The Bible in a Year (with Fr. Mike Schmitz) - Day 151: Wisdom and Folly (2025)
Episode Date: May 31, 2025Fr. Mike delves deeper into the lessons Ecclesiastes teaches us today about living wisely by keeping the end in mind, enjoying the present moment, and not worrying too much about other people's opinio...ns of us. Today's readings are 1 Kings 9, Ecclesiastes 6-7, and Psalm 7. For the complete reading plan, visit ascensionpress.com/bibleinayear. Please note: The Bible contains adult themes that may not be suitable for children - parental discretion is advised.
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Hi, my name is Father Mike Schmitz and you're listening to the Bible in a Year podcast where
we encounter God's voice and live life through the lens of scripture.
The Bible in a Year podcast is brought to you by Ascension.
Using the Great Adventure Bible timeline, we'll read all the way from Genesis to Revelation,
discovering how the story of salvation unfolds and how we fit into that story today.
Today is day 151, day 151.
We're reading 1 Kings chapter 9 and then
two chapters out of Ecclesiastes chapters 6 and 7. We're also praying Psalm 7. If you're interested,
the Bible translation that I'm reading from is the Revised Standard Version, the Second Catholic
Edition. I'm using the Great Adventure Bible from Ascension. Also, you can download your own Bible
in a Year reading plan by visiting ascensionpress.com slash Bible in a Year. You can also subscribe to this podcast
to receive daily episodes every single day for 365 days.
As I said, it is day 151.
We're reading First Kings Nine,
which is gonna sound like yesterday,
like a review of Second Chronicles,
because it is, it's a review of the other things
that Solomon has done and specifically,
the Lord's second appearance to Solomon we're going to hear about as well as
diving more deeply into Ecclesiastes and this incredible incredible wisdom book where
Colette the preacher examines what is the goodness of life and what should I set my heart on and what is it?
Dangerous to set your heart on that is today first Kings 9 Ecclesiastes 6 and 7, and then praying, Psalm 7.
The First Book of Kings, Chapter 9. The Lord's Second Appearance to Solomon.
When Solomon had finished building the house of the Lord and the King's house and all
that Solomon desired to build, the Lord appeared to Solomon a second time, as he had appeared
to him at Gibeon. And the Lord said to him, I have heard your prayer and your supplication which you have
made before me.
I have consecrated this house which you have built and put my name there forever.
My eyes and my heart will be there for all time.
And as for you, if you will walk before me as David your father walked, with integrity
of heart and uprightness, doing according to all that I have commanded you, and keeping
my statutes and my ordinances, then I will establish your royal throne over Israel forever,
as I promised David your father, saying, There shall not fail you a man upon the throne of
Israel.
But, if you turn aside from following me, you or your children, and do not keep my commandments
and my statutes which I have set before you, but go and serve other gods and worship them. Then I will cut off Israel from the land
which I have given them.
And the house which I have consecrated from my name
I will cast out of my sight,
and Israel will become a proverb
and a byword among all peoples.
And this house will become a heap of ruins.
Everyone passing by it will be astonished and will hiss,
and they will say,
why has the Lord done thus to this land and to this house?
Then they will say, because they forsook the Lord their God
who brought their fathers out of the land of Egypt
and laid hold on other gods and worshiped them
and served them.
Therefore the Lord has brought all this evil upon them.
At the end of 20 years in which Solomon had built
the two houses, the house of the Lord and the King's house,
and Hiram, King of Tyre, had supplied Solomon with cedar and
cypress timber and gold as much as he desired, King Solomon gave to Hiram twenty cities in
the land of Galilee.
But when Hiram came from Tyre to see the cities which Solomon had given him, they did not
please him.
Therefore, he said, What kind of cities are these which you have given me, my brother?
So they are called the land of Kabul to this day.
Hiram had sent to the king one hundred and twenty talents of gold.
Other Works of Solomon
And this is the account of the forced labor which Solomon levied to build the house of
the Lord and his own house and the millow and the wall of Jerusalem and Hazor and Megiddo
and Gezer.
