“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are like whitewashed tombs which on the outside appear beautiful, but inside they are full of dead men’s bones and all uncleanness. So you, too, outwardly appear righteous to men, but inwardly you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.” Matthew 23:27-28
I recently came across this interesting photo of a tree that was hollow on the inside and looked relatively healthy on the outside. This tree was cut down because a professional arborist thought it looked stressed and said it was probably not healthy. Not healthy! If you could look at the stump closely, you will see that 80% of its insides are missing completely. Incredibly, to the untrained eye, the outside of the tree looked just fine, and it took an expert to spot the problem. Had it not been cut down, it would have inevitably blown down sometime in the future. The scary part was the tree was only 10’ from a house!
In today’s verse Jesus is speaking to the most outwardly righteous people in Israel. The Pharisees and Sadducees strode about striving to look righteous in all they did, but much of the sermon on the mount (found in Matthew and Luke) addressed the hypocrisy of these men. God is concerned with the health of our insides, not the looks of the outside. Time and time again His Word reveals stories of people who looked “wrong” on the outside, but were “strong” on the inside. Stories like the poor widow, the repentant tax-collector, and the kind Samaritan, were contrasted with the “righteous” men of the temple who looked good but weren’t good.
If we are not healthy on the inside, pressures from the outside will take us down. It isn’t always the weakest-looking trees that blow down during a storm but the weakest trees. Some look good on the outside, but like our tree in today’s photo, might be dead on the inside. Remember that I said the expert arborist saw the tree and then cut down the tree to protect others. God is the expert that knows our health on the inside. Throughout the Bible there are examples of God removing those that were dangerous to those around them. If we lose our usefulness to the Kingdom of God and have, in fact, become detrimental to the kingdom, we may be cut down.
Famous actor Robert Redford was walking one day through a hotel lobby.
A woman saw him and followed him to the elevator. “Are you the real Robert Redford?” she asked him with great excitement. As the doors of the elevator closed, he replied, “Only when I am alone!” Isn’t Redford’s answer often our own.
I think the Word is clear that we are eternally secure once we have received the Holy Spirit. I also think the Bible clearly teaches that sin in our lives can lead to physical death. When Ananias and Sapphira tried to deceive the Holy Spirit in the book of Acts, they lost their lives, but there is no indication that they lost their salvation. We are not “punished” for our sin in the sense of losing salvation or being eternally separated from God, yet we are disciplined, sometimes even unto death. “The Lord disciplines the one he loves, and he chastens everyone he accepts as his son.” (Hebrews 12:6).
First John 5:16 says there comes a point when God can no longer allow a believer to continue in unrepentant sin, that there is sin that leads unto death. When that point is reached, God may allow the stubbornly sinful believer to taste that death. If we look like the tree above and we are spiritually dead on the inside, we should be prepared. If the strong winds of this world don’t take us down, the axe of the great Arborist just might. Regardless, how we look to others is inconsequential. It’s what’s inside that counts.
I will put within you. And I will remove the heart of stone from your flesh and give you a heart of flesh.”
We are told to listen to our hearts when making decisions and it has become default advice line people use all the time when they are asked for help with a problem. “Just listen to your heart” is the same advice given for decisions as diverse as buying a home or deciding whether to marry an internet acquaintance. But is this advice the wisest advice?
our hearts. But our hearts make a better pumps than brains.
Sadly, from the beginning the result of following the heart was not comfort and guidance, but death and destruction. The myth that leads this false assumption that we can rely on the heart is that we, and of course our hearts, are basically good. If we base our thinking on this premise, we think- “since our hearts are good, they can be a guide for decisions that lead to good.”
Thousands were being blessed and hundreds saved. The older minister placed his hands upon the evangelist’s head and felt about it. ‘I am trying to find the secret of your success,’ he said.
been paid for by the Son.
Of course, when we disconnect our Pacemaker, let the battery go dead, or don’t maintain it like we should, we are right back to the evil heart-making decisions.
the next few days. That is almost always a mistake, especially in the summer. By the time I get around to taking the garbage, it invariably has gathered flies, maggots, and an atrocious odor.
tends to do that- it is more powerful than perfume.
matter?
can all damage other’s view of God. It is a fact of nature. No matter how much we say we are believers if we carry garbage around with us, the bad smell will overcome the good smell every time. How can we influence anyone to step into salvation if it smells that bad!
There is an interesting story about a time the queen of Sheba came to visit Solomon. One day she decides to test him. She brought artificial flowers so perfectly formed that no human eye could detect them from real flowers. She put them in a vase on Solomon’s table, in his throne room next to his flowers. As he came in, the queen of Sheba is reported to have said, “Solomon, you are the wisest man in the world. Tell me without touching these flowers, which are real and which are artificial.”
let the bees come in; they will know where the real is. If we are Jesus real it will draw people. Even in the face of rejection by many there will be others who will be drawn to the sweet perfume of the gospel.
whether we like it or not.
Years ago I heard the story (that I have probably already related to you) about a little girl who was lost during a snowstorm.
our name, He puts signs of His presence all around us, and He maps out clearly in His Word how we can be with Him.
tell you to get prices from many others and come here last because you will see we are the best in every way and you will use us.