Intro
Mist rises from the ground, disappearing in the heat and is gone.  A vapor and 
nothing more.  The mother of all the living, Eve, held her newborn son, the 
second child ever born of a woman.  Even so, the paradise God created became an 
evaporating mist, awaiting its recreation on the Last Day.

Main Body
Eve gazed at the child in her arms.  She named him Abel: vapor, lacking 
substance, anything less would be nothing.   Not so with her firstborn, Cain, 
which means to get or create.  Eve thought Cain was the one.  He will make 
right what she and Adam inflicted on the world.  He will be the promised 
Messiah, crushing the serpent’s head.

Cain began to grow, sinful and fallen.  Eve now knew he was not the promised 
Messiah.  Hoped faded from her like a vapor, which the name of her second son 
reveals.  Generations later, Eve’s descendant, Solomon, became king of Israel.  
In the book of Ecclesiastes, he used another name for himself: “Qoheleth,” 
Teacher.   How fitting, for Solomon wants to teach.  

When but a young man, God promised Solomon wisdom.  Now, the teacher is no 
longer a child, but an old man who lived and seen almost everything.  The 
gray-bearded king walks past the Temple, which 180,000 of his men labored seven 
years to build.  He takes his spot before his people. 

A golden crown graces the King’s head, a robe of scarlet drapes over his 
shoulders.  The majesty of the city he built towers around him.  The Teacher 
speaks of life, even using the same word Mother Eve once used: Abel.  
“Meaningless, meaningless.”  All is as a vapor, soon to be gone.  Everything 
you see is as pointless and forgettable as the morning mist, as lasting as a 
puff of wind.

So, where do you find meaning in life?  Solomon invites us to ask ourselves.  
But does our life even matter?  Some contend our life is but the span of time 
between our first and final breath.   The best you can do is eat, drink, and 
party because one day you will die.  An acceptable philosophy for a fish or a 
fruit fly—but you are neither of those. 

You are more than a flesh-and-blood creation of God.  Unlike the other animals 
in the world, God made you in His image.  He hard-wired you, longing for 
purpose in your life.  You want your life to matter.

Solomon wanted his life to matter.  When he pondered the meaninglessness of 
life, he spoke from experience.  Even though God blessed him with much wisdom, 
the Teacher’s heart stirred and wrestled within, searching for purpose.  

Ecclesiastes reveals his search for meaning and what he found along the way.  
Solomon found laughter and pleasure.  He built monuments and parks, filled his 
houses with beautiful wives and concubines, his treasuries with coin and 
silver. 

Advancement and riches, work and wisdom.  Solomon had whatever he wanted from 
the best of the world.  Did he suffer hunger as the King?  Solomon was never 
alone without wanting solitude.  He never lacked for money.  Every yearning of 
his heart was soon satisfied, leaving him craving for more, even while bored, a 
thirst unquenched.   

The wise one looked at life.  He reflected on what his eyes took in—vapor, 
empty wind, and nothing more.  His life was a gold-plated mist, melting in the 
heat of the day.  His life was a silver-lining of nothingness.  Life without 
meaning ached within him.

The more Solomon got, the more he realized something.  None of what surrounded 
him lasts.  Even if it would, we don’t.  You can’t take your belongings with 
you.  You feast today, but the worms will be feasting on you tomorrow.  The 
more you clamor to hang on to this world, the more it wisps through your 
fingers like a passing breath.

How much wisdom do you need to learn that?  What do you hold on to for meaning 
in life?  Take a ripe peach in your hand: fuzzy, the essence of the fruit’s 
flesh entering your nostrils.  The fruit with sweet juices to savor, but 
tomorrow it will be rotten.  I hold a paycheque in my hand, but soon enough the 
money will disappear and be gone.  

Meaningless.  Such despair is disheartening, dispiriting, and you hate it—but 
you can’t say it isn’t true.  Why bother at all if, in the end, you die?  Ah, 
so here’s the truth: life is only meaningless if you mistake the stuff of this 
world for life.  

Even so, does God tells us to work?  Yes!  We need to eat.  Scripture contains 
these stern words: “The one who is unwilling to work should not eat” (2 
Thessalonians 3:10).  Jesus also directs us to pray for food.  But none of 
those are life in themselves.

