Narcan for the Soul

Ecclesiastes 2:13-3:22 June 28, 2026 Pastor Chris Oswald
Thesis Ecclesiastes serves as God's wake-up call to displace our worldly intoxications with sober reality, but only Jesus Christ — the greater Solomon — provides both the full revelation of eternal life and the power to live rightly in light of it.
Series
Ecclesiastes
Type
Expository
Tone
pastoralpropheticdidactic
Method
redemptive-historicalcanonicalgrammatical-historical
What's in this sermon

The shape of the argument

32 units across exposition, application, illustration, theological claim, and conclusion. The pastor's argument is built from these moving parts.

Pastoral correction · unit #13
"Applies the enjoyment principle with controversial pastoral claim: chronic discontentment and possibly clinical depression may be God's discipline for ingratitude and taking gifts for granted. Issues direct pastoral charge: those who cannot be satisfied must appeal to God not for more things but for the capacity to appreciate what He's already given. Offers personal pastoral consultation."
Doctrinal loci· 14 surfaced
Anthropology · 10 Christology · 10 Hamartiology · 8 Providence / Sovereignty · 7 Sanctification · 7 Soteriology · 7 Bibliology · 6 Eschatology · 4 Pastoral Theology · 3 Doxology / Worship · 2 Ecclesiology · 2 Theology Proper · 2 Ethics / Moral Theology · 1 Pneumatology · 1
Bible citations· 19
Luke 8:9-14 | 1 Peter (general) | Ecclesiastes 2:11 | Ecclesiastes 1:3 | Matthew 16:26 (implied) | Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 | Ecclesiastes 2:13-19 | Ecclesiastes 3:9-13 | Ecclesiastes 2:24-25 | Psalm 127:1 (alluded to) | Ecclesiastes 3:16-22 | Ecclesiastes 3:11 | Matthew 12 | Romans 1:25 | Ecclesiastes 4:4 | Various Gospels (implied 'follow me' commands) | Ecclesiastes 3:1-8 (implied seasonal language) | Genesis 3 (curse on toil, implied) | Lord's Supper institution accounts (implied)
Illustrations· 1
  1. analogy · unit #6 — Extended scientific analogy explaining how Narcan works chemically by displacing opioids from brain receptors, jolting overdose victims back to consciousness. Includes personal anecdote about Vicodin use after knee surgery to illustrate opioid effects, and firefighter paramedic insight on administration methods.
Theological claims· 9
  1. The Preacher of Ecclesiastes, more than any Old Testament figure, anticipates and affirms Jesus' warning about the futility of gaining the world at the cost of one's soul. unit #5
  2. Ecclesiastes functions as divine intervention, displacing fantasy with reality and romanticism with accounting to rescue believers from fatal worldly intoxication. unit #7
  3. The Preacher's incomplete understanding of the afterlife is not a defect but reflects the principle of progressive revelation — God unveiling truth gradually across Scripture with Christ as the climactic interpretive key. unit #16
  4. Hell is the place where those who worshiped creation over Creator receive precisely what they desired — existence utterly stripped of every divine gift and blessing. unit #18
  5. Those who die in Christ receive eternal union with the Creator where all created goods remain but are properly ordered under Christ as the ultimate good. unit #19
  6. Humans are inescapably mimetic — the solution is not to escape imitation but to redirect it toward the right model, since we necessarily derive values from observing others. unit #24
  7. Jesus Christ is the solution to misdirected mimetic desire — He lovingly commands imitation of the right model, saying 'Follow me, be like me, copy me.' unit #25
  8. Christ is both the pattern believers must follow and the power enabling them to follow the pattern — this is Providence's consistent hermeneutical and homiletical commitment. unit #26
  9. The uniquely Christian tweak to Ecclesiastes is that we begin not by enjoying our toil's fruit but by enjoying the fruit of Christ's toil — his cursed labor on the cross. unit #28
Quotations· 2
"Progressive revelation is the principle that God disclosed himself and his redemptive purposes gradually across the span of Scripture, with later revelation building upon, clarifying, and bringing to fullness what was given in earlier and often more partial or shadowed forms. It does not mean earlier revelation was false, that God changed his mind, but that the same ununified truth was unveiled by stages, reaching its climax and interpretive key in Christ." — Unnamed theological source (unit #16)
"mimetic desire" — Rene Girard (unit #22)
Read it

Full transcript

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0 · Opening prayer interceding for those with unresolved sicknesses, testifying to God's trustworthiness even when unseen, and asking for the congregation to encourage those lacking faith and love those suffering well

A bigger blessing to the kingdom and so on and so forth. We ask for that as well. And finally, Father, we lift up those who are just struggling with unresolved sicknesses and conditions. And we just pray, God, your mighty hand of blessing upon them, not only in the physical, but especially in the spiritual. And we, Lord, as a congregation would say on behalf of all those people who need something to change, that we, together, even now in this time of prayer, come together to testify that you, O Lord, are trustworthy. You are good. You are faithful, even when we don't see it. And there's countless testimonies in this room to say that that is so. And so, Father, if we can be an encouragement, if we can give our faith to those who are lacking it, Father, please help us to love those who are suffering well this week. In Jesus' name we pray. Amen. Amen.

