
Catching Breath and Taking Stock
- if you ever have a summer day to spare with nothing
to do, I recommend a field trip to North Bay
- your timing has to be just right, but if it is,
you will encounter a most fascinating insect that will give you reason
to think
- I dont have to give you very precise directions,
because you cant help but run into this insect
- I mean what I say youll run into
it, so bring some extra windshield washer fluid
- the insect I am talking about is called the shadfly
-
- the shadfly is an insect with no sight and no
capacity to eat or drink
- they live for about twenty-four hours, and their
only functions appear to be flying and reproducing
- for a brief period every summer some summers
being worse than others these shadflies recreate what appears
to be an Egyptian plague and literally blanket North Bay
- you cant walk, drive, or move, without
hitting a shadfly
- just as soon as they come, theyre gone
again
-
- now I recommend that you wear a bug net or some
sort of protection, and plant yourself on a park bench near Lake Nipissing,
and consider the lowly shadfly
- consider the shadfly, thou sluggard
- for the briefest of periods, they come into this
world and make their presence known
- and then theyre gone
- what have they contributed? what where their
lives worth? what lasting impression did they leave behind, other than
on your windshield?
- from a human perspective, theyre little
more than nuisances
-
- now sit on that park bench a little longer and
consider your life
- in the bigger scheme of things, how much different
are you than a shadfly?
- how much longer are you alive?
- not much
- we may be alive a few dozen years, but some of
us are realizing thats not a very long time
- what is your life contributing?
- what is the bottom line of your life?
- you and I are not too different from shadflies
-
- somebody has called the nineties the decade of
"cashing out"
- "Stop the nineties, I want to get off"
- weve all heard of some fast-track, hard-driver
who suddenly abandons his briefcase and resurfaces at some cottage or
ranch or boat
- people are checking out, and asking themselves
what theyre really doing
- theyre asking what is honest, what is real,
what is valued, what is really important
- the traditional rewards of career and money are
replaced with a slower place and quality of life
- somebody has said that in the seventies, we worked
to live
- in the eighties, we lived to work
- and now we simply want to live long and
well
-
- people are now asking, "Is all this stress
really worth the reward?"
- "Isnt this life shortening my life?"
- and the clincher: "Is this all there is?"
- theyre asking questions that need to be
asked
- and by the way, theyre not waiting until
they are forty or fifty to have their mid-life crises
- people who are in their thirties are taking stock
of their lives and asking serious questions about the direction of their
lives
-
- now friends, I dont have the answers, but
its important to realize that the Bible does
- the Bible has the answers to these questions
- it may surprise many people to discover that
the Bible grapples with the questions of meaning and fulfillment and
the bottom-lines of our lives
- for six sermons, weve been looking at an
Old Testament book called Ecclesiastes
- the name means "preacher"
- were now half way through this book
- I had a choice to make this week: I was going
to plow on and enter the second half of the book of Ecclesiastes, but
Ive made another choice
- as weve finished this first half, I thought
it would be useful to stop and sum up what this book has said thus far
- it struck me that we shouldnt rush over
the critical message of the first half of this book, which has very
real application to you this morning
-
- you, if you are like other human beings, are
looking for meaning
- and Ecclesiastes speaks to us more clearly than
even a shadfly of the real meaning of our lives
- so brace yourself for five summary statements
that I want to drill home this morning as the Bibles answer to
human questions on the meaning of life
-
- five simple statements with huge implications
for all of us
- STATEMENT NUMBER ONE
- whatever man usually calls the "goods"
of life are of their nature incapable of giving man full satisfaction
to his craving for happiness
- or put another way, we dont find satisfaction
in the "goods" of life
- health, riches, possessions, material and sensual
pleasures, honors, career, prestige all these things are incapable
of giving full satisfaction to our cravings
- they just dont deliver what they promise
- all achievements and all possessions all with
time return to dust
- as Ecclesiastes says:
- (Ecclesiastes 1:2) "Meaningless! Meaningless!"
says the Teacher. "Utterly meaningless! Everything is meaningless."
- (Ecclesiastes 2:1) I thought in my heart, "Come
now, I will test you with pleasure to find out what is good." But
that also proved to be meaningless.
- (Ecclesiastes 5:10) Whoever loves money never
has money enough; whoever loves wealth is never satisfied with his income.
This too is meaningless.
- and I could go on
-
- Ecclesiastes drives home the point that our souls
are hungry for something
- and we usually look to pleasure or health or
riches or possessions or prestige what we call the "goods"
of life for satisfaction
- and it doesnt work
-
- the shadfly, like other bugs, is drawn to light
- and we, like glorified shadflies, are drawn to
these things
- but they just dont satisfy
- so why do we still look to them for satisfaction?
- why do we still think that if we only earned
a bit more, owned a bit more, felt a bit healthier, experienced a little
more pleasure, gained a little more respect, that things would be any
better?
- why do we look to these things to satisfy the
hunger in our souls?
-
- SUMMARY STATEMENT TWO
- these goods are not stable or reliable; if we
trust in them we are in danger of losing them
- Ecclesiastes is clear that life is fragile and
transitory
- what we possess today may very well be gone tomorrow
- so what we call the "goods" in life
are not deserving recipients of our trust
- (Ecclesiastes 2:20) So my heart began to despair
over all my toilsome labor under the sun.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:21) For a man may do his work
with wisdom, knowledge and skill, and then he must leave all he owns
to someone who has not worked for it. This too is meaningless and a
great misfortune.
- (Ecclesiastes 5:13) I have seen a grievous evil
under the sun: wealth hoarded to the harm of its owner,
- (Ecclesiastes 5:14) or wealth lost through some
misfortune, so that when he has a son there is nothing left for him.
- (Ecclesiastes 5:15) Naked a man comes from his
mother's womb, and as he comes, so he departs. He takes nothing from
his labor that he can carry in his hand.
- (Ecclesiastes 6:12) For who knows what is good
for a man in life, during the few and meaningless days he passes through
like a shadow? Who can tell him what will happen under the sun after
he is gone?
-
- Jesus said:
- (Matthew 6:19) "Do not store up for yourselves
treasures on earth, where moth and rust destroy, and where thieves break
in and steal.
- dont depend on that which can so easily
be taken away!
- your bank balance it could disappear tomorrow
- your job, your reputation, your health
all of it could be gone at the snap of a finger
- (Matthew 6:20) But store up for yourselves treasures
in heaven, where moth and rust do not destroy, and where thieves do
not break in and steal.
- (Matthew 6:21) For where your treasure is, there
your heart will be also.
-
- SUMMARY STATEMENT THREE
- the pursuit of happiness does not necessarily
bring happiness
- this is illustrated throughout the book
- Solomon observed people trying to find fulfillment
and happiness, and concluded that it is out of their control
- a word that Solomon uses a lot is "striving"
- people are striving for happiness or fulfillment,
and what does it gain them?
- (Ecclesiastes 2:3) I tried cheering myself with
wine, and embracing folly--my mind still guiding me with wisdom. I wanted
to see what was worthwhile for men to do under heaven during the few
days of their lives.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:4) I undertook great projects:
I built houses for myself and planted vineyards.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:5) I made gardens and parks and
planted all kinds of fruit trees in them.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:6) I made reservoirs to water
groves of flourishing trees.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:7) I bought male and female slaves
and had other slaves who were born in my house. I also owned more herds
and flocks than anyone in Jerusalem before me.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:8) I amassed silver and gold
for myself, and the treasure of kings and provinces. I acquired men
and women singers, and a harem as well--the delights of the heart of
man.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:9) I became greater by far than
anyone in Jerusalem before me. In all this my wisdom stayed with me.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:10) I denied myself nothing my
eyes desired; I refused my heart no pleasure. My heart took delight
in all my work, and this was the reward for all my labor.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:11) Yet when I surveyed all that
my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve, everything was meaningless,
a chasing after the wind; nothing was gained under the sun.