Pharaoh king of Egypt had gone up and captured Gezer and burnt it with fire and had slain
the Canaanites who dwelt in the city and had given it as dowry to his daughter Solomon's
wife.
So Solomon rebuilt Gezer.
And lower Bethharon, and Baalath and Tamar in the wilderness, in the land of Judah, in
all the store cities that Solomon had, and the cities for his chariots and the cities
for his horsemen and whatever Solomon desired to build in Jerusalem, in Lebanon, and in
all the land of his dominion.
All the people who were left of the Amorites, the Hittites, the Perizzites, the Hivites,
and the Jebusites, who were not of the sons of Israel, their descendants who were left
after them in the land whom the sons of Israel were unable to destroy utterly, these Solomon
made a forced levy of slaves, and so they are to this day.
But of the sons of Israel, Solomon made no slaves.
They were the soldiers, they were his officials, his commanders, his captains, his chariot commanders,
and his horsemen. These were the chief officers who were over Solomon's work, five hundred and fifty,
who had charge of the people who carried on the work. But Pharaoh's daughter went up from the
city of David to her own house, which Solomon had built for her. Then he built the millo.
Three times a year Solomon used to offer up burnt offerings and peace offerings upon the
altar which he had built to the Lord, burning incense before the Lord.
So he finished the house.
Solomon's Fleet
King Solomon built a fleet of ships at Ezion Gebur, which is near Eloth on the shore of
the Red Sea in the land of Edom.
And Hiram sent with the fleet his servants, seamen who were familiar with the sea together
with the servants of Solomon.
And they went to Ophir, and brought from their gold to the amount of four hundred and twenty
talents, and they brought it to King Solomon.
The Book of Ecclesiastes, Chapter 6.
Frustration of Desires.
There is an evil which I have seen under the sun, and it lies heavy upon men.
A man to whom God gives wealth, possessions, and honor, so that he lacks nothing of all
that he desires.
Yet God does not give him power to enjoy them, but a stranger enjoys them.
This is vanity.
It is a sore affliction. If a man begets a hundred children and lives many years so that the days of his years are many
But he does not enjoy life's good things and also has no burial
I say that an untimely birth is better off than he
For it comes into vanity and goes into darkness and in darkness its name is covered
Moreover it has not seen the sun or known anything, yet
it finds rest rather than he.
Even though he should live a thousand years twice told, yet enjoy no good, do not all
go to one place?
All of the toil of man is for his mouth, yet his appetite is not satisfied.
For what advantage has the wise man over the fool, and what does the poor man have who
knows how to conduct himself before the living? Better is the sight of the eyes than the wandering of desire.
This also is vanity and the striving after wind. Whatever has come to be has already
been named, and it is known what man is, and that he is not able to dispute with one stronger
than he. The more words, the more vanity. And what is man the better? For who knows what is good for man
while he lives the few days of his vain life,
which he passes like a shadow?
For who can tell a man what will be after him under the sun?
Chapter seven, wisdom and folly compared.
A good name is better than precious ointment,
and a day of death than the day of birth.
It is better to go to the house of mourning than to go to the house of feasting.
For this is the end of all men, and the living will lay it to heart.
Sorrow is better than laughter, for by sadness of countenance the heart is made glad.
The heart of the wise is in the house of the mourning, but the heart of fools is in the
house of mirth.
It is better for a man to hear the rebuke of the wise than to hear the song of fools.
For as the crackling of thorns under a pot, so is the laughter of the fools, this also
is vanity.
Surely oppression makes the wise man foolish, and a bribe corrupts the mind.
Better is the end of a thing than its beginning, and the patient in spirit is better than the
proud in spirit.
Be not quick to anger, for anger lodges in the bosom of fools.
Say not, Why were the former days better than these?
For it is not from wisdom that you ask this.
Wisdom is good with an inheritance, an advantage to those who see the sun.
For the protection of wisdom is like the protection of money,
and the advantage of knowledge is that wisdom preserves the life of him who has it.
