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Pastor Jerry Costolo focuses on Ecclesiastes 3:1–15 and its famous “a time for everything” poem. He notes the book’s unsettling, repetitive tensions and explains the poem’s 14 paired contrasts as a comprehensive picture of human experience under God’s sovereignty over time and seasons. Addressing Solomon’s question about the gain from toil, he offers three responses: God gives busyness and beauty in time yet withholds full understanding; God’s gift is joy, doing good, and enjoying food, drink, and labor; and God’s work endures, repeating life’s cycles. He then contrasts Solomon with Jesus, ending with Matthew 6’s call to consider birds and lilies, confronting anxiety and urging seeking God’s kingdom.
By Fellowship Community ChurchPastor Jerry Costolo focuses on Ecclesiastes 3:1–15 and its famous “a time for everything” poem. He notes the book’s unsettling, repetitive tensions and explains the poem’s 14 paired contrasts as a comprehensive picture of human experience under God’s sovereignty over time and seasons. Addressing Solomon’s question about the gain from toil, he offers three responses: God gives busyness and beauty in time yet withholds full understanding; God’s gift is joy, doing good, and enjoying food, drink, and labor; and God’s work endures, repeating life’s cycles. He then contrasts Solomon with Jesus, ending with Matthew 6’s call to consider birds and lilies, confronting anxiety and urging seeking God’s kingdom.