The Bible Recap - Day 171 (Ecclesiastes 7-12) - Year 5
Episode Date: June 20, 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 - Check out Way Nation’s Pr...ayer Study! FROM TODAY’S PODCAST: 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 finished our 14th book of the Bible.
Congratulations!
And this is the last we'll see of possibly Solomon's wisdom.
Let's look at what the preacher had to say to us today.
In Chapter 7,
he urges his readers to take life and death seriously, and to let sadness do its job.
Even though life is fleeting, there's still weight to the human experience,
and value in the emotions that come with it. He encourages us to wait on God's timing as we walk
through life. Pride and patience are at odds, waiting requires humility.
And in the same way that we shouldn't look forward-longingly, we also shouldn't look backward-longingly.
In verse 10, he says it like this,
say not why were the former days better than these, but it is not from wisdom that you ask this.
Trusting God means we live in contentment in the now.
In verse 16, he seems to frown on wisdom and righteousness, but that feels contradictory
to everything else he said.
So what do we make of this verse?
It says, be not overly righteous and do not make yourself too wise.
Why should you destroy yourself?
The word righteous here isn't referring to morality. It's a word used most often in terms of a judicial system.
Given the context and word choice here,
it almost seems like the preacher is saying,
don't puff yourself up.
Don't be the person who always has to be right
and have all the answers.
That's arrogant and ultimately keeps you
from being the kind of person you're trying to portray yourself as.
At the end of chapter 7,
the preacher laments how challenging human relationships can be.
He warns that a manipulative, needy woman is worse than death, and tries he may with
all his wisdom, he can't seem to comprehend women at all.
But men, you aren't off the hook here because he can only understand one of you, and it
probably isn't you specifically.
Humans are just complex
creatures and connecting is hard. In Chapter 8, he gives some advice to the King's counselor.
He basically says, look, you're dealing with a man who has almost no restraint on his power.
You're going to need a lot of wisdom to know when to speak up, when to keep quiet.
He's going to try to abuse his authority, and you're going to have to know exactly how to
approach him to rain him in sometimes
But even in this the preacher realizes that the impact this can have is fleeting
It's just another aspect of how we can spin our wheels trying to control things
We can't determine the outcome
By the way, this is especially interesting if Solomon is the author because he was the king in chapter 9
He reminds us again that we're all going to die.
He never lets us forget this for very long. He reminds us to enjoy our days while we have them.
In verse 10 he says something that will continue to unpack more as we keep reading, but I just want to touch on it briefly for now.
He says, whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might. For there is no work or thought or knowledge or wisdom and shield to which you are going. You may have heard someone use the word
shield as a reference to hell, but it's more of a reference to death or the grave. And at this point
in time, God had not yet given his people a lot of information about what happens after death,
but they had a general view that the body went to shiel and the spirit went to God.
God will continue to reveal information to his people about this, but we're not there yet,
so hang in there. Moving on to chapters 10 and 11, the preacher moves back into straight-up
Solomon-style proverbs. He reminds us that even a little foolishness can lead to ruin,
and that we should guard our thoughts as much as our words. And I'd be remiss not to point out that 11-5 talks about how God gives life in the womb,
and it's remarkable that this passage was written long before 40 ultrasounds ever existed.
The verse says, as you do not know the way the Spirit comes to the bones in the womb
of a woman with child, so you do not know the work of God who makes everything.
We can't understand God's ways, but they govern everything we do, so it's best and wisest to yield to Him and trust Him. In the final chapter of the book, He calls the reader to remember God,
especially in youth. This isn't to say we should forget Him when we're old. It's just pointing out
that it can be easy to forget Him when we're young and haven't yet gained
the wisdom of years that might cause a person to reflect on the brevity of life.
He strings together a bunch of weird phrases that, if you read them closely,
are describing the failing body of an old man.
The strongman our bent refers to his bones and joints decaying.
The grinder sees because they are few, refers to the way he has to
stop eating because his teeth have fallen out. Then verse 7 says, the dust returns to the earth as
it was, and the spirit returns to the God who gave it. He wraps up his whole experiment with this
conclusion. We'll see pain and joy in our lives, but our job is to enjoy and obey God regardless.
joy in our lives, but our job is to enjoy and obey God regardless. Your perspective on this book, whether it was encouraging, depressing, refreshing, it
probably has a lot to do with what you were looking for in it.
If you were looking for a path to success or the good life, it probably made you despair.
But if you were looking for God, what did you see about him today?
My God shot was in 812, which also felt like
a perfect summary for the whole book. It says, though a sinner does evil a hundred times
in prolongs his life, yet I know that it will be well with those who fear God, because
they fear before him. This first points out that there's no formula for a long and happy
life. Living righteously doesn't mean you'll live longer than those who aren't walking with God. The only thing we can do is
delight in God and obey Him and trust Him with the outcome. And that, in itself, is what
it looks like for things to go well, regardless what actually happens. Isn't that what you're
really after anyway, a heart at peace? And haven't you seen time and again how getting the thing you want doesn't actually
achieve that for you?
And how striving after it actually produces the opposite of a heart at peace?
The preacher has had palaces and parties and concerts and concubines and money and amounts
you and I will never be able to touch.
And he says, none of it brings the kind of peace and joy that comes from humbly walking with God.
The preacher knows he's where the joy is.
Have you heard about my devotional called The God Shot, 100 Snapshots of God's Character
Inscripture?
In this 100-day devotional, I dig into powerful sections from each
book of the New Testament, and point out a name or attribute of God that tells us more about who he is.
It's quick and easy to read, but it's packed with theological truth. It makes a great gift for a new
mom who's struggling to find time in the word, or for that friend who needs a bit of an on-ramp to
doing the Bible recap with us. You can always find it at thebibelrecap.com-forwards-last-store or at Amazon or wherever you like to shop,
but you can also find it in airports.
So check those spinning racks when you go to pick up your water and your peanuts for the trip,
and depending on where you live, I might have even signed a copy for you when I was in
that airport.
But if you don't want to wait, check for a link in the show notes.
Prayer can be challenging. It can be easy to feel like we're not praying the quote-unquote
right way. May Nation has a new prayer study that will help you look to the Bible to learn
how to pray with confidence. Growing in prayer is going to help you as you grow closer to
God. To join, just text the word grow to 67101 or click the link in the show notes.