GOD IN MY LIVING
Opening Prayer
Ever-present God, today I rejoice in the certainty of Your presence and the promises of Your Word.
Read ECCLESIASTES 4:1—5:7
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Scripture taken from the THE HOLY BIBLE, NEW INTERNATIONAL VERSION, NIV Copyright © 1973, 1978, 1984, 2011 by Biblica, Inc.® Used by permission. All rights reserved worldwide.
Meditate
“That’s why we trust the Bible—it speaks to both realities: the changing human condition and the constantly changing cultural conditions” (Mike Yaconelli, 1942–2003).
Think Further
The Teacher shows sympathy with the oppressed (4:1–3); with those whose hard work never allows them to “keep up with the Jones’s” (4:4–6); with those who have no family, whose hard work benefits no one but themselves (4:7,8); with those who in their loneliness do not enjoy even the simple benefits of human companionship (4:9–12). In all these cases the Teacher wants us to know that his search for wisdom is not carried out in ignorance of the true human condition. He knows our sufferings. He understands our weakness and our frustrations. His words are grounded in reality. This is not a privileged king handing out empty aphorisms to the starving mob. This is a man who has seen and considered the realities we live with.
Like the psalmists, like the prophets of Exile, like Jesus, the Teacher wants us to know that our sufferings are seen. His God is not aloof, resting on the laurels of his luxuries. He is involved with us, alive to our sufferings. The name will come later from the prophet Isaiah (Isa. 7:14), but you can almost hear it here: the Teacher’s God is Immanuel, God with us.
In chapters 4 and 5, the Teacher makes three important contrasts: between youth and old age, between speaking and listening and between promising and delivering. Better the hopefulness of youth, he suggests, than the cynicism of age. Don’t let your desire for power and success rob you of a child-like innocence (4:13–16). Better the silence of a good listener than the babbling of a fool. Don’t pester God with your many words. Learn the reverence of silence (5:1–3). Better one delivered action than a thousand empty promises. Don’t keep saying you will do this or that. Just do it. Let your actions speak for you (5:4–7).
Apply
“I am my best when I can’t make it alone” (Gerard Kelly). What is your response to this statement?
Closing prayer
Loving Father, thank You for being with me in the ups and downs of life. You are my God for all seasons of life.
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