Solomon, with a careful and sometimes heavy heart, watches life unfold “under the sun” and records what he sees without polishing the edges. He observes two inescapable truths. First, rulers often abused their authority to harm others. Second, even those who seemed favored in life eventually died like everyone else. Ecclesiastes 8:9-10 captures his reflection: “All this I observed while applying my heart to all that is done under the sun, when man had power over man to his hurt. Then I saw the wicked buried. They used to go in and out of the holy place and were praised in the city where they had done such things. This also is vanity.” Solomon returns again to that familiar word, vanity, reminding us that life, as it appears on the surface, can feel like chasing the wind. Watching the parade of human history, he seems to sigh, as if to say that even the loudest applause fades quickly at the cemetery gate.
When we bring Solomon’s observations into our daily lives, they feel uncomfortably familiar. We still see power misused, injustice applauded, and outcomes that make us scratch our heads and wonder if someone misplaced the instruction manual for life. We plan, we worry, we check the weather, and sometimes we still forget an umbrella on the one day it pours. Solomon reminds us that no one knows the future and that every path eventually leads to the grave. It can sound like he is quietly suggesting we lower our expectations. As David Hubbard noted, “Ecclesiastes had shown the weaknesses in human views of hope. He had taught his followers in what not to hope.” That rings true when we place our confidence in temporary things. Promotions, possessions, and even reputation can slip through our fingers like sand. Life under the sun, taken by itself, does not offer much solid ground to stand on.
Yet the story does not end there. What Solomon could not fully see, Jesus reveals with clarity and grace. Where Solomon sees uncertainty, Jesus speaks promise: “For the hour is coming in which all who are in the graves will hear His voice and come forth” (John 5:28). Where death seems like a locked door, Jesus quietly carries the key. The New Testament reminds us, “We do not grieve as others do who have no hope” (1 Thessalonians 4:13). Through His death and resurrection, Jesus answers the ache that Ecclesiastes exposes. Forgiveness replaces guilt, and life replaces death. The thief on the cross found hope in his final moments, a gentle reminder that grace arrives even when the clock appears to have run out. History truly is His story, moving toward a restoration that only He can accomplish. Under the sun, shadows remain, but in Christ, they no longer have the final word.
