Then Jesus spoke up and answered his thoughts. “Simon,” he said to the Pharisee, “I have something to say to you.” Luke 7:40 NLT
“You’re in a ‘spazzy’ mood today. I’m sure you’ll break
something.” The mind reader had struck again.
Let me clarify. I’ve never visited a mind reader, but I live
with one. My wife and I have an uncanny ability to read each other’s minds, and
she was doing it again. She claims it’s because we’re “soul mates.” Maybe she’s
right. I suppose it comes from living together, spending quality time with each
other, having similar likes and dislikes, and reaching for the same goals. When
significant decisions approach, I know her answer, and she knows mine—even
though we discuss the matter to make sure. Sometimes, it’s freaky to think someone
else knows what I’m thinking.
I suppose Simon the Pharisee felt the same. He had invited
Jesus to his religious party. But Simon didn’t invite the sinful woman who
showed up, too. Why he didn’t ask her to leave is a mystery.
As Simon watched the woman cry over Jesus’ feet and anoint
them with perfume, he concluded this couldn’t be the long-awaited Messiah. He
wouldn’t allow a sinful woman like this to touch Him. Simon didn’t know it, but
Jesus read his thoughts—and then answered them with a story of two debtors who
had their debts forgiven.
Knowing Jesus can read our thoughts is comforting—yet
disturbing. Comforting because sometimes our situations are such that we can’t
adequately express what we want to say. The grief slices too deeply. The pain
is almost unbearable. We can’t put into words what we want to say. God assures us
we don’t have to. Paul wrote, “But the Holy Spirit prays for us with groanings
that cannot be expressed in words” (Romans 8:26 NLT).
Disturbing because there are those times when I shudder to realize
Jesus knows what I’m thinking. Those times when my mind has wandered into areas
it has no business traveling. When I’m not thinking about things that are true, honorable, right, pure, lovely, and
admirable. Things that are excellent and worthy of praise. (Philippians 4:8) Jesus can help
reorient the direction of our minds as well—onto healthier turf.
Don’t be afraid to let Jesus read your mind. Only good can come
from it.
Father, guide me to think about those things that honor Your
name and build me up spiritually.
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