The
Teacher began his reflection on meaning in life by focusing on
how so much in life is hevel, vapour or
smoke, it’s fleeting and hard to hold onto. Now the Teacher starts digging
deeper into his search for meaning, for a sense of weight and meaning in life. The
Teacher now moves into offering a philosophy on life, developing principles to
guide us to growing our knowledge and ethics to shape how we should journey
through life so that it’s more than simply hevel
that slips through our hands. The Teacher’s desire is that we can look back
over life, recognise in the present, and look to the future with the ability to
recognize and determine what is hevel and
what carries weight and meaning. Just a side note, when we talk about God’s
glory, the word glory carries the sense of weight and majesty.
I
love to laugh, as many of you have learned, but the Teacher begins by saying
that “Laughter is madness.” The word for
laughter in Hebrew is “simhah” and can also
be translated as “mockery or derision.” In our culture today, it’s often
easier to laugh at others in mockery, rather than to laugh with someone in
pleasure. We see this in the word he uses for madness, “tollel” which can be translated “to be infatuated; to make
look foolish; to make a mockery of; act like a madman.” This is not
laughing in pleasure, but with cruelty, a type of laughter that’s much too
common today. Our culture’s becoming crueler as we turn more and more to media
for our information and entertainment.
Like
so many people today, the Teacher turns to pleasure to find meaning in life,
yet right from the start, he sounds doubtful, “What
does pleasure accomplish,” and still goes ahead with trying to see if
pleasure brings meaning to his life anyway. The word for pleasure is “siklut” and can be translated as “joy,
gladness, or delight.” He doesn’t condemn pleasure; joy, gladness, and
delight are good things, something we all desire to experience. Jesus enjoyed
weddings, dinners with friends, and even created wine for the wedding. The word
siklut in the Old Testament is often used as
a response to worshipping God and something we can experience even in times of
trouble; Psalm 51:10–12, “Create in me a pure heart, O God, and renew a
steadfast spirit within me. Do not cast me from your presence or take your Holy
Spirit from me. Restore to me the joy of your salvation and grant me a willing
spirit, to sustain me.” We hear the
call to find our joy in the strength of the Lord in
Nehemiah 8:10.
The
Teacher discovers that pleasure doesn’t truly satisfy in the long term.
Indulging in pleasure doesn’t bring you lasting hope or meaning, it often merely
hides the emptiness of your life. Much of the pleasure the Teacher seeks out is
found in activities that emphasizes “sensory input to the body which gives
entertainment to the senses,” the second definition of siklut. Proverbs
21:17
offers us this warning, “Whoever
loves pleasure will become poor; whoever loves wine and olive oil will never be
rich.”
The
Teacher’s reason for exploring wine and embracing folly is to see what’s “good for people to do under the heavens during the few
days of their lives.” He claims that he doesn’t let go of wisdom, recognizing
that wisdom is better than foolishness, that having some limits in place is a
good idea. At its heart, this is worldly wisdom, not Godly or biblical wisdom. In
how he writes this, laughter, madness, wine and folly are all closely
intertwined. It’s no secret how quickly wine or alcohol can grab a hold of us,
creating a dependency that can lead to addiction. Peter gives us insight into
what the Teacher learns in 2 Peter 2:18-19, “For
they mouth empty, boastful words and, by appealing to the lustful desires of
the flesh, they entice people who are just escaping from those who live in
error. They promise them freedom, while they themselves are slaves of
depravity—for “people are slaves to whatever has mastered them.” The
chase after pleasure is one of the big idols today. Think of how much is spent
on entertainment today in the search of pleasure; where our dollars go shows
where our heart is drawn.
Aldous
Huxley wrote Brave New World, writing about people who love technology
which leads them to a place where they’re no longer able to think for themselves,
reduced to passivity and self-centredness, and truth is drowned in an ocean of
meaningless noise. People in Brave New World are controlled through
pleasure, drugs, and beautiful women freely available in a consequence free
world. Neil Postman uses Brave New World as an example of where we’re
heading in his book Amusing Ourselves to Death, warning that in our
media-infused age, everything, politics, education, journalism, and even
religion has become entertainment, and for many, meaningless. Something to think
about as we flip through our apps and channels as we doom scroll on the couch.
