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Ecclesiastes 8:6-7, Proverbs 24:21

Finding Wisdom

The Bible calls people to live peaceful lives by submitting to legitimate authority, and Paul tells us to pray for those who lead as well. Solomon gives a clear expression of this in Proverbs 24:21: “My son, fear the LORD and the king, and do not join with those who do otherwise.” Ecclesiastes 8:5 adds that those who obey authority generally have a less difficult time in life than those who rebel. That is usually true, and many of us learn it the hard way, sometimes with fewer push pins in our pride than we expected. Yet Solomon also says, “For there is a time and a way for everything, although man’s trouble lies heavy on him. For he does not know what is to be, for who can tell him how it will be?” (Ecclesiastes 8:6-7). In harmony with the wider message of Ecclesiastes 3, he seems to acknowledge that there can be a proper time even for civil disobedience. Still, the wise person does not act rashly. He seeks God’s timing, because knowing there is “a time” is not the same as knowing that this very moment is it.

That tension meets us in daily life more often than we may wish. Sometimes we face situations where we can either obey God or obey human authority, but not both. The Hebrew midwives faced that crisis when Pharaoh commanded them to kill the Hebrew baby boys. Peter faced it when he was ordered to stop preaching Christ and answered, “We ought to obey God rather than men” (Acts 5:29). Yet these decisions are not always as neat and tidy as they look in a Sunday school picture. Life is complex, and our judgment can be cloudy, especially when our preferences dress themselves up as convictions. Joseph showed wisdom in Egypt while suffering injustice. Daniel showed wisdom in Babylon under pagan rule. Nehemiah showed wisdom in serving a king while carrying the burden to rebuild Jerusalem. Wisdom helps us know not only what is right, but how and when to respond when duties seem to collide.

Because we know these biblical stories so well, we can mistakenly think every case is simple. It is not. God has not given individuals a blank check to obey only the laws they happen to like. Romans 13:1 says, “Let every person be subject to the governing authorities.” Civil disobedience must be clearly supported by God’s revealed truth, not by mood, irritation, or a bad afternoon. This is where Jesus brings light. He Himself said, “Render to Caesar the things that are Caesar’s, and to God the things that are God’s” (Mark 12:17). In Christ we see perfect wisdom, courage, and submission. When facing difficult questions, James says, “If any of you lacks wisdom, let him ask God” (James 1:5). Solomon also reminds us that “safety lies in many advisers.” Jesus teaches us that truth and grace are not enemies, and under His lordship, even hard decisions can be faced with a steady heart.

Ecclesiastes 8:7-8, Genesis 4:26

The Road to Eternal Life

Ecclesiastes 8:7-8 reminds us of a truth we often try to sidestep: “For he does not know what is to be, for who can tell him how it will be? No man has the power to retain the spirit or power over the day of death.” These verses speak plainly about the when, the how, and the certainty of death. No one knows when his final day will come. I once tested that idea with an online “Death Clock.” Back in 2014, it confidently informed me that I would die on October 27, 2019, even counting down the seconds as if it had insider information. It also predicted my grandson TJ would pass away in 2067 at the age of sixty-five. As of 2026, we are both still here, and the clock has quietly lost credibility. Solomon was right all along. There are too many variables in life for anyone to predict the timing of death with any accuracy.

Not only is the timing unknown, but the manner of death is equally hidden. A scene from The Big Fish tells of children peering into a witch’s glass eye to see how they would die. One boy saw himself falling off a ladder. My grandson, at eleven years old, quickly reasoned that such knowledge would simply lead the boy to avoid ladders forever. Even a child can see the flaw in trying to outmaneuver what only God knows. Solomon brings us back to reality: “no one has power over the day of death.” It is certain, even if its details remain a mystery. This truth quietly levels us all. Kings and common people stand on the same ground here. Wealth, reputation, and influence do not grant exemptions. Death is a command no one can resist. The story of Abel, Seth, and Enoch reminds us that from the earliest days, humanity has wrestled with this reality. Seth’s son Enoch, whose name points to human frailty, lived in a time when “men began to call upon the name of the LORD,” acknowledging their limits and their need.

