7-5-7 Solomon And Wisdom
Solomon's Attitude To True Wisdom
Solomon forgot that his wisdom was a gift from God; he speaks in Ecc.
1:16 of how “I have gotten me great wisdom” (RV). His possession of truth
led him to the assumption that this was a reward for his own diligence;
whereas it was a gift by grace. Yet he himself knew that the wisdom given
by God brings joy, whereas human wisdom leads to the grief and
depression which afflicted Solomon (Ecc. 1:18 cp. 2:26). Solomon
'had the truth', he knew so deeply the true principles of
Yahweh worship. But like us, he scarcely
considered the enormity of the gap between the theory he knew and
the practice of it in his own heart
and living. We too have a tendency to build up masses of Biblical and
spiritual knowledge, and to let the mere acquisition of it stop us from
practicing it. He flouted the explicit commandments not to get horses
from Egypt, not to marry Gentile women, and not to multiply
silver and gold (Dt. 17:17,18 cp. 1 Kings 10:21-29). At
the end of his days, he recognized that although he
had loved the theory of wisdom, the image of a
spiritual life, the wisdom of God had never really impacted his
soul: " I said, I will be wise (referring back to his request for
wisdom in 1 Kings 3); but it was far from me" (Ecc.
7:23). His request for wisdom had only been so that he could do
the job of leading Israel, living out the parental expectation of
his father, whom he admits in Proverbs 4 had taught him to ask for wisdom.
In Prov. 19:12 he speaks as if his own wisdom was like the dew coming
down- as if he felt that the mere possession of wisdom made him the Messiah
figure which his father had so hoped for him to be in Ps. 72:6). And he
says as much in Prov. 29:3: “Whoso loveth wisdom [exactly what Solomon
was commended for doing] rejoiceth his father”. He saw his wisdom and
knowledge as some sort of a reward in themselves: “the prudent are crowned
with knowledge” (Prov. 14:18). This is of course true in a sense, as all
the Proverbs are. But Solomon surely had the idea that he, who was so
renowned for his knowledge, was somehow thereby rewarded by having it.
This assumption by Solomon was likely behind each of the many references
he makes to the value of wisdom and the blessedness of the man who has
it. It is rather like feeling that ‘we have the truth’ because somehow
our correct understanding of doctrines is a reward for our righteousness,
and mere possession of doctrinal truth means that we are acceptable to
God.
The description of the " largeness" of heart in 1 Kings 4:29
uses the same word used about the largeness of the land of Israel
in Ex. 3:8; Neh. 9:35; his wisdom was " as the sand that is on the
sea shore" (1 Kings 4:29) as Israel were
described in Gen. 22:17. Even in his spiritual
collapse at the time of Ecclesiastes, Solomon still
taught Israel true wisdom, and organized his wisdom
into more accessible books (Ecc. 12:9-12), giving himself the title “koheleth”
(‘the preacher’). And yet he himself tried alcohol, wealth, women, indeed
every addiction, in order to “see what was that good for the sons of men,
which they should do under the heaven” (Ecc. 2:3). And yet he knew from
childhood the conclusion of the matter- man’s duty is to fear God and
be obedient (Ecc. 12:13). He who had been given wisdom started out in
a search for it… showing clearly enough that what he knew was so much
theory, but never touched his own heart. Solomon taught wisdom to the
youngsters, but he gave himself over to search for some kind of vague
philosophical truth outside of God.
Having admitted his wisdom was " far from me" personally, Solomon
then recognized that he was a mixture of wise saint in theory,
and utter sinner in practice: " God giveth to a man that is
good in his sight wisdom, and knowledge
and joy (as he did to Solomon, Song 3:11)...but
to the sinner he giveth travail (as Solomon complained he
had in Ecclesiastes, 1:13; 2:23; 3:10; 4:4), to gather
and to heap up (the same word is used re. Solomon's
" store cities" ) " (Ecc. 2:26).
Yet Solomon wasn't bothered to do anything
about his chronic 'little of both' syndrome- a temptation
many of us must know keenly. He knew that he had been
given Divine wisdom, but the wonder of it meant little
to him; he became so accustomed to using
it for the benefit of others and sharing
it with them that it became meaningless for him personally.
