What A Waste!

So I come in my reading to the book of Ecclesiastes, a singular work from Scripture that contains none of the direct revelations from God seen in all the other books (save Ruth, but that too is a special case). Instead it is a witness to a “seeker of truth” starting from within himself. Let’s see how this works out for him.

The theme of the book is stated in the second verse, “Vanity of vanities,” says the Preacher, “Vanity of vanities! All is vanity.” I prefer a more contemporary colloquialism, “What a waste! It’s all such a waste!” And so, on this high plateau begins the book. And from there the picture gets only more bleak. Which again proves to me that there indeed is something for everyone in the collection of the Scriptures. For the aggressive there are wars and catastrophes, for the mystic there are the prophetic books, for the adventurer there are sweeping stories of visits to distant foreign lands to seek a bride, or an entire nation evacuating a country in one night en mass. For the poet there are the Psalms, for the romantic there is the Song of Songs. And for the clinically depressed here is Ecclesiastes. This is the book made famous in the Modern Era by Bob Dylan and the Byrds in the song, “Turn, Turn, Turn.” To everything there is a season. And for everyone there is something in the Bible. This is not a feel-good book. It basically says if you start with only yourself as your guide to life and living prepare to be severely disappointed.

The writer is a seeker of wisdom and truth. It is not that he doesn’t find it, he actually does or so he says. But it doesn’t do him any good, since he ends up with the same fate as the idiot. Death. So why even bother? 2:15 Then I said to myself, “As is the fate of the fool, it will also befall me. Why then have I been extremely wise?” So I said to myself, “This too is vanity.”

He sees man working very hard and being exceptionally successful, but in the end he dies and all his possessions are in the hands of one who has none of his skills and passion. And it is all wasted. The good suffer, the evildoers are prosperous, and it all seems to be a waste and doesn’t make any sense. 2:19 And who knows whether he will be a wise man or a fool? Yet he will have control over all the fruit of my labor for which I have labored by acting wisely under the sun. This too is vanity.”

The writer intuits that all things come from God so it is best to live in a manner befitting the best one can be. But in the end we are all beasts and act like it, (3:18 I said to myself concerning the sons of men, “God has surely tested them in order for them to see that they are but beasts.”) and ending up little better than the beast of the field. 3:19 For the fate of the sons of men and the fate of beasts is the same. As one dies so dies the other; indeed, they all have the same breath and there is no advantage for man over beast, for all is vanity.”

Look around at the world today. Look at the news headlines. Look at your neighbors. Look at your families, look at yourself. Have things changed much since this book was written? I dare say it has not. Stupid things are still done by stupid people. Stupidity still causes destruction to life and property and nations and nature. Talk about “What a waste!” It really doesn’t make any sense. On any level. This could have been a really great world . . . but for Man. So like the writer says, the best thing you can do in the midst of all this madness is to work the best you can as peacefully as you can. 3:22 “I have seen that nothing is better than that man should be happy in his activities, for that is his lot. For who will bring him to see what will occur after him?”

But in the midst of living one can’t help being mindful of all the injustice and rampant evil in the world, the writer immediately continues. And this brings despair. 4:2-3 “So I congratulated the dead who are already dead more than the living who are still living. But better off than both of them is the one who has never existed, who has never seen the evil activity that is done under the sun.” Indeed is this not the sentiment of the clinically depressed?

A commentator wrote that a New Testament believer could not write such a book today as Ecclesiastes. That may be, if one is considering that this writer has no knowledge of divinely revealed truth, such as the Torah, or any New Testament writing. But I counter that the sentiment as described in this book can be understood even now, that the world we live in today doesn’t really make sense, and it is futile to try and make sense of it. For even though the author can write 2:24-25 “There is nothing better for a man than to eat and drink and tell himself that his labor is good. This also I have seen that it is from the hand of God. For who can eat and who can have enjoyment without Him?” he can also write 8:17 “I saw every work of God, I concluded that man cannot discover the work which has been done under the sun. Even though man should seek laboriously, he will not discover; and though the wise man should say, ‘I know,’ he cannot discover.” In other words what God is doing He Himself knows and it is impossible for man to understand any of it except that which God chooses to reveal. Truly God has indeed revealed a lot, count the pages of your Bible. But does evil in the world make sense to you? Does creating mankind only to have so many of them go to eternal damnation make sense to you? Certainly not! But that is only because God has kept those reasons to Himself. Just as is stated way back in Deuteronomy: “The secret things belong to the LORD our God, but the things revealed belong to us and to our sons forever, that we may observe all the words of this law.” Deut. 29:29

