And he said to them, You are those who justify yourselves before men, but God knows your hearts. For what is exalted among men is an abomination in the sight of God. -- Luke 16:15
Abomination here is the same word Jesus uses when He
referred to the “abomination of desolation” in the temple in Matthew 24. It echoes the prophecy in the Book of Daniel
and was seen historically in the idol that Antiochus IV Epiphanes set up in the
temple during the time of the Maccabean Revolt.
It’s not simply something that displeases God, rather it is a thing that
is in competition with God, something that draws the heart and mind away from
the truth and corrodes the spirit.
So many of us want to
look good and to be thought well of, to have status and prestige. We want our friends, neighbors, and
co-workers to have good opinions of us.
When ugly things surface in our lives, we often concern ourselves with
what the neighbors might think. We don’t
want to shame our families or be humiliated before the world. That’s not bad; it’s some of the societal
glue that holds civilization together.
The problem comes when that is all that concerns us, when only the world’s
opinions matter to us, when we do things only for the sake of appearances and
to cultivate the favor of others.
My first concern should be whether what I’m thinking about
is right before God. It really ought to
be easy to live a righteous and holy life.
All we have to do is watch our thoughts and avoid self-defense and
self-justification. It’s not so easy in
practice for me because my old nature is violent, blood-thirsty, lustful, and
arrogant – to name a few problems.
Still, even in my case, I can catch these things before they are
expressed in words and actions – not because I worry about what friends or
family might think but because I talk them over with the Lord.
Do you ever wonder what saints pray about for hours at a
time? I tend to think, more than making
requests off a shopping list, they are opening their hearts and letting all
their thoughts run before the Father, consulting with the Holy Spirit to see if
they are missing the Way even by much as an inch. Watch! Jesus says. And pray.
The Lord comes to us, not necessarily when we expect Him,
but, as the parables say, in an hour when we think not. I’m not talking only about death or the
Second Coming. He comes to those who are
watching and His reward is with Him.
1 comment:
"Do you ever wonder what saints pray about for hours at a time? I tend to think, more than making requests off a shopping list, they are opening their hearts and letting all their thoughts run before the Father, consulting with the Holy Spirit to see if they are missing the Way even by much as an inch. Watch! Jesus says. And pray."
Nice insight. I think you may be on to something there.
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