Eccles Ch 3 – Study

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Additional notes are Black

For those who may wish to ‘study’ this chapter, the following simple resources are provided for you. Each passage has a four-Part approach to help you take in and think further about what you have read.

A. Find out :
  1. How wide embracing are these verses? v.1
  2. What do verses 2 & 3 cover?
  3. How does verse 4 naturally flow on?
  4. How does verse 5 continue from that?
  5. How do verses 6 & 7a move on from there?
  6. How do verses 7b and 8 now change?
B. Think:
  1. How can such words as in these verses be encouraging to us?
  2. How may they be depressing?
  3. How may they be challenging?
C. Comment:

In this passage the word “time” occurs fifteen times, and in that there is a sense of just going on and on. That is probably what Solomon, in the light of all that has he has said previously, is trying to convey, that life just goes on and on monotonously.

If life does just go on and on like that, that should create various feelings in us. First there is the sense of order and stability about life, a certain sureness about it. Second, if we look at it from a purely human point of view, there is almost a depressing inevitability about it, we are caught up in a giant wheel of activity where one thing must follow another. Third, though, and perhaps this should be the most important thing for us, there is the challenge to be alert to the times and the days in which we live.

If is Autumn, we know Winter will follow, but Spring will follow that. If we are going through difficulties, blessing will eventually come. Do we have the patience and perseverance to wait in the right attitude until the next “season” comes? The men of Issachar (1 Chronicles 12:32 ) were those who understood the times and knew what Israel should do. May we similarly understand when it is right to do the right thing in season, the appropriate thing for the moment.   

D. Application?  
  1. A time to move and a time to stand still?
  2. A time to speak out and a time to be silent?
A. Find out :  
  1. What is man’s burden? v.9,10
  2. What 2 things has God done? v.11
  3. Yet what is man’s “frustration”? v.11c
  4. So what is man’s lot? v.12
  5. What is God’s gift? v.13
  6. Why does God make things as they are? v.14
B. Think:
  1. What is the apparent hard aspect to life?
  2. How can drudgery be turned to blessing?
  3. What provision has God made, according to this passage?
C. Comment:  

Within this passage Solomon faces a problem that all mankind faces and then presents the solution. First the problem: that man has to work to stay alive(v.9,10). Genesis 3:19 tells us that because of our separation from God we will have to work hard to achieve provision. For so many that work is just daily drudgery that goes on and on meaninglessly.

Next the solution: God has imparted so much of Himself that work can be transformed to give us real satisfaction. Let’s consider.

First, the world in which we live and work is a beautiful place (v.11a), it is only man who spoils it. Our work environment can be a blessing.

Second, within us we have a sense of something far more than mere materialism, a sense of eternity (v.11b), a sense of the spiritual world, a sense of the Divine. Our awareness can be a blessing.

Third, the Lord Himself can bless us and transform the ordinary and make it something special (water into wine was the classic illustration in John chapter 2, Moses’ rod was another, Exodus 4:2). As we seek to do good (v.12) and to do our work well (implied), we can find satisfaction (v.13).

Yes, work is there as a necessity but the Lord has so provided that the necessity can be a blessing to us. Yet again we see that without God the world can be hard; with Him it can be transformed. He provides a world that is complete (v.14), a world where past and present are often repeats (v.15) and so a world for us to simply enjoy what is with God’s help, whether that be work or recreation.

D. Application?  
  1. Is the Lord in our work? He knows more about it than we do! (see Luke 5:4-10)
  2. Let God turn the ordinary into a blessing.
A. Find out :  
  1. Where did Solomon maintain wickedness was? v.16
  2. To whom will God bring judgement? v.17
  3. What does he maintain men are like? v.18
  4. In what way? v.19,20
  5. Of what was he unsure? v.21
  6. So what was his conclusion? v.22
B. Think:
  1. Reminder! From what perspective was Solomon looking at life?
  2. How are verses 18-21 only partial truth?
  3. How is the life of the Christian to be very far from the life seen here?
C. Comment:  

At various times in this book, Solomon’s low spiritual state produces half truths, and this is one of those times. First of all he considers the place of justice (v.16) and maintains that even there, there was evil (presumably corruption), in the very place where you would look for truth. But then he thinks, God will eventually deal with this (v.17), and as he thinks this he naturally moves on to think of death, for in death God deals with all men.

Frankly, he says, men are sometimes like animals (v.18) in the way they behave and, indeed, their end is just the same as that of animals (v.19). Humans and animals alike all end up in death returning to dust (v.20).

It is here that we now find the half truth, for in his “under the sun” thinking he sees the material dimension to life only and, yes, all bodies do eventually die and see corruption. However, for the human being at least, (the Bible is silent about animals) death is not the end. The unbeliever is excluded from God’s presence for eternity but never the less lives on in isolation, but for the believer it means a glorious eternity in the wonderful presence of their Saviour. This is the clear teaching of the rest of the Bible.

D. Application?
  1. The human viewpoint is limited when it doesn’t know God and doesn’t receive His revelation.
  2. Death is not the end!