For you are like whitewashed tombs—beautiful on the outside but filled on the inside with dead people’s bones and all sorts of impurity. Matthew 23:27 NLT
The
outside looked terrible, but the inside . . .
I
looked at the text: “Can you call me when you get a second.” It came from my
father’s only sister. When I called, she told me she had a few items that
belonged to my grandmother. She thought I might want them.
A
couple of weeks later, my wife and I headed for the Lowcountry of South
Carolina to round up a cedar chest and a small night table. I remembered both
sitting in my grandmother’s bedroom. I couldn’t wait to add them to my heirloom
collection. One I hoped my children would want and pass along.
Both
items had been sitting in a utility building for years. The varying
temperatures had done their work. The veneer peeled off in various places on
the cedar chest, but the real wood areas remained in good shape.
The
surprise came when I opened the lid. The inside was in perfect condition. And
it was a true cedar chest, complete with smell and label. Also on the inside
were a number of crocheted items my grandmother had made.
Jesus
encountered some religious folks whose outsides and insides didn’t match
either. Oh, they dotted all the i’s and crossed all the t’s, but Jesus said
their insides were filthy.
The
ways we try to alter our outsides when we don’t enjoy how they appear are
numerous—and costly and perhaps unhealthy. They also prove futile if we think
altering the outside will change anything. We might temporarily feel better
about ourselves—we might even gain a few so-called friends in the process—but
our elation will be short-lived. In the end, unhappiness will pounce on us like
a lion.
Until
we let God change our insides by His grace through forgiveness—and until we
realize just how much God loves us and wants us as His children—we’ll never
know true satisfaction or joy. Outside stuff is temporary; inside stuff is
permanent.
We
often judge by outward appearance, but God looks at the heart. And when we
learn to see ourselves as God does, we won’t overly concern ourselves with the
outside. We’ll just want to keep the inside tidied up.
What
are some ways you can keep your inside pretty and clean?
Prayer:
Father, remind us that our insides are far more important than our outsides.
Tweetable: What's on your inside?
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