When the Axe Is Dull, the Flies Are Dead, and You Want to Walk Off the Job

Illustration of a man standing by a workbench with a dull axe, a jar of perfumer’s oil with flies nearby, and a guard post in the background, symbolizing compromise, neglect, and faithfulness.
Picture of Caleb Nation

Caleb Nation

Lead Director

Text: Ecclesiastes 10:1–4, 8–10

Tone: Gentle but confronting, especially for men who feel the weight of work, leadership, and pressure

Reading time: About 8–10 minutes

Focus: How small compromises—dead flies, a dull axe, and walking off your post—quietly destroy wisdom, influence, and legacy

Introduction

Most men do not blow up their lives in one moment.

They leak, drift, and crack slowly.

It starts with a small compromise no one sees, a bit of laziness you excuse, a careless word, or a moment when you walk away inside even if your body stays in place.

Ecclesiastes 10 speaks directly into that kind of life. It shows how a little folly can undo a lot of wisdom, and it uses images that hit hard: dead flies in expensive oil, a dull axe that makes work harder, and the temptation to abandon your post when leadership is bad or pressure rises.

Dead Flies in Expensive Oil

— Ecclesiastes 10:1 TLV
“Dead flies make a perfumer’s oil stink, so a little folly outweighs wisdom and honor.”
Close-up illustration of a perfumer’s jar with a few dead flies on the surface, symbolizing small compromise ruining what is costly.

Perfume in the ancient world was costly. It took time, skill, and rare ingredients. One dead fly in that oil could ruin the fragrance and make something costly smell rotten.biblegateway+1

That is how character works

You can spend years building a reputation—faithfulness in marriage, consistency at work, integrity in leadership—and one foolish choice can outweigh much honor.

Not because the good never mattered, but because folly is loud. It spreads. It stinks.

For men, this can look like:
  • A secret habit you keep feeding, telling yourself you have it under control
  • A private bitterness you let sit in your heart toward your wife, your pastor, or your boss
  • A “small” compromise with money, boundaries, or what you consume late at night

The enemy says, It’s just a fly. Look at all the good in your life.

But the Word says, A little folly outweighs wisdom and honor.

This is not written to shame you. It is written to wake you up. If you know there is a dead fly in your oil, this is mercy. This is the Ruach ha-Kodesh putting His finger on something before it spreads.

The Dull Axe and the Wasted Strength

— Ecclesiastes 10:10
“If the axe is blunt and one does not sharpen the edge, then he must use more strength, but wisdom has the advantage of giving success.”

A dull axe still cuts. It just costs more.

A man swinging a dull axe at a log, exhausted and sweating, while a sharpening stone lies unused nearby.
  • More sweat
  • More time
  • More frustration
  • More strain

The problem is not the wood. It is the edge.

Many men are swinging hard with a dull axe:

  • You keep grinding at work but never sharpen your thinking, your skills, or your planning
  • You keep reacting to problems in your home but never grow in patience, communication, or prayer
  • You keep pushing in ministry but never rest, listen, or let God recalibrate your heart

Wisdom says: stop swinging long enough to sharpen.

Sharpening looks like:
  • Sitting with God’s Word before you pick up your phone
  • Asking hard questions of yourself instead of blaming everyone else
  • Getting counsel instead of pretending you already know
  • Learning new skills instead of complaining that the world is unfair

The fool says, I do not have time to sharpen. I just need to swing harder.

Wisdom says, If I sharpen, my strength will finally go where it is supposed to go.

Don’t Leave Your Post When Authority Is Flawed

— Ecclesiastes 10:4 TLV

“If a ruler’s spirit rises up against you, do not leave your post, for composure allays great offenses.”

A guard standing at his post while a storm gathers, symbolizing faithfulness and calm under pressure and flawed leadership.

Solomon pictures a ruler who is angry, unstable, or unfair. The natural response is to walk, to quit, to pull away, to say, If this is how he leads, I’m done.

But wisdom says something different:

  • Do not abandon your post
  • Stay steady
  • Stay composed

This cuts against the spirit of our age.

We live in a generation that treats leaving as strength. If a church disappoints us, we leave. If a job is hard or leadership is flawed, we leave. If pressure hits in marriage, we emotionally check out.

Men especially feel the pull to run when they feel disrespected or unheard.

But Ecclesiastes 10 says calmness under flawed authority can quiet great offenses.

That does not mean stay in abuse. It does mean this:

  • Do not let someone else’s foolishness become your excuse to become foolish
  • Do not let a leader’s anger make you abandon the place God put you
  • Do not let offense talk you out of your assignment

There are times God moves you. But there are also many times the enemy simply wants you off your post.

Wisdom knows the difference.

A man who fears Adonai learns to stand his ground even when leadership trembles.

How These Three Images Work Together

Dead flies, a dull axe, and walking off your post may feel like separate pictures, but they all press on the same truth: small inward choices shape the outward life of a man.

  • Dead flies show how small compromises rot what is costly
  • The dull axe shows how neglect and stubbornness waste strength
  • Leaving your post shows how offense and pride sabotage calling

Together they say:

  • Guard your heart from “small” folly, because it is never small for long
  • Sharpen your life with wisdom so your strength actually builds instead of just spends
  • Stay at your post when everything in you wants to run so your story is not one of quitting, but of faithfulness

Kingdom Reflection

The world tells men to be strong in themselves, to move fast, speak loud, and never back down.

Ecclesiastes 10 tells a different story.

True strength is not in noise, force, or constant motion. True strength is in wisdom that fears Adonai, guards small cracks, prepares before swinging, and refuses to abandon the place God has assigned.

A man can be admired and still be a fool.

A man can be quiet and still be mighty in the Kingdom.

Living It Out

  • Ask Adonai to show you any “dead fly” you have been ignoring—one small compromise that is starting to affect your fragrance
  • Identify one area where you have been swinging a dull axe. What sharpening step can you take this week: learning, planning, repentance, or counsel?
  • Ask honestly: where have you left your post in your heart—at home, at church, at work? What would returning look like today?
  • Take one deliberate, small act of faithfulness in that place instead of reacting or withdrawing

Closing Prayer

Father,

Thank You for warning me in love.

Show me any dead flies I have allowed into the oil of my life. Show me where my axe is dull and I am wasting strength instead of walking in wisdom.

Show me any place where I have left my post in my heart.

Teach me to fear You more than I fear people, pressure, or loss. Sharpen me by Your Word.
Strengthen me by Your Ruach ha-Kodesh.

Make me a man who guards his character, prepares with wisdom, and stays faithful where You have placed him.

In Yeshua’s Name, amen.