So then whether it is the writer of Ecclesiastes or whether it is the evangelical in the Sunday pulpit, without the foundation of this truth, that indeed you can not make sense of this life without knowing and understanding the things that God has revealed to us and accepting there are things He knows that we cannot, proves the validity of this book and world view. And this is what the writer has neglected in his seeking wisdom. He’s left out any revelation from the very One who made everything in the first place. On one hand leave Him out of the equation and indeed nothing really makes sense. And on the other hand, even knowing God but attempting to make sense of of the world while lacking information that He has withheld is just as futile. Leading to what is probably a secondary purpose of the book. The question on every lip after a disaster. “Why?” Ecclesiastes shows that this is ultimately the wrong question when trying to make sense of this world because it is unanswerable, and only leads to futility.

So even though just looking around at the world tends to make one exclaim “what a waste,” because truly the evil and terrors we witness daily are a most horrible waste, we can comfort ourselves with the mantle of revealed truth and know that the One who placed us here has His own reasons, and knowing His character from the revealed truth we can have confidence that He will bring us through it all, eventually, in His own time, into a clear clean place that lacks all the ugliness and waste we witness today. So our Lord has told us.

But the fact is since He has told us plenty that the author seems not to have heard or considered we aren’t left in the despair and emptiness shared by this book. But the point of the book and probably the reason it is included in the Canon is to show the necessity of having God Himself share with mankind the things required for life. For without that revelation, life, for those thoughtful enough to ponder its meaning, only leads to futility and a “living for today” philosophy. For those who have no concerns of the meaning of life there is nothing else but to “eat, to drink and enjoy oneself in all one’s labor in which he toils under the sun during the few years of his life which God has given him; for this is his reward” (5:18), as he has no higher purpose. But there is a higher purpose if you seek it. But not starting and ending with yourself.

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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What the Bible Teaches, the Resurrection of Jesus

This the 18th installment of 52 reviewing RA Torrey’s 1898 publication What The Bible Teaches, Book 2, Part 6. See all of Lex’s posts here. A PDF copy of the book can be downloaded here. You are welcome and encouraged to join the discussion in your comments to these posts.

THE RESURRECTION OF JESUS CHRIST

After discussion last week the death of Jesus Christ we turn to the Resurrection. The death of any single soul in the Roman Empire, being judged guilty of crimes and crucified, could not have considered to have any effect on society locally much less around the world. The huge numbers of criminals who ended their lives that way is testament to this fact. However, by all historical accounts the death of the man Jesus Christ actually resulted in His resurrection thereby becoming the pivotal moment in human history. This event that even Adam looked forward to after his error in judgement, and which should have been anticipated by the all Jews from the time Moses wrote the Law. It is notable that Jewish politics in Palestine could be divided partly over the belief or disbelief in the resurrection of the dead (the party of the Pharisees and Sadducees), a fact that Paul took advantage of when on trial before the Jewish Counsel (Acts 23:6), a bodily resurrection that would not be possible were it not for the first born from the dead, our Lord Jesus.

That the resurrection factually occurred in history can be verified by the written Gospel accounts and book of Acts using the tools of textual criticism. Torrey examines some of these in this chapter. In spite of the heresies of the first few hundred years of the life of the church and those who wrote against the bodily resurrection of Jesus, the truth prevailed, that Jesus physically died on that cross, and was buried, and did escape that tomb under His own power three days later in bodily glorified form, validated by numerous and uncontradicted witness accounts.

