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Ecclesiastes 4:1-8

A Hollow Crown and a Full Heart

Solomon’s reflections in Ecclesiastes 4:1–8 read like a tour through the darker corners of human relationships. He begins with oppression, describing a world where the powerful crush the powerless and neither side finds comfort. His despair is so deep that he remarks it might be better never to have been born than to witness such cruelty. That is not exactly the sort of verse anyone stitches on a decorative pillow, yet the point is clear: people are not objects to be used for pleasure, privilege, or position. Albert Speer’s description of Hitler in Inside the Third Reich reinforces this sobering reality. He wrote that Hitler “could fascinate, but he could not respond to friendship… At the core of the place where his heart should be, Hitler was a hollow man.” Where love is absent, both oppressor and oppressed remain comfortless. Comfort is a gift that grows only where genuine care exists, and it withers when people are treated like tools rather than treasured lives.

Solomon then shifts from seeing people as objects to seeing them as rivals. He observes that much human effort springs from envy: “A man’s skill in his work comes from his envy of his neighbor.” The ancient world apparently had its own version of keeping up with the Joneses. Solomon calls this relentless striving “chasing after the wind,” a poetic phrase that gently suggests the futility of trying to grab what cannot be held. John Bunyan pictured this in Pilgrim’s Progress when Pilgrim met the man with the rake who stared only at the ground, searching for treasure in the dirt while a celestial crown hovered above him. He never looked up and missed the glory entirely. Many of us understand that posture. We study schedules, emails, and anxieties with great concentration while overlooking the people standing beside us. The finest gifts often arrive in ordinary relationships, yet they can be missed while we chase something that promises satisfaction but never delivers.

Finally, Solomon addresses the illusion of isolation. He describes the person who decides, “I do not need anyone.” C. S. Lewis warned that a heart locked away from others may become “unbreakable, impenetrable, and irredeemable.” The New Testament offers a different vision through Jesus Christ. He declared, “This is my commandment, that you love one another as I have loved you” (John 15:12). Paul added, “We are members one of another” (Ephesians 4:25). Jesus did not live as a rock or an island. He entered human loneliness, shared meals, wept with friends, and gave Himself for others. In Him, relationships find healing and purpose, and the hollow places of the human heart discover fullness.

Ecclesiastes 3:21, 12:7, Mark 12:24

God’s Promise

The Sadducees were known for trying to trap Jesus with clever questions. They once presented a far-fetched scenario about a woman who married seven brothers in succession and asked whose wife she would be in heaven. Their intent was not curiosity but ridicule, since they denied the resurrection entirely. Jesus responded by telling them they were mistaken because they did not “know the Scriptures.” Using Exodus 3:1–6, He pointed to God’s declaration to Moses: “I am the God of Abraham, Isaac, and Jacob.” In Mark 12:26 Jesus emphasized the present tense of “I am,” explaining that God did not say “I was” the God of these patriarchs. By calling Himself their God in the present, God affirmed that they were still alive to Him. My old Greek professor, John Grassmick, noted that God implied the patriarchs continued to live and that His covenant relationship with them remained intact. Jesus concluded that God “is not God of the dead, but of the living” (Mark 12:27). The covenant-keeping God does not abandon His people at death.

This truth reaches into ordinary life more than we sometimes realize. Many live as though today is all there is, pouring energy into pleasures, possessions, and positions that cannot outlast the grave. Solomon wrestled with this dilemma in Ecclesiastes, describing life without eternal perspective as vanity. Even sincere people can drift into a routine that forgets eternity entirely. It is possible to fill calendars, maintain responsibilities, and still feel a subtle emptiness. A gentle chuckle sometimes helps us face reality; if the Sadducees had been correct, their worldview would have been rather bleak indeed. Their refusal to believe in resurrection left them with little hope beyond the present moment. Jesus told them they were “deceiving themselves” (Mark 12:24). When eternity is removed from view, life’s deeper meaning becomes difficult to locate.

The New Testament presents Jesus as the answer to this dilemma. He is the divine Son who came from beyond and returned there, promising life that continues beyond death. In John 14:2–3 He declared, “In my Father’s house are many rooms… I go to prepare a place for you.” Paul affirmed that Christ “has been raised from the dead” and that through Him resurrection becomes a reality (1 Corinthians 15:20). Solomon once asked, “Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward?” Jesus provides the answer through His own resurrection and promise. God’s faithfulness extends beyond the limits of time, and His covenant with His people includes life that continues in His presence.

