How can you be happy? Who can show you the path to happiness? Pastor Bobby Jamieson shatters our illusions of what will make us happy and blazes a surprisingly simple trail to resilient joy.
Does it feel like you should be happy, and want to be happy, and try to be happy, but somehow you just can’t be happy? One way to be unhappy is not getting what you most want. Another way is to get all you could possibly want…only to discover that everything is not enough.
The writer of Ecclesiastes did it all. He had money, education, possessions, sex, and power—everything the modern world promises will bring joy—and yet he was never satisfied. And from his discontent, we benefit and find a surprisingly simple trail to lasting joy.
In this thoughtful exploration of Ecclesiastes, which speaks to all of us who feel restless and unfulfilled, Pastor Bobby Jamieson:
• teaches us how placing life on an eternal horizon empowers us to experience joy no matter our circumstances • puts Ecclesiastes into dialogue with profoundly insightful critics of modernity to show that life in the modern West is a conveyor belt toward burnout • helps us dismantle our false hopes one by one, clearing ground for true satisfaction
Poetic yet straightforward, philosophical yet accessible, Everything Is Never Enough frees us to stop grasping at broken promises and start receiving life as a gift of God’s grace.
Bobby Jamieson is a Ph.D. student in New Testament and affiliated lecturer in New Testament Greek at the University of Cambridge. He and his wife are members of Eden Baptist Church, and they live in Cambridge with their three children. Bobby previously served as assistant editor for 9Marks.
This is one of those rare books that both communicates profound matters and expresses them in a melodious manner. A delight to read and be reminded of Love's gift of life.
"But if you believe that life is good because life is a gift, and life is a gift because God gives it, and life is full of good things because the creator is constantly flinging gifts at you faster than you can catch them, then any meaning you discover is catching up with the meaning that God has already built in. Any goodness you enjoy is scratching the surface of the goodness that life is. Any happiness you experience is a glimpse of the one who is happiness himself." (181)
Stunning, masterful, poignant, the height of excellence. I’m so thankful to have sat under the sermons that led to this book, and the book has brought Ecclesiastes to new and sparkling life yet again. If you read one book in the remainder of this year, make it this one.
”This universe is one impossibly large bell, struck by the hand that made it. The joy you feel in your best moments is a share of the joy of your maker.”
Bobby Jamieson’s best book (so far!) and one of my favorite reads of the year. He captured the “resonance” of Ecclesiastes for the modern age and did so with beautiful, melodious prose.
I hope this book gains wide readership. I'd love to see this become a modern classic among Christian living books.
Ecclesiastes never interested me or resonated with me until a couple of months ago. Now that it does resonate with me, I don't know what took so long given the existentialist bent to my personality. Along that same line of thinking, after reading this book I think Ecclesiastes could be a really fruitful resource for cultural engagement and evangelism, especially in the contemporary western world.
Jamieson has written a masterpiece here. This is a great book to give to someone who's not a Christian or to someone who wants a deep study of Ecclesiastes. Jamieson's ability to speak to both audiences is impressive.
Favorite quotes:
"We want to know so that we can control" (8).
"Happiness is not striving for gain from life but receiving life itself as a gift" (26).
"Money is only as good as what it can get you" (60).
I wish I could show you my kindly gifted paper back copy of this work. Coffee stains, appalachian river water, black ink, and dried soap riddles the pages of my poor paperback. And yet as ugly as my copy of this book is, the state of it is something of a letter to how much this book affected me. This book is war-torn from the intellectual battles it has gone through with my heart and mind in recent months.
I am writing this review from the front porch of the cabin that Cierra and I honeymooned in (5 years ago). We are visiting this property in NC after 5 years of marriage. I have had a few days to sit with this great book and finally report its completion and in many ways practice its concepts. For the first time in a long time I feel that I have been able to “be present to the present’s presents” (pg. 138).
I love the subtitle of this book: “Ecclesiastes’ Surprising Path to Resilient Happiness”. Something that I think about a lot is how when I was young never thought I would need a book on happiness. I thought that sorrow was not something I would face like others did. Oh how arrogant and wrong I was.