The bodily resurrection of Jesus Christ is paramount to Christianity. Redemption, Salvation, Justification, Sanctification all would not be possible without it. As Paul succinctly states, “if Christ has not been raised, your faith is worthless; you are still in your sins.” And “If we have hoped in Christ in this life only, we are of all men most to be pitied.” (1 Cor. 15:19, 21) Why would so many believers in the early church and throughout history willingly go to their death via persecution if not for a belief in something so certainly and adamantly declared by those who came before? It doesn’t make sense. And of who else can it be stated they rose from the grave, generating millions of converts and impacting the course of history? Not a single soul, except for Jesus.

I like Torrey’s statement concerning living our lives through Christ. “The only living, doing, or accomplishing in the Christian life that is acceptable to God is through union with the risen Christ. Through union with the crucified Christ, we get our pardon, our cleansing from guilt, our justification, our perfect standing before God. Through union with the risen Christ, we get power for life and fruit. One reason why there is so little life and fruit in many professedly Christian lives is that there is so little knowledge of the risen and living Christ.” Just such a churchgoer was I in my formative years, even as an alter-boy in the Roman Catholic Church. I could see so many parishioners coming to church on Sunday but displaying no evidence that the resurrection of our Lord meant anything to them outside of that hour. Again, myself included. If the awesome power that raised Jesus from the dead was the actual power of the living God in regenerating and awakening our souls to that new life in Christ, surely we would show some evidence of that by forsaking such worldliness and our former manner of life and “be renewed in the spirit of your mind, and put on the new self, which in the likeness of God has been created in righteousness and holiness of the truth.” (see Eph 4:17-32)

The Resurrection is a seminal moment in history and should be in our own lives. It is the guarantee that, just as He was raised from the dead, we too are promised the same resurrection power to aid us in living now in this world and encourage us with the promise we will live with Him in the next.

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What the Bible Teaches, by R.A. Torrey, Book 2, Part 5

This week Lex discusses the death of Jesus and its implications for life.

Most of the world thinks the Gospel consists only of exemplifying the life and goodness of Jesus Christ. All the while missing completely that it is His death through which we all must pass in order to be able to live His life.

Read the chapter in Torrey’s Book, What The Bible Teaches and join the conversation.

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The Science of Salvation


For I am not ashamed of the gospel, for it is the power of God for salvation to everyone who believes, to the Jew first and also to the Greek. For in it the righteousness of God is revealed from faith to faith; as it is written, “BUT THE RIGHTEOUS man SHALL LIVE BY FAITH.” For the wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all ungodliness and unrighteousness of men who suppress the truth in unrighteousness, because that which is known about God is evident within them; for God made it evident to them. For since the creation of the world His invisible attributes, His eternal power and divine nature, have been clearly seen, being understood through what has been made, so that they are without excuse.
Romans 1:16-20

I watched an enjoyable movie last night, “Einstein and Eddington, the basis of which was a British scientist (Eddington) confirming Einstein’s theory of General Relativity. One of the last lines spoken in the film as Eddington concludes his presentation of his confirmation paper to fellow scientists was, “I for one have no doubt, I can hear God think.”

It has always been my conviction as an Astronomy enthusiast from my youth, that all science can be seen as a confirmation of God. Simply because in man’s world where he has imagined, designed, engineered and built some exquisitely amazing things, as well as untold many mundane things, all things in fact that were previously not here when civilizations began, had its beginning with the creativity of man.

Why then is it incomprehensible to scientists that everything about man’s world and universe in which he finds himself would not also be imagined, designed, engineered and manufactured by the One who has capability to do so? Namely God. Indeed as Psalm 19:1 states, “The heavens are telling of the glory of God; And their expanse is declaring the work of His hands.” In a sense it may be extrapolated that indeed by these things we can see (rather than “hear,” as in the above quote from the movie) God thinking, as witnessed by His magnificent design of all creation.

