Proverbs: Practical Wisdom for Daily Life
Proverbs was primarily authored by Solomon (1:1; 10:1; 25:1), though it includes contributions from Agur and Lemuel. It covers topics from work ethic to sexuality to speech to friendship. At its heart is a simple premise: "The fear of the LORD is the beginning of wisdom" (Proverbs 9:10). True wisdom is fundamentally relational — knowing God.
Ecclesiastes: Wisdom Pushed to Its Limits
Ecclesiastes is Solomon's most challenging book — an honest reckoning with the apparent meaninglessness of life "under the sun." Through 12 chapters of searching inquiry, the Preacher tests pleasure, work, wisdom, and wealth. His conclusion: "Fear God and keep His commandments, for this is the whole duty of man" (12:13).
Song of Songs: The Wisdom of Love
Song of Songs (also Song of Solomon) is a collection of love poetry celebrating human romantic love as God's gift. It is the only biblical book without explicit mention of God, yet it sanctifies sexuality and marriage. Jewish tradition held that it was the Holy of Holies among the biblical books.
Psalm 72 and 127
Solomon also authored two Psalms: Psalm 72 (a royal psalm for the ideal king) and Psalm 127 ("Unless the LORD builds the house..."). His wisdom extended to poetry and prayer, not merely proverbial instruction.