Consider the work of God. Who can make straight what he has made crooked?
In the day of prosperity be joyful, and in the day of adversity consider.
God has made the one as well as the other, so that man may not find out anything that will be after him.
Inequalities of Life other, so that man may not find out anything that will be after him.
Inequalities of Life In my vain life I have seen everything.
There is a righteous man who perishes in his righteousness and there is a wicked man who
prolongs his life in his evil doing.
Be not righteous over much, and do not make yourself over wise.
Why should you destroy yourself?
Be not wicked over much, neither be a fool.
Why should you die yourself? Be not wicked over much, neither be a fool. Why should you die before your time?
It is good that you should take hold of this, and from that withhold not your hand, for
he who fears God shall come forth from them all.
Wisdom gives strength to the wise man more than ten rulers that are in a city.
Surely there is not a righteous man on earth who does good and never sins.
Do not give heed to all the things that men say, lest
you hear your servant cursing you. Your heart knows that many times you have yourself cursed others.
All this I have tested by wisdom. I said, I will be wise, but it was far from me. That which is,
is far off, and deep, very deep. Who can find it out? I turned my mind to know and to search
out and to seek wisdom and the sum of things, and to know the wickedness of
folly and the foolishness which is madness. And I found more bitter than
death the woman whose heart is snares and nets, and whose hands are fetters. He who
pleases God escapes her, but the sinner is taken by her. Behold, this is what I
found, says the preacher,
adding one thing to another to find the sum, which my mind has sought repeatedly, but I have
not found. One man among a thousand I found, but a woman among all these I have not found.
Behold, this alone I found, that God made man upright, but they have sought out many devices.
that God made man upright, but they have sought out many devices.
Psalm 7, Plea for Help Against Persecution, Isha'gion of David, from all my pursuers and deliver me, lest like a lion they rend me, dragging me
away with none to rescue.
O Lord my God, if I have done this, if there is wrong in my hands, if I have repaid my
friend with evil or plundered my enemy without cause, let the enemy pursue me and overtake
me and let him trample my life to the ground and lay my soul in the dust.
Arise, O Lord, in your anger, lift yourself up against the fury of my enemies.
Awake, O my God, you have appointed a judgment.
Let the assembly of the peoples be gathered about you, and over it take your seat on high.
The Lord judges the peoples. Judge me, O Lord, according to my righteousness,
and according to the integrity that is in me.
O let the evil of the wicked come to an end, but establish the righteous, ye who try the
minds and hearts, O righteous God.
My shield is with God, who saves the upright in heart.
God is a righteous judge, and a God who has indignation every day.
If a man does not repent, God will wet his sword.
He has bent and strung his bow.
He has prepared
his deadly weapons, making his arrows fiery shafts.
Behold, the wicked man conceives evil, and is pregnant with mischief, and brings forth
lies. He makes a pit, digging it out, and falls into the hole which he has made. His
mischief returns upon his own head, and on his own skull his violence descends.
I will give to the Lord the thanks due to his righteousness
and I will sing praise to the name of the Lord,
the Most High.
Father in heaven, thank you so much.
God, thank you so much.
Thank you for your word and thank you for your wisdom
that you share with us.
Thank you for allowing us to ask questions
and to question reality.
Thank you for letting us, inviting us to question goodness
and question righteousness and question the mystery of evil
and our own mystery of evil in our own hearts.
Thank you for allowing us to come before you
with all these questions and with all this brokenness
that's not just around us, but is also in us.
Thank you for sharing your word, the words of Koala,
the words of the preacher who gets to ask big questions
and invites us into asking those big questions.
We give you praise and we thank you in Jesus' name, amen.
In the name of the Father, and of the Son,
and of the Holy Spirit, amen.
Okay, so here we are with First Kings, chapter nine.
We're getting to the end of the reign of King Solomon.
And so we see a bunch of building
because he is the Solomon the builder.
We see a bunch of activity that he's doing.
And we see, again, a picture of Solomon
kind of getting towards the end of his life.