Ecclesiastes 4:1-2

That Lonesome Valley

In the opening chapters of Ecclesiastes, Solomon paints a sobering picture of life “under the sun.” The universe appears indifferent to human joys and sorrows. The sun rises and sets without pause, the seasons continue their rhythm, and the rivers flow into the sea without concern for the struggles of those living beside them. The old lyric, “Old Man River…he don’t care,” captures this sense of indifference. Humanity lives in a fallen world marked by tension between people and their environment. Labor is difficult, relationships can be strained, and life sometimes feels like a lonely journey. Woody Guthrie’s familiar line expresses the sentiment well: “You got to walk that lonesome valley; you have to walk it by yourself.” Solomon’s reflections expose the isolation that can accompany life when it is viewed apart from God. Generations come and go, yet the natural world carries on, seemingly unaffected by the drama of human existence.

Loneliness takes many forms. There is the loneliness of simply being alone, which prisons use as punishment through solitary confinement. There is psychological loneliness, when a person stands in a crowd yet feels invisible. There is the loneliness of separation, experienced when distance removes us from those we love. Finally, there is existential loneliness, the sense of being alienated from the universe itself. A generation is born and another passes away while the wind keeps blowing and the sun keeps shining. It can feel as though the universe continues without noticing anyone in particular. When people begin to see life this way, relationships can suffer. If the world does not care, it becomes easier to treat others as though they do not matter either. Solomon observed this reality in Ecclesiastes 4:1–2: “I saw all the oppressions that are done under the sun… the tears of the oppressed, and they had no one to comfort them.” Both the oppressed and the oppressors find themselves trapped in the same lonely cycle.

The New Testament offers a striking contrast to this isolation. Jesus entered a world marked by loneliness and declared, “I am with you always, to the end of the age” (Matthew 28:20). He described Himself as the Good Shepherd who knows His sheep and calls them by name (John 10:14). The apostle Paul affirmed that nothing “in all creation” can separate us from the love of God in Christ Jesus (Romans 8:39). In a universe that sometimes feels indifferent, the presence of Christ speaks of personal care and enduring companionship. He steps into humanity’s isolation and transforms it with the promise of divine nearness.

Ecclesiastes 3:21-22, John 11:25

The Question is “Who?”

Ecclesiastes 3:21 presents a difficult and searching question: “Who knows whether the spirit of man goes upward, and the spirit of the beast goes down into the earth?” It raises the fundamental issue of whether anything exists beyond the grave. Some scholars argue that people in the Old Testament had little concept of life after death, yet others see evidence throughout Scripture that they did. As Ryken observes, “Although some scholars still doubt whether people in Old Testament times believed in life after death, it is clear from this and many other verses that they generally did.” Solomon appears to pose the question rather than settle it immediately, allowing readers to wrestle with uncertainty. Later, however, he expresses conviction in Ecclesiastes 12:7: “…dust returns to the earth…But the spirit returns to God who gave it.” The question lingers long enough to stir reflection before pointing toward a deeper truth.

The reality of death has a way of focusing the mind. As the years pass, thoughts about mortality tend to arrive more frequently, sometimes uninvited and often at inconvenient moments. Solomon devoted considerable attention to this subject, noting that life’s pleasures, possessions, and positions under the sun cannot provide lasting satisfaction. Without clarity about what follows death, joy in daily living remains elusive. He wrestled with the apparent futility of life and even wondered whether it might be better never to have been born. Such reflections can sound gloomy, yet they reveal an honest struggle shared by many. Human achievements fade, memories dim, and even the strongest bodies eventually surrender. The question of what lies beyond remains stubbornly persistent. It is not merely philosophical. It shapes how people view purpose, meaning, and hope in the present.

Ultimately, the answer Solomon seeks is not a theory but a person. His questions point toward a “who” rather than a “what.” Who knows what lies beyond the grave? Who can reveal what comes after life ends? The New Testament offers a clear response. As Jesus prepared to raise Lazarus, He declared, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live” (John 11:25). Paul echoes this assurance, writing, “For to me to live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21). The uncertainty that hovers over human mortality finds resolution in Christ. He does not merely discuss life after death; He embodies it. In Him, the lingering question of Ecclesiastes receives its answer, not as an abstract idea but as a living promise.

