Posts Tagged 'Solomon'



A Survey of Ecclesiastes 2

Reverence God Always, 5:1—7

Throughout the book of Ecclesiastes, there are a number of “interludes,” similar to the parenthetical passages in the book of Revelation. In that book, those pauses in the action serve to explain certain things John saw in a previous vision. In Ecclesiastes, the interludes give Solomon an opportunity to review various attempts to find the satisfying and unifying key to life and its purpose. Up to chapter 5, the Teacher has concluded that the only satisfaction comes from accepting God’s plan for one’s life, even if the sum total of that plan is not clear. Life should be marked by acceptance, not by making demands of God. In fact, the one who fears God must continually draw near to God if he is to be sensitive to his will.

1. Watch your step! Keep your mouth shut!, verses 1—3

Guard your steps when you go to the house of God. Go near to listen rather than to offer the sacrifice of fools, who do not know that they do wrong. Do not be quick with your mouth, do not be hasty in your heart to utter anything before God. God is in heaven and you are on earth, so let your words be few.

The KJV renders “guard your steps” as “Keep thy foot.” The emphasis is on the individual to use control and restraint as he approaches God. Perhaps Jesus had these verses in mind when He told the story of the two who went into the temple to pray in Luke 18:9—14. Believers ought to approach God confidently, yet with the right motives. We come before God in humility as we recognize His majesty and His absolute right to our lives.

Far too many Christians approach God with a profusion of words, but without a receptive spirit. That’s what Solomon is hinting at when he writes, “Go near to listen.” As surely as we are able to talk to God, He is able to speak to us. But we need to willing to receive what He is saying to us. It is always better to hear what the Holy Spirit has to say than to be focused on telling God what we want Him to hear. Smith and Goodspeed see in the word “listen” more than merely hearing the words of God, but obeying what God says. Their translation:

To draw near to obey is better than that fools should offer sacrifice.

This notion goes along very well with 1 Samuel 15:22,

But Samuel replied: “Does the LORD delight in burnt offerings and sacrifices as much as in obeying the voice of the LORD ? To obey is better than sacrifice, and to heed is better than the fat of rams.

In coming near to God, we seek His guidance as we listen to His words. The alternative to this is to suppose that offerings can be a substitute for a God-ordered life. “The sacrifice of fools” would be any irreverent or insincere approach to God. Moffatt translates the last clause of verse 1 as:

All a fool knows is how to do wrong—even in worship.

Some commentators see this as an attempt to bribe God. See Isaiah 1:11—20. While this is possible, I see two other possibilities:

  • Sometimes it is easier to offer some sort of sacrifice to God than it is to what He tells us. Thus, we make ourselves feel better, thinking He will accept something from us in place of what He wants from us.
  • Sometimes we offer boisterous worship in place of obedience, thinking that will appease Him. We draw His attention to our worship and away from our disobedience, and we think that will make for the deficit in our spiritual lives.

And yet, we are made to communicate to God in prayer. The emphasis in verse 2 is on rashness and haste. A.F. Harper writes:

Respectful silence or reverent and thoughtful prayer is more appropriate than much speaking in patterned liturgical forms.

Early Jewish writing mirror what Solomon has said:

Always let the words of a man before the Holy One (blessed be His name) be few.

True prayer is not reciting a list as quickly as possible so you can get on other things in life. One of the best commentaries on these two verses is what our Lord said in Matthew 6:7—8,

And when you pray, do not keep on babbling like pagans, for they think they will be heard because of their many words. Do not be like them, for your Father knows what you need before you ask him.

Verse 3 seems to be by itself, like an isolated proverb. But it is related to verses 1 and 2. How many times have you gone to bed and tossed and turned thinking about the day you just lived through? That’s what happens when your focus is inward, instead of outward. What you think about is what you dream about. Similarly, what is on your mind when you come before the Lord is what you’ll be thinking about, even when you’re praying. That is the prayer of a fool.

2. Keep your vows, or keep your mouth shut!, verses 4—7

When you make a vow to God, do not delay in fulfilling it. He has no pleasure in fools; fulfill your vow. It is better not to vow than to make a vow and not fulfill it. Do not let your mouth lead you into sin. And do not protest to the temple messenger, “My vow was a mistake.” Why should God be angry at what you say and destroy the work of your hands? Much dreaming and many words are meaningless. Therefore stand in awe of God.

A vow is really a contract with God; it is a binding commitment made by us to Him, and as Solomon notes, its is dangerous to not keep a promise made to God. The RSV hints that the vow involves money or offerings: “When you vow a vow made to God, do not delay in paying it…Pay what you vow.” This would be in keeping with making excuses to the “temple messenger,” or preacher. However, this verse certainly applies to any kind of promise made to God, at any time. How often have we made a vow to God to do something for Him when we find ourselves in trouble? A vow made at such a time is just as binding as a vow made during a time of prayer.