And so what we're gonna see in the next two days,
first Kings 10 and first Kings 11 is the ultimate,
I would say this, the wise one, the wise one ending his wise life
in foolishness.
The builder, the great builder ending his life in ruins.
And that's gonna be more of Solomon's story
as we continue our journey with him
for the next couple days.
Even though, as we know, God has warned him.
That second dream that God appeared to him saying,
yeah, I will bless you.
I will be with you.
I will establish your throne
like at the throne of your father forever.
Just do not turn away and serve other gods.
And we're gonna find that Solomon
does not take that to heart.
He might for a day, he might for a week,
he might for a couple of years.
But you know, so often it's not how we start,
it's how we end.
And speaking of not how we start, not how we end,
Ecclesiastes can be a very troubling, very confusing book,
but also can be very inspiring if we just receive it the right way.
For example, when it comes to endings and beginnings,
here's the author Colette, here's the author Solomon,
the author of Ecclesiastes saying,
yeah, the day of your death is better than the day of your birth.
Like what? Better to go to the house is better than the day of your birth.
Like what?
Better to go to the house of mourning
than the house of feasting.
Ah, better sorrow than mirth.
Which is, okay, I don't understand.
What are you trying to say?
One of the things that the author,
the wise one is trying to point out is,
when we recognize that all things are going to have an end,
we recognize that all things are going to have an end,
then we live with clarity.
We can then live with purpose.
But if I'm just focusing on the beginning,
if I'm just focusing on the start
without focusing on the ending,
then I will probably live incredibly foolishly.
I will live a life of folly as we're going to see
that so many people in the scripture and in our lives,
what do they do? What do we do? We have good beginnings.
We don't always have great endings. And so the wise one is saying, yeah,
the day of death is better than the day of your birth.
It puts things in perspective. Was it Stephen Covey who had said, begin with the end in mind as a way to live wisely because I know what's coming
or I have an idea of where I want to end up,
therefore I'm gonna live in a way that's intentional,
trying to get towards that place,
part of the wisdom of Ecclesiastes.
But another thing, it begins with chapter six,
calls, it's where he says, it's the frustration of desires
and it says, there's an evil under the sun
that lies heavy upon men, that here's a person
to whom God gives wealth and they have possessions and honor,
lacks nothing they desire,
but he doesn't have the power to enjoy them,
but a stranger enjoys them, this is vanity.
Now there's a possibility that this can be,
yeah, they've been given all these gifts and all this work,
they've been blessed in so many ways,
but someone else enjoys the fruits of their labor,
not being a vanity, a meaninglessness, a vapor.
But there's also a thing called anedonia. If you know what anedonia is,
it is an inability or unwillingness to enjoy oneself.
You know, hedonism is taking pleasure, right?
It's a kind of a idea, a mindset
that's oriented towards pleasure.
Anedonia is, you know, if you're anhedonic,
the opposite of hedonism.
It's an inability or unwillingness to enjoy oneself,
to have gifts, to be surrounded by gifts,
to be surrounded by life, to be surrounded by,
as it says in scripture here,
possessions and wealth and honor,
but not have the ability to enjoy it.
Not letting oneself say, oh my gosh,
I can actually take joy, I can laugh. I can rejoice in what I have is that's a burden.
That is a burden to be anadonic. So we have to, I think so many of us,
we can be like this. We can fall into that trap where she's like, Nope,
I gotta get back to toil. I gotta get back to work.
I gotta get back to the thing because I'm worried about the bills and I'm
worried about the mortgage and I'm worried about these things that are real,
right? Obviously, but maybe you have kids and maybe God's calling you to stop and just
okay enjoy the fact you have kids yeah but they're noisy and they're messy and
they're yeah but they won't be noisy messy for long or forever at least maybe
you're alone and you're like I can't enjoy this time alone we have it you've
been given silence you've been given the gift of of quiet and peace and time to
think freedom maybe even to travel or freedom to serve that there are so many You've been given silence. You've been given the gift of, of quiet and peace and time to think, um,
freedom, maybe even to travel or freedom to serve,
but there are so many people who, ah,
they have other obligations because their lives are full of family.