Ecclesiastes 3:20

One, Two, Buckle my Shoe

Perhaps age has a way of turning our attention toward the inevitable end of our physical lives. The phrase “dust to dust, and ashes to ashes” echoes through the book of Ecclesiastes and lingers in thoughtful moments. Ecclesiastes 3:20 reminds us, “All go to one place. All are from the dust, and to dust all return.” The verse applies equally to people and animals. Everything that has ever lived eventually dies. Solomon wrestled with this reality and called it vanity. The wise and the foolish share the same fate. The wealthy and the poor reach the same conclusion. The productive and the idle all arrive at the same destination. The comparison between humanity and animals reinforces the same sobering truth: both return to dust. It is a humbling realization. Human achievement, intelligence, and ambition cannot change the certainty of mortality. The earth has received kings and shepherds alike, and it will continue to do so.

Childhood memories sometimes echo these realities in unexpected ways. “Ring around the Rosie, a pocket full of posies. Ashes! Ashes! We all fall down.” As children, the rhyme seemed playful. Later reflection gives it a more serious tone. On Himebaugh Avenue in North Omaha, jump ropes turned and voices sang the same lines repeatedly. The rope kept swinging, and the song kept repeating, often to the mild frustration of nearby listeners. Another childhood chant eventually found its way into popular films and became a darker refrain. These little verses remind us, in their own simple way, that life has limits. Even the Grim Reaper appears in cultural imagination as a persistent visitor. The message is not meant to produce dread but awareness. Mortality is a teacher, gently reminding us that time is not unlimited and that human control is more fragile than we sometimes imagine. Life moves quickly, and its brevity has a way of sharpening perspective.

The New Testament addresses mortality with both honesty and hope. Jesus spoke plainly: “In the world you will have tribulation” (John 16:33), yet He also promised something greater. In John 14:2–3 He said, “In my Father’s house are many rooms… I go to prepare a place for you.” The certainty of death does not stand alone in the gospel story. Paul writes, “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22). While humanity returns to dust, Christ offers resurrection and life beyond the grave. The One who entered death and rose again transforms the meaning of mortality. The future is not defined solely by ashes and dust but by the promise of a prepared place and a faithful Savior who has gone ahead.

Ecclesiastes 3:18-20

Ring Around The Rosie!

In Ecclesiastes 3:18–20 we are reminded that God is testing humanity. The writer observes that people and animals share the same breath and the same end: “All are from the dust, and to dust all return.” Mortality is not merely a biological fact but a spiritual lesson. God allows human frailty to reveal who we are and who He is. A childhood memory sometimes captures this truth in unexpected ways. As children splashed in a summer pool and later played “Ring Around the Rosie,” the familiar line echoed: “Ashes! Ashes! We all fall down.” At six years old, those words seemed only playful. Later reflection reveals their sobering echo. Some historians link the rhyme to the Great Plague, with its rash, its posies, and its tragic ending. Whether or not that connection is exact, the message remains: all of us fall down. Death arrives without regard to status or strength. Neither clever plans nor human effort can fully shield us. The fall of humanity placed mortality upon us all, and it remains beyond our control.

Recognizing mortality often changes perspective. It humbles ambition and places achievements in their proper context. We make plans, collect possessions, and imagine we are steering the ship, only to discover we are passengers more than captains. Life can feel like an exam for which the study guide never fully arrives. We try to compare ourselves favorably with others, though the mirror sometimes reveals a more honest report. In this sense, life exposes our dependence. Ogilvie notes that we must trust God’s deeds since our own are limited and our lives too brief to see ultimate justice. Another commentator writes, “Our present existence is a proving ground. It is a test… in the sense of something that demonstrates our true character.” Mortality reveals our place in the universe and our relationship to God. The lesson can be uncomfortable, like discovering the answer key is not in our possession after all.

The New Testament speaks directly to this human condition. Jesus described Himself as the shepherd, saying, “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep” (John 10:11). While humanity returns to dust, Christ offers a different horizon: “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22). Mortality becomes a teacher pointing beyond itself. Paul writes, “For this perishable body must put on the imperishable” (1 Corinthians 15:53). In Christ, the testing ground of life reveals not only human frailty but also divine grace, reminding us that while all fall down, God’s redemptive purpose stands.