James Baldwin said, “You think your pain and your heartbreak are unprecedented in the history of the world, but then you read”. I have always loved the Bible because so often it has met me in the dark closets of my heart. I have had pains, joys, meditations, and feelings that I did not know what to do with and so often the scripture has talked right back to secret whispers of my heart. This is especially the reason why I love the book of Ecclesiastes. When I read the 12 chapters of Ecclesiastes I feel like I am sitting down with a man who has a similar personality to myself and views the world and all of it’s philosophical implications the way I naturally do. I
In other words, Ecclesiastes has always felt like “my” book. What started with the sermon series from my pastor during COVID has evolved into a deep love that has resulted in me reading books on Ecclesiastes, attending a conference on the piece of wisdom literature, and even going back to sit under it’s glory on a weekly basis.
This sensation of being given language and feeling understood by the author of Ecclesiastes was perfectly captured by Bobby Jamieson. So often as I was reading Bobby’s comments, philosophical meditations, modern applications, and illusions of the conceptual mansion of Ecclesiastes I was moved to further understanding of God, myself, and the broken world we live in.
I can count on my hand the few moments of my life where I can indescribably “feel” the sanctifying hand of God has he has prayerfully molded me into the image of his Son. Though the Lord is always sanctifying I think Christians are afforded seasons of peculiar awareness, and my time with this book is one of those times.
Everything is Never Enough is the volume I have needed for a long time. And I am very grateful to Bobby Jamieson’s labor in this piece. I do not say this lightly but this has moved to being one of my all time favorite books. This one affected me in a way I haven’t been before.
Lately I have chosen to read works like these that tend to merge the wonders of life and depth of theology. I have just enjoyed them more. And I find myself living more observant of beauty and tragedy, then in turn theologically meditating on the depths of this crazy world.
No one is as happy as they want to be or will be after death (if in Christ). Fellow believer, go read the book, it is totally worth it. 5/5.
Ecclesiastes is one of my favorite books in the Bible. Reading it is like looking into a mirror that reflects the complexities of my own life experiences. So when this book popped up on my Goodreads, I was hype!
It's all vanity so what the even heck? We strive to have it all—master every detail, predict every turn, guard against every unknown. But no matter how deeply we long or how hard we try, the final outcome remains beyond our reach.
Qohelet reminds us to see the blessings God pours into our lives as just that, gifts! Not trophies we’ve earned, not entitlements we cling to, and not the source of our deepest hopes and dreams. When we hold them with open hands, we’re free to delight in them without mistaking them for our everything. For the restless hollow aches within us and the part that feels exiled in this world can find home, joyfully, in God.
"Jesus' incarnation is the rescue mission none of us thought possible. Jesus death is the death of sin. Jesus resurrection is the death of death. Together, Jesus death and resurrection are the death of absurdity and alienation. Jesus suffering God’s judgment on the cross is death of guilt and condemnation for every deed, for every secret thing, for every evil. All this is promised to all who believe and only those who believe. Everything is never enough, but Jesus is. Jesus is enough to satisfy God's judgment on your behalf. And Jesus is enough to satisfy your soul forever. Jesus alone is God’s answer to your life's absurdity."
A blend of careful biblical commentary, thorough sociological research, and great writing. Ecclesiastes is becoming one of my favorite books in the Bible and this book helped it get into my bones a little more.
Ecclesiastes has been on my mind and heart alot over the past year, but everytime I chose to talk about it with others, they always said something like, “that book is depressing”
but there is so much wisdom and encouragement in Ecclesiastes and this book brings all of that together clearly and concisely and powerfully! It shows how Qohelets words are actually an antidote to problems in modernity that seem to increase, I would HIGHLY recommend this book to ANYONE
This was one of the best books I’ve ever read. It was nuanced, brilliant, excellently organized, and full of beauty. This is a book I wish I wrote. Would HIGHLY recommend.
Read it sporadically and slowly. Moving. Soul-stirring. A refreshing (and somewhat new) take on Ecclesiastes, while at the same time saying everything I already thought to be true. Everything really is never enough; well, except one “thing”: a relationship with Christ, and Jamieson does a great job of arguing that thesis.
The first section is bleak; it’s meant to be.
The second section is hopeful; when contrasted with the bleakness of section one, it must be. When gifts are treated like gifts and not idols, it brings joy.
The third section, even if a bit rushed and “tacked on,” is the most important one. The conclusion of Ecclesiastes is, “Fear God and keep his commandments, for, one day, he will judge.” How do we get that righteousness to prep us for judgment day? Christ.
A great book to read with a seeking friend (though they might need to be academically inclined a bit).
Tolle lege, tolle lege.
P.S. Absolutely hated the way the endnotes were done—never seen that before and hope to never see it again.