The New Testament brings light into this shadow. While Ecclesiastes reveals the certainty of death, Jesus speaks of victory beyond it. He says, “I am the resurrection and the life. Whoever believes in me, though he die, yet shall he live” (John 11:25). What we cannot control, Christ has conquered. The apostle Paul writes, “The last enemy to be destroyed is death” (1 Corinthians 15:26). Through the cross and resurrection, Jesus transforms death from a final wall into a doorway. The contrast between the way of Cain and the way of Enoch finds its fulfillment in Him. Those who walk with God find that death does not have the final word. As Scripture says, “To live is Christ, and to die is gain” (Philippians 1:21). In Christ, the mystery of death remains, but its sting is removed, and its outcome is no longer uncertain.

Jeremiah 4:28

It shall come to pass

Sometimes the days seem to stretch on without end, yet the old saying still holds its ground: “everything must come to an end.” That truth applies not only to the events that fill our calendars but also to our lives themselves. My dad was not a Bible scholar, but he had a way of summarizing deep truth in a single line. He often said, “and this too shall come to pass.” History quietly agrees with him. Civilizations rise and fall with a regular rhythm that would almost be predictable if it were not so sobering. Egypt, Babylon, Persia, Greece, Rome, and many others have all taken their turn on the stage. Because our own lives unfold in such a short span within a single era, it is easy to think things will continue as they are. Yet history reminds us that what feels permanent often is not. Even the things we assume will last, like that box of leftovers in the refrigerator, have a way of proving otherwise.

Jeremiah gives us insight into why even great nations fall. The decline of Israel was not random or accidental. It was tied directly to its rebellion against the God who had formed and sustained it. From its early days in Egypt to its strength under Solomon, Israel experienced both blessing and collapse. Jeremiah 4:28 records the seriousness of that fall: “For this, the earth shall mourn, and the heavens above be dark; for I have spoken; I have purposed; I have not relented, nor will I turn back.” That is a sobering picture. In our daily lives, we may not be managing empires, but we still wrestle with the same tendencies. We drift, we forget, and we occasionally act as if we are in charge of outcomes that clearly belong to God. History, both ancient and personal, gently reminds us that our plans are not always as sturdy as we imagine. The rise and fall of nations mirrors the smaller patterns we see in our own lives.

The New Testament, especially through Luke’s writings, shows that history is not a random collection of events but the unfolding of God’s purpose. As James Montgomery Boice observed, Luke is not merely recording the story of the early church but revealing that history has a plan. Scripture says, “When the fullness of time had come, God sent forth his Son” (Galatians 4:4). History moves toward Christ and finds its meaning in Him. Jesus stands at the center, drawing people into a new fellowship and shaping lives for His glory. He also promises, “Behold, I am making all things new” (Revelation 21:5). The rise and fall of nations, the passing of days, and even our own brief lives are part of a larger story. As the saying goes, all history is His story. God has spoken, and He will not turn back. In Christ, what must come to pass leads not to uncertainty, but to a future shaped by His unchanging purpose.

Jeremiah 4:27

A Ray of Hope

God’s grace can be seen throughout the Old Testament, especially in the stories that speak of judgment. In each account, the central theme is not destruction but the way of escape. Noah found safety by believing God. Lot escaped by believing God. The Israelites in Egypt were spared through faith in God’s provision. Rahab, Abraham, and many others discovered that the path to life was the same: believe God. Even in the coming destruction of Jerusalem, Jeremiah did not simply announce doom; he proclaimed hope and called the people to trust the Lord. Jeremiah 4:27 captures this balance: “For thus says the LORD, ‘The whole land shall be a desolation; yet I will not make a full end.’” The story, in the end, is not centered on those who refused to believe but on those who did. God’s grace consistently shines through, even when the skies grow dark.

That pattern speaks directly into our daily lives, though perhaps in quieter ways. We may not be building arks or marking doorposts, but we still face moments that require trust. We often prefer visible guarantees, detailed plans, and perhaps a small preview of tomorrow just to feel comfortable. Instead, we are invited to trust God without seeing the full picture. History reminds us that God refused to let Noah perish in the flood, would not allow Lot to be consumed in Sodom, and protected those who placed the Passover blood over their doors. He spared Rahab in Jericho and extended hope again and again. Even Adam and Eve were given the promise of a coming deliverer. There has always been a ray of hope in the sky, though sometimes we squint to see it, especially on days when the clouds seem to have settled in for an extended stay. The consistency of God’s grace reminds us that He has never been careless with those who trust Him.