1 · Frames the sermon as a comparison between the Preacher of Ecclesiastes and Jesus Christ, establishing the preacher's pastoral calling to feed sheep with God's word

All right, we're in Ecclesiastes again. Second week in the title of this message is, This Preacher Compares That Preacher With The Preacher, Jesus Christ. And I thought of the Spider-Man meme, for those of you that know the three Spider-Man pointing at each other. So, this preacher talks about that preacher, the preacher who wrote the book of Ecclesiastes, and compares him with the preacher, Jesus Christ. My main concern, whatever book of the Bible we happen to be in, is that I understand how Jesus Christ wants to use the place we are at in his word to feed his sheep here at Providence. There are a lot of other things people look for in preaching. But my fundamental call before the Lord is to feed his sheep with his word and to consult him and seek him to know how to do that. Now, I will tell you that at some point I maybe made a risky decision. I told Dove probably about 10 months ago, You know what, Dove? Why don't you come up with the preaching calendar? Why don't you figure out what books you think we need to hear, and then I'll preach them. And so, we're not in Ecclesiastes because I decided we should be in Ecclesiastes. Mr. Judeo-Christian wanted us in Ecclesiastes. No, I'm kidding. But I'm so glad that we're here. And one of the reasons for that is it's not something I would have picked, but it forces me to ask, Lord, what do you want me to do with this? How can I use this to feed your sheep? And I think that one answer, as I've sought the Lord on this, can be found in Jesus' parable of the seeds and the sower, which is Luke 8, verse 9 through 14. And when his disciples asked him what this parable meant, he said, To you it has been given to know the secrets of the kingdom, but for others they are in parables, so that seeing they may not see and hearing they may not understand. Now, the parable is this. The seed is the word of God. The ones along the path are those who have heard. Then the devil comes and takes away the word from their hearts, so that they may not believe and be saved, verse 13. And the ones on the rock are those who, when they hear the word, receive it with joy. But these have no root. They believe for a while, and in a time of testing, fall away, verse 14. As for what fell among the thorns, they are those who fear, they are those who hear, but as they go on their way, they are choked by the cares and riches and pleasures of life, and their fruit does not mature. So I'm asking the Lord, how do you want your sheep to feed on the book of Ecclesiastes? And I think one answer is, is that there is a kind of person who has received the gospel, who has heard the gospel, but will not move forward and advance in the gospel or godliness because cares and riches and the pleasures of life cause their fruit not to mature. And I think Ecclesiastes is one of the weapons in our Savior's arsenal to pull these thorns out of our lives, allowing the word of God to advance and prosper as we want it to, advance and prosper.

2 · Signals the structural approach for the sermon: contrasting the wisdom of Ecclesiastes with the wisdom of Christ to extract theological insight

So that's why I think today we're going to do a lot of contrasting what this preacher says in Ecclesiastes with what the preacher, Jesus Christ, says, and maybe glean some interesting information.

3 · Introduces Ecclesiastes' function as spiritual Narcan — an intervention to wake believers from worldly intoxication

The first thing I think that the book of Ecclesiastes is doing for us is it's serving as a kind of spiritual narcan. It's given by the Lord to us to wake us up out of an intoxication with the word, with the world. There's two important words, at least two important words in the book of Ecclesiastes. The first one I've talked to you about, it's Hebel, and it's the word for vanity, and it appears, I think it's like 37 times in this one book. The majority of Hebrew uses of this particular word take place in this one book, Ecclesiastes. And that word simply has this idea of evaporation, of something here today and gone tomorrow, short-lived. We talked about the water cycle last week and how this thing that you have today may not be here tomorrow. It may be absorbed and returned elsewhere. So that's one important word in the book. And this is interesting because, you know, when we were going through 1 Peter, which was the book we were in before this one, a book Dove also picked, when we were going through 1 Peter, kind of one of the key themes of 1 Peter is that they are in a refiner's fire to test the purification or reality of their faith. So there's a disillusion happening. They're in the refiner's fire. All of the dross of their sin, their flesh and so forth is being burned off, and their pure, true faith is being revealed. Well, it wasn't coincidental that Dove picked Ecclesiastes next because there's a different kind of refinement that happens here. And that's sort of, you might say, the refinement of evaporation or things are taken away and what's left and what remains. And that's one of the key ideas of Hebel. And there's another key word in the book of Ecclesiastes, and that's the word yitron. And that word gets used a fair bit, not as much as Hebel. But this word is an accounting word, and it simply means what is left over at the end of the day. It's kind of the word for the balance, the net, not the gross. What is left over after the world has exercised its taxes, its taxes of futility, its taxes of toil, its taxes of entropy? What is left over? That's the word yitron.

