Chasing The Wind -  By Grant Phillips -
http://www.raptureready.com/featured/phillips/phillips289.html 
"I  denied myself nothing my eyes desired; I refused my heart no pleasure. My heart  took delight in all my labor, and this was the reward for all my toil. Yet when  I surveyed all that my hands had done and what I had toiled to achieve,  everything was meaningless, a chasing after the wind; nothing was gained under  the sun." (Ecclesiastes 2:10-11 NIV)
King  Solomon was quite wealthy by anyone's standards. Some have estimated that his  wealth today would be in the billions or even trillions. This doesn't even take  into account his absolute power over everything and everyone in his kingdom.  Anything and anyone he wanted was his for the taking.  
Very  few of us today could recite the verses above and apply them to our own lives.  However, in this country in particular, we give it our best shot whether we're  rich or poor.  
Greed  is on an epidemic scale in America and it has infected nearly everyone. Who of  us can say we have never bought (usually on credit) something that we couldn't  afford and didn't need? Consumer debt is nearly 800 billion dollars in this  country, if not more. Credit cards, house payments, vehicle payments, luxury  items and the list goes on down the page. Very few of us have little or no debt.  Most are swimming in debt and taking on water.  
Our  greed doesn't stop with debt either. There are those in our society who will  rape and/or murder others to satisfy their sexual desires. Some of our citizens  have been murdered over pocket change.  
In  our society, almost nothing will be withheld by some to get what they want. They  will lie, cheat, steal, rape, murder, gossip, whatever it takes. Even for those  who obtain their desires legally, did they do so morally?  
Notice  that Solomon denied himself nothing his eyes desired and refused himself no  pleasure. I personally feel that there are plenty of moral people (Christian and  non-Christian) who have never gone quite that far. They may desire what someone  else has, but would never think of crossing the lines of "illegality" and  "immorality."
However,  we find ourselves still reaching beyond to obtain as much as we can (legally and  morally) in material things and pleasures. So we still do not deny our eyes and  heart "things" within our own limited resources.  
Solomon  next speaks of the labor of his hands and his being so proud of his  accomplishments. I'm always reminded of the actor Jimmy Stewart saying grace in  the movie Shenandoah. It went something like this:
"Lord,  we cleared this land. We plowed it, sowed it and harvested it. We cooked the  harvest. It wouldn't be here. We wouldn't be eatin' it, if we hadn't done it all  ourselves. We worked dog-boned hard for every crumb and morsel, but we thank you  just the same anyway Lord for this food we're about to eat. Amen."   
Does  this sound like any of us, or do we even offer a prayer at our mealtime? I  suppose one is as bad as the other. The prayer in the movie probably went about  as far as the ceiling, so I guess no prayer at all would have been just as  effective. I'm amazed at how many Christians do not thank God for their meal in  public or even in their own home. They just dive in, with no thought of thanking  God.  
Is  it possible we have Solomon's attitude of "I did it. Look at what I've  accomplished?" Sounds like a pretty good argument to me.
I  love what Solomon says next. He says that everything was meaningless. He had  just been chasing after the wind. Nothing was gained under the sun. Here is a  man who had all his heart desired, and this is what he says of all he  experienced.  
Have  you ever watched a child chase the wind? Maybe you did that as a child. I did,  but I never could catch it. I could feel it, but I could never catch it.   
We  are all like the child chasing the wind. We don't realize until we get older, if  we're blessed, that all these things we chased after are meaningless. Notice how  Solomon ended the book of Ecclesiastes:
"Now  all has been heard; here is the conclusion of the matter: Fear God and keep his  commandments, for this is the duty of all mankind. For God will bring every deed  into judgment, including every hidden thing, whether it is good or evil."  (Ecclesiastes 12:14 NIV)  
We  can chase after the wind until our legs fall out from under us, but we'll never  catch it. The only thing that really matters in life is did we "fear God and  keep His commandments?"  
Life's  material pleasures are not wrong as long as they are within the framework of  God's will.  
For  example; if you enjoy fishing, then do so, but don't neglect God. Do you want a  boat but can't afford one? Don't buy the boat, fish off the bank until you can  afford one, but make sure you don't short-change Him for the boat.
I  sometimes like to watch shows where people go buy a house. They'll look at three  or four and decide which one to buy. What amazes me is the prices these people  shell out. Actually, they are probably in debt up to their eyeballs. I couldn't  sleep at night if I had the house payment some of these folks must be saddled  with.
Most  of us have not learned what is really important in our lives. Most of us are  building bigger barns, not knowing that our soul may be required of us tonight.  Our soul is the most important thing we have, and it is the most neglected.  That's what Solomon was talking about. Fearing God and keeping His commandments  mean knowing Him as our Savior and serving Him as our Lord in today's verbiage.  That is the most important thing in our life. Everything else is just chasing  the wind.
Grant  Phillips
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