Wine
and laughter don’t bring meaning to life, so the Teacher tries a different
approach, “I undertook great projects.” He
does some pretty impressive things: he builds houses, plants vineyards, and gardens.
He creates parks; the word for park in Hebrew is where our word for paradise
comes from; he builds little paradises and fills them with fruit trees, an
image of the garden of Eden. When you have parks and fruit trees, you need
water so he builds reservoirs to water the trees. These are great and good projects!
The
Teacher doesn’t stop with building projects; he accumulates all kinds of
wealth and people. He buys slaves, and many slaves are born into slavery in his
household, a foreign concept today to many of us, but not uncommon then. He
develops herds and flocks, more than anyone before him, suggesting that the
Teacher might be Solomon. He gathers silver and gold and treasure. He acquires
singers and a harem, what he calls “the delights of
a man’s heart.” In verse 10, the Teacher takes delight in what he’s
accomplished and attained, and that delight is his reward, but ultimately, it’s
not enough.
The
experiences of pleasure all slip away through his fingers. Today that’s seems
enough for many people, life’s all about the here and now, there’s no vision or
thinking about the future. His heart takes delight in all he accomplishes, in
all that he built and created and gathered for himself, even the immoral
experiences like concubines. Solomon had over 1,000 wives and concubines, and built
temples to his wives’ gods, and yet his heart and soul is empty. His many accomplishments
don’t bring the meaning and weight that he’s searching for because he’s
searching “under the sun” instead of seeking
the Creator of everything under the sun.
Bobby
Jamieson wrote a book on Ecclesiastes called Everything is Never Enough,
a reminder that one way to be unhappy is to get everything you want, only to
find that everything’s still not enough. You get used to the feelings that come
from doing something that brings you pleasure, but if you keep on seeking the
same pleasure, you will need more in order to experience the same level of pleasure.
The drive for pleasure leads to discontentment, frustration, and a continual
searching for more. Thanksgiving and gratitude become difficult.
Too
often we seek pleasure “under the sun” apart
from God.
Pleasure’s not bad, in verse 26 the Teacher even calls it a gift from God. Yet
what do we gain from the constant search after pleasure? The answer is nothing
permanent, it’s “chasing after the wind.”
Materialism and consumerism fail to bring meaning into our lives. However, the
word for pleasure can also be translated as “joy.” Joy is more a state
of being than an emotion; it’s a result of choice. Joy is part of the fruit of
the Spirit; part of the experience of being a Christian and choosing to follow
the way of Jesus. In John 15:11, Jesus says, “These
things I have spoken to you, that my joy may be in you, and that your joy may
be full.” Joy comes in living for Jesus and following his teachings.
Many
people today, Christians included, believe that the purpose of life is to
be happy, and suffering has never felt happy. Randy Newman writes, “With a
high premium placed on “joy,” or “fellowship,” and a distorted view of “the
abundant life,” some people steer clear of any uncomfortable burdens connected
with seeing a world in need. Sadness and burden, by definition, are excluded
from a life that is supposed to be happy and full.” The chase after
pleasure “under the sun” is “me”
focused while Jesus comes to guide us into a “thee” focused living faith
that embraces God’s call at Sinai to care for each other. We do this out of gratitude
for Jesus’ sacrifice for our sin, loving God and neighbour, entering into each
other’s struggles and help them see God’s presence, building our lives together
on the foundation of Jesus.
Knowing
Jesus is returning to overturn the results of sin: abuse, cruelty,
injustice, violence, racism, poverty, and all forms of brokenness is where you’ll
discover joy that has weight and meaning. Because of Jesus’ resurrection,
ascension to heaven, and promise to return, we’re reminded that this world “under the sun” isn’t everything. Jesus is
returning to bring renewal, to wipe away tears and fears, to bring eternal joy
and hope. Joy is found in salvation, in reconciliation with God. Jesus talks
about the joy in heaven when a sinner repents. Look for your joy in Jesus, in
the community of believers, and in loving God and neighbour.