I discovered that a seductive woman is a trap more bitter than death. Her passion is a snare, and her soft hands are chains. Those who are pleasing to God will escape her, but sinners will be caught in her snare. [Ecclesiastes 7.26]
Because we know a thing or two about Solomon from Bible sources other than just Ecclesiastes, we can understand from some of the things said in Ecclesiastes that Solomon, in his then-present condition, had digressed in his undiluted faith in God ALONE. Solomon teaches us from his mistakes.
First, by the time Solomon penned Ecclesiastes, he had certainly already amassed his 700 wives and 300 concubines. From the Scriptures we know with certainty that these women were mostly foreign women with foreign gods who led Solomon headlong into idolatry.
Based on everything else Solomon said just in today's One Year Chronological Bible reading, we can see that Solomon's wisdom, in conjunction with his idolatry, left him conflicted and fatalistic. And, in this condition, Solomon groveled in his conflicted fatalism without recognizing his own role in it.
Verse 26 of Ecclesiastes 7 suggests that Solomon's groveling, conflict, fatalism, and idol-induced blindness came even in the midst of his unmatched wisdom. Solomon fully recognized the curses of the "seductive woman" without a moment's accountability for having willfully and intentionally invited the "seductive woman" (women) into his own life. Verses 27-29 then actually reveal just how complete Solomon's idol-induced blindness had become:
“This is my conclusion,” says the Teacher. “I discovered this after looking at the matter from every possible angle. Though I have searched repeatedly, I have not found what I was looking for. Only one out of a thousand men is virtuous, but not one woman! But I did find this: God created people to be virtuous, but they have each turned to follow their own downward path.” [Ecclesiastes 7.27-29]
Every possible angle? Really? If we can see it, Solomon fully recognized his wives' and concubines' role in his fate but did not see his own contribution to it. Solomon held out as the one-in-a-thousand virtuous man who was fatefully (as in, randomly) cursed. The one angle from which Solomon failed to look at his present situation was the angle where he had ignored God's Word about taking multiple foreign women unto himself. Such is the age-old work of Satan's blinding device of idolatry.
As we look at the seductive woman's captivating effect that Solomon described, we see everything Jesus came to set aright:
“The Spirit of the LORD is upon me, for he has anointed me to bring Good News to the poor. He has sent me to proclaim that captives will be released, that the blind will see, that the oppressed will be set free, and that the time of the LORD’s favor has come.” [Luke 4.18-19]
Jesus' quote of Isaiah 61.1-2 here referring to captives being released, the blind seeing, the oppressed being set free, and the time of God's favor all clearly address the problem Solomon defined in Ecclesiastes 7.26.
It should not be overlooked in Ecclesiastes 7.26 that Solomon, whether intentionally or not, indicted himself accurately in his reference to "those who are pleasing God" because "those who are pleasing to God" are those who sincerely (undividedly) believe God:
And it is impossible to please God without faith. Anyone who wants to come to him must believe that God exists and that he rewards those who sincerely seek him. [Hebrews 11.6]
To sincerely seek God is to trust Him ALONE. While Solomon never denied the existence of God in his life, his disobedience of collecting foreign women and their foreign gods, effectively blinded him to the fact that the trap more bitter than death described in Ecclesiastes 7.26 was the exact opposite of God's reward for undivided (sincere) faith. In fact, Solomon revealed his own faithless exit from God's pleasure into God's displeasure without seeing that he had begun to trust in idols. Consequently, Solomon never 'connected the dots' between the "meaningless life" he described in Ecclesiastes and his own gross faithlessness to God ALONE.
Sadly, such is the condition of the Church today where every curse abounds and "good people" blindly attempt to attribute "bad things" to random fate (albeit somehow lovingly ordained by God). Satan's deception is still at work blinding people today just as he blinded Solomon centuries ago, all induced by idolatry: trusting other gods in addition to God, instead of sincerely trusting God ALONE.
Curses don't lie, but deceived people do because the one who deceives them is a liar himself - a God "damned" liar who insists that curses mean nothing. Satan wants nothing more than for people to deny curses' implications, because to do so is to deny God's Word, and therefore, to deny God. It all started in the Garden of Eden.
This is an uncomfortable reality to reconcile with. So, let's talk about grace!
New Testament grace is for "believers in Jesus ALONE." Jesus always advocated for and demanded undivided faith in God ALONE. Partial faith in God means the rest of man's faith is in something else. That "something else" is idolatry - taking "wives" that are forbidden by God - "seductive foreign women" and the idols attached to their allure. Any trust in any idol blinds the idol-believer to any accountability on his part for his "captive" situation(s). Holding to these idols simply cannot be reconciled with Jesus' strict demand:
If any of you wants to be my follower, you must give up your own way, take up your cross, and follow me. [Matthew 16.24 (also, Mark 8.34 & Luke 9.23)]
The person who effectively gives up their own way, takes up their cross, and follows Jesus SHOULD reflect Jesus' resurrection life in EVERY WAY: captives should be released, the blind should see, the oppressed should be set free, and God's favor (every blessing/reward of God upon obedience) should come. But, we don't see this because we, like Solomon, are blinded to the truth and have satisfied ourselves that our circumstances are random (someone else's fault) when those circumstances are instead the direct product of our own selfish lust for idols. The Church today is warned against by the apostle Paul:
You should know this, Timothy, that in the last days there will be very difficult times. For people will love only themselves and their money. They will be boastful and proud, scoffing at God, disobedient to their parents, and ungrateful. They will consider nothing sacred. They will be unloving and unforgiving; they will slander others and have no self-control. They will be cruel and hate what is good. They will betray their friends, be reckless, be puffed up with pride, and love pleasure rather than God. They will act religious, but they will reject the power that could make them godly. Stay away from people like that! [2 Timothy 3.1-5]
To be clear, man's idols in the 21st Century are as complex and advanced as man himself. The idols that blind mankind today have many names and are found in the broad categories of debt, insurance, medicine and technology. These industries do not demand that we outright deny God, but lure us (as would a seductive woman) to add them to our belief in God diluting our faith in God ALONE effectively blinding us to the obvious curses we suffer just like those who deny God altogether (the world). Our subsequent blindness to the Biblical implication of curses manifested on our lives necessitates, like Solomon in Ecclesiastes, that we "wisely" attribute them to randomness and fate out of our control.
To further blind people, the devil has convinced the Church to embrace unbiblical ideas about "bad things" randomly happening to "good people." Amazingly, Solomon's own Proverbs from earlier in his life say otherwise:
Like a fluttering sparrow or a darting swallow, an undeserved curse will not land on its intended victim. [Proverbs 26.2]
The Bible continues to reveal that past, present, and future captivity of idolatry. But these words will be as meaningless to us as they were to Solomon as long as we hold to our forbidden foreign wives, the idols that convince us that our circumstances are nothing but random fate (thus negating our need to repent).
Father, I am more convinced today that Christianity is, by and large, as deceived as was Solomon regarding his captivity to idolatry. The distinguishing curses that the Church powerlessly suffers just like the world tell all. By Your Word, shine light on our path that we might see the gross idolatry that we have, up to this time, been in denial of. By Your Word, Jesus, may we give up our own way, take up our cross, and follow Him. May Your people look different than the world. So be it.