So then I thought, if all this evidence displayed before our eyes properly interpreted should point us directly to God, as Paul indicates, then so should that great Salvation event which our Lord freely bestows on all who have faith in Him. In other words, Science should authenticate Salvation.

Scientists are fond of declaring that science is the study of evidence and experiment verifiable by repetition and the knowledge gained organized into theories. Wikipedia states “Science (from Latin scientia, meaning “knowledge”) is a systematic enterprise that builds and organizes knowledge in the form of testable explanations and predictions about the universe.” It occurs to me that Salvation can be seen as just that sort of thing.

Jesus says “unless one is born again he cannot see the kingdom of God.” (John 3:3) This “born again” experience is such a vital occurrence, Jesus says, that without it entry into Heaven is precluded. Simply put, being born again means that God personally opens the spiritual eyes of the blind, reveals Himself and makes His home in the person’s heart upon invitation. A strange notion to some, which is why Nicodemus, to whom Jesus was speaking, was so dumbfounded, in spite of the fact that he was a doctor of the Law. It is an intensely spiritual and intimate occurrence, especially when accompanied, as it was in the case of Paul, by audible and visible manifestations. (Acts 22:6-11) Certainly to most of us the event is not so dramatic, but the revelation of a personal God most definitely is. Opening one’s eyes to behold the Creator and Lord of all the universe is an awesome thing to behold. And very humbling.

But I think the experience is also something that can be held up to the standard of science. After all, it is predicted by the writings of Scripture. (Prov. 1:23, Is. 44:3, 59:21, Ez. 36:27, 37:14, Joel 2:28-29) The results are defined in the character transformation that should occur as predicted in Scripture. ( Gal. 5:16-25) It is a repeatable event – not more than once by the same individual, no. But, just as with a chemistry experiment and substances are combined, the chemistry of each being physically changed from one property to another, you can’t repeat the experiment with the same physical elements. You get a fresh batch and repeat the experiment. Well, with the process of being born again, this event has been reproduced by the millions ever since that day of Pentecost in Jerusalem. Repeated and verified, with provable results, lives changing in dramatic and powerful ways. The very essence of scientific validity, no?

You say “but there is nothing measured, quantified, or tested, to permit the word ‘science’ to apply.” Yes we are discussing human beings and not chemical properties, it is true that we can’t categorize this under the physical sciences. But it can be categorized under the behavioral sciences. The results of being born again have been proven and tested since Pentecost. This is undeniable. Indeed History has been changed and affected. Individuals have changed from one set of behavior to another acknowledged by all observers and historians. And this change was proven and tested by the point of death. Many early Christians proved their spiritual transformation by willingly submitting to terrors and death at the hands of the state. A thing that was incomprehensible to their contemporaries, but a mystery acknowledged none the less by historians such as Josephus and Tacitus. A personal and spiritual sacrifice that also continues today in parts of the world.

Many will heap scorn upon this concept of scientific provability of the salvation of souls. As Paul wrote, “For the word of the cross is foolishness to those who are perishing, but to us who are being saved it is the power of God.” 1 Cr. 1:18 And “But a natural man does not accept the things of the Spirit of God, for they are foolishness to him; and he cannot understand them, because they are spiritually appraised.” 1 Cor. 2:14 See also 1 Cor 1:21, 25, and 3:19. But that does not nullify that evidence and the interpretation of it. The evidence is real enough, just ask any of the untold millions who have experienced the touch of God’s Spirit in their lives. I can personally attest to it as well (see my testimony here).

The skeptic should not confuse the nominal christian who professes a cursory belief in God and Jesus Christ but lives a life that belies that belief. Such are many who are mere church-goers. This is not the evidence to which I refer. The real evidence is more tangible than that, as John states, “the one who says he abides in Him ought himself to walk in the same manner as He walked.” (1 John 2:6, read the entire 2nd chapter!) The real evidence will be visible to everybody who is able to discern.

