld for later juxtaposition with heaven)...It is not simply “the grave.” Instead it is a place in which all dead persons have a shadowy existence, a place to which the Lord can send people and from which God can also bring them back (I Samuel 2:6), a place from which the Lord could hear the cries of Jonah (Jonah 2:2). Sheol is mentioned some sixty-five times in the Hebrew Bible, and some of the writers allow the “shades” to continue to possess some kind of memory and existence in Sheol (e.g., Numbers 16:30-33; I Samuel 28:8-14; Psalm 143:3; Isaiah 14:14-17). One Psalmist even imagined that God could be present in it...(Psalm 139:8)...But in his only use of the term, Qohelet maintains the traditional view of ancient Israel: Sheol is a place from which no one exits, from which no prayers arise, beyond which there is no further hope (see Job 14:11-14; Psalm 6:5). It is a place of nonbeing, where all consciousness and all passions have ceased (see Ecclesiastes 9:5-6)...The Teacher maintains this view in the face of some of his contemporaries who were apparently already beginning to suggest that the dead might be resurrected to either of two places, one up and one down (see Isaiah 26:19; Daniel 2:2). Perhaps Qohelet’s view is a manifestation of a conservative, upper-class outlook, analogous to that of the patrician Sadducees of later times who denied the resurrection of the dead (Mark 12:18; Luke 20:27). Perhaps Qohelet’s critic of a later generation, the writer of the Wisdom of Solomon, more accurately represented the hope of the rank and file of Jews even of Qohelet’s day when he wrote, “Righteousness is immortal” (Wisdom of Solomon 1:15 NRSV). (Towner, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs, Wisdom, Sirach (New Interpreter’s Bible), 341)
Ben Witherington III (b. 1951) infers:
Ecclesiastes 9:10 says emphatically that in Sheol there is no knowledge, no wisdom, no planning, indeed no consciousness, and hardly what one would normally call being in any real sense. It seems to be a state of oblivion and not bliss. (Witherington, Jesus the Sage: The Pilgrimage of Wisdom, 69)
Wesley J. Fuerst (1930-2007) depicts:
Sheol was conceived in ancient Israel as a dark and dismal place inhabited by the dead ‘souls’ of men, in a manner very similar to other ancient ideas about the abode of the dead. In Sheol existence was quiet and separated from God and from human activity or memory (‘Will thy wonders be known in the dark, thy victories in the land of oblivion?’, Psalm 88:12). No life was imagined for Sheol, and as the place where all the dead go it certainly provided no means for Koheleth and his contemporaries of solving the issues of death, mystery, and unfairness through reliance upon some grand recompense at the end of time. In the religion of the Old Testament, Sheol signified neither a last judgement, nor heaven or hell; it was not a place where people either suffered for wrong-doing or were rewarded for good...All of this was of course taken for granted by Koheleth. (Fuerst, The Books of Ruth, Esther, Ecclesiastes, The Song of Songs, Lamentations: The Five Scrolls (Cambridge Bible Commentary), 141-42)
Despite its colorless existence, residing in Sheol does not reflect poorly on its residents; in context it represents a universal destiny.

