In Ecclesiastes 3:18–20 we are reminded that God is testing humanity. The writer observes that people and animals share the same breath and the same end: “All are from the dust, and to dust all return.” Mortality is not merely a biological fact but a spiritual lesson. God allows human frailty to reveal who we are and who He is. A childhood memory sometimes captures this truth in unexpected ways. As children splashed in a summer pool and later played “Ring Around the Rosie,” the familiar line echoed: “Ashes! Ashes! We all fall down.” At six years old, those words seemed only playful. Later reflection reveals their sobering echo. Some historians link the rhyme to the Great Plague, with its rash, its posies, and its tragic ending. Whether or not that connection is exact, the message remains: all of us fall down. Death arrives without regard to status or strength. Neither clever plans nor human effort can fully shield us. The fall of humanity placed mortality upon us all, and it remains beyond our control.
Recognizing mortality often changes perspective. It humbles ambition and places achievements in their proper context. We make plans, collect possessions, and imagine we are steering the ship, only to discover we are passengers more than captains. Life can feel like an exam for which the study guide never fully arrives. We try to compare ourselves favorably with others, though the mirror sometimes reveals a more honest report. In this sense, life exposes our dependence. Ogilvie notes that we must trust God’s deeds since our own are limited and our lives too brief to see ultimate justice. Another commentator writes, “Our present existence is a proving ground. It is a test… in the sense of something that demonstrates our true character.” Mortality reveals our place in the universe and our relationship to God. The lesson can be uncomfortable, like discovering the answer key is not in our possession after all.
The New Testament speaks directly to this human condition. Jesus described Himself as the shepherd, saying, “I am the good shepherd. The good shepherd lays down his life for the sheep” (John 10:11). While humanity returns to dust, Christ offers a different horizon: “For as in Adam all die, so also in Christ shall all be made alive” (1 Corinthians 15:22). Mortality becomes a teacher pointing beyond itself. Paul writes, “For this perishable body must put on the imperishable” (1 Corinthians 15:53). In Christ, the testing ground of life reveals not only human frailty but also divine grace, reminding us that while all fall down, God’s redemptive purpose stands.