The way this wisdom was “far from me” is truly tragic to behold in Solomon.
He had spoken by that wisdom in Proverbs of bringing up a child in the
way he should go; whereas by the time of Ecc. 2:19 and his experience
with his own children, he comments about his heir: “Who knoweth whether
he shall be a wise man or a fool?”. He simply didn’t see the relevance
of his wisdom to his own personal family life. Yet he proudly insisted:
“Who is as the wise man?”, as if the possession of theoretical truth and
wisdom was the ultimate possession; and he then goes on to say that this
made him beyond criticism (Ecc. 8:2-4). This surely must be a
danger for any community or individual who considers they have “the truth”
and who considers the possession of it to be of the utmost importance.
" What hath the wise more than the fool?"
(Ecc. 6:8) shows how effectively he despised his wisdom; he lost sight
of the Kingdom which it led to ultimately, and the God manifestation
which it could enable in this life. He had written in his Proverbs
that the ruler who lacks wisdom will oppress his people (28:16); and although
his wisdom remained with him right to the end, in terms of knowledge (Ecc.
2:9; 12:10), yet at the end end of his reign Solomon was the ruler who
did oppress his people. And he had gone on in Prov. 28:16 to warn against
covetousness in a ruler, even though he went ahead with practicing every
conceivable form of it in Ecc. 2. “Therefore remove sorrow from thy heart,
and put away evil from thy flesh” (Ecc. 11:10) Solomon taught- and yet
Solomon in Ecclesiastes is the very picture of such a person. Like
the lung cancer specialist who smokes, the experienced pilot who takes
off with frozen wings and then crashes, so Solomon’s very wisdom somehow
disinclined him to living it out in practice. This is the perversity of
our nature- the higher we may rise, the deeper we are inclined to fall.
Further than all this, Solomon even seems to have come close to despising
the wisdom he had been given. He refers to himself when he writes at the
end of his life of the man whose labour is in wisdom [cp. his labouring
to write out so many Proverbs], and yet it is all pointless in that he
will leave it all to a fool after him- he had already seen the unspirituality
of his children (Ecc. 2:21). This thinking reflects a perception that
his wisdom was totally irrelevant to himself- he wrote it all down for
others, but not for himself. Right at the end of Ecclesiastes he chuffles
that he still preaches his wisdom to the youth, although he himself has
the attitude that it is all meaningless. This is one explanation of the
paradox within Ecclesiastes- the teaching of Divine truth, whilst lamenting
the pointlessness of it.
The blasphemy of those statements in Ecclesiastes that wisdom
is meaningless is hard to plumb. Deep within his heart, Solomon's
attitude was that " As it happeneth to the fool,
so it happeneth even to me (the man made wise by God); and why was
I then more wise?" (Ecc.2:15). Ecc.7:16 is in similar vein:
" Be not righteous over much; neither make thyself over wise"
- even though wisdom and righteousness are what God desires
from us above all! This despising of wisdom and
the truly spiritually ambitious life was due to Solomon's
lack of faith in a resurrection; he had his kingdom in this life, and
he failed to see the blinding necessity of a resurrection, judgment and
change of nature. In the end, Solomon felt that for himself, it
was as well to be righteous as to be wicked, for in death there was no
further difference (Ecc. 9:2,5,9). He knows judgment will come (Ecc. 11:9),
at least for the young people, but he reasons as if it won’t- at least
not for him. He knows, but he doesn’t know on the personal, experiential
level. This is why there are apparently contradictory statements in Ecclesiastes.