4 · Demonstrates how yitron (gain/net balance) functions throughout Ecclesiastes by citing two examples where the Preacher asks what remains after all human toil — exposing the vanity of worldly achievement

And Ecclesiastes' preacher is using that word to do the same thing. It's a spiritual narcan. It's saying, you know, so little of the things you care about will come to anything. That's kind of the basic idea there. That word appears usually, as you're reading Ecclesiastes on your own, that word appears usually as the word gain. And it's in a number of the chapters. For instance, one of the very first questions asked, I think the first question asked in the book, chapter 1, verse 3, what does man gain by all the toil at which he toils under the sun? The idea is, what's left over? What's the balance? And then chapter 2, verse 11, then I considered that all my hands had done, all that my hands had done and the toil I had expended in doing it, and behold, all was vanity and a striving after wind, and there was nothing to be gained under the sun.

5 · Asserts that Jesus uses Ecclesiastes to sober believers, and identifies the Preacher of Ecclesiastes as the Old Testament figure best positioned to affirm Jesus' teaching about gaining the world but losing one's soul

So this is one of the things that Jesus is doing with the book of Ecclesiastes in your life and in my life, is he's trying to sober us up. I don't know of anybody in the Old Testament who would agree with Jesus' statement, what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world but loses his soul? I don't know anyone in the Old Testament who is in a better position to agree with that statement from Jesus than the preacher in the book of Ecclesiastes. He can say absolutely correct, absolutely true, what does it profit a man if he gains the whole world and loses his soul?

Where this fits

Recent preaching context

The three sermons immediately preceding this one in the preaching schedule.

Jun 7, 2026
Because Christ has inaugurated the messianic age, believers must participate in the coming shalom through prayer, self-control, and earnest love for one another.
1 Peter 4:7-19
Jun 19, 2026
The primary theological point of Genesis 6 is not the identity of the Nephilim but the danger of prideful rebellion against God's established boundaries, as demonstrated by the New Testament's consistent use of this passage to warn against transgression.
Genesis 6:1-4
Jun 21, 2026
True contentment is found not in the pursuit of exceptional pleasures or achievements, but in receiving each ordinary day as God's gift and resting in the gospel assurance that God is pleased with us in Christ.
Ecclesiastes 1:1-11:10
June 28 · This sermon
Narcan for the Soul
Ecclesiastes serves as God's wake-up call to displace our worldly intoxications with sober reality, but only Jesus Christ — the greater Solomon — provides both the full revelation of eternal life and the power to live rightly in light of it.
Ecclesiastes 2:13-3:22
Take it further

Discuss · apply · pray

Small-group discussion

6 questions for your group this week

  1. The Preacher says 'vanity of vanities' — everything under the sun is futile. What does he actually mean by futility? Is he saying that work, pleasure, and relationships have no value, or is he saying something more specific about how we pursue them?
    Ecclesiastes 2:11
    → Can you think of a time when you felt the weight of this futility — when something you worked hard for or enjoyed didn't satisfy the way you thought it would?
  2. According to the sermon, Ecclesiastes functions like spiritual Narcan — it's meant to wake us up from an intoxication with worldly illusions. What are we actually intoxicated by? What fantasies or false promises have you noticed operating in your own desires or decisions this week?
  3. The Preacher identifies four sobering realities: death is undeniable, returns on labor are unpredictable, seasons constantly change, and enjoyment itself requires God's enabling grace. Which of these four hits you hardest right now, and why?
    Ecclesiastes 3:1-8, Ecclesiastes 3:9-13
    → How does acknowledging that particular reality change the way you think about your current circumstances?
  4. The sermon suggests that chronic discontentment is often a 'jammed gratitude signal' — we've become so accustomed to blessings that we can't actually enjoy them anymore. Where do you see this operating in your own life or in the culture around you?
    Ecclesiastes 2:24-25
  5. The Preacher prescribes enjoying simple things and fearing God as the solution within his limited understanding of the afterlife. But the sermon argues that Jesus, the greater Solomon, changes the starting point for Christian life. Instead of beginning by enjoying the fruit of our own toil, we begin by enjoying the fruit of Christ's toil — his work on the cross. What's the difference, and why does that difference matter for how you live this week?
    Matthew 16:26
    → How would your approach to your work, your rest, and your enjoyment shift if you truly believed that Christ's finished work on the cross is the primary fruit you're called to enjoy?
  6. The sermon identifies us as mimetic creatures — we necessarily absorb our values and desires by watching others. The solution isn't to stop imitating but to redirect imitation toward the right model. Who are you currently imitating, whether consciously or unconsciously? And is that the model you actually want to become?
Daily readings · Monday–Friday

5-day reading plan

This week, we walk through five theological claims that anchor Ecclesiastes' wake-up call: the futility exposed by the Preacher anticipates Christ's warning, the book functions as divine intervention against worldly intoxication, progressive revelation shows us why the Preacher lacked the full picture, eternal judgment and union with Christ complete what Ecclesiastes begins, and the Christian life pivots on enjoying Christ's toil rather than our own.

