|
Jonathan's Bible Study Site
|
Meditations:
Genesis 1:24-31, All God's Children
Genesis 4:1-15, Stubborn Grace
Genesis 9:8-17, My Rainbow
Exodus 2:1-15, Spectacular Failures
Exodus 15:22-27, Blessings from Difficulties
Exodus 16:2-5, 13-31, 35, The "Manna" Test
Leviticus 19:1-18, God's Economics
Numbers 20:2-13, Unfaithful Leadership
Numbers 21:4-9, The Essence of Salvation
Deuteronomy 2:1-9, God's Mysterious Goals
Deuteronomy 10:12-21, All About Love
Judges 6:11-24, Unlikely Warrior
Judges 7:1-8, 19-22, Too Many
1 Samuel 3:1-18, Learning to Listen
1 Samuel 9:1-21, Qualifications for Service
1 Samuel 16:1-13, From God's Perspective
1 Kings 8:22-30, 35-53, A Repeated Practice of Repentance
1 Kings 8:54-61, Timeless Truths from Solomon
1 Kings 17:1-16, Obedience When It Hurts
1 Kings 22:1-18, Listening to the Truth
2 Kings 6:8-22, Those Who Are With Us
1 Chronicles 14:8-12, Miracles in the Mundane
Ezra 3:8-13, Forever
Job 28:12-28, Trying to Figure It Out
Job 38:1-13, Only God Is God
Proverbs 8:1-14, Understanding Wisdom
Proverbs 15:8-17, A Life of Obedient Simplicity
Proverbs 16:1-9, An Obedient Life
Proverbs 19:20-23, God's Plans for a Rich Life
Proverbs 19:8, 20-21, 23, The Best Source for Self-Worth
Proverbs 30:1-9, Only Enough, Please
Ecclesiastes 1:1-11, Nothing New
Ecclesiastes 5:10-20, A Gift from God
Ecclesiastes 9:1-2, 7-10, God's Blessings in Simple Things
Elsewhere on this web site:
Ecclesiastes 9:1-2, 7-10, God's Blessings in Simple Things
|
Ecclesiastes 9:1-2, 7-10 God's Blessings in Simple Things
All this I laid to heart, examining it all, how the righteous and the wise and their deeds are in the hand of
God; whether it is love or hate one does not know. Everything that confronts them is vanity, since the same
fate comes to all, to the righteous and the wicked, to the good and the evil, to the clean and the unclean, to
those who sacrifice and those who do not sacrifice.
As are the good,
So are the sinners;
Those who swear
Are like those who shun an oath.
Go, eat your bread with enjoyment, and drink your wine with a merry heart; for God has long ago approved
what you do. Let your garments always be white; do not let oil be lacking on your head. Enjoy life
with the wife whom you love, all the days of your vain life that are given you under the sun, because
that is your portion in life and in your toil at which you toil under the sun. Whatever your hand finds
to do, do with your might; for there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom in Sheol, to which you are going.
New Revised Standard Version
The Bible tells us King Solomon was the wisest ruler who ever lived (1 Kings 3:12), but in that blessing from God, Solomon also
experienced frustration and even depression, as we see this gifted man try to figure out what life meant. Throughout Ecclesiastes,
he wrestles with good and evil, riches and poverty, and it never did make sense to him, because this world is all he knew, and after
this world came the nothingness of Sheol for everyone.
By New Testament times, Jewish theologians had started to understand that there would be a life after the earthly one, a life that
would complete the work of God's justice started in this life, although God had not revealed much yet to them about this life after
death. In the person of Jesus, we get the completeness of that story, the missing pieces to the puzzle that bothered Solomon so
much in Ecclesiastes.
Still, Solomon understood enough to provide us great insight in how we are to live. He knew that it was wrong to defy God's
commandments, and he saw that some wicked people faced calamity in their earthly lives, but some also prospered. He observed
some people who devoted themselves to being as righteous and religious in the sight of others as they could be, but it seemed that
they, too, faced prosperity or calamity in the same measure as the wicked. How could this be?
Solomon deduces that a righteousness we manufacture ourselves is no better than wickedness. As long as we are depending on
ourselves to achieve great goodness for the praise of others, Solomon would say like Paul that we are just noisy gongs and
clanging cymbals. It is not the big, visible righteous actions we take, but the small, unnoticed acts of goodness that are what
please God.
Look then at the second part of this passage. Live the life that God has given you. Find joy in your present circumstances
instead of striving for what might or might never be. Enjoy the work that God has put in front of us, because God wants to bless
us in the simple acts of living. It is when we let go of our self-driven goals that we allow God to work through us--it is the bumper
sticker "let go and let God" 3000 years before there were bumpers!
No where is this wisdom more true than in a church! Surveys in the past have shown that one of the most important selection
criteria for families in choosing a church is how clean the nursery is. Every preacher has hundreds of examples of how members of the
congregation were moved by an obscure phrase in a sermon that had little to do with the main theme--but because that person could
hear that one phrase at that instant, God was able to work wonders in their lives. Stories abound about how God used simple interactions
between people to show love, just like Jesus taught in several places that God will reward those offering a thirsty person a simple cup of water.
Whatever work you have at hand, no matter how large or how small, no matter whether anyone notices at all--do everything with
enthusiasm and with joy, because God blesses us in simple things!
|
|
Copyright © 2003 - 2008 Jonathan Morris. All Rights Reserved