The Divine Sabotage: An Expositional Journey Through Ecclesiastes
English


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About The Book

Description: The concept of the divine sabotage is the starting point for this expositional journey through Ecclesiastes. Dan Lioy notes that on the one hand God has set eternity in the human heart (Eccl 3:11a). Yet on the other hand no one can fathom what God has done from beginning to end (Eccl 3:11b). God has imposed limitations on the human race that undermine human efforts to look beyond the present-especially to understand the past or probe into the future. Expressed differently because people are creatures of time their heavenly imposed finitude subverts their ability to fathom the eternal plan of God. The preceding observations help pinpoint why existence often seems vague incongruous and antithetical. People are left feeling confused powerless and frustrated. And somewhere along the way they begin to ask what life is really all about. Solomon who was Israels wisest and most powerful king also wrestled with these issues and he recorded his observations and conclusions in the book of Ecclesiastes. Lioys objective balanced and affirming examination of Solomons treatise indicates that the fundamental quality of life is defined by revering God and heeding His commandments (Eccl 12:13). He notes that if human existence is likened to a cord made of three strands (an analogy based on Ecclesiastes 4:12) it remains coherent and interconnected when God is at the center of ones inner world at the core of ones understanding of the external world and the basis for the significance one derives from life. This volume is appropriate for personal study and is also suitable as a college and seminary textbook. About the Contributor(s): Dan Lioy is a researcher writer and editor of biblical resource materials including scholarly monographs commentaries and dictionaries. He has held faculty appointments at several tertiary institutions both in the United States and abroad. His previous Wipf and Stock publication is Jesus as Torah in John 1-12 (2007).
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