Under The Sun

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Webers.Home

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May 28, 2018
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#61
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Ecc 12:9-10 . . A further word: Because Koheleth was a sage, he
continued to instruct the people. He listened to and tested the soundness of
many maxims. Koheleth sought to discover useful sayings and recorded
genuinely truthful sayings.

Solomon's argument smacks of circular reasoning in that he regards his own
personal philosophy as "genuinely truthful sayings" while any and all second
opinions are misinformation solely because he honestly believes himself
incapable of error. That's hardly a novel attitude. Many bright people are
deeply offended when those of lesser IQ reject their (sage) opinions.
However, we're inclined to give Solomon the benefit of the doubt and go
along with his self-evaluation because we are, after all, Bible students who,
for the most part, don't know any better anyway.

Ecc 12:11a . .The words of wise men are like goads,

Goads were used by mule skinners and such who drive oxen and/or horses
to pull plows and wagons. The device is a bit like the pointed tool that
workers use to pick up trash along roadways: a long stick whittled to a sharp
point at one end. A fancy goad might include an ornate metal prod at one
end. When the skinners want an ox to get moving, they just poke its rump.

Anyway; wise people are difficult to oppose without coming across as obtuse
because everything they say makes sense to those of us with a lesser IQ.
Even when the wise are wrong they sound right so there's nothing to gain by
matching wits with them. they'll just keep sticking it to you.

Ecc 12:11b . . and masters of these collections are like well-driven nails;

The word for "nails" is from masmerah (mas-mer-aw') which actually isn't a
nail but a peg. Ecclesiastes is the only place in the entire Old Testament
where masmerah is located. Small pegs can be used to build furniture. Large
ones can be used as fence posts; and other sizes can be used to hold a tent
in place. A husky peg on a tug boat can be used as a tow bit. So peg has
lots of meanings and one that we can easily apply in this passage is that the
person who takes the words of the wise seriously, supposedly becomes a
solid, stable individual.

Ecc 12:11c . .they are given by one shepherd.

If you asked twenty people to draw a crooked line; you would get twenty
dissimilar lines. Wisdom is like a straight line. If you asked those same
twenty people to draw a straight line, all twenty lines would look the same.
They might have different lengths, and they might be of different thickness,
but they would all conform to the well known geometric axiom that a
straight line is the shortest distance between two points.

Straight lines don't zig nor zag nor kink nor sag nor bow nor bend like a
crooked line. All straight lines look the same because straight lines go in only
one direction; viz: the words of the wise must be consistent if they're to be
taken seriously. A wishy-washy philosopher is just a blow-hard.

Ecc 12:12 . . But beyond this, my son, be warned: the writing of many
books is endless, and excessive devotion to books is wearying to the body.

Back then I'd imagine that prolific authors wore themselves out what with no
machines like typewriters to work with. In our day, writing is a snap with
computerized word processing.

"My son" doesn't necessarily refer to Koheleth's kin; but can also refer to his
students. The teacher then, is the student's father, in an academic sort of
way. There's a number of incidents in the Old Testament where Bible
students are called sons of the prophets. Compare 2Kings 2:12 where
Elijah's apprentice Elisha, called his master "my father".
_
 

Webers.Home

Well-known member
May 28, 2018
5,683
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Oregon
cfbac.org
#62
.
Ecc 12:13a . .The sum of the matter, when all is said and done:

Solomon has discussed how life is out of balance; viz: its unjust and unfair;
cruel and punctuated with misery-- youth is temporary, happiness is fragile,
joy is fleeting, and entertainment provides only momentary relief.

Life traps us in circumstances beyond our control and we're often dominated
by unscrupulous people. Life is pointless, much too brief, and everyone, both
the good, the bad, and the ugly, are faced with old age and the inevitability
of death. So . . since that is our situation; what is the use of life anyway? If
life is such a dead-end, a pointless pursuit, then why should we take it
seriously; if at all?

Ecc 12:13b-14 . . Revere God and observe His commandments! For this
applies to all mankind: that God will call every creature to account for
everything unknown, be it good or bad.

Wouldn't it be sad if we only lived and died like insects and fungi? I mean,
what would be the point of it all? What real advantage is it to have a
beautiful mind if it's only going to die and stop working after many years of
learning and experience? And what real value is it to the minds of the
present to make the world a better place for the next generation of minds if
the minds of the present don't live to see it?

By believing in a supreme being, your life means something after all. It
counts in some way when there is a God; and it gives people a hope for the
future after they're destroyed by old age and death. Wouldn't it be far better
to perceive yourself part of a grand scheme instead of walking across the
stage of your all too brief life as an insignificant speck in a pointless cosmos?

The Bible's God has another Genesis in the works for mankind. Yes, a whole
new earth and a whole new universe minus all the negative aspects of the
current one.

"For, behold, I create new heavens and a new earth: and the former shall
not be remembered, nor come into mind." (Isa 65:17-25)

"According to His promise we are looking for new heavens and a new earth,
in which righteousness dwells." (2 Pet 3:13)

"I saw a new heaven and a new earth; for the first heaven and the first
earth passed away" (Rev 21:1-6)

As my wife and I decline and wax older and older, we feel sadness for the
loss of our youth. There was a time when we were both bright-eyed and
bushy-tailed and could get by with very little rest. The skin on our face, and
under our chin, was tight, and our middles were lean and defined. Today
we're sag-bottomed and flaccid.

The great cowboy artist Charles Russell once commented that time traded
him wrinkles for teeth. Me too. I've lost teeth, some are capped, and my
gums have receded. The teeth that remain have become so brittle that I
have to be careful when eating my favorite hard candies.

Believing that there is a supreme being, and a future world, lifts our spirits
and strengthens us to cope with aging and the onset of death. We have
promise of a great, eternal future out ahead in a world where youth is the
norm, and no one dies or gets sick.

Even if we are totally wrong in our belief, my wife and I are far better off
than "the man under the sun" who has resigned himself to futility; to live out
his pointless existence with no more importance than an alley cat or a feral
dog; to die and be recycled back into the matrix from whence he came; the
meanwhile suppressing a gnawing anxiety in the back of his mind that there
just might be an afterlife after all.

-- The End --