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Ecclesiastes 12_8-14 Sermon 16.pdf
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Big Idea: Do not sweat the small stuff, and under the sun all stuff is small stuff. The only non‑small thing is God, His commands, and His final judgment.
Restating The Refrain (Ecclesiastes 12:8)
- Solomon closes where he began (1:2), deliberately bracketing his work with the same refrain.
- “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity” — Not the moan of a cynic, but a conclusion based on the transience of life under the sun.
- The Hebrew word hevel is breath, vapor — it appears briefly and then vanishes, signaling the fleeting nature of everything under the sun.
- The pastoral charge: refuse to treat temporary things as ultimate things.
Rabbinical Insight: Seven Stages of Life
- Kohelet Rabbah connects the sevenfold use of “vanity” to seven stages of life, underscoring their fleeting nature:
- Infancy — utter dependence, soon replaced by growth (cf. 11:10, “childhood and youth are vanity”).
- Childhood — the age of play, without thought of responsibility (cf. 3:4, “a time to laugh”).
- Youth — strength, beauty, and ambition, soon overwhelmed by new burdens (cf. 11:9, “walk in the ways of thine heart… but know thou, that for all these things God will bring thee into judgment”).
- Adulthood — building family, working and striving for success (cf. 2:4–11, the great works of Solomon, followed by “all was vanity”).
- Maturity — management of wealth, reputation, and influence (cf. 5:10–11, “he that loveth silver shall not be satisfied with silver”).
- Old age — decline and limitation (cf. 12:1-7).
- Death — the last breath, the final vapor, when dust returns to the earth and the spirit to God (12:7).
- The sages underscore that no phase of life is as solid as it seems. All stages of life, under the sun, are ultimately fleeting.
The Teacher’s Method (Ecclesiastes 12:9–10)
- Solomon did not merely collect sayings; he weighed, pondered, searched out, and arranged them to be understood, remembered, and lived.
- “Acceptable words” — divrei ḥefetz: words that delight, are upright, and are true.
- Beauty and truth: Craft matters, but content governs. Words have a beauty of their own, but beauty serves truth, not the other way around.
- The phrase “set in order” suggests the careful editing of proverbs so they are both memorable and practical.
- “Weighed” — evaluating the worth of each thought.
- “Searched out” — digging beneath the surface to find what is real.
- “Set in order” — fitting those truths into a sequence and structure that makes them portable for life.
- Rhetoric: Eloquence without truth misleads; truth without clarity is easily lost. Solomon’s method is one of deliberate presentation, shaping wisdom so it can be carried and lived out.
What Wise Words Do (Ecclesiastes 12:11)
- Solomon compares the words of the wise to goads (which prod us forward when we would stall) and nails (which hold truth in place, preventing it from slipping).
- “Masters of assemblies” refers to those who can take many parts and assemble them into a unified whole, whether literal or illustrative.
- All true wisdom comes from one Shepherd, God Himself.
- Rabbinical tradition sees this “Shepherd” as God, the source and unifying force behind every genuinely wise saying.
The Warning About Endless Books (Ecclesiastes 12:12)