Here we are again, back in the
saddle of my Bible blog. Today we’ll be diving into the twenty-first book of
the Old Testament: Ecclesiastes.
Ecclesiastes seems to be an essay
written by an author who introduces himself as “the Preacher, the son of David,
king in Jerusalem.” By which I presume we are to infer that the author is
Solomon, and that we should therefore strap ourselves in for some mind-blowing
wisdom. And wisdom is one of the themes threaded throughout the essay, so I
guess that’s consistent.
Apparently, Ecclesiastes is
considered highly quotable, since quite a number of lines and motifs from it
are referenced throughout popular culture. You might, for example, recognize
such staples as “There is nothing new under the sun,” and “To everything, there
is a season.” There are more, but I suspect one would have to read the entire
essay to pick up on all of them.
Anyway, the book starts out on kind
of a bleak note with another famous phrase “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.”
This continues into a lamentation about how temporary and kind of pointless
human lives are in a world of unchanging permanence where everything that
happens now has happened before and/or will happen again, and nothing genuinely
new ever happens.
From there, the narrative moves into a kind of
autobiographical story about the author’s quest to find out what purpose men
should have in life. It starts with his pursuit of knowledge and wisdom, which
the author proclaims himself to have acquired to a degree surpassing all who
came before him. But lest you think this is egotistical, he goes on to proclaim
the pursuit to be vain and merely “striving after wind.” His final conclusion
about the pursuit of knowledge?
“Ecc 1:18 For in much wisdom is much vexation, and he who increases
knowledge increases sorrow.”
That’s sentiment with which I’m
fairly certain many beneficiaries of modern medicine would disagree. And one
which, unfortunately, seems to infect the mindset of many modern Christian
denominations.
So, having dispensed with the value
of seeking wisdom, the author moves on to seeking pleasure. He goes on about
the masses of wealth he acquired, and the gardens he planted, and the many
slaves that he bought, sold, and bred (seriously, he really does, talking about
them in the same verse with his herds and flocks) and the many concubines he
bedded. He claims that, while he indulged himself shamelessly, his wisdom
remained as great as ever (leading me once again to question just what it is
that he thinks wisdom entails), but in the end he concludes that seeking
pleasure is just more vanity.
After this the author returns to the
subject of wisdom and foolishness. And in his ruminations on the subject,
realizes that wise men and foolish men all die and are forgotten eventually. In
this section, we see kind of a prototype of the lame apologist argument that
the temporary nature of a material life means that it must be meaningless and
valueless. So, again, the author concludes that all is vanity with the added
proviso that now he hates life.
The author moves on to a new subject
then: labor. And here he kind of bitches a moans that all the products of one’s
work and wisdom might somehow end up benefitting somebody else after one dies,
and that this is for some reason a bad thing. Basically, his complaint is that
the products of the labor or righteous men could end up going to sinners, and
the products of sinners could end up going to righteous men, so neither one of
them really benefits. Naturally, he concludes that labor and its products are
also vanity.
Chapter 3 opens with one of the most
famous passages in the Bible: the bit about how “to everything there is a
season.” You may be familiar with it from the song “Turn, Turn, Turn,” by The
Birds, which faithfully reproduces the words nearly verbatim. But it also gets
referenced pretty routinely in other media.
From here, the essay starts getting
pretty self-contradictory. There are passages that say the dead are better off
than the living, but later a passage that says it’s “better to be a live dog
than a dead lion.” Other passages lament that wisdom and foolishness are
equivalent since everybody ends up dead anyway, in the midst of multiple other
passages that claim it’s better to be wise than to be foolish. And, ironically,
passages that claim only fools throw out a lot of words while the wise say
little, but the author who claims to be wise beyond everybody else is
presenting a rambling, wordy, contradictory, and redundant spillage of words.
It’s difficult, really, to tease out
just what it is that the author is trying to say overall. I thought maybe it
was just me, but I did a little research and it seems that there really is a
lot of confusion as to just what the overall message of Ecclesiastes is
supposed to be. Many readers can’t even agree if it’s supposed to be an
optimistic or a pessimistic book. This has led some to speculate that it’s not
even supposed to have a coherent message at all, but rather intended to provoke
the reader into thinking about the topics on which it touches.
If that’s the case, though, I think
it’s rather unfortunate that the author chose to phrase so many of his
statements in very definitive terms (even the ones he contradicts). Some of
them really do come off as him giving specific advice on how to live one’s
life, and some of that advice is rather unfortunate indeed. Such as:
“Ecc 8:2 I say: Keep the king’s command, because of God’s oath to
him. 3 Be not hasty to go from his
presence. Do not take your stand in an evil cause, for he does whatever he
pleases. 4 For the word of the king
is supreme, and who may say to him, “What are you doing?” 5 Whoever keeps a command will know no evil thing, and the wise
hear will know that proper time and the just way.”
That reads a lot like “The ‘just
following orders’ defense is totally legit.” Or worse, a direct order to do
whatever a king orders you to do, even if you know it’s wrong. If the author
really was Solomon, then this is clearly a self-serving passage, and
unfortunately a generally worded command of the sort that has helped to justify
oppressive notions like “Divine Right of Kings,” for centuries.
In the end, the author does seem to advocate
generally for taking pleasure in simple joys of life, though on little more
justification than “because God wants you to.” There also seems to be a rather epic amount of whining that this is the case, since the author seems to think it's poor reward and kinda pointless. But this is a book that is
clearly open to a great deal of interpretation. I highly suspect that another
reader could easily come away from it with a far different impression than I
have. So, like many of the more abstract books of the Bible, I’m going to have
to advise you to read it for yourself and see if it says anything of value to
you. For me, though, I can’t say that it did much.
Next stop on our magical tour of the
Bible: the Song of Solomon.