Solomon's shift from personal reflection to wisdom sharing in Ecclesiastes chapter 7 brings us face-to-face with mortality and meaning. What begins as almost funeral-like observations quickly transforms into profound insights about living well in light of life's inevitable end.
I recently wrote my own eulogy – a strange exercise that forced me to confront uncomfortable questions. What legacy am I building? Would people speak of me as I hope they would? Most importantly, have I focused on what truly matters? Because as Solomon reminds us, "A good name is better than fine perfume, and the day of death better than the day of birth."
This counter-cultural wisdom strikes at the heart of our pleasure-seeking society. Solomon insists that mourning is better than feasting, that sadness benefits the heart, and that wisdom is found in confronting life's difficulties rather than escaping them. These insights parallel Jesus' teachings in the Beatitudes, where blessings are pronounced on those who mourn and hunger for righteousness.
Solomon also addresses our tendency to live mentally trapped between nostalgia for the past and anxiety about the future, missing the only moment we can actually influence – the present. This obsession manifests in our cultural resistance to change (like the recent Cracker Barrel logo outrage) while preventing us from investing deeply in relationships right before us.
Perhaps most powerfully, Solomon acknowledges life's apparent unfairness. The wicked sometimes prosper while the righteous suffer. Yet even without the revelation of Jesus that we now possess, he concludes that pursuing God is what ultimately matters. For us today, this means recognizing our value in God's eyes beyond our brokenness – that we are loved, chosen, redeemed, and purposeful in His divine plan.
Whether you're wrestling with mortality, questioning your purpose, or feeling distant from God, remember this truth: You are deeply loved. So much that even if you were the only person who needed saving, Jesus would have died for you alone. This is the message that gives meaning to everything "under the sun."