(6 stars!!)
This is definitely my book of the year. This will be a long review so my tl;dr version is: "A must read if you want to understand life as it is and not how you think it should be."
Onward...
I've always been attracted by the books that one thinks shouldn't be in Scripture, Esther, Song of Solomon, and of course Ecclesiastes. Almost every time I've read Ecclesiastes I've been frustrated because the generally understood purpose is something along the lines of: "This is Solomon looking at life as someone who doesn't follow Yahweh and revealing the purposelessness of life." Really? This is the best we can do with Ecclesiastes?
Jeffrey Meyers is here to save us from that faulty view of Ecclesiastes, and he does an admirable job of it.
Mr. Meyers starts out with a needed corrective. "Vanity of vanities," is the way the book starts out in most English translations. Mr. Meyers points out that this is a poor translation. The Hebrew word is "hevel" and it means smoke, mist, or vapor (Thus the title of the book). So Solomon doesn't start out telling us how useless and vain life is, (and then keep repeating it through the entire book), he tells us that life is a vapor, a mist, something that is here and then gone, and this should inform our view of how we ought to live.
Solomon's goal in the book is to tell his readers not to waste their time trying to figure out what God is up to in this life because he has tried and he has failed, and if he has failed, then you will also, dear reader. You just cannot apply your wisdom to life and all of the good and bad events that happen to you and say, "Aha, here is what the Lord is up to that makes sense of all of this," or as Mr. Meyers puts it:
"What the author intends to teach us is that real biblical wisdom is founded on the honest acknowledgment that this world’s course is enigmatic, that most, if not all, of what happens is quite inexplicable, incomprehensible to us, and quite out of our control."
Live for any length of time and you will understand exactly Mr. Meyers' point (not to mention Solomon's).
What to do in light of this problem? Solomon answers for us, and to put it in baseball terms Solomon says: "Don't go for the homers, you're not going to get them and even when you DO occasionally get them, you'll probably have the wrong answer for WHY you got them. Instead, play small ball. Get some bunts and some singles and be satisfied with that."
What does Solomon mean by this? He means that, even though we are not going to figure out what God is up to, even though much of what he does is inexplicable and incomprehensible, what we do know is that he gave us this life, our family, our wife, our finances, to be enjoyed...so enjoy them! Mr. Meyers puts it this way:
"Solomon argues consistently and well for his conclusion: Christians will confess their ignorance and impotence and yet nevertheless receive and rejoice in everything God gives them in life, fearing him and keeping his commands."
As I've read through this book, it's really changed my outlook on how I understand life. What was God doing when he blew up my son's plans to adopt four children? I don't have a clue. It's inexplicable, but it's an Ecclesiastes moment. God will do what he is going to do and most of the time we won't know why he does it.
However, I was out on a night hike last week and I climbed up to the top of a hill near me and on one side the sun was setting and when I turned around, on the other side, the moon was rising. This too was an Ecclesiastes moment. It was meant to be experienced as a good gift from a good God and I understood that and I reveled in the moment, the sun lighting up the underside of the clouds in a fiery red, and the deepening purple as the sun slowly set. But this is hevel. It's vapor. The moon is going to rise later and later and sometimes there will be clouds, so I have to receive the moment as it is, a good gift from God that, like the rest of life, will not last. Take joy in it now. Play small ball.
Mr. Meyers finishes this excellent commentary with these words:
"With these final words Solomon reaches the pinnacle of believing wisdom. These are truly words of faith. Solomon had learned, as we all must, that he was not in control. Thus we learn that as creatures we cannot trust time and events. We have no leverage over them. As we are time-bound, dust-bound creatures living under the sun, and as we are sons and daughters of Adam who will never escape God’s comprehensive curse in this life, so we will never be completely “in the know,” never satisfied, never free from the trouble and calamity, never escape death in this life.
Never.
This is just as much true for those who are believers as anyone else! Our only hope is in the living God, our Maker and our Savior. Our hope now is clearer than it was for Solomon, but our calamitous, vaporous situation under the sun is no different."
I loved this book very much indeed.