1.) The illustrations in the book are really good and really plentiful. He writes beautifully and I think reading the book is an exercise in thinking more illustratively.
2.) His theological reflection on different aspects of life are really convicting and helpful, I found myself thinking often of how my own life could be a better example of the wisdom in Ecclesiastes.
3.) His conclusion bringing in Charles Taylor and the imminent frame to make sense of the tensions between Qohelet and the editor was brilliant. If he came up with that, great job. Regardless, I’m surprised no one had thought to do that sooner.
I think everyone would enjoy this! The book was playful and beautiful at the same time!
Very accessible, does a great job at breaking down Ecclesiastes, and sticks to the theme throughout. Challenged me to reflect afresh on my assumptions of what leads to happiness.
Main takeaway: Happiness comes not from getting more out of life, but from receiving life itself as a gift.
"But if you believe that life is good because life is a gift, and life is a gift because God gives it, and life is full of good things because the creator is constantly flinging gifts at you faster than you can catch them, then any meaning you discover is catching up with the meaning that God has already built in. Any goodness you enjoy is scratching the surface of the goodness that life is. Any happiness you experience is a glimpse of the one who is happiness himself."
Absolutely excellent! Will be mulling this one over hopefully for months and years to come. Ecclesiastes never gets old and Jameson's exposition is careful and poignant.
I cannot recommend this book enough. I think everyone, whether you are a Christian or not, would benefit from reading this book. Jamieson masterfully shows the absurdity of the modern hollow pursuit for happiness. While the book is on Ecclesiastes, he draws from sociologists and psychologists to show how the ancient wisdom of Ecclesiastes is still true today.
For Christians, this book will definitely help you better grasp one of the more difficult books of the Bible to meditate on. And it will also give you a greater love for the ultimate Gift Giver and the good things He gives.
The first half of this book was 3 stars. The author’s writing style is not my favorite- more lyrical, prolix, and poetic. In some regards it seemed written for unbelievers or people looking into Christianity, and so at times I felt it wasn’t applicable to me. He references and quotes a lot of other authors and philosophers. It made it hard to follow at times and it wasn’t a book I was loving to read. However, by the second portion of the book I really started to enjoy his arguments about level II. Particularly enjoyed his chapters on food, toil, and marriage. I would reference back to this book if I were leading a study on Ecclesiastes and ended up enjoying it overall.
Great book. Jamieson’s reflections on Ecclesiastes were terrific; he captured the heart of the book well. Plus, he is a really enjoyable author to read. I highly recommend this book; make sure to read it slowly and let its ideas steep.
This book was overview and exploration of Ecclesiastes and I found that it was very impactful.
The truths communicated in this book have stuck with me in a way that regularly changes my perspective throughout the day for the better. That is the main reason for the 5 ⭐️ rating.
Everything Is Never Enough did a good job surveying the main themes of Ecclesiastes and synthesizing them into a clear picture. I highly recommend this book for the big picture understanding of Ecclesiastes this book conveys.
From the first section I wanted a bit more from the book, which is ironic given the subject. But as Jamieson wrote on he opened up deep truths with understandable and enjoyable writing while remaining humble and pointing back to the most important source, Ecclesiastes itself. It’s a good book, and it’s Good News. What a gift He has given us to live this absurd life and really live it well, because He lives! . . . Also Bobby Jamieson looks like Paul Dano so please cast him for the Ecclesiastes movie
Reading the book of Ecclesiastes is like doing a cold plunge. The words of the Preacher (ESV) will shock you. If you’re not careful, you’ll freeze in the water. Bobby Jamieson is here to make sure that doesn’t happen.
He doesn’t downplay the sayings of the Preacher; he lets you sit in them. But Jamieson will pull you back up and encourage you with practical insights, showing you how Ecclesiastes teaches to live a happy life.
Yet Jamieson does not fail to present the telos of Ecclesiastes: Christ, the only one who can satiate your longing for perfect and satisfying happiness.
If you suspect that daily reels, pictures, or advertisements have persuaded you that only this or that will finally make you happy, then you need an Ecclesiastes cold plunge. Let Jamieson be your guide.
This book is equal parts social philosophy, biblical commentary, and theological psychology.
Been a fan of Bobby Jamison for awhile now as an author, as he is very well read and a robust thinker. This book really highlights not only his knowledge, but also his writing ability, as it is beautifully and provokingly written.
If you’re asking the deep questions of life and want to know how the Bible both shatters your expectations but also gives you hope, this book is for you