7-5-2 Solomon's Attitude To The Kingdom
It would seem from Ecclesiastes that Solomon lost any personal hope even
of resurrection, and because of this he wonders why he ever initially
had asked for wisdom: “I myself perceived that one event [death] happeneth
to them all. Then said I in mine heart, As it happeneth to the fool, so
will it happen even to me; and why was I then more wise?” (Ecc. 2:14,15
RV). “God giveth to the man that is good in his sight wisdom…this also
is vanity” (Ecc. 2:26). This is a definite reference back to himself,
who was given wisdom. But he now saw it as vanity, seeing there was no
personal future hope. What this teaches us is that unless we personally
believe we will be in the Kingdom, then all our wisdom is of no value
to us personally….and in the end, we will like Solomon live a life that
reflects this.
Solomon speaks in Ecclesiastes 6 of the tragedy of possessing all things
but being unable to enjoy them, because fulfilling one's own natural desires
one after another really isn't much of a life. And thus he came to despise
the concept of eternal life: " Yea, though he live a thousand years
twice told, yet hath he seen no good" (Ecc. 6:6). " A thousand
years" was likely a figure for eternity. He conceived of eternal
life as being life as we now know it; and he didn't really want to live
for ever as he'd fulfilled every natural desire. There's a real warning
for us here. If we see the eternity of the Kingdom as a big carrot for
us, it may not actually be that motivating for us in the long run of spiritual
life. It is the quality and nature of that life which is surely important
to us, and not the mere infinity of it. Indeed, eternal life as we now
know it would be a curse rather than a blessing.
We have shown elsewhere that Solomon saw himself as the Messianic Son
of David, therefore he felt his kingdom was the Messianic Kingdom.
He felt that God “hath made me an house, as he promised” to David (1 Kings
2:24). He felt that he was the fulfilment of the promises, and therefore
the Kingdom had come; he failed to be awed by the greatness of the Christ
to come, and abstracted and reduced His coming Kingdom into an effective
nothingness. By doing so, he totally overlooked the highly conditional
nature of the promises, and forgot his own proneness to failure, and the
weakness of his nature. He failed to meditate upon the promises beyond
what they seemed to offer him in the here and now; and the result was
that he felt they were totally fulfilled in him: “[God had] kept
with thy servant David that thou promisedst him...as it is this day...I
am risen up in the room of David my father, and sit on the throne of Israel,
as the Lord promised, and have built an house for the name of the Lord”
(1 Kings 8:20,24). He dogmatically declared to Shimei: “And King Solomon
shall be blessed, and the throne of David shall be established before
the Lord for ever” (1 Kings 2:45). And in all this, of course, we see
our warning. This may explain why he built his own house as a replica
of God's house - he felt that in fulfilment of the Davidic covenant his
house was God's house. Solomon's attitude to the Kingdom was that
it was all here and now, and it was not so much the Kingdom of God as
the Kingdom of Solomon. In this Solomon may seem far removed from
our experience. But with eyes half closed, discerning only the general
outline, Solomon is surely in a mind-set analogous to many of us.
Solomon was so sure that because of his father’s righteousness, therefore
God would establish him. “Mercy and truth preserve the king, and he upholdeth
his throne by mercy” (Prov. 20:28 RVmg.) says as much- the promises (“mercy
and truth” usually refer to God’s promises) had been given to David and
just because of that, Solomon was sure that his throne and kingdom
would thereby be upheld. He forgot the crucial need for personal, obedient
relationship with God. And he overlooked all the hard work that his father
had done in preparing for the temple to be built- in that he claimed all
glory for himself: “Through wisdom is an house builded; and by understanding
it is established” (Prov. 24:3) he said- perfectly true, but with the
self-justifying twist behind the words in his case, that he had built
the temple thanks to his own wisdom. Wisdom is given, he said, to the
man who is pleasing to God (Ecc. 2:26)- again referring to himself. One
even wonders whether he justified his many wives by reasoning that “Whoso
findeth a wife [any time!] findeth a good thing, and obtaineth favour
of the Lord” (Prov. 18:22).
Solomon’s use of his
wealth to create a garden with special rivers and fruit trees was surely an
attempt to reproduce Eden on earth (Ecc. 2:5,6 RV). He thought that he could
buy the Kingdom, create the Kingdom paradise on earth,
have it now...
and so very many have
fallen into the same delusion. |