High School | The Value of Wisdom (Ecclesiastes 7) | Collin Warner
Speaker: Not provided
Shared by Calvary Chapel Chino Hills
Calvary Chapel Chino Hills
Summary
Main message: Solomon in Ecclesiastes 7 shows that godly wisdom has real value: it rightly orients our lives (making us serious, humble, and strong) while also having limits — human wisdom cannot answer everything, and sin has corrupted what God intended. Living by biblical wisdom shapes legacy and character better than worldly gain or cleverness.
Key points:
- Wisdom has an intended purpose; misusing or over‑stretching human wisdom leads to frustration and error.
- Godly wisdom produces three attitudes: seriousness about life (live with eternity and legacy in view), humility under God's sovereignty, and spiritual strength.
- Ecclesiastes 7 uses paradoxical contrasts (e.g., a good name better than ointment; house of mourning better than house of feasting; the end better than the beginning) to awaken people to wise living.
- Wisdom is more life‑giving than money and protects when applied, but it cannot make sense of everything — there are limits to human understanding.
- The fault for evil and disorder lies with fallen humanity, not with God's original design.
Scriptures mentioned: Ecclesiastes 7, Isaiah 55:8‑9, Deuteronomy 29:29, Proverbs 4:3‑5, Proverbs 3:13, Proverbs 3:18, 2 Corinthians 2:14‑16, Hebrews 9:27 (referenced), Psalm 90:12, Romans 8:28‑29, 1 Corinthians 3:18