The New Testament reveals that this steady thread of hope finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ. He declares, “I am the root and the offspring of David, the bright morning star” (Revelation 22:16). What was promised in shadows is made clear in Him. The warnings of judgment are no longer reasons for fear but reminders of God’s love and provision. Jesus assures His followers, “My sheep hear My voice, and I know them, and they follow Me, and I give eternal life to them, and they shall never perish” (John 10:27-28). Scripture adds that “He is able to save forever those who draw near to God through Him” (Hebrews 7:25). Because He lives, “you shall live also” (John 14:19). In Christ, the way of escape is not a distant hope but a present reality, and even death itself becomes, as Paul wrote, “gain” (Philippians 1:21).

Jeremiah 4:26, 1 Corinthians 2:14

From Creation to Chaos

In the beginning, God spoke, and chaos became creation. Order stepped onto the stage, and what had been formless took shape. During the first three days, the seas, the skies, the stars, and the land were formed into recognizable categories. In the next three days, God filled those categories with life: fish in the seas, birds in the air, animals on the earth, and finally a garden and the creation of man and woman in His own image. God spoke, and good things came. Yet man’s rebellion reversed that beautiful order. Jeremiah later looked upon the land and said, “I looked, and behold, the fruitful land was a desert, and all its cities were laid in ruins before the LORD” (Jeremiah 4:26). The contrast is striking. God brings order out of chaos; man, left to himself, has a way of turning even a well-arranged room back into disorder before lunch.

Jeremiah’s day reveals how this reversal happens. The people had forgotten God and all He had done for them. Their ears could no longer hear, and their eyes could no longer see. They had grown dull to spiritual truth. Without God, everything drifts back toward chaos. That pattern still finds its way into our lives. We may not be watching cities fall, but we can misplace what matters and then wonder why things feel unsettled. Paul explains this clearly: “The natural person does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are folly to him” (1 Corinthians 2:14). Truth can stand right in front of us, and we still miss it if our hearts are not aligned with God. It is a bit like searching for reading glasses while they are resting on your head. The problem is not the availability of truth but the condition of our perception. Without God’s Spirit, even the clearest truths can seem distant or confusing.

The New Testament shows that the answer to this condition is found in Jesus Christ. The change we need is not merely external but internal. As Jesus said, “Unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God” (John 3:3). Charles Hodge noted that if sin blinds the soul to truth, then only the Spirit can restore sight. This aligns with Paul’s words: “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts” (2 Corinthians 4:6). The same God who brought order at creation brings clarity to the human heart through Christ. Those who come to Him are not turned away, for Jesus said, “Whoever comes to me I will never cast out” (John 6:37). In Him, chaos gives way to understanding, and what once seemed foolish begins to shine with meaning.

Jeremiah 4:25

Hope and a Future

After the six days of creation in Genesis, God commissioned Adam and Eve to “be fruitful and fill the earth.” It was a world shaped by His voice, ordered out of chaos, and filled with goodness. Yet sin has a way of undoing what God has so carefully arranged. Rebellion does not build; it unravels. Jeremiah captures this reversal with sobering clarity as he describes Judah’s condition using the language of creation turned backward. What once had form becomes “without form and void.” What once teemed with life grows empty. In Jeremiah 4:25 he writes, “I looked, and behold, there was no man, and all the birds of the air had fled.” It is a haunting picture. The fruitful land has become barren, and the fullness of life has slipped away. It reminds us, perhaps uncomfortably, that when we drift from God’s design, things do not merely pause; they begin to come apart.

This pattern is not confined to ancient history. It quietly repeats itself in our own lives. We may not notice it at first. Life gets busy, priorities shift, and before long we find ourselves surrounded by a kind of inner clutter that we did not plan. We were meant to flourish, yet sometimes we feel a bit like a room that was cleaned last week but now seems to have been visited by a small tornado. Jeremiah’s words help us see that the issue is not simply external circumstances but the deeper condition of the heart. Without God, everything trends toward disorder. Yet Jeremiah does not leave us there. He speaks of a coming New Covenant, a time when the Spirit of God would once again move “over the face of the deep.” Lloyd-Jones described this as a “breath of hope,” like a traveler in a desert suddenly seeing an oasis. Scripture echoes this promise: “The people dwelling in darkness have seen a great light” (Matthew 4:16). Even in our confusion, there remains the quiet possibility of renewal.

That promise finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ. Jeremiah pointed forward to a covenant that would restore what sin had undone, and Jesus declared its arrival. At the last supper, He took the cup and spoke of “the new covenant in my blood” (Luke 22:20). Through Him, order is brought back into chaos, and life is breathed into what once felt empty. The New Testament reminds us, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation” (2 Corinthians 5:17). The same God who formed the world now works within hearts, restoring what was lost. In Christ, hope is not an illusion but a present reality. Even as we walk through the valleys of life, we carry the promise that God’s purposes are not abandoned. As Jesus said, “I came that they may have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10).

