"Meaningless,
                meaningless!" 
                says the Teacher. 
                "Utterly meaningless! 
                Everything is meaningless!" 
                Ecclesiastes 1:2 
                 
                These words were written 3,000 years
                ago. Yet they are as up-to-date as todays
                newspaper. The Teacher looked at life apart from
                God and concluded that life was meaningless.
                Contemporary philosophers have said the same
                thing. They too have looked at life. They have
                said that God is dead, or at least, irrelevant,
                and they too have concluded that life is
                meaningless and without purpose. There is no
                rhyme or reason to our existence, they tell us.  
                In the words of the inimitable 'Lou
                Grant' of the old Mary Tyler Moore show, "Youre
                born; you die; and everything in-between is just
                filler" What a dreadfully pessimistic
                view of life. The point is, however, that the
                Biblical perspective is that this is an accurate
                assessment of existence without God! 
                Let us get back to the Teacher. He
                was probably King Solomon, and the book of
                Ecclesiastes, from which our opening words are
                taken, is his inspired reflection on life.
                Ecclesiastes is one of the most fascinating books
                in the Holy Bible! Solomon devoted himself to
                study and to explore all that is under heaven. He
                devoted himself to understanding what life is all
                about.  
                
                    "I wanted to
                    see what was worthwhile for men to do under
                    heaven during the days of their lives",
                    he says (Ecc. 2:3).  
                 
                We began with his conclusions. Let
                us see how he arrived at them. 
                INTELLECT 
                "I devoted myself to study",
                says Solomon (Ecc. 1:13). He explored wisdom and
                knowledge. I thought to myself, "Look, I
                have grown and increased in wisdom more than
                anyone before  me....I have experienced much of
                wisdom and knowledge" (1:16). He was
                not unlike those today who live for an academic
                career and the accumulation of a veritable
                alphabet after their names. Degrees are the
                thing, they say! And this is what they live for. 
                What is Solomons conclusion? 
                
                    "Then I
                    applied myself to the understanding of
                    wisdom, and also of madness and folly, but I
                    learned that this, too, is a chasing after
                    the wind. For with much wisdom comes much
                    sorrow; the more knowledge, the more grief."
                    (1:17,18) 
                 
                Isnt that the way it is? Does
                a "PhD" really bring happiness or
                contentment? Hardly! Perhaps you are able to
                articulate your misery more eloquently, but
                education brings no lasting peace. 
                PLEASURE 
                Next, Solomon turns to pleasure. In
                fact he says: 
                
                    "I denied
                    myself nothing my eyes desired; I refused my
                    heart no pleasure!" (2:10)  
                 
                He built gardens and parks. He
                amassed silver and gold. He acquired men and
                women singers. He also gathered a harem and gave
                himself over to the pleasures of the flesh
                (2:4-8). And what is his conclusion? 
                
                    "Yet when I
                    surveyed all that my hands had done and what
                    I had toiled to achieve, everything was
                    meaningless, a chasing after wind, nothing
                    was gained under the sun." (2:11) 
                 
                Can we not say the same? Have
                celebrities and rock stars not said the same?
                Having given themselves over to pleasure, have
                they not also found it to be an empty thing? 
                WORK 
                Now what about work? Solomon turns
                to work and again he finds the same thing:  
                
                    "What does a
                    man get for all the toil and anxious striving
                    with which he labours under the sun? All his
                    days his work is pain and grief; even at
                    night his mind does not rest!"  
                 
                (How well we know that!!) And what
                happens to all that you get? What happens to that
                great business empire you build?  
                
                    "I hated all
                    the things I toiled for under the sun",
                    says Solomon, "because I must leave them
                    to the one who comes after me; and who knows
                    whether he will be a wise man or a fool"
                    (2:17-23). 
                 
                So, intellectual pursuits, pleasure
                and work are explored and everything is
                meaningless, says the Word of God!  
                ADVANCEMENT 
                Climbing to the top of the corporate
                ladder. Ah! There is a worthwhile pursuit! Not
                so, says Solomon.  
                
