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No, not according to tradition. He was the wisest of men (1 Kings ch.3).

In Ecclesiastes, which many believe to be written towards the end of his life, he took the position of a 'skeptic' saying such things as 'vanity, vanity, all is vanity.' Certainly as an exceedingly rich and successful king he was in the best position of anyone to see the futility of having everything you want and more. Certainly the end of his life was not as good as his beginning since he disobeyed God's command and married many foreign women who led his heart away from the true God into idolatry.

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10y ago

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