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Under the Sun: From Observation to the Fear of God
Coles
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Under the Sun: From Observation to the Fear of God in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.99

Coles
Under the Sun: From Observation to the Fear of God in Vernon, BC
By None
Current price: $10.99
Original price: $12.99
Loading Inventory...
Size: Kobo eBook
*Product information may vary - to confirm product availability, pricing, shipping and return information please contact Coles
What happens when the things we rely upon most begin to collapse beneath us?
Ecclesiastes is one of the most searching and emotionally honest books in all of Scripture. It confronts the instability of life with unsettling clarity: wisdom cannot guarantee outcomes, pleasure cannot satisfy permanently, work cannot secure lasting meaning, and time eventually humbles every person beneath the sun. Human striving, achievement, certainty, and control all prove unable to bear the full weight of the human soul.
Yet Ecclesiastes was never written to leave us in despair.
In Under the Sun , Slayder Betts offers a contemplative and deeply human exploration of Ecclesiastes, allowing the book's tensions, questions, and observations to speak with their full force rather than rushing prematurely toward simplistic conclusions. Written in a reflective literary style, this work walks alongside the voice of Qoheleth-the observer and assembler-through the complexities of grief, wisdom, mortality, longing, injustice, pleasure, uncertainty, and faithfulness.
Rather than dismantling meaning itself, Ecclesiastes dismantles the false foundations upon which we often attempt to build meaning.
Through meditative prose, pastoral insight, theological reflection, and honest engagement with the human condition, Under the Sun explores themes such as:
• The instability of human achievement
• The limits of wisdom, understanding, and control
• The burden of time and mortality
• Pleasure, sorrow, and the ache for permanence
• Hope deferred and unresolved longing
• Faithfulness when life does not fully resolve
• The fear of God as the beginning of grounding and meaning
• Joy as a gift received rather than possessed
• Communion with God amid life's uncertainty
This is not merely a commentary on Ecclesiastes, nor is it a devotional built upon easy answers. It is an invitation into honest discipleship-one that allows readers to wrestle openly with the realities of life while discovering that reverence, humility, and faithful alignment with God remain possible even in a world marked by vapor and fragility.
For readers of contemplative theology, biblical wisdom literature, spiritually grounded literary nonfiction, and reflective Christian thought, Under the Sun offers a thoughtful and emotionally resonant meditation on what it means to live faithfully beneath heaven while longing for what is beyond it.
What happens when the things we rely upon most begin to collapse beneath us?
Ecclesiastes is one of the most searching and emotionally honest books in all of Scripture. It confronts the instability of life with unsettling clarity: wisdom cannot guarantee outcomes, pleasure cannot satisfy permanently, work cannot secure lasting meaning, and time eventually humbles every person beneath the sun. Human striving, achievement, certainty, and control all prove unable to bear the full weight of the human soul.
Yet Ecclesiastes was never written to leave us in despair.
In Under the Sun , Slayder Betts offers a contemplative and deeply human exploration of Ecclesiastes, allowing the book's tensions, questions, and observations to speak with their full force rather than rushing prematurely toward simplistic conclusions. Written in a reflective literary style, this work walks alongside the voice of Qoheleth-the observer and assembler-through the complexities of grief, wisdom, mortality, longing, injustice, pleasure, uncertainty, and faithfulness.
Rather than dismantling meaning itself, Ecclesiastes dismantles the false foundations upon which we often attempt to build meaning.
Through meditative prose, pastoral insight, theological reflection, and honest engagement with the human condition, Under the Sun explores themes such as:
• The instability of human achievement
• The limits of wisdom, understanding, and control
• The burden of time and mortality
• Pleasure, sorrow, and the ache for permanence
• Hope deferred and unresolved longing
• Faithfulness when life does not fully resolve
• The fear of God as the beginning of grounding and meaning
• Joy as a gift received rather than possessed
• Communion with God amid life's uncertainty
This is not merely a commentary on Ecclesiastes, nor is it a devotional built upon easy answers. It is an invitation into honest discipleship-one that allows readers to wrestle openly with the realities of life while discovering that reverence, humility, and faithful alignment with God remain possible even in a world marked by vapor and fragility.
For readers of contemplative theology, biblical wisdom literature, spiritually grounded literary nonfiction, and reflective Christian thought, Under the Sun offers a thoughtful and emotionally resonant meditation on what it means to live faithfully beneath heaven while longing for what is beyond it.


