Jeremiah 4:24, Genesis 1:1-2

The Second Adam

Jeremiah described the earth as being “without form and void,” echoing the condition of Genesis 1:2. That phrase carries weight. It reminds us that rebellion against God does not lead forward but backward. In creation, God moved a chaotic, lifeless world into one filled with order and life, calling it to be fruitful and full. Sin reverses that movement. It slowly unravels what God has made, drawing everything toward emptiness and confusion. Jeremiah paints a vivid picture of this decline: “I looked on the mountains, and behold, they were quaking, and all the hills moved to and fro” (Jeremiah 4:24). Even creation itself seems unsettled, as though the very ground beneath our feet shares in the consequences of human rebellion. It is a sobering thought. Left to ourselves, we do not drift toward order. We drift toward disorder, often more quickly than we would like to admit.

That pattern is not limited to ancient Judah. It shows up quietly in our own lives. We may begin with good intentions, but without God’s steadying hand, things tend to slide out of place. It is a bit like trying to keep a desk perfectly organized while continuing to use it every day. Papers multiply, small items wander off, and before long the neat arrangement has become a mystery even to its owner. Spurgeon saw in this a picture of the human heart. He described it as “Tohu and Bohu, disorder and confusion,” until God steps in to do something entirely new. He does not renovate the old structure or patch up a few cracks. He builds anew. As long as we live in these bodies, Paul reminds us there is a struggle between the pull of sin and the order God brings. Yet there remains a deeper hope that God’s work is not partial or temporary but complete and lasting.

That hope finds its fulfillment in Jesus Christ. The new creation Spurgeon and Lloyd-Jones describe is not an idea but a reality brought about through Him. Scripture says, “If anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come” (2 Corinthians 5:17). Just as “the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” in the beginning, so the Spirit now moves within the heart, bringing life where there was none. Jesus spoke of this when He said, “That which is born of the Spirit is spirit” (John 3:6). John Henry Newman captured it well: “A second Adam to the fight, and to the rescue came.” Christ restores what sin has undone. Where there was darkness, He speaks light. Where there was emptiness, He brings life.

Jeremiah 4:23, Genesis 1:1-2

Tohoo And Bohoo

Many commentators suggest that the early verses of Genesis describe a world that had fallen into chaos, expressed in the phrase “without form and void.” However one understands the details, Scripture clearly shows that this condition reflects the effects of sin, not the intention of God. Isaiah affirms that God “made the world to be lived in, not to be a place of empty chaos” (Isaiah 45:18). Jeremiah looked at his own generation and, with a heavy heart, used that same language: “I looked on the earth, and behold, it was without form and void; and to the heavens, and they had no light” (Jeremiah 4:23). The parallel is sobering. What began as a description of disorder at the dawn of creation becomes a picture of moral and spiritual ruin among God’s people. Sin, whether in heaven or on earth, has a way of turning what is ordered into what is empty.

That pattern continues to echo in our own experience. We may not describe our lives in such dramatic terms, yet there are moments when things feel a bit scattered, like a carefully planned schedule that quietly falls apart before noon. E. W. Bullinger noted that the phrase “without form and void” draws attention to a condition of ruin, a state that contrasts sharply with God’s original design. He also saw in Genesis a parallel with the “new creation” that takes place in those who are born again. That idea brings the subject closer to home. Left to ourselves, we do not naturally move toward clarity and purpose. Instead, we drift. We may try to organize the outward parts of life, but inwardly there can still be a sense of emptiness that refuses to cooperate. It is not simply a matter of better habits or improved effort. Something deeper is needed, something that reaches the heart.

That deeper work is revealed in Jesus Christ. The same God who said, “Let there be light,” and brought order out of chaos now shines into human hearts. The apostle Paul writes, “God, who said, ‘Let light shine out of darkness,’ has shone in our hearts” (2 Corinthians 4:6). This is the language of new creation. Through Christ, what was empty is filled, and what was dark is illuminated. Jesus Himself said, “I am the light of the world. Whoever follows me will not walk in darkness, but will have the light of life” (John 8:12). From orbit around the moon, Frank Borman once read the opening words of Genesis, reminding a watching world of its origin. It was a fitting moment, yet the greater reality is that the light spoken at creation now shines through Christ. In Him, ruin is not the final word, and darkness does not remain unchallenged.

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