Robert Davidson (1927-2012) identifies:

Sheol...is not hell in the sense of a place to which some people go—the wicked—to be punished. Sheol means for everyone the end of all that makes life meaningful and joyful. It was widely believed that in Sheol no contact with God was possible. The author of the Book of Ecclesiasticus gives voice to a view which we find elsewhere in the Old Testament: “Who in the netherworld can glorify the Most High?...No more can the dead give praise than those who have never lived: they glorify God who are alive and well.” (Ecclesiasticus 17:17-28; cf. Isaiah 38:18-19). (Davidson, Ecclesiastes and the Song of Solomon (Daily Study Bible), 63)
Philip Graham Ryken (b. 1966) recognizes:
The word “Sheol” is not a synonym for Hell but simply refers to the place of the dead, whether good or evil. Martin Luther [1483-1546] said it well: Sheol is “the hidden resting-place...outside of the present life, where the soul departs to its place.” (Ryken, Ecclesiastes: Why Everything Matters (Preaching the Word), 219)
Ecclesiastes 9:10 marks the book’s sole reference to Sheol. James L. Crenshaw (b. 1934) portrays:
Qohelet depicts Sheol as lacking any promising feature, whether achievement, mental calculation, knowledge, or wisdom [Ecclesiastes 9:10]. The participle hōlēk underlines the fact that human beings are already going that direction. The personal pronoun ’attāh (you) personalizes the point. Qohelet saw no basis for optimism about the next life, either in Hebraic expression, the resurrection of the body, or in its Greek expression, the immortality of the soul. For Qohelet, Sheol was a place of nonbeing. (Crenshaw, Ecclesiastes: A Commentary (Old Testament Library), 163)
In Ecclesiastes, the modern expression “you can’t take it with you” would refer to more than material possessions. Jennifer L. Koosed (b. 1971) depicts:
There is no living on (French: sur-vivre, “over-living”), either in the sense of survival, or resurrection. There is only, minimally, Sheol (Ecclesiastes 9:10), a shadowy underworld or place of shades, where all go together...Death, then, for Qohelet, entails these two themes: (1) the extinguishing of memory and (2) the leveling of differences. (Koosed, (Per)mutations of Qohelet: Reading the Body in the Book, 90)
There is one facet especially conspicuous by its absence in Sheol (Ecclesiastes 9:10). Jerry E. Shepherd (b. 1953) notices:
It is significant that among the four things he lists in Ecclesiastes 9:10 as missing from the place to which all are going, he saves “wisdom” for last. All along he has been on a quest, by his wisdom, to find wisdom (Ecclesiastes 7:23). But in the end, no one is wise. He has declared that “wisdom preserves the life of its possessor” (Ecclesiastes 7:12). But now, in this sad verse, we find out that, at most, all it really ever does is delay the inevitable. (Tremper Longman III [b. 1952] and David E. Garland [b. 1947], Proverbs ~ Isaiah (Expositor’s Bible Commentary), 337-38)
Wesley J. Fuerst (1930-2007) imagines:
As an old wise man, he found most distasteful about the notion of going to Sheol, the fact that there would be no chance in that place for wisdom, knowledge, reflection or action [Ecclesiastes 9:10]. His life’s work as a wise man would be ended, and he could look forward to being still, and perhaps bored. (Fuerst, The Books of Ruth, Esther, Ecclesiastes, The Song of Songs, Lamentations: The Five Scrolls (Cambridge Bible Commentary), 142)
Many have deduced that Koheleth rejects the concept of an afterlife entirely (Ecclesiastes 9:10). Wayne H. Peterson (1927-2003) supposes:
The reference to Sheol in Ecclesiastes 9:10 shows that Koholeth had no understanding of a future life in God’s presence, such as is taught in a few places in the Old Testament (Psalm 49:15, 73:23-25; Daniel 12:2-3) and throughout the New Testament (I Thessalonians 4:13-18). In common with the majority of the people in his time he still thought of life after death as a peaceful but pleasureless existence in the underworld. Because this earthly life alone offered the possibility of pleasure, he taught the duty of full enjoyment of these pleasures while life on earth lasted. (Peterson, Proverbs - Isaiah (Broadman Bible Commentary), 123)
Tremper Longman III (b. 1952) examines:
The second half of this verse [Ecclesiastes 9:10] is one of the clearest indications that Qohelet had absolutely no concept of life after death. Those who wish to argue otherwise are reduced to special pleading of the most obvious kind, like Ernst Henstenberg [1802-1869], who remarks, “there are forms of knowledge and work which belong only to the present life, and he who does not employ them has buried his talent in the earth, and thus committed a heavy, sin,— a sin, the consequences of which will stretch into eternity.” John 9:4 is not parallel here because the night referred to there is not death in general but Christ’s death, and the work is specifically his redemptive work...The list of things absent after death, actions, thought, knowledge, and wisdom, suggest both physical and mental processes coming to a complete end. For Qohelet death is the absolute end. We thus see that “under the sun” entails the entirety of human possibility; it is no wonder that ultimate meaning alluded him. (Longman, The Book of Ecclesiastes (New International Commentary on the Old Testament), 231)
Robert Alter (b. 1935) considers:
It is possible that Qohelet’s uncompromising insistence on death as a realm of utter extinction is a polemic response to the new doctrine of an afterlife that was beginning to emerge toward the end of the biblical period. (Alter, The Wisdom Books: Job, Proverbs, and Ecclesiastes: A Translation with Commentary, 378-79)
At the very least, Ecclesiastes 9:10 provides hope that, even without the enticement of the afterlife, hard work is worth the effort.

