Daily Scripture Reading: Leviticus 15:1-16:28, Mark 7:1-23, Psalm 40:11-17, Proverbs 10:13-14
On the Wii sports game there is training that you can go through to practice your skill level with each of the sports. One of the training exercises for the golf game, is to try to hit a target painted on a green. The bullseye is worth 100 points and the circles outside of the bullseye is worth 50 points. I often hit the 50 points mark and rarely hit the 100 point mark. The 100 point circle is the hardest to hit because it is the smallest and you are rewarded the most points for obvious reasons: it takes the most skill to hit it.
All through Leviticus there is this idea of God teaching his people to be clean. There is much sacrifice and cost involved in living a life that is holy and pleasing to the Lord. The people of God had not only attempted very hard to meet these rules, but they had come up with their own rules defining holiness and righteousness. The problem with this was as we come to the New Testament, Jesus points out that they had completely missed the bullseye. In Mark 7:7-9 and following Jesus informs the religious leaders that they had chosen to follow their own definition of what is "righteous or holy" and they had completely missed God's mark. These leaders' hearts were far from God, and their worship of Him was a joke.
What is the point? When you combