Ecclesiastes 1:1,2To: Ecclesiastes Main MenuTo: Grace Notes Home Page Ecclesiastes 1:1The words of the Preacher, the son of David, king in Jerusalem.Sounds impressive. A communicator of the Word (QO-HE-LET) Refers to the one who brings the assembly together; which the communicator does. It is a fem. participle which looks at the actions being a response, in this case to God's leading. In the Hiphil stem it means to assemble and I think we can apply that to the work that will follow. The communicator assembles information and comes to a conclusion. He is the son of David, and king in Jerusalem: With those credentials you might expect to hear a glowing testimony of a man's walk with God, but then there is verse two. Ecclesiastes 1:2Vanity of vanities, says the Preacher, Vanity of vanities! All is vanity.The word VANITY is the Hebrew HE-BEL and in its simplest form looks at breath, wind, that which is empty and worthless. It is used three ways in the O.T. 1. For the false gods worshiped by the people. They were nothing, empty. This verse is blunt, it is intended to shock the reader out of complacency. It is designed to rock the boat, shake the tree, and it pull the chain. To stir us up in our often secular humanistic view point of the value of life. And it does just that . . . Now what has caused Solomon, the wealthiest most powerful ruler of his time and the times of others to come to such a miserable conclusion of life. I READ THESE WORDS AND ALMOST get a picture of a middle aged man sitting on a bar stool, crying in his beer, and uttering over and over again . . . emptiness, emptiness, all is emptiness. Now considering who said this and considering who he was and that he is just about 40 years old, we have to ask what has brought Solomon to this point: PRINCIPLES: 1. Solomon lived life doing things his own way Listen to the shepherd's words to his beloved: SOS 1:15 How beautiful you are, my darling, How beautiful you are! Your eyes are like doves. And her words to him: SOS 1:16 How handsome you are, my beloved, And so pleasant! Indeed, our couch is luxuriant! The beams of our houses are cedars, Our rafters, cypresses. Then listen to Solomon's dismal conclusion: SOS 8:6-7 For love is as strong as death, Jealousy is as severe as Sheol . . . Many waters cannot quench love, Nor will rivers overflow it; If a man were to give all the riches of his house for love, It would be utterly despised. He would have given all his wealth for her, but she said no. And that was the catalyst, that was what pushed him over the edge and finds him siting in despair writing Emptiness of emptiness, all is emptiness. PRINCIPLES: 1. God loves us and wants us to see the value of dependence upon Him and Him alone But now, at the end of his life he looks back on that pursuit for significance and proclaims, emptiness . . . all is emptiness. AS SOLOMON EXAMINES WISDOM HE DOES SO ON both the track of the secular and the track of the Spiritual: Solomon takes a look at life around him, at his own life a part from fellowship with God, and sees three elements at work. These elements of life intrude upon man's secular wisdom. These three elements assume that God is irrelevant, that God is out of picture. And with that secular approach to life these three things will encompass man: 1. The first is death: Death is a rather serious problem for the human race. The person who puts all his eggs in life's earthly basket will soon discover that life is going to end. In our youth we may think we will live forever but then, maybe around 40 or so, we recognize that are days are numbered. Too many other forces, greater than man's resolve and determination, are at work in the world for man to not experience the intrusion of chance, what some might call just plain bad luck, into his secular wisdom. So Solomon meets man on man's level. He assumes God is not in the picture and from his wisdom, but perhaps more from his experience, he sees that life even at its best is open to the intrusions of death, evil, and chance. It is no wonder that he proclaims even at the end of the story: Vanity or vanities, emptiness of emptiness, all is vanity, all is empty. Ecc 1:2 and Ecc 12:8 is the somber declaration of the meaningless of life. These are the bookends of despair. BUT THAT IS NOT ALL THERE IS. Solomon also explores the track of divine or spiritual wisdom and in that he declares that life has meaning, it is worth living, and can be lived with Joy. In his faith filled perspective, Solomon is going to see life in light of five attributes of God: 1. God is the creator and there is meaning to His creative power: Solomon explains the love of God like no one else in the Bible. He looks at life, its suffering, its hardships, its evil, its death, all the things we see in life that would make us think God is not a God of love but then he makes the point. That in spite of what we see we have amore sure promise, a more sure fact, and that is that God loves us, that is just the kind of God He is. And His love is greater than all the hate and hurt we face in the world. The conclusion is these two tracks of wisdom is a question: How do you want to live? Do you want to live separated from God and His power, might, wisdom, and love and in doing so live at the hands of death, evil, and chance? Or do you want to live in God's plan: Ecc 12:13-14 The conclusion, when all has been heard, is: fear God and keep His commandments, because this {applies to} every person. For God will bring every act to judgment, everything which is hidden, whether it is good or evil. That is where this book will bring us but not before it pulls out from under us all the props we might use to seek security and significance in the world and through secular wisdom. There is no charge for Grace Notes Materials. You can help further this work by your prayer and by sending a contribution to: Grace Notes 1705 Aggie Lane Austin, Texas 78757 wdoud@bga.com Grace Notes Web site: http://www.realtime.net/~wdoud/ Anonymous FTP site: ftp://ftp.bga.com/vendors/wdoud/ Grace Notes is a ministry of Village Missions International. |
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