The exclusion of an afterlife would fly in the face of much contemporary religious thought. Leonard S. Kravitz (b. 1928) and Kerry M. Olitzky (1954) acknowledge:

Such a thought...seems to contravene traditional religious views. Kohelet does not even speak of immortality through children, as the reader would have expected in the context of the Bible. Hence, the Targum understands the verse to refer to the righteous who achieve their good works before they die so that they may receive their reward for them after death. Rashi [1040-1105], taking cheshbon as “accounting,” tells the reader that the righteous need not be concerned about “accounting” in the world-to-come, but the wicked should be very concerned about it. (Kravitz and Olitzky, Mishlei: A Modern Commentary on Proverbs, 95)
Some have attempted to defend the possibility of an afterlife in Ecclesiastes. Daniel J. Treier (b. 1972) argues:
The statements about Sheol need not preclude some kind of afterlife, given potential hints elsewhere in the book. In this passage, though, the Sage gives full voice to his tragic side; most Old Testament references to Sheol concern those under divine judgment, whereas this makes it the destiny of everyone (Craig G. Bartholomew [b. 1961] 2009:305). The Sage’s statements portray the apparent certainties from our current, empirical perspective; this verse does not weigh in on other possibilities. Similarities are frequently noted between Ecclesiastes and the Gilgamesh Epic yet, although these words sound alike, the epic’s advice could amount to little more than “let us eat and drink, / for tomorrow we die” (I Corinthians 15:32)—according to which eating and drinking becomes everything, blown out of proportion. However, just because the Sage does not say everything in every verse, we should not assume that pagan, hedonistic resignation captures his perspective. Ecclesiastes commends these pleasures in moderation that reflects the influence of divine judgment, even without clearly foreseeing the ultimate basis on which that judgment makes sense. Since the Sage can reach such a nuanced perspective on human joys without revelation about resurrection in Christ, Ecclesiastes can help to engage pluralistic civil arenas. Some teaching on cardinal virtues and capital vices commends itself with the book’s logic regarding how to handle human limitations and earthly fragility under God. Still, in the end this message drives us toward humility and the necessity of theological virtue. (Treier, Proverbs & Ecclesiastes (Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible), 209)
J. Vernon McGee (1904-1988) justifies:
It is certainly true that the body in the grave can no longer hold a hammer in its hand. The brain is no longer able to study or perform any mental chores. Solomon is speaking only of the body. “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with thy might [Ecclesiastes 9:10].” He is talking about the hand, not the soul. It is the hand that will be put into the grave. If you are a child of God, you will go into the presence of the Lord. If you are not a child of God, you will go to the place of the dead until you are raised to be judged at the Great White Throne [Revelation 20:11-15]. This life does not end it all. This book does not teach soul sleep. (McGee, Ecclesiastes and Song of Solomon (Thru the Bible), 70)
Philip Graham Ryken (b. 1966) clarifies:
When the Preacher says that there is no work or wisdom there [Ecclesiastes 9:10], he may sound as if he denies the afterlife. But the Preacher is not trying to answer our questions about what does or does not happen to us after we die; to answer those questions we need to turn to other places in Scripture. He simply is saying that we are all going to die and that when we do, it will be the end of our work on earth, the end of everything we know about what is happening in the world, and the end of all our earthly pleasures. (Ryken, Ecclesiastes: Why Everything Matters (Preaching the Word), 219-20)
It is worth noting that an afterlife is a feature of some Old Testament texts. Iain Provan (b. 1957) surveys:
The one “place” to which all the living go to is Sheol, the world of the dead (e.g., Job 30:23, “the place appointed for all the living”)...The Old Testament often speaks of death as if it were a final ending of human existence—a place of separation from God (e.g., Psalm 6:5, 88:10-12) that the righteous as well as the wicked will experience as darkness and chaos, and from which even they will not return (e.g., Job 10:20-22). Other texts, however, tells us that the wicked depart to Sheol (e.g. Psalm 9:17, 31:17), implying that the fate of righteous is ultimately (if not immediately) different—a point explicit in Psalm 49:13-15, where the righteous are ransomed from Sheol’s power (cf. also Psalm 16:10-11). Proverbs 15:24 tells us that “the path of life leads upward for the wise to keep him from going down to the grave [Sheol]” (cf. Proverbs 12:28, 14:32); Psalm 139:7-12 claims that God is not, after all, absent from Sheol, but present with the worshiper even in the midst of the darkness; and Job 14:13 pictures Sheol as a place in which God might hide Job until his wrath has passed, the passage envisioning a later time when God will remember him and the dead will be roused out of their sleep (Job 14:12, 14-17; cf. the famous Job 19:25-26). In passages like Isaiah 26:19 and Daniel 12:2-3, moreover, there are clear references to resurrection from the dead. (Provan, Ecclesiastes/Song of Songs (NIV Application Commentary), 93)
In Ecclesiastes, Sheol represents death, the great equalizer (Ecclesiastes 9:10). In this sense, “the grave” is an appropriate translation (KJV, NJV, NLT).

