The Bible Recap - Day 170 (Ecclesiastes 1-6) - Year 5
Episode Date: June 19, 2023SHOW NOTES: - All the info you need to START is on our website! Seriously, go there. - Join our PATREON community for bonus perks! - Get your TBR merch - Show credits - Find out what streaming Way... Nation offers HERE! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: - Video: Ecclesiastes Overview - Romans 12:9 - Proverbs 6:16-19 - Prep Episode #1 - The Bible Recap Start Page SOCIALS: The Bible Recap: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-Group: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter TLC: Instagram | Facebook | Twitter D-GROUP: The Bible Recap is brought to you by D-Group - an international network of discipleship and accountability groups that meet weekly in homes and churches: Find or start one near you today! DISCLAIMER: The Bible Recap, Tara-Leigh Cobble, and affiliates are not a church, pastor, spiritual authority, or counseling service. Listeners and viewers consume this content on a voluntary basis and assume all responsibility for the resulting consequences and impact.
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Hey Bible readers, I'm Tara Lee Cobble and I'm your host for the Bible recap.
Today we started Ecclesiastes, which is part of the wisdom literature in Scripture, and
tomorrow we'll finish it.
It's written by someone called the preacher or the teacher, and that may or may not be
Solomon, but many people believe it points to the life of Solomon, regardless who wrote it.
This book is ultimately about a grand experiment that the main character sets up.
He has lots of resources at his disposal, and he wants to find out how to live the best,
most joyful kind of life.
Then he unpacks everything he learns, so that we don't have to go through this experiment
for ourselves.
He basically buys every single thing on Amazon and writes a concise 12 chapter review sharing
all his data with us.
To let us know what's worth our time and energy and money.
Right out of the gate in verse 2, we get an idea of how he feels about it all.
Vanity of Vanity is all his vanity, he says.
The word he uses for vanity here is hevel, which means vapor or smoke.
But it also carries the connotation of something that's hard to grasp. He uses this word 38 times
in this book, so it's definitely part of his overarching theme. Here are some of the things he
learns through his observations. He starts out addressing work. All hard work is eventually
negated by death. You and I see this all the time.
Buildings decay, technology is outdated, and even our income is diminished by taxes.
It's just a reminder of the futility of work. Not only that, but our names will be forgotten
when we die. And even a massing knowledge doesn't enhance the preacher's life, he basically says ignorance is bliss. 118 says, in much wisdom is much vexation, and he who increases knowledge increases sorrow.
He's worked hard, he's learned a lot, and he still feels empty, and maybe even worse off.
So he decides to test his heart with the things that seem to hold other kinds of value.
Forget hard work and a legacy, let's go after joy and pleasure.
But before we accuse him of just trying to be a hedonist, he says he's trying to do this
experiment honestly and with wisdom, not recklessly.
So he builds an estate for himself.
He throws huge parties.
He hires all his favorite bands to play in his backyard.
He has lots of concubines.
And it's all a vapor, a fleeting pleasure that fails to satisfy
him.
He's gaining a lot of wisdom through this process, but he's frustrated that even though
he's getting wiser and that's a good thing, he's still going to die.
His wisdom can't keep him from meeting the same end as a fool.
They're both going to die and lose everything they've amassed on Earth. And he'll eventually lose even more than the fool because he has so much stuff to lose.
Anything material he leaves behind will be handed off to someone else and they might not appreciate it.
It seems so unfair to him. He decides that the best thing to do is just be in the moment and find
contentment in working into the Lord and trusting him, not in trying to amass a fortune or a name for himself.
In chapter 3, he lists out the various seasons most people encounter in their lives.
There are 14 pairs of seasons, and we usually prefer one of the things in each pair,
a time to be born, a time to die, a time to mourn, and a time to dance.
But God has appointed both things in each pair.
Some people may have trouble with two of the things in this list.
First, the phrase, a time to kill might bother you.
But remember, this is not suggesting murder.
This is the nation-state of Israel, and God has established laws about when the death penalty
should be enacted.
So there is, in fact, a time to kill in this scenario.
But capital punishment and carrying out God's laws for their nation-state is different than
revenge.
