Context Counts
You start the year with a plan. You’re reading straight through the Bible. Psalms lift your heart. Proverbs offers clear, memorable wisdom. Then you turn the page into Ecclesiastes. “Vanity of vanities, saith the Preacher, vanity of vanities; all is vanity.” It feels like the Bible suddenly turned pessimistic. You might even think, “I thought reading Scripture was supposed to strengthen my faith—not make me wonder whether anything matters.” If you’ve ever felt that, this article is for you. My aim is simple: **Ecclesiastes is not the end of faith.It is a gift of holy disillusionment.** God gave us this strange wisdom book so that your faith could become more honest and durable, not more fragile. Wisdom Books Are Patterns, Not Contracts Ecclesiastes isn’t the only wisdom book in your Bible. It sits alongside Job, Proverbs, and the Song of Solomon as part of a wisdom “family.” Each one has its own voice: * Proverbs usually shows how life tends to work when you fear the LORD. * Job asks what happens when a righteous person suffers horribly for no obvious reason. * Ecclesiastes describes how life under the sun feels puzzling, fleeting, and out of our control. * The Song of Solomon celebrates love and delight as gifts from God, even in a fallen world. The trouble comes when we quietly turn wisdom into a contract. Take this well‑known proverb: “**Train up a child in the way he should go:and when he is old, he will not depart from it.**” That is true, God‑given wisdom.But it describes the normal pattern of life, not a mechanical guarantee with no exceptions. When we treat proverbs as contracts, we set ourselves up for a painful choice later: * Either pride (“I did it right, so of course life is working”), * Or despair (“I must have failed, because life didn’t follow the script”). Wisdom literature shows us how God’s world usually works; it does not hand us a formula that can force His hand. Ecclesiastes is God’s way of saying, “Don’t turn My patterns into contracts. Don’t confuse wisdom with control.” “Vanity of Vanities”: Not “Nothing Matters,” but “You’re Not in Control” From the opening line, the Preacher sounds unsettling: “Vanity of vanities… all is vanity.” In the King James Bible, the word “vanity” carries the sense of a breath, a vapor, a mist—something real, but impossible to grasp and hold. He isn’t saying, “Nothing has value.”He’s saying, “Life is real and weighty, but it is not manageable. You can’t make it behave.” You can: * Work hard, build a career, and then watch circumstances you never chose undo your plans. * Try to raise your children wisely and still walk through heartbreaking seasons. * Chase wisdom and still run into questions you can’t answer. You can do everything “right” (humanly speaking) and still not control: * What happens after you’re gone. * The injustice that shows up in places meant to defend justice. * The fact that wise and foolish alike still die. Ecclesiastes is not trying to empty your life of meaning.It is trying to empty your illusion of control. That’s the disillusionment part. But it’s meant to be holy disillusionment—the tearing down of illusions so that you can trust God as He actually is, not as you imagined Him to be. Crooked Things You Cannot Straighten (Ecclesiastes 3) Ecclesiastes 3 is famous for its “time for every purpose” poem. It’s less famous for what comes after. The Preacher writes: “**And moreover I saw under the sun the place of judgment, that wickedness was there;and the place of righteousness, that iniquity was there.**” He looks at the law court—the “place of judgment”—and finds wickedness there.He looks at the “place of righteousness” and discovers it isn’t as clean as it claims to be. If you’ve followed headlines, walked through church conflict, or watched hypocrisy up close, you know this feeling: “This is not how it’s supposed to be.And I cannot straighten it.” The Preacher still confesses that God will judge the righteous and the wicked. He still affirms that God will have the last word. But he refuses to pretend that the tension is simple. If you were told that mature Christians don’t talk this way—that strong faith never wrestles, never grieves, never says “this feels crooked”—Ecclesiastes quietly disagrees by its very presence in Scripture. When You “Know Not”: Ecclesiastes 11 and Faithful Risk If earlier chapters show how little control you have, Ecclesiastes 11 asks: What do you do with that? “**Cast thy bread upon the waters:for thou shalt find it after many days.Give a portion to seven, and also to eight;for thou knowest not what evil shall be upon the earth.**” The image is surprising. Throwing bread on the water doesn’t look like a solid investment.But the point is not carelessness—it’s faithful risk in a genuinely uncertain world. Then he says: “**He that observeth the wind shall not sow;and he that regardeth the clouds shall not reap.**…**As thou knowest not what is the way of the spirit,nor how the bones do grow in the womb of her that is with child:even so thou knowest not the works of God who maketh all.In the morning sow thy seed, and in the evening withhold not thine hand:for thou knowest not whether shall prosper, either this or that,or whether they both shall be alike good.**” Three times, he reminds you: “Thou knowest not… thou knowest not… thou knowest not.” You do not know what evil may come.You do not know exactly how God is working.You do not know which specific efforts will bear fruit, or when. So what does wisdom say? * Don’t freeze waiting for perfect conditions. * Don’t demand guarantees before you sow. * Don’t let uncertainty excuse laziness or self‑protection. Holy disillusionment does not say,“Because I cannot control outcomes, I will stop sowing.” It says,“Because I cannot control outcomes, I will fear God, obey faithfully, sow widely, give generously, and leave the results in His hands.” If you’re in a season where you’ve obeyed as best you can and still have no idea what will come of it, Ecclesiastes 11 is God’s word to you: “Thou knowest not… sow anyway.” What Ecclesiastes Quietly Rescues You From When you let Ecclesiastes speak as wisdom rather than as a glitch in the Bible, it quietly rescues you from three dangerous counterfeits. 