Diana and Dave love to ride their jet skis on the lake, skimming across
the water on warm sunny days. But one morning the weather was cool and mostly
cloudy, and Diana couldn’t convince Dave to go out. So she went on her own. It
was so cold that she flitted back and forth across the lake, trying to keep
herself in the sunshine for some needed warmth. But every time she reached a
sunny area, the clouds moved and it quickly turned to shade. Realizing the
futility and silliness of chasing the sunshine, she finally gave up because it
didn’t bring her what she wanted.
King Solomon did another kind of chasing that couldn’t bring him
satisfaction (Eccl. 2:1).
In the first 11 verses of Ecclesiastes 2 alone, he mentions that he chased
after pleasure, laughter, wine, wisdom, houses, gardens, money, possessions,
and music. But his evaluation was that “all was vanity and grasping for the
wind. There was no profit under the sun” (2:11). Those pursuits were
empty—“vanity of vanities” (1:2). He wisely concluded: “Fear God and keep His
commandments, for this is man’s all” (12:13).
Are you chasing after some of the same things that Solomon was? It’s a
vain pursuit. Purpose and satisfaction come only from knowing and obeying God.
Only God can fill an empty heart. (RBC)