He has made everything beautiful in its time. Also, he has put eternity into man’s heart, yet so that he cannot find out what God has done from the beginning to the end (Ecclesiastes 3:11, esv).
More than three thousand years ago, a king named Solomon chronicled his search for fulfillment. He was the wisest and richest man of all time. If anyone could stroll down every conceivable avenue of potential satisfaction, it was this king of Israel.
Ecclesiastes details Solomon’s pursuit of pleasure. He constructed a palace so opulent it staggered world leaders; accumulated innumerable jewels and possessions; pursued advanced studies; and was with a different woman every day. He explored it all, yet concluded in despair, “So I hated life, because what is done under the sun was grievous to me, for all is vanity and a striving after wind” (Ecclesiastes 2:17).
Solomon discovered what so many fail to realize: history is a repetitive loop of personal futility, with every imaginable experience on the horizontal plane promising fulfillment it can never truly deliver. Solomon was crushed by the realization that on his own, he could not fashion a happiness or satisfaction that would endure beyond the momentary. In Ecclesiastes 3, he turned his expression of frustration on God who made him: “He has put eternity into man’s heart” (3:11).
In this passage, eternity refers to our deep and abiding awareness of something outside the boundaries of our senses. Humans are unique because we hunger for something the experiences of this planet cannot satisfy—a quest for eternity.
The implications of Solomon’s statement are staggering: we are looking for the eternity God created us to long for, but cannot find it on our own. Like hungry people locked outside a gourmet restaurant, we know satisfaction is near but can’t get to the food. Like blind people standing on the edge of the Grand Canyon, we feel the awesomeness close at hand without the capacity to take it in.
Searching for eternity does not lead to finding—until God Himself intercepts our wandering pursuit.
As Solomon rightly observes, all people share the need for fulfillment to come from a source outside of self and beyond this world: “There is nothing better for a person than that he should eat and drink and find enjoyment in his toil. This also, I saw, is from the hand of God” (Ecclesiastes 2:24).
God designed us so that we cannot find fulfillment or lasting enjoyment apart from this eternity. The more we try to satisfy our deepest longing by good and bad horizontal means, the more likely we are to miss God’s vertical invitation to experience Him.
Do you sense that same longing in your soul? Have you known the emptiness of looking for satisfaction in the next raise or relationship or reward? Like Solomon, you have a longing for eternity that only God can satisfy. The underlying vacuum in the center of every soul is a manufacturer’s specification from God Himself. He is the One who has placed eternity in our hearts—and only He can fill it.
Journal
Pray
Lord God, You have set eternity in my heart. Like Solomon, I have tried in vain to fill that deep longing with other things. Forgive me, God. I acknowledge that You, and only You, can truly, deeply satisfy the longings of my soul. Help me learn from Solomon. I will not look for meaning or fulfillment in my accomplishments, relationships, or earthly pleasures. You only will I seek, for You satisfy my soul. Thank You, my Maker, in the name of Your eternal Son, amen.