I'm just trying to spin this and I don't mean to spin it in a,
in a way that is overly Pollyanna ish, but,
or overly naive by that sense of, okay, so I'm single. Yes.
I'd love to have a family. Yes. I'd love to have a spouse, you might say.
But okay, but I also am free.
I'm free to serve people who would not be able to be served
by me if I had a family or by me if I had a spouse.
And so to be able to say that, to see that and say,
okay, let me take joy in what I do have,
not be sorrowful of what I don't have.
Last couple of things.
There is just this great verse in chapter seven,
verse 10 that says,
"'Say not, why were the former days better than these?
"'For it is not from wisdom that you ask this.
"'Why were former days better than these?
"'Like back in the good old days,
"'they were so much better than times
"'we're living through right now.'"
And basically Colette is pointing out,
the author of Ecclesiastes is pointing out,
yeah, you're not being smart when you say that.
You're not being wise when you ask the question
back in the day, why was it so much better than today?
Because that is not the case.
I think it was Augustine, Saint Augustine
who had once said something along the lines of,
do not wish for the good old days,
essentially because back in the good old days,
you wouldn't have thought they were the good old days.
Something along those lines.
Yeah, that was pretty much a butchering of his quote.
But the last, last little note, verse 21 in chapter seven.
It says, do not give heed to all the things that men say,
lest you hear your servant cursing you.
It says, do not give heed to all things that people say,
lest you hear your servant cursing you
or anybody cursing you.
Because that can really, I guess, make us sad. It can really ruin our day. Here's someone saying anybody cursing you. Because that can really just make us sad.
It can really ruin our day.
Here's someone saying something negative about you.
But he goes on to say,
your heart knows that many times
you yourself have cursed others.
And I just think about how often does someone's
not even like overly cruel comment,
but just a slightly critical comment.
How often can that ruin our day?
It can just kind of be that sliver
that gets under our skin that just bothers us.
And think of all the times we have said
those kinds of things with other people.
And now it's not just merely a matter of,
well, you've done it too,
but I think it's a matter of wisdom.
And the wisdom is this.
Someone could say about me, they could say,
oh yeah, he's not that, I mean, he's fine,
he's not that smart, or he's fine,
but he's not that whatever the positive thing is. And they could say, oh yeah, he's not that, I mean, he's fine, he's not that smart, or he's fine,
but he's not that, whatever the positive thing is.
And that could really, you know,
I could let that be a burr under my skin.
I could let that be something that really bothers me.
But how many times do I offer my own assessment
of someone's podcast or someone's show
or someone's whatever it is they're doing,
and I don't really even mean anything.
It's just, oh, I'm just sharing my opinion.
So again, it's not even just a matter of like,
hey, you do it too, but it's a matter of,
okay, let me think, when I do it, do I really,
does it mean that I've really taken the time
and have come down to the conclusion,
here's my assessment of this person as a person,
or here's my assessment of this person
as whatever it is that they're doing?
Like, nope, I was probably just being a little bit too loose
with my criticism, and it probably didn't really mean anything when I said it.
So maybe when someone is saying it about me,
maybe take it with a grain of salt. I don't know if that makes any sense.
It made sense to me when I was thinking about it.
And this is one of those times where you say, yeah, father,
I'm like you were off today. And I'd say, okay, maybe, uh,
maybe I just have to think of the seventh chapter of Ecclesiastes verse 21.
Just think, yes, today, not the most articulate.
What a gift.
I am so grateful we have 365 of these
because, you know, it's day 151.
You get to get a chance to kind of redeem yourself
on day 152.
But today is the day that the Lord has made.
And so we rejoice and are glad in it.
We rejoice and praise the Lord
and we rejoice and pray for each other.
I am praying for you.
Please pray for each other and please pray for me.
My name is Father Mike.
I cannot wait to see you tomorrow.
God bless.