Monday Matthew 16:26

Jesus diagnoses the same fatal trade that haunted the Preacher: the surrender of the soul for the accumulation of earthly goods. What Ecclesiastes unveiled through royal experiment, Christ revealed as the central crisis of human existence—and He alone offers the reversal. The Preacher could only name the futility; Jesus names both the futility and the Savior from it.

Tuesday Romans 1:25

Paul diagnoses the root pathology the Preacher exposes: we exchange the truth of God for a lie, worshiping the creature rather than the Creator. Ecclesiastes is God's Narcan—jolting us awake from that substitution by showing us the creature's bankruptcy. Until we see through the fantasy, we cannot turn to the only One who satisfies.

Wednesday Luke 8:9-14

Jesus teaches that the same seed of God's word falls on different soil, and different hearts receive it differently based on what they love. The Preacher saw the seed falling on rocky and thorny ground—lives choked by worry and wealth—but lacked the full revelation of the Sower's return and judgment. Christ brings both the fuller diagnosis and the power to change the soil of our hearts.

Thursday 1 Peter 1:3-5

Peter anchors our hope not in the goods themselves but in the resurrection of Jesus Christ and an inheritance kept in heaven. Where the Preacher saw all things under the sun as vanity, Peter invites us to see all things as servants of a greater inheritance—one that cannot perish, spoil, or fade. The created goods don't disappear; they find their true home in a redeemed cosmos under Christ.

Friday 1 Corinthians 11:23-26 (Lord's Supper institution)

Every time we receive bread and wine, we commemorate the One whose labor was cursed, whose sweat was blood, whose toil produced not earthly gain but eternal redemption. The Preacher tells us to enjoy the fruit of our work; Christ invites us to subsist on the fruit of His work—the only labor that truly satisfies the soul. Begin there, and everything else falls into place.

Sunday-evening family table

What Are You Actually Chasing?

For the parent

This prompt invites kids to notice what they're imitating or wanting because they see others wanting it — and gives you a chance to name how Jesus offers us a better model to copy. Listen for what they're drawn to, then gently ask: where did that come from?

Dad (or Mom) preached today about how we pick up wants from watching other people — like we're always copying what we see around us. Think of one thing you really want right now. Where did you first see someone else have it or want it? Was it a friend, someone on a screen, someone in our family? And then: do you actually want it, or do you want it because *they* wanted it?
works for ages 7+ — younger kids may need help naming what they want; teens and up will quickly see the pattern
Couples · three questions over coffee

Waking Up Together

  1. What fantasy about the world or your life did the sermon expose as intoxication — and what sober reality did it reveal?
  2. Where do you see misdirected desire showing up in our marriage — chasing what the world says matters instead of what actually satisfies — and how can we redirect each other toward Christ as the pattern?
  3. What is one concrete way this week you can enjoy not the fruit of your own toil, but the fruit of Christ's toil on the cross — and how can I pray for you to actually taste that joy?
Memory verse this week

Ecclesiastes 3:11

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 beginning to end.

Why this verse: This verse anchors Ecclesiastes' central diagnosis — humans are trapped between temporal existence and eternal longing, aware of eternity but unable to grasp it apart from revelation. It captures the book's function as Narcan, jolting us awake to reality, and points to why Christ alone can complete what the Preacher leaves unfinished.

Where this was preached

About the church

Providence Community Church
Lenexa, KS
Sundays · 10:00 AM
About us · What we believe
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# Providence Community Church

A church preaching expository sermons through the books of the Bible.

## Sermons
- [Eschatology You'll Actually Use (1 Peter 4:7-19, 2026-06-07)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2026/06/eschatology-you-ll-actually-use)
- [They Might Be Giants? A Discussion of Genesis 6 (Genesis 6:1-4, 2026-06-19)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2026/06/they-might-be-giants-a-discussion-of-genesis-6)
- [Ecclesiastes - Vapor, vanity, and the gift of God (Ecclesiastes 1:1-11:10, 2026-06-21)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2026/06/ecclesiastes-vapor-vanity-and-the-gift-of-god)
- [Narcan for the Soul (Ecclesiastes 2:13-3:22, 2026-06-28)](/ProvidenceLenexa/sermons/2026/06/narcan-for-the-soul)

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