For the Life of the World / Yale Center for Faith & Culture

How to Read Ecclesiastes: Absurdity, Futility, and the Simple Value of Life / Jesse Peterson

Mar 26, 2026
Jesse Peterson, an Assistant Professor of Biblical Studies who studies Ecclesiastes and value theory, explores Qoheleth's stark view of life. He probes absurdity, the gap between expectation and reality, the harm of death and lost memory, and why simple enjoyment and absorbed work can be intrinsically valuable. Short, philosophical, and unexpectedly uplifting.
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INSIGHT

Meaning Breaks When Expectations Clash With Reality

  • Ecclesiastes diagnoses the absurd as the gap between expectation and reality that undermines a direct line from toil to lasting payoff.
  • Kohelet urges a reorientation: enjoy the present work itself as an end, not only a means, because outcomes and memory are uncertain.
ANECDOTE

Jazz Drumming Demonstrates Autotelic Presence

  • Jesse Peterson uses his experience as a jazz drummer to illustrate Ecclesiastes' emphasis on owning the present moment.
  • Improvised jazz requires full absorption in each immediate musical challenge, mirroring Kohelet's autotelic joy.
INSIGHT

Meaning Versus Value Distinction In Ecclesiastes

  • Peterson distinguishes meaning from other values and reads Kohelet as denying a specific intersubjective kind of meaning tied to reputation and memory.
  • Despite denying that kind of meaning, Kohelet still affirms positive values like present joy.
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