Deceiving Appearances

There’s a route around my neighborhood that I like to jog (Full disclosure, I haven’t actually jogged there in a while, but I like to.) Along it, there is a stretch of road with a plethora of plants. One day as I was making my way passed them, I was thinking how nice the plants looked until I got closer and realized that that the city had begun the process of removing them. What looked so good from a distance, turned out to be nothing more than weeds. Overgrown and unkempt, their initial appearance deceived me into believing that they were something good, when in reality, not only were they unhealthy, they were preventing any good growth.

What is true of these unruly plants, can also be true in our own lives. Something looks good, when in reality, we are substituting something that is actually good for something that looks close in appearance. We want to believe that the “weeds” are just as useful,  after all – weeds are plants too.  But instead of adding into our lives, the weeds not only detract, they prevent the addition of good. They may appear to be innocuous, but in reality they are causing the slow demise of our soul.

Perhaps this is why through Scripture we are commanded to be vigilant, for as any gardener knows weeds appear any time you’re not diligent about their removal. Because they can be confused for a plant, it’s important that we are discerning about that which is actually beneficial and that which just appears to be. We must be careful to weed our lives of anything that inhibits our walk with God…and to plant good things in their stead.

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At Love’s Impulse

One of my all-time favorite hymns is “Take My Life and Let It Be[affiliate link]. This moving prayer  rightly places our hearts and our lives where they belong – at the altar of sacrifice for our Heavenly Father. It’s a melodic exhortation to recognize that all we have needs to used for Him.

Within the song, there’s a powerful line that reminds us that worship not only occurs in church, but with how we treat others for worship is rightfully proclaiming who God is.  The second verse begins:

Take my hands, and let them move

At the impulse of Thy love.

These words are a startling recognition that our actions towards each other should not begin with our feelings but with the prompting of God.  It’s a hard truth. Because God is love, we must love (See I John 4:9).We want to act in accordance with how each other deserves, not in accordance with the graciousness that the Father has shown us. We want to behave as a response to the actions of another, not as a response as to His actions on the cross.

However, as I’m often reminded, we’re all broken. None of us are without the need of a Savior. And since He sacrificed everything as an act of His love, perhaps we can sacrifice our assessment of another’s deservingness as an act of our love. If not for the other person, for the fact that our Father’s love towards us compels it.

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