NO DIVINE AUTHOR
When God offered Solomon anything he desired, the wisest man on earth asked not for eternal life or heavenly reward, but for wisdom to govern well. The essay argues this choice is revelatory: if heaven and salvation were central to God's design, Solomon would have asked about them. His silence on the afterlife — and his later writings in Ecclesiastes, which frame life as fleeting and without transcendent compensation — suggests that institutional religion's promise of heaven and threat of hell is a doctrinal invention, not biblical truth. Drawing on both Proverbs and Ecclesiastes, the essay contends that Scripture's actual theology is grounded in this life: building community, pursuing wisdom, accepting mortality, and living with integrity and purpose. The real spiritual task isn't earning eternal reward — it's stewarding the time, relationships, and world you already have.