Robert Davidson (1927-2012) traces:

Death...has been hovering in the wings and sometimes stepping forward to occupy centre stage ever since Ecclesiastes 2:14. Death is no respecter of persons, Koheleth reminds us. We may not like it, we may even try to avoid thinking about it. It is what he calls “an evil” (Ecclesiastes 9:3), but it comes to good folk and to bad folk alike; to those who are punctilious in their religious observances and to those who are not; to those who go to church and to those who never darken the door of a church. We will go down to “the dead”; we have all been issued a one way ticket to Sheol (Ecclesiastes 9:10). (Davidson, Ecclesiastes and the Song of Solomon (Daily Study Bible), 62-63)
The shadow of death looms large and an awareness of death colors one’s perception of life. Daniel J. Treier (b. 1972) reveals:
Ecclesiastes 9:10 forbids reading Ecclesiastes 9:1 deterministically or fatalistically: freedom entails taking advantage of opportunities. Memento mori (“remember your death”) anticipates what it means to remember your Creator; we are all headed to Sheol, the realm of the dead, far too soon from our current perspective. So carpe diem: we ought to seize the day, working and thinking and knowing while we can. Gregory the Great [540-604]’s comment is apposite: “So death itself will be defeated when it comes, if we always fear it before it comes.” (Treier, Proverbs & Ecclesiastes (Brazos Theological Commentary on the Bible), 208-09)
The reality of death’s inevitability is often resisted. Chris Morrant and Joyce Catlett (b. 1932) analyze:
Summing up individual and societal defenses against the terror of death, Ernest Becker [1924-1974] (1973/1997) wrote: “Everything that man does in his symbolic world is an attempt to deny and overcome his grotesque fate. He literally drives himself into a blind obliviousness with social games, psychological tricks, personal preoccupations so far removed from the reality of his situation that they are forms of madness—agreed madness, shared madness, disguised and dignified madness, but madness all the same. (p. 27)”...As Robert W. Firestone [b. 1930] (1994) points out death is not a choice, it comes for us all. What counts is how we live and fight our resistance to the good life. He encourages us to “make each day count” as in the book of Ecclesiastes, which says, “Whatsoever thy hand findeth to do, do it with all thy might; for there is no work, nor device, nor wisdom in the grave, whither thou goest” (Ecclesiastes 9:10 KJV). (Adrian Tomer [b. 1944], Grafton T. Eliason [b. 1967] and Paul T.P. Wong [b. 1937], “Separation Theory and Voice Therapy: Philosophical Underpinnings and Applications to Death Anxiety Across the Life Span”, Existential and Spiritual Issues in Death Attitudes, 367)
The realization of death need not be depressing. Edward M. Curtis (b. 1940) acknowledges:
Qoheleth’s observations could lead one to resignation and despair, but he urges his readers to greater diligence, because he sees a basis for confidence and hope in fearing God and trusting in his providence. This does not guarantee a life that is materially prosperous and trouble free, but it does enable people to face an unknown future confidently, because they know God’s purposes cannot be thwarted by the enigmatic experiences that are part of life. (Curtis, Ecclesiastes and Song of Songs (Teach the Text Commentary Series), 86)
Andy Sochor (b. 1980) encourages:
Reminding us that our lives are temporary should not be dispiriting to us, causing us to abandon our labors in life because there is no lasting benefit from them. Rather we are to work hard and take advantage of the time we have now. After we reach Sheol (the grave), there will be no more work, preparations, or learning to do. We will be judged based upon what we do after this life. Therefore, we must do the best we can now to accomplish those things we ought to be doing. (Sochor, Vanity of Vanities: Notes on Ecclesiastes, 75)
Frank Johnson (b. 1943) supports:
Sheol’s rewards are even less attractive than life among the living. Qoheleth resolutely believes that persons can find life enjoyable, even with limited knowledge, with no retribution and with a common fate. (Johnson, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, and Song of Solomon (Cokesbury Basic Bible Commentary), 121)
