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Christopher Seitz on wisdom

From Ecclesiastes: Koheleth's Solomonic Meditation by Christopher Seitz · · Beeson Divinity School at Samford University

“The one who had it all in fact had nothing, and the one who has nothing finds everything.”

Christopher Seitz
Senior Vice President, OPENLANE INC
wisdomconfessionspiritual paradox

On , Christopher Seitz, Senior Vice President at OPENLANE INC, spoke about wisdom during Ecclesiastes: Koheleth's Solomonic Meditation by Christopher Seitz on Beeson Divinity School at Samford University.

Ecclesiastes: Koheleth's Solomonic Meditation by Christopher Seitz
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Ecclesiastes: Koheleth's Solomonic Meditation by Christopher Seitz
Watch on YouTube
Lecture given by Dr. Christopher Seitz as part of the annual Biblical Studies Lectures at Beeson Divinity School, Samford ...
Christopher Seitz

About Christopher Seitz

Senior Vice President · OPENLANE INC

Christopher Seitz, Senior Vice President at Openlane, has been active in biblical scholarship and theological lectures. In a 2021 lecture at Beeson Divinity School, Seitz discussed the book of Ecclesiastes, describing its central figure Koheleth as a "single brooding consciousness" and arguing that the book's joy refrains are not hedonistic but serve a sustained function across the text. He stated that the opening poem is "not about the futility of the created order" but rather bears witness to God's providential design, and he suggested translating the Hebrew word "hevel" as "ungraspable" rather than "vanity." In a 2020 webinar at Wycliffe College, Seitz addressed the future of Old Testament canonical interpretation, noting that "the final editors are as it were the first readers and the text carries forward on its own." He described the future of the field as "positive if diffuse in character." In a 2019 lecture, Seitz discussed the identity of Israel, emphasizing that "the Oracles of God entrusted to the Jews mark them out as distinctive bearers of His identity to the world" and that this identity is "permanently tied up with an encompassing all nations and peoples of creation." Earlier lectures from 2007, republished in 2012, explored the theological significance of the Old Testament's canonical order, with Seitz arguing that "the order of the books in the Bible is not merely historical but creates a nexus of interpretation."

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