Jeremiah 2:37, Romans 6:14

Truth Will Set You Free

The people of Jerusalem searched for deliverance through alliances with surrounding nations, hoping political connections would secure their future. Jeremiah made it clear that such confidence would end in disappointment. In Jeremiah 2:37 we read, “From it too, you will come away with your hands on your head, for the Lord has rejected those whom you trust, and you will not prosper by them.” The very nations trusted for protection would eventually enslave them. Huey explains, “Its dependence on other nations rather than on God was leading to national destruction. After its defeat, many of the people would be led away as captives with their hands on their heads.” The image is sobering. Those who sought freedom through human alliances found themselves returning to captivity. Israel looked to others for liberation when true freedom could only be found in a relationship with the God who created and sustained them.

This pattern continues to echo through history and into ordinary life. Nations still depend on alliances for security, and individuals often look to various systems, achievements, or pleasures to provide meaning and peace. Yet the things we trust apart from God frequently become masters rather than servants. Boice writes, “Remember that the next time someone suggests that you have to sin to be free. Merely attaching the word freedom to sin does not make sin a way of liberation. The truth is that sin is bondage. It enslaves us so that we are unable to escape its grasp later, even if we want to.” The promise of freedom can be persuasive, whether it appears in possessions, ambitions, or personal indulgences. It often arrives wrapped in attractive packaging and persuasive language. Over time, however, these pursuits can quietly take control, leaving us wondering how something that once felt liberating now feels strangely confining. The human heart has a remarkable ability to trade lasting peace for temporary satisfaction while insisting it is doing just fine.

The New Testament presents a different vision of freedom through Jesus Christ. He declared, “You will know the truth, and the truth will set you free” (John 8:32). God opposes sin not out of harshness but because it enslaves and ultimately destroys. As another writer observes, sin leads to blindness and bondage, much like Samson’s downfall. Jesus came to offer life rather than captivity, saying, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10). Through His death and resurrection, He provides a liberation no earthly alliance can supply. Paul affirms this freedom in Romans 6:14: “Sin will have no dominion over you since you are not under law but under grace.” In Christ, the search for freedom finds its true and lasting fulfillment.

Jeremiah 2:36

It Doesn’t Make Sense

Jeremiah, along with many of the prophets, confronted both the northern and southern kingdoms of Israel with their sins. Yet Israel could not see their wrong and certainly would not admit it. Even when the blood on their hands exposed their guilt, they refused to acknowledge their faults. Huey observes, “Since Adam’s sin and denial of blame (Gen 3:12), the human race has become skilled at sidestepping guilt. The most difficult words to form on human lips are ‘I was wrong; I am guilty.’” This stubborn refusal led to shame and failure. The Northern Kingdom experienced the consequences when Assyria scattered them throughout the world in 721 before Christ, carrying them away as captives. Judah still had an opportunity to repent, and Jeremiah was sent as the final prophetic voice to warn them. In Jeremiah 2:36 he declares, “How much you go about changing your way! You shall be put to shame by Egypt as you were put to shame by Assyria.” Their unwillingness to confess would eventually lead to disgrace.

The charge against Judah included inconsistency and disloyalty. The phrase “changing your way” reveals a nation shifting allegiances whenever convenient. They trusted Egypt one moment, Assyria the next, and later Babylon. They moved from one idol to another, abandoning the Lord who had delivered them from Egypt. Hughes writes, “Loyalty is indispensable to the survival of friendship. How many once-prosperous friendships have faded because of disloyal talk? Pascal put it pointedly: ‘I set this down as a fact, that if all men knew what each other said of the other, there would not be four friends in the world.’ You will never know a deep friendship unless there is mutual loyalty and trust.” Disloyalty inevitably produces shame. This pattern feels familiar in everyday life. It is easy to shift commitments when circumstances change or to place confidence in whatever promises immediate security. The human heart can change directions with surprising speed, often while insisting it has remained steady all along.

The New Testament exposes this same tendency and offers a clearer path. James writes, “A double-minded man is unstable in all his ways” (James 1:8). Jesus taught that divided loyalty cannot endure: “No one can serve two masters” (Matthew 6:24). Yet Christ also embodies the loyalty humanity lacks. Paul reminds believers, “If we are faithless, he remains faithful” (2 Timothy 2:13). While people often search for meaning in shifting alliances, the gospel points to a Savior who remains constant. Willis notes that Israel should have looked to the Lord, the One who delivered them with a mighty hand. The New Testament echoes that truth, declaring that salvation is found not in earthly power but in Christ, “the same yesterday and today and forever” (Hebrews 13:8).

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