We must do what we can when we can. Time is a factor when “you only got a hundred years to live”. Roland C. Ehlke (b. 1944) remarks:
Death is certain. Life is short. Once you’ve gone, you’ll never return to live on this earth. Why, then, waste time fretting over things you can’t control? ‘Enjoy life,’ urges the Teacher. You can enjoy life without abandoning yourself to sin and madness [Ecclesiastes 9:7-10]. (Ehlke, Ecclesiastes, Song of Songs (People’s Bible Commentary), 96)
Martin Sicker (b. 1931) implores:
Time is man’s most valuable possession and should not be wasted; it is a non-recoverable asset. Therefore, whatever one is able to do to extract the most rational enjoyment from life should be done expeditiously and with appropriate determination and fervor. Put another way, Koheleth may be understood as urging that one not mortgage the present for an uncertain future aside from the certainty of the grave. (Sicker, Kohelet: The Reflections of a Judean Prince: A New Translation and Commentary, 125)
Walter C. Kaiser, Jr. (b. 1933) agrees:
The time to labor for God is while we are still on this side of the grave, for when death comes, the day of opportunity will have passed. The phrasing of Ecclesiastes 9:10 is reminiscent of Colossians 3:23: “Whatever your task, do it heartily, as unto the Lord and not to men.” Men must not opt out of total, earnest, and dedicated involvement in the privilege of work. They may think that the presence of evil and their impending death are massive obstacles to believing that God has a good plan for all fo life, and therefore they may refuse to do anything pending further disclosures on the subject. But such inactivity is wrong. Counsels the teacher, “Get involved and work vigorously” to the glory of God while you still have life in your bones. (Kaiser, Ecclesiastes: Total Life (Everyman’s Bible Commentary), 101)
David Balsley (b. 1946) strengthens:
Because life is fleeting (as Solomon has just observed in Ecclesiastes 9:9), we seldom have enough time to do all the things we think we would like to do...Anything we are going to get done during the brief lifetime we spend on this earth will have to be done now or the opportunity will soon be gone. So Solomon calls his readers to diligence - to do with all our might whatever it is we decide to do with the short span of time we call our lifetime. Life will soon be over, and the chance to do what we wanted to do will be gone. (Balsley, The Puzzled Preacher: A Pastoral Exposition of Ecclesiastes, 238)
Charles H. Spurgeon (1834-1892) belabors:
Let us not wait for large opportunities, or for a different kind of work, but do just the things we “find to do” day by day. We have no other time in which to live. The past is gone; the future has not arrived; we never shall have any time but the present. Then do not wait until your experience has ripened into maturity before you attempt to serve God. Endeavor now to bring forth fruit. Serve God now, but be careful as to the way in which you perform what you find to do, “do it with your might [Ecclesiastes 9:10].” Do it promptly; do not fritter away your life in thinking of what you intend to do tomorrow as if that could recompense for the idleness of today. No man ever served God by doing things tomorrow. (Spurgeon, Morning by Morning, 331)
L.D. Johnson (1916-1981) charges:
Ecclesiastes 9:10 is the ultimate statement of “seize the day.” Don’t be halfhearted about the task at hand. Wherever you are, be all there. Give it your best shot, no matter whether the assignment seems challenging or not. Why? Because that is the only “shot” you have at life—the one at hand. (Johnson, Proverbs, Ecclesiastes, Song of Solomon (Layman’s Bible Book Commentary), 120)
We should use our time, perhaps the scarcest of human resources, wisely as lost time is never found. Since death marks the end of an era, Koheleth reminds his readers to act now as life is a limited time offer. There is no time like the present! Strike while the iron is hot! So do something. Now.

How does the inevitability of death affect your life? What meaning does death bring to life? What is on your bucket list? Should our actions be taken with a sense of urgency? What should you be doing now?

“Do what you can, with what you have, where you are.” - Theodore R. Roosevelt (1858-1919)