1. “Prosperity‑Lite” Expectations You may not consciously buy into full‑blown prosperity teaching. But it’s easy to absorb a softer version: * “If I do A, B, and C, God will give me X.” * “If I live wisely, my life will be noticeably smoother than other people’s.” * “If I raise my kids right, they cannot possibly wander.” Ecclesiastes won’t allow that story to stand. It tells you honestly: * Sometimes the righteous suffer. * Sometimes the wicked prosper. * Sometimes life under the sun looks upside‑down. This doesn’t cancel Proverbs; it balances it. The wisdom books together teach: * God is just. * Obedience is wise and good. * But in this present age, you will not always see the full pattern now. 2. Slogan‑Level Christianity We live in an age of short captions, inspirational backgrounds, and shareable verses.There’s nothing wrong with that—until you begin to think the whole Bible should sound like a motivational poster. Ecclesiastes refuses to be reduced to a slogan. God has preserved in His Word a sustained reflection that says: “Life feels like vapor.Injustice sits where justice ought to be.Death comes to all.” If your Christianity never gives you permission to say those sentences,your Christianity is thinner than your Bible. 3. Throwing Away Your Faith When Formulas Fail If your faith rests on an unspoken equation— “Good people always get good outcomes now;bad people always get bad outcomes now”— then when suffering or injustice crashes into your life, you’ll feel backed into a corner: * “Either God failed me,” * “or the Bible doesn’t work,” * “or I’m done with all of this.” Ecclesiastes opens up a third option: “Maybe the problem is not with God’s character,but with the script I was insisting He follow.” Holy disillusionment tears down false expectations so that you can know and trust the real God, not the one you imagined. The End of the Matter: Fear God and Keep His Commandments Ecclesiastes doesn’t end in despair. It ends with clarity: “**Let us hear the conclusion of the whole matter:Fear God, and keep his commandments:for this is the whole duty of man.For God shall bring every work into judgment,with every secret thing,whether it be good,or whether it be evil.**” After all the circling around vanity, injustice, and death, the Preacher does not say, “Nothing matters.” He says: * God is to be feared. * His commandments are to be kept. * Every work—even the hidden ones—matters because God will judge with perfect wisdom. You are not given control over outcomes.You are given a posture: Fear God.Walk in obedience.Live as if every unseen act is seen by Him. That is the “conclusion of the whole matter.” Ecclesiastes and the Risen Christ Ecclesiastes is true, but it speaks from the vantage point of before the cross and the empty tomb. It knows that death comes to all.It knows that under the sun, the righteous are not always rewarded and the wicked are not always punished. What it can only anticipate in shadow, the New Testament proclaims in full light. The Lord Jesus Christ stepped into the same world Ecclesiastes describes: * A world where labour can feel like chasing the wind. * A world where injustice stands in the place of judgment. * A world where everyone goes to the grave. He suffered as the truly righteous man who received the worst this world could offer.He died.And He rose again. Because Christ is risen, the apostle can say: “Therefore, my beloved brethren, be ye stedfast, unmoveable, always abounding in the work of the Lord, forasmuch as ye know that your labour is not in vain in the Lord.” Ecclesiastes says,“Life under the sun feels like vanity.” The resurrection answers,“In Christ, your labour is not in vain in the Lord.” We can join the Preacher in telling the truth about how life feels now,and at the same time rest in a hope he could only see from afar: Our light, momentary affliction is working for us a far more exceeding and eternal weight of glory. Holy disillusionment plus resurrection hope does not lead to cynicism.It leads to honest, durable faith. If You Feel Like You’re Losing Your Faith If Ecclesiastes makes you uneasy, you might assume that something is wrong with your faith. But the very existence of this book in your Bible is a message: God is not intimidated by your questions or your confusion.He is the One who put these words in Scripture and handed them to you. You may not be losing your faith.You may be losing your illusions. Painful as that is, it can be a mercy. When false expectations fall, there is more room for the living God—not the God of your unwritten contract, but the God who actually is. Here’s a simple way to respond: * Read Ecclesiastes 1, 11, and 12 in the King James Bible. * As you read, underline or mark each line that feels uncomfortably true. * Turn those lines into prayer instead of hiding them. You might simply say, “Lord, I feel this.Teach me to fear Thee honestly.Teach me to sow when I do not know what will prosper.Help me trust that nothing done in Thee is in vain.” Key Takeaways * Ecclesiastes is wisdom for seasons when life refuses to fit your neat formulas. * It exposes the vanity of trying to control outcomes and invites you into the fear of God instead. * It rescues you from prosperity‑lite expectations, slogan‑level Christianity, and the impulse to throw away your faith when your formulas fail. * Read in the light of the risen Christ, it doesn’t lead you to nihilism, but to honest obedience and confident hope that “your labour is not in vain in the Lord.” If this helped you see Ecclesiastes differently,consider sharing it with someone whose faith feels like it’s fraying at the edges. This is a public episode. If you would like to discuss this with other subscribers or get access to bonus episodes, visit nathanbrowning.substack.com [https://nathanbrowning.substack.com?utm_medium=podcast&utm_campaign=CTA_1]
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