Second, the phrase, a time to hate might bother you too.
But God himself hates sin and calls us to hate it as well.
Romans 129 says, abhor what is evil.
Hold fast to what is good.
And you may remember from our reading in Proverbs 6,
how Solomon listed out several things God hates.
His hatred doesn't mean he isn't loving.
He hates the things that threaten what he loves
as we all do.
These two attributes of God aren't contradictory,
they're complementary.
So even as much as we may hate that idea,
there is in fact a time to hate.
One of the verses in this book that captures the complexity of life and all its seasons
is 3-11. It says, he has made everything beautiful in its time. Also, he has put eternity
into man's heart, yet so that he cannot bind out what God has done from beginning to
end. This verse points out that God is actively working in everything for a specific
purpose, namely redemption, and that He's given us a desire to grasp it all, but the inability to do so.
God leaves some things as mysteries, even to the wise. It's a reminder that we aren't God,
and it's also an incentive to trust Him with all the things we don't know. This is both comforting
and humbling.
In chapter four, the preacher points out how a lot of our work ethic is actually driven by our need for control and superiority. And how that's not just pointless, but it's exhausting too.
We're motivated by competition and jealousy and pride, but comparison is a terrible taskmaster. It never lets us rest.
The teacher says there's more joy in wisdom in working together. If we're going to be working and
trying to find actual contentment at it, it's best not to go it alone, not to set ourselves up
against each other, but to partner with each other instead. If Solomon isn't the author of Ecclesiastes,
then whoever wrote chapter 5 has been reading a lot of his proverbs,
because it talks a lot about not talking a lot, which Solomon liked to talk a lot about.
The preacher keeps telling us to guard our mouths.
He basically says, hey, God has given you a job to do. You have a calling. Are you working or just talking?
When talking is your calling, like mine, this is even more important. All my fellow career
talkers out there, we don't get a pass. We have to double down on this wisdom. The preacher also
shows us how greed wounds the greedy. And he points out that greed and striving to be rich
is altogether different than enjoying what God has given you. If God has given you wealth,
then you can live with an open hand, not focused on it,
then that's where real blessing is found.
He says it this way in 519-20.
Everyone also to whom God has given wealth and possessions and power to enjoy them,
and to accept his lot and rejoice in his toil, this is the gift of God.
For he will not much remember the days of his life, because God keeps him occupied with joy in his heart.
Being occupied with God, not with wealth, is the path to joy.
And we can't enjoy God's gifts if we're focused on gaining more, we can only enjoy them
when they aren't our focal point, when they're a byproduct of walking in contentment with
God.
What was your God shot today?
Mine was in 314, which says,
I perceived that whatever God does in Jews forever,
nothing can be added to it
nor anything taken from it.
The teacher starts out talking about all the striving we do
to gain things that are fleeting
and how we exhaust ourselves over a vapor.
And here we see that everything God sets in motion
is immovable. It lasts.
We can't add to it or take from it, it's fixed forever.
How very opposite his ways are from ours.
How powerful he is and how weak we are.
I love that about him.
I'm drawn to his strength and his permanence.
He's where the joy is.
[♪ OUTRO MUSIC PLAYING [♪
Are you struggling in the reading plan?
I have a pro tip for you.
It might seem counterintuitive to tell you to listen to more,
but I really think it might reignite some of the passion
you may have lost if you go back and listen
to our six prep episodes again.
They're super helpful, even if you've been with us for years.
You can listen to them all in about an hour.
Check the show notes for a link to prep episode one
in today's show notes, or search for it in your pod catcher.
We've also linked all the prep episodes
on the start page of our website, thebibelrycap.com.
I believe God has some encouraging things for you
in these episodes, and I'm praying you're gonna help you
get over the hump if you're struggling.
So let's go!
Check out those prep episodes again!
I'm cheering you on!
Are you looking for great Christian music that's free?
Who doesn't love free stuff?
Way Nation has lots of free streams you can pick from, no matter which genre you prefer.
They've got adult contemporary, hip hop and pop, rock and Spanish to listen to any of those
text-thord stream to 6-7-101
or click the link in the show notes.