Are you looking for meaning in all the wrong places?  Do worries make you 
anxious, as you twist your sheets around your legs, unable to sleep?  Do you 
think you deserve more, jealous of your neighbor’s stuff, which keeps you 
pining for more?  Solomon’s voice echoes across the ages: “Are you looking for 
meaning in the meaningless?  Are you trying to fill your sails in the 
evaporating vapors of this world?”

Oh, but the Teacher’s story is not yet ended, for his father, King David, named 
him Solomon because it means peace.  David also gave him a second nickname: 
“Jedidiah,” which means the Lord’s love is resting on him.  

David wanted God’s peace to rest within his son.  Even so, Solomon walked away 
from God for a while, not experiencing His peace—but God never walked away from 
him.  God would send someone who would change everything.  His name would be 
Yeshua; not meaningless vapor, but Savior.  We call Yeshua “Jesus.”  

Jesus was the Savior to come, who would also come to save Solomon.  David, 
Solomon’s father, wrote how Jesus would die for our sins.  Men would pierce His 
hands and feet so we could walk in heaven.  Because of Yeshua, we will live in 
the house of the Lord forever.  

Solomon made the same point.  Every deed done on earth is not meaningless.  He 
was using poetic license for effect, contrasting our life now with eternal 
life.  Solomon calls us to recognize: We have more to our life than what takes 
place in this world. 

The wise Teacher tells us to put your hope and trust—not in money, food, or 
fame—but in the Lord.  God gives us those gifts, and then provides us with an 
eternity beyond the ages!  So, look to your Savior!  Hold on to the life 
waiting for you in eternity!  The life our Lord gives you lasts forever, which 
is, what in the end, matters.  

What God will grant to us in the creation to come gives us meaning, even here 
and now.  Holding on to the life God promises, something odd begins to happen.  
Everything “meaningless” in this “meaningless” life starts to take on new 
meaning.  Here is how Solomon described it: “A person can do nothing better 
than to eat, drink, and enjoy his work.  I also realized even this from is from 
God’s hand, for who can eat or enjoy life apart from him?”  “Even this from is 
from God’s hand.”

I hold a peach in my hand.  Soon the fruit will decay—but today that wholesome 
essence of the earth gives strength to my body!  Through it, God loves me and 
cares for me.  I cut a piece from the peach and hand the dripping goodness to 
another; a smile now spreads across his face.  Through me, God now loves him.  
Through such an act of kindness, even the peach receives its meaning and 
purpose.

I hold a paycheque in my hand.  The money will disappear—but for now, it 
provides a roof from the rain and food for the table.  I work many hours for my 
paycheque, but that is not all.  Through my salary, you are bringing God’s love 
to me, as well.   

I, in turn, thank God, returning some of what He gives me back to Him.  Well, 
Sheri does, for through that paycheque, I am showing God’s love to her when she 
receives the money and uses it.   Even our money now receives its meaning and 
purpose.

I go home and kiss my wife.  One day, death will come calling; but today, we 
are here, each for the other.  Through her, God loves me; through me, God loves 
her.  That love of God lasts forever.  So, all those little acts of love are 
not empty or meaningless, for they now take one a meaning and purpose.  

A life that only revolves around your days on this earth before you’re under 
the earth IS meaningless!  Not so when you remember that your Savior prepares a 
life for you beyond this fallen world.  Then, everything changes.  What you 
have doesn’t give meaning to life—but life in Christ does give meaning to what 
you have.

Augustine, a pastor who lived over 1500 years ago, wrote a revealing prayer.  
“You have made us for Yourself, O Lord, and our heart is restless until it 
rests in You.”  What is its meaning?  You are more than a morning mist or 
evaporating vapor.  

You are a creation of God, first made in His image and likeness, first animated 
by the breath of God Himself.  God gives you a purpose and meaning beyond any 
money or mere object.  You aren’t just a consumer.  You’re a child of God 
because of God’s love for you in Christ Jesus.  

Conclusion
So, hold on to what gives meaning in a meaningless world.  Set your eyes on 
Jesus, who died and rose for your salvation.  You are God’s, and He is yours.  
Then see your life with new eyes, for it springs from Him, is lived in Him, and 
even for Him.  

Like Jedidiah, Solomon’s other nickname, the Lord’s love is resting on you.  
Like the Teacher, you know the wisdom from above.  Like Solomon, God gives you 
His peace.  With what God gives you, you now know the meaning of life.  Amen.
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