For example, the wise dies as the fool, with no more eternal remembrance
than the fool (Ecc. 2:15,16). This, Solomon, says, is what he himself
believes in his own heart. But in 7:12 he says that wisdom gives life
to those who have it. But then again in 9:16-18 he observes that although
wisdom can help, it’s benefits are easily undone, so easily as to make
it useless. I don’t see these different perspectives as being the difference
between life in the world and life in the spiritual realm. They are all
spoken with conviction by Solomon, which, to my mind, ruins the
idea that he himself believed the Truth but was simply outlining what
life is like without God. He advocates both ways. My resolution of this
is that he knew and preached God’s Truth, but for him personally, it meant
nothing at all. And therefore in practice he advocated the life of self-enjoyment,
acting as if all the other truth of wisdom was not operative
in practice. His final reccommendation in Ecc. 12 is for young people
to go the way of wisdom, as this is their duty. He had evidently minimized
the coming of judgment, as his obsession with himself being the Messiah
had lead him to minimize the reality of the coming of Christ. How deeply
do we struggle with our own humanity, and deeply long for
the second coming? Has our materialism made the Hope of
the Kingdom mean practically nothing? Solomon's complaint
at the pointlessness of wisdom in Ecc. 2:15-20
is liberally sprinkled with personal pronouns; his self-centredness was
part of his materialism and lack of faith in the Kingdom.
And for us too, familiarity with the glorious
principles of Divine Truth with which we have been entrusted
can lead us to the blasphemy of saying, in effect, that
those principles are unimportant; they come to
mean little to us personally, and thereby we effectively deny their
value and worth.
Because of all this, despite having such knowledge and wisdom with which
to rule Israel (for this was the primary purpose of the gift of wisdom
to him), Solomon oppressed his people. With evident reference to himself,
he commented: “Becauze the king’s word hath power, who may say unto him,
What doest thou?” (Ecc. 8:4 RV). It is only God who cannot be questioned
in this way. But Solomon felt that because he possessed God’s wisdom,
he could therefore act as God: “I counsel thee, Keep the King’s command,
and that in regard of the oath of God” (Ecc. 8:2) could suggest that he
thought that his commandments were in fact God’s. So the possession of
Truth, which we too have, can lead to an incredible arrogance, a lack
of openness to others’ comments upon us, and a certainty that we
are right in all that we do and are beyond criticism. The hardness of
a man is changed by true wisdom (Ecc. 8:1 RV), but knowing this, Solomon
became hard hearted. He had the wisdom- but as he said, it was far from
him personally.
Solomon made the classic mistake of assuming that his will and word were
effectively equivalent to the word of God. In Prov. 6:21 he speaks of
the need to bind the law about your heart and neck; but in Song 8:6 he
asks his Gentile lover to “set ME as a seal upon thine heart” and arm.
And often in Proverbs he uses the language of the blessings for keeping
God’s law and turns them into the blessings for keeping his law;
e.g. “My son, keep my words, and lay up my commandments with thee.
Keep my commandments, and live; and my law as the apple of thine eye.
Bind them upon thy fingers, write them upon the table of thine heart”
(Prov. 7:1,2). And we all do the same in essence, whenever we assume that
our consciences are effectively the will of God; when we ‘play God’ by
allowing our words and will to count as if they are His word.
Even early on, Solomon had a way of spinning things, even God’s word,
in his own selfish way. David had insisted that God had told him that
he couldn’t build the temple because he had shed so much blood in war
(1 Chron. 22:8). But Solomon just slightly spins this when he asks Hiram
to come and help him build the temple, because, he says, his father David
hadn’t had the time to get around to the job because of being busy fighting
wars (1 Kings 5:3). He says nothing about David shedding blood; the moral
aspect of it all is nicely ignored by Solomon.
Dt. 17:17-20 is a warning to the King of Israel not to multiply horses
and wives, lest his heart be turned away. It’s a conscious prediction
of Solomon’s apostasy. But one result of such behaviour would be that
the King’s heart would be “lifted up” above his brethren (Dt. 17:20)-
and this is exactly what happened to Solomon. He came to see himself as
somehow above the rest of humanity, to the extent that he was convinced
that he was acceptable to God, and that he could abuse his brethren because…he
had wisdom. Significantly, Solomon uses the same Hebrew word translated
“lifted up” in Dt. 17:20 in Prov. 4:8, when he speaks of how the possession
of wisdom will “exalt” or lift up a person. He came to think that his
mere possession of true wisdom gave him a superiority over others, and
thus he was lifted up above his brethren. There are major warnings here
for us, who for generations have possessed more Bible truth than any other
church on earth. It has , sadly, led to a lifting up of many
of our hearts above our fellow man and even our fellow brethren… Yet this
doesn’t take away from the wonderful truth of it all. |