Vows made to God, if kept, have power to lift us to new levels of devotion and service, but a broken promise to God jeopardizes our standing with Him.

What keeps us from keeping a vow made to God? Very often it is greed or a lack of faith. Yet a vow is much more than just a promise; it is a spiritual bond between man and God. Numbers 30:2–

When a man makes a vow to the LORD or takes an oath to obligate himself by a pledge, he must not break his word but must do everything he said.

When we don’t keep our end of the commitment, we offend two parties:

(1) It is disrespectful of and an insult to God.
(2) It is a self-inflicted injury, for God will be recompensed (Acts 5:4).

God is not looking for for vain dreams or lofty words and big promises. He is looking for people to do His will, and that begins with keeping our word to God. Indeed, obedience IS better than sacrifice.

A Survey of Ecclesiastes, 1

LIFE: THE MOST FRUSTRATING THING IN THE WORLD

1. Introductory Comments

The writer of Ecclesiastes is Solomon, a fact well established among conservative Bible scholars. Solomon is also responsible for Proverbs and the Song of Solomon. But Ecclesiastes is completely different from those two books in both tone and content. If the book of Proverbs illustrates the wisdom of Solomon, then Ecclesiastes indicates the man’s foolishness.

Ecclesiastes is one of the most puzzling books in the entire Bible mainly because of its unorthodox statements about life and extreme pessimism. The correct interpretation of this book is made possible when it is viewed through the lense of the New Testament. Ecclesiastes shows us man’s wisdom apart from God. When we consider the great questions of life without God, we will always arrive the wrong conclusions, as Solomon did throughout Ecclesiastes. This likely explains why atheists and unbelievers love to quote from this book; interestingly, Voltaire often cited verses from Ecclesiastes in his writing.

Man has always sought happiness without God. Every day, most people in most parts of the world try to find meaning in their lives without considering God. The inestimable value of Ecclesiastes is that is shows us how absurd that quest is. Solomon was the wisest man who ever lived, and that great wisdom was a gift to him from God. Yet, despite that, for a time in Solomon’s life, he tried to find pleasure and meaning apart from his Creator. His conclusion was that his quest was vanity. That word occurs over 30 times in Ecclesiastes; it means “empty” or “purposeless.” Satisfaction in this life is fleeting and temporary at best without Jesus Christ. Although the many conclusions and opinions Solomon makes in this book are not inspired, Scripture is inspired. This is why time and again Solomon prefaces some many of his thoughts with, “I said in my heart,” or “Under the sun,” or “vanity.”

God showed Job, an admittedly righteous man, that even he was a sinner in God’s sight. In Ecclesiastes, God will show Solomon, a very wise man, that even he was a fool in the sight of God.

2. Frustration #1: Nature and History, 1:4-11

The first thing Solomon finds in his quest for meaning is that when man looks at life’s physical environment, he finds only the answers the material world can give. In these eight verses, Solomon takes on the role of a scientist and historian.

First, as a scientist, Solomon studies nature and the world around him and reduces everything to a simple cause-and-effect. In fact, Solomon cites examples of natural phenomena in the order of their creation: (1) the solid earth, (2) the rising and setting of the heavenly bodies, (3) air currents, (4) the flow and evaporation of water. Solomon studied all these things looking for meaning to his life. But he, like the scientist, can only describe the physical laws he sees, he cannot go beyond that. Studying nature without knowledge of God cannot lead a person to God. That’s the frustration Solomon feels at this point. The Biblical view of nature is somewhat different, however. Scripture plainly teaches that all nature testifies to the existence of a Creator, even though it does not compel a belief in Him (Psalm 19; Romans 1:20). But Solomon isn’t interested in God, all he wants is proof; proof of meaning.

He is frustrated because, as he observes the ebb and flow of nature, it seems to be meaningless to him.

He doesn’t fare any better as the historian, either. If the solid earth gives no stability and yields no answers, what help can there be an endless succession of birth and death? In fact, when you study history, you will find exactly what Solomon has found: men and women struggling to find meaning in their experiences, yet all their work was in vain, for they, like Solomon, found nothing. Every generation tries to find satisfaction from some “new thing,” but every “new thing” is really just a variant on the past (verse 9).

Naturally, there have been great inventions over the years, but what Solomon has in mind is that one thing that would enable a man to break out of nature and the monotony of history into meaning. Man is always looking for the one thing that will give his life meaning. Interestingly, with all the great strides in science and technology man has made in the past two centuries, each generation, thinks itself the greatest, yet still struggles to find meaning.