- (Ecclesiastes 2:22) What does a man get for all
the toil and anxious striving with which he labors under the sun?
- (Ecclesiastes 2:23) All his days his work is
pain and grief; even at night his mind does not rest. This too is meaningless.
-
- related to this is
- SUMMARY STATEMENT FOUR
- man is powerless
- man is utterly unable to penetrate and understand
the laws of government and the universe in this world
- (Ecclesiastes 3:11) He has made everything beautiful
in its time. He has also set eternity in the hearts of men; yet they
cannot fathom what God has done from beginning to end.
- (Ecclesiastes 6:12) For who knows what is good
for a man in life, during the few and meaningless days he passes through
like a shadow? Who can tell him what will happen under the sun after
he is gone?
- (Ecclesiastes 8:17) No one can comprehend what
goes on under the sun. Despite all his efforts to search it out, man
cannot discover its meaning. Even if a wise man claims he knows, he
cannot really comprehend it.
- memorize these words: "I dont know"
- they will serve you well
- we dont really understand life, do we?
- as one hymn says, "I am not skilled to understand,
what God has willed, what God has planned"
- and thats true of all of us
- when we are faced with an illness, when a mother
has a stillbirth, when a child is taken away in an accident, when we
lose a job there are many questions and few answers
- and Ecclesiastes reminds us that we are ultimately
powerless and unable to understand the complexities of life and providence
-
- summary statement five is the most important
- after all Ive said, it would be easy to
fall into despair and conclude that all things are hopeless
- but thats not the course of action recommended
in Ecclesiastes
- SUMMARY STATEMENT FIVE IS THIS
- cease striving, avoid all speculation, and put
your trust in God
- set aside all anxious striving and labor
- avoid all speculation on Gods ruling of
the world dont second-guess God
- and be thankful to God for whatever satisfaction
he gives you, valuing and measuring everything as a gift from him
- never forget that although you are not in control,
God is, and we will have to render strict account to him
- stop trying to be God; let God be God
-
- (Ecclesiastes 2:24) A man can do nothing better
than to eat and drink and find satisfaction in his work. This too, I
see, is from the hand of God,
- (Ecclesiastes 2:25) for without him, who can
eat or find enjoyment?
- (Ecclesiastes 3:12) I know that there is nothing
better for men than to be happy and do good while they live.
- (Ecclesiastes 3:13) That everyone may eat and
drink, and find satisfaction in all his toil--this is the gift of God.
- (Ecclesiastes 5:18) Then I realized that it is
good and proper for a man to eat and drink, and to find satisfaction
in his toilsome labor under the sun during the few days of life God
has given him--for this is his lot.
- (Ecclesiastes 5:19) Moreover, when God gives
any man wealth and possessions, and enables him to enjoy them, to accept
his lot and be happy in his work--this is a gift of God.
-
- Ecclesiastes helps us accept that what could
drive us to agnosticism and skepticism can really drive us to God
- as we recognize the difficulty and complexity
of life, we can understand Gods presence and lift our lives onto
a higher plane where a solution is believed to exist, although we might
not understand it
- God loves us and cares for us
- he makes everything beautiful in his time
- we can trust him and enjoy his gifts
- this is the message of Ecclesiastes
-
- I speak to you this morning as a shadfly among
shadflies
- were alive for only a brief time
- dont look to the "goods" of life
for satisfaction
- they dont satisfy, and theyre only
transitory anyway
- recognize that you cant bring yourself
happiness
- youre powerless and you dont have
the answers
- but recognize this morning that God does
- turn your life over to him
- seek first his kingdom and his righteousness,
and all these other things will be added to you
- learn contentment at Gods hand
- be still and know that he is God