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God is good, but life is still hard

October 27th, 2009 by Kristi Stephens

Yesterday I introduced a topic that we’ll be looking at for a while together – how do we construct a theological framework which helps us to make sense of pain and loss? This is no easy task. I surely am not thinking that we are going to settle this in everyone’s minds forever – but I do believe that as we open the Word of God with an open heart, we get a glimpse of the bigger picture.

To begin our dig into Scripture, let’s crack open the book of Ecclesiastes together. Often avoided, this book has become one of my favorites. I can’t wait to look at it with you!

Back when I was a tenth grader at a Christian school, we often liked to joke with our geometry teacher (who was also our Bible teacher) and write Ecclesiastes 1:2 on our test papers.

“Meaningless! Meaningless!”
says the Teacher.
“Utterly meaningless!
Everything is meaningless.”

Doesn’t that verse just fill you with hope? :)

I think that much of the confusion regarding the book of Ecclesiastes stems from the way the NIV has translated this word. “Meaningless” is really a very insufficient term. The KJV, NKJV, ESV, and NASB (maybe others – I haven’t checked them all!) all translate this term as vanity – “Vanity of vanities, all is vanity.”

This begs the question – what is vanity?

John MacArthur summarizes that there are three basic ways that the term “vanity” is used in the book of Ecclesiastes. It refers to:
• Transience – the vapor-like nature of life
• Futility – focuses on the cursed condition of the earth and its effects on our lives
• Incomprehensibility – life’s unanswerable questions and the mystery of God’s purposes

In other words: vanity refers to futility, frustration, limitation, and ultimately death which every person experiences as a result of living in a sin-cursed world.

Right there, I want to yell this out with Solomon. He wrestled with pain and loss and death and frustration just like we do. I think he was angry about death – it wasn’t supposed to be this way, and it stinks! I think he was frustrated by the brokenness of living life as sinful people in a cursed world, where righteousness and wickedness did not always seem to be getting appropriate consequences. And I think he, like the rest of us, recognized that there is much which is simply incomprehensible – God’s ways are not our ways.

Solomon’s book echoes the thought of my heart recently – life is hard. God is good, but life is still hard.

Hard, but not meaningless.

To be continued…

All the posts for this series are indexed here.

6 Responses to “God is good, but life is still hard”

  1. Teri Lynne Says:

    Kristi, I am so looking forward to this study. I read Ecc. a few months ago and was amazed by how much more I "get it" the older I become. Thank you for sharing!!

  2. Brooke McGlothlin Says:

    You and I are writing from a similar heart this week. I appreciate your close look at Scripture and I'm looking forward to your insights :-) And I agree with Teri Lynne, perspective changes everything. It's a shame we think we know it all in our 20s!

  3. Julie@comehaveapeace Says:

    I appreciate hearing your heart today and sharing what mine is feeling. Looking forward to the answers unfolding in Eccl. I'm linking up to you tomorrow in my next post "Falling Peaces." You have already worded the challenges well. Thanks, Kristi!

  4. whittybrooke Says:

    Very interesting subject! I've always liked reading from Ecclesiates….seems to go along with my feelings on things that have been happening in my life over the past several years. I think reading something like that is actually more meaniningful if you're going through hard times than if everything is good. But something I'm slowly learning, as you so truthfully said, is that God is still good….even in the midst of all the bad in life. Look forward to reading more posts!

    Tyra

  5. Julie@comehaveapeace Says:

    Hey, I think you can still get in on the giveaway carnival. Jump in! :)

  6. Sandra Says:

    I get questions about this a lot, especially from young believers and non-Christians. Why is life so hard if God loves us? I try to explain that God hates sin and the effects of sin even more than we do!

    Looking forward to more in this series!

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