                    "I saw that
                    all who live and walk under the sun followed
                    the youth, the kings successor!"
                    (Ecc. 4:15).  
                 
                The wisest man in all the world says
                that there is always someone who will do a better
                job, or offer a better service and is prepared to
                take you place. In the flash of an eye your white
                collar, executive position can become redundant,
                and you are left scrambling. All of this
                "getting ahead" is meaningless, says
                Solomon.  
                RICHES 
                 "Ive
                been rich, and Ive been poor; and believe
                me, rich is better!" The words of Sophie
                Tucker strike a responsive chord in many hearts!
                Rich is better, by far, and so in pursuit of the
                Almighty Dollar we work long hours, neglect our
                families, burn ourselves out, and break our backs
                for money that we have no time to spend. We need
                the money for the children, for the Jacuzzi, for
                the BMW; and we must have more! Solomon says:  
                
                    "Whoever loves
                    money never has money enough; Whoever loves
                    wealth is never satisfied with his income.
                    This too is meaningless." (5:10) 
                 
                Truer words were never spoken. 
                This, then, is Solomons view.
                The wisest man other than Jesus Christ Himself
                concludes that life without God is meaningless. 
                The history of man is littered with
                wrecks of men who testify to the emptiness of all
                things. Though dead, they still speak and their
                lives cry out to us of the meaningless of life
                without God. Howard Hughes, Elvis Presley, Janis
                Joplin, Napolean, Neitzsche. Brilliant, talented,
                creative, even revolutionary lives, yet empty
                without God.  
                Our own lives speak to us also,
                though we usually attempt to drown the sound in
                the deafening roar of furious activity. Yet in
                the rare quiet moments, perhaps in the lonely
                hours of the night, we wonder: Is that all there
                is? Is there nothing more? Perhaps we have
                achieved much of what we sought, but the
                anticipation far exceeded the actual event, and
                we have been left with a nagging emptiness. Is
                that all there is? Is there nothing to satisfy
                the soul? 
                The great theologian Augustine knew
                all about this. He says to God: You made us for
                yourself and our hearts find no peace until they
                rest in you! The Son of God Himself speaks to the
                issue: What good is it for a man to gain the
                whole world, and forfeit his soul (Mark 8:36)? 
                THAT IS NOT ALL THERE IS! 
                The Bible brings us good news.
                Solomon says that the conclusion of the matter is
                this: "Fear God and keep His
                commandments" (12:13). Return to God. Seek
                the forgiveness of God. Seek to know and serve
                God in reverence and love. 
                How may I know God, you may rightly
                ask! The Biblical answer is clear and  unequivocal:
                Jesus Christ! He is the Way, the Truth, and the
                Life (John 14:7). He is the Saviour of the world!
                He is the Son of God who came to die for sinners,
                and He is able to save them from their sin; and
                it is sin that is at the root of our trouble! It
                is rebellion against God that is at the bottom of
                our turmoil. It is because of sin that we are
                separated from God. And it is our wickedness that
                is going to bring the wrath of God upon our heads
                if we do not flee to Christ. 
                Friends, we urge you to listen to
                the words of God: 
                Seek the Lord while He may be
                found; 
                Call on Him while He is near. 
                Let the wicked forsake his way 
                And the evil man his thoughts. 
                Let him turn to the Lord, and He will have mercy
                on him, 
                And to our God, for He will freely pardon! 
                Isaiah 55:6,7 
                Listen also to the words of the Lord
                Jesus: 
                Come unto Me, all you who are
                weary and burdened, and I will  
                give you rest. Take my yoke upon you and learn
                from Me, for I 
                am gentle and humble in heart, and you will find
                rest for your souls. 
                Matthew 11:28,29 
                May God bless His Holy Word to your
                souls. 
                 
                Additional reading material
                is available free of charge. Please request John
                Blanchard's excellent booklet "Ultimate
                Questions " 
                 
                 
                 
                  
                   
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