It will take someone much more astute than I to flesh out this concept more fully and intelligently. But I am convinced that the spiritual miracle of God touching the heart and soul of a human being bringing him from death to life is profoundly evidenced in our physical world and properly can be understood in the language of science. At its heart, science is the description of creation by observation. The evidence of God’s touch is more than abundantly displayed in the behavior of the believer. If the heavens declare the glory of God, as the Psalmist wrote, certainly the act of being born again must be a deafening shout to all creation.

[Scriptures taken from the New American Standard Bible © 1995]

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What the Bible Teaches, by R.A. Torrey, Book 2, Part 4

This the 16th installment of 52 reviewing RA Torrey’s 1898 publication What The Bible Teaches. See all of Lex’s posts here. A PDF copy of the book can be downloaded here. You are welcome and encouraged to join the discussion in your comments to these posts.

THE CHARACTER OF JESUS CHRIST

Jesus Christ is the ultimate character. All those peculiarities that define the best characters that we know personally or have known about in the world have their genesis in Jesus Christ. Human kindness, generosity, humor, concern, selflessness, self-control, generosity, humility, devotion, all stem from the One in whose likeness we were all made. The same with creativity, attention to detail, productivity, love of beauty, hatred of perversion, hope and all the other personal characteristics we’d desire in ourselves.

Torrey explores the character of Jesus in this chapter. He is very detailed in the things discussed. For example he writes thirty-nine propositions concerning how Jesus loved, describing almost every example in Scripture of how this was manifested. Yes, it is important that all these things be understood about our Lord, they are all vital concepts that assure us that if He displays His love and concern for those as described in these verses we too are encompassed in that love. The recitation of which sure does fatten this chapter.

The character of Jesus Christ is an immense topic and could be detailed in books without end. But one word can easily summarize. That is Love. All the different characteristics possessed by our Lord Jesus Christ are different manifestations of His unbounded love. That includes His love for the Father, whom He obeyed and set aside His glory to live among us, including his obedience and desire to please, to imitate, to reveal His Father to all creation.

And Jesus loves His creation and creatures. This of course is shown in the ultimate act of love in laying down His life for the salvation of man and the restoration of nature. We should understand this love in mainly two ways. One is to love in the sense of wanting the very best for the beloved. He wants the best for us and is hurt and disappointed when we accept so much less for ourselves. This is the Greek Agápe (ἀγάπη) Note love. It also involves tough love – discipline – to bring us to the place that is best for us.

He also has genuine love of fellowship for us. This is the Greek Philia (φιλία) Just as He delighted to walk in the Garden with Adam and Eve, He wants the same feeling of affection from us to warm our relationship. It is definitely not a cold impersonal feeling of winding up His creation and letting it uncoil predictably. The interaction is of vital importance. This is the concept of praying without ceasing. Meaning a constant form of communication, not just something to be relegated to one day of the week. Commune with Christ on a moment by moment basis and you will discover all the characteristics of His nature.

What do we really have when we don’t consider such an intimate level of communication with Jesus who has given us everything of importance in this life? If we don’t care enough to make Him a priority in thought word and deed what does that say of our love for Him? The Scriptures in this chapter show at length how He loves us. How is our love for Him manifested in our lives? Think of these following verses and see if you can imagine the extent meant by “all your heart,” “all your soul,” “all your strength.”


Deut. 6:5 “You shall love the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your might.”


Deut.10:12 “Now, Israel, what does the LORD your God require from you, but to fear the LORD your God, to walk in all His ways and love Him, and to serve the LORD your God with all your heart and with all your soul.”


Mark 12:30 [Jesus speaking] “AND YOU SHALL LOVE THE LORD YOUR GOD WITH ALL YOUR HEART, AND WITH ALL YOUR SOUL, AND WITH ALL YOUR MIND, AND WITH ALL YOUR STRENGTH.”

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Note. You may need a Greek font to see these Greek words for love displayed correctly. They can be obtained on the NET Bible web site. See the Download Fonts on the page at this link: http://bible.org/netbible/. Hebrew fonts are also available there.

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