3. Frustration #2: Wisdom, 1:12-18

Here we see the inquiring mind at work, searching for meaning. Yet even acquiring all knowledge left Solomon empty. In his first mention of God, in verse 13, Solomon states that God has given man something that the rest of nature does not have: the constant, though often worrying, urge to make sense life. Animals don’t have that; they live within their world of instincts. But man is driven to understand how his life works so that he can ultimately control and direct his instinctive desires.

Verse 15 is such a profound verse. In our time, we have “straightened out” many of the twists of the past and added many comforts and security to life. But we, in our life time, have seen how in a instant, all that security can be stripped away by one single act of terrorism, and how a dormant group of people can revive the horrors of the past and destroy what is truly good and meaningful in life.

Even Christians, who have a fuller revelation of God through Jesus Christ, still cannot comprehend how the Divine mind works. Often, “God’s ways are not man’s ways.” But, through faith, we are able to see that in everything God works for good the those who love him, Romans 8:28.

The problem with knowledge is that we are finite, but eternity is all around us. We can always find more things wrong than we can make right. G.G. Atkins offers these profound thoughts:

We do, however, posses the power by the grace of God and the mystery of our own creative personalities to take the raw material of experience and our own always unfinished selves, and make of life an enterprise worthy of its cost and promise. The crooked can be made straight, in highways, in society, and in the soul; not always easily or soon, and always at a price. But we have not choice save to try it.

4. Frustration #3: Unlimited wealth, 2:1-11

To most people, unlimited wealth suggests the possibility of unlimited happiness. Money can buy pleasure, and to be sure Solomon probably tried everything in they way of pleasure. We can only speculate as to what pleasures Solomon explored, searching for meaning. He mentions a few:

  • He surrounded himself with people who could make him laugh, but eventually the jokes grew stale (verses 1-2).
  • He turned to sensual pleasures, things like wine (verse 3).
  • He turned to hobbies, perhaps thinking a more sensible use of money would give him satisfaction (verses 4-8).

The final words of verse 8 may well refer to his many wives, though the Hebrew is extremely obscure. Not finding satisfaction in one night stands, he seeks it marriage.

In this frustration, we see something interesting. Solomon is looking for peace and meaning in worthwhile pursuits. No one could deny that building projects are themselves sinful or wrong. Hobbies don’t have to be sinful. Marriage is noble institution. Yet, even these innocuous pursuits yield nothing but disappointment if God is not part of the pursuit.

5. Frustration #4: Death, 2:12-23

If a person cannot find abiding happiness in work and wealth and worthwhile activities, what is left? Nobody lived a life as Solomon did. And if they tried to, even they would find it monotonous. But Solomon reached the conclusion that even so, it is better to wise than to be a fool. And yet, the wise man isn’t all that far removed from the fool, since they both come to the same end. All the wisdom of the ages cannot keep the wisest man from his fate: death.

It is true that thanks to advances in medicine, human life spans have been lengthened, perhaps as many as 15 or 20 years, but when you compare two decades to a millennium or eternity, those extra years don’t make much of a difference.

In verse 17, the Teacher concludes that he hates life, that it is meaningless, “vanity.” Remember, the Hebrew word means “purposeless.” It made no sense to Solomon that he should work so hard to create things, only to die. Thomas Edison is a good example of a man who created many of the things we use and take for granted today. He was a genuine genius, yet he died just like everybody else. What good did all his brain power do him in the end? All his inventions didn’t extend his life a minute.

John Harvard, the man who founded Harvard University, was a Christian, and he left his vast fortune to the Church to spread the Gospel. Today, there isn’t much left of the Christian faith on the campus of Harvard.
Solomon realized this thousands of years ago. It is a waste of time to work for something, only to turn it over to a fool. He had the same problem, and 1 Kings 12 describes it in detail.

Verses 24-26 give an excellent summation of Solomon’s exploration so far. These verses are easily taken out of context, but in context they are quite profound. You can wear yourself out trying to find meaning in life by studying nature or history; you can make the pursuit of money and luxury your goal in life, thinking your possessions will bring you peace. But you will end up frustrated because you are grounding yourself in the material world, which does not hold the key to satisfaction. Why not simply take your daily life from God?

Note the words of 1 Timothy 6:6-19.

To walk with God means that we are able to ask for wisdom when we need it and are able to use it rightly with the help of the Holy Spirit. God, through His Word, communicates to us His will for our lives, which gives us meaning and purpose.

Nobody needs to be as foolish as Solomon was. Through Jesus Christ, we are able to live lives full of meaning; be content with our lives, secure in the knowledge that our very lives are in God’s hand.


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