Saturday, June 24, 2023

The Foolishness of Solomon

If you know anything about King Solomon, David’s son, you probably associate the word wisdom with him rather than foolishness. According to the biblical record, Solomon was the wisest and richest king in his day. Sadly, the record also reports that in his last years, he turned away from following God with his whole heart and was foolishly drawn into idol worship by his many foreign wives. Taking the foreign wives may have been a wise move for any other king; wives offered as gifts from competing kingdoms often forged alliances that promoted prosperity for both rulers. But for a God-fearing Israelite, foreign wives were forbidden. Solomon ignored that. His wives did what God warned they would do. He paid the price for his disobedience the same way Saul did. His vast kingdom was shattered after he died, most of it going to one of his rivals.

Sadly, there are many tales of prominent Christians who fall due to the siren call of worldly pleasures. But you don’t have to be the ruler of a kingdom to take a lesson from this. Any of us who claim the name of Jesus are susceptible to earthly allures. And often the idols we find tempting us to worship are very subtle. There is nothing inherently wrong with watching a little television, playing a little golf, taking a jog through the park, or going for a ride on a motorcycle. However, when any hobby or pursuit takes so much of our time that we neglect the spiritual disciplines that keep our faith strong, we risk falling into idolatry. The slide has begun if the first thing that comes to mind when there is a free moment is picking up the remote or grabbing the clubs.

Polls tell a sad tale when it comes to Bible reading among evangelical Christians. Too few church going believers pick up their Bibles even once during the week. At the same time, according to one study, Americans over fifteen watch an average of three hours of TV per day, but most Christians would claim they don’t have time to read the Bible. I know men who will spend hours feeding their golf habit but can’t spare a few minutes to feed their souls. If God is truly at the center of a life, that life should be centered around God and His Word not concerned with catching the latest episode of that popular TV show or chasing a better handicap score. Those things should be secondary.

I don’t want to single out hobbies as the only temptation to idolatry. There are many things, inherently good things that can pull a Christian off center. Family responsibilities, career requirements, the maintenance of our worldly possessions all can lure us off track. Ironically, even “church” itself can get us in trouble. We can become so busy with meetings and programs and practices that we end up “chasing the wind” as Solomon put it. The Preacher said that everything under the sun is futile. The key here is “under the sun.” If the writer of Ecclesiastes was Solomon as many believe, you can see how he became disenchanted with life on earth. His greatest failure was not seeing what his father, David, saw. Read his psalms: David always turned his eyes to God when the world was unsatisfying. He knew where peace was to be found: “Better is one day in your courts than a thousand elsewhere.”

We no longer go to the temple in Jerusalem like David did. We have it better: we go into the throne room of God – a privilege bought for us by the blood of Christ. The way to make God’s presence your center is through the spiritual disciplines, prayer and Bible reading chief among them. Put down the remote, leave the clubs in the garage and sit down with your Bible… every day. Confess your waywardness to God and ask Him to bless you with His presence. At an earlier time in his life, Solomon wrote these words to his son: “That’s right—if you make Insight your priority, and won’t take no for an answer, searching for it like a prospector panning for gold, like an adventurer on a treasure hunt, believe me, before you know it…  you’ll have come upon the Knowledge of God.” (Prov. 2:1-5 The Message) The feeling you get from that will be better than a hole-in-one. No foolin’.

Related posts: The Missing Book; Idol Worship; Who’s in the Temple; Where Do You Find Truth?; Read This or Die;

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