רַעְיוֹן
desire
Definition
The Hebrew noun רַעְיוֹן (raʻyôwn) primarily denotes a 'desire' or 'longing,' but in its three biblical occurrences in Ecclesiastes, it carries a nuanced sense of a 'vexing desire' or 'troublesome striving.' It describes the frustrating and ultimately futile pursuits of human effort and ambition under the sun. In Ecclesiastes 1:17 and 2:22, it is paired with 'striving after wind,' characterizing the intellectual and laborious pursuits that lead only to sorrow and vexation. In Ecclesiastes 4:16, it refers to the endless, insatiable public desire for a new leader, another example of fleeting and unsatisfying human aspiration.
Biblical Usage
This word is used exclusively in the book of Ecclesiastes, all three times by Qoheleth (the Teacher). It consistently appears in contexts critiquing human toil and ambition, framing them as sources of grief and frustration rather than fulfillment. The pattern is clear: רַעְיוֹן is not a neutral desire but one inherently linked to the vanity and vexation of life apart from God. Key verses are Ecclesiastes 1:17 ('I applied my heart to know...it is a striving after wind'), 2:22 ('What does a man get for all the toil and striving of heart?'), and 4:16 ('There was no end to all the people, to all before whom he was...').
Etymology
Derived from the root רָעָה (rāʻâ, H7462), which broadly means 'to feed, tend, shepherd.' Through the related Aramaic-influenced noun רְעוּת (rᵉʻûth, H7469) meaning 'desire' or 'pleasure,' רַעְיוֹן developed its specific meaning. The semantic connection likely moves from the idea of 'tending to' or 'caring for' something to 'setting one's heart upon it,' hence a deep desire or longing.
Semantic Range
This word is theologically significant as it encapsulates a core theme of Ecclesiastes: the futility of human striving 'under the sun' when divorced from the fear of God. It highlights that even noble human desires for wisdom, achievement, and legacy can become sources of vexation when pursued as ultimate ends. Understanding this Hebrew term enriches reading by clarifying that the Teacher is not condemning desire itself, but diagnosing a specific kind of restless, earthbound ambition that leads to emptiness, pointing indirectly to the need for a God-centered purpose.
In the ancient Near Eastern wisdom tradition, to which Ecclesiastes belongs, there was a strong focus on the limits of human understanding and the often-painful gap between effort and reward. רַעְיוֹן reflects this cultural preoccupation with the frustrating nature of life's endeavors. The modern understanding of 'desire' is often positive or neutral, but this term carries a culturally specific connotation of a burdensome, anxious striving that was recognized by sages of the time.
תַּאֲוָה (ta'avah, H8378) — a strong, often physical craving or lust, which can be positive or negative. חֵפֶץ (chephets, H2656) — delight, pleasure, or matter; often refers to what one takes pleasure in or chooses. נֶפֶשׁ (nephesh, H5315) — soul, life, appetite; denotes desire as a deep, life-level craving.
Word Details
How this works
Hebrew definitions are from Brown-Driver-Briggs (1906) and Strong's Exhaustive Concordance (1890), both public domain. BDB was groundbreaking for its era but reflects 19th-century assumptions about Semitic etymology. Modern scholarship (HALOT, DCH) has revised many entries. Use these definitions as a starting point for exploration, not as the final word on a term's meaning in context.
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