Watch this. Three minutes. Then three questions below it.
Easy Company in the Bastogne foxholes. Snow. No winter gear. Running out of ammunition. These men survived not because of their equipment but because they had decided they were not going to leave each other.
Men are dying of isolation while surrounded by people. The average man has acquaintances and no one who actually knows what he is carrying.
An isolated man is the most vulnerable version of a man.
Band of Brothers is the film at the center of this study. The scene is chosen because it captures something true about the specific challenge this study addresses. The filmmakers may not have intended a theological reading, but the truth they captured is there regardless of intention.
Ecclesiastes 4:9-12 sits inside a larger argument Paul or one of the other biblical authors is making about how the renewed life looks in practice. The verse is not a standalone principle. It is part of a sustained argument about what it looks like when a man actually believes what he says he believes on Sunday morning.
The connection between this film and this Scripture is the same one that runs through every study in this series: what a man sees in the mirror when he watches that clip is exactly the gap this Scripture addresses. The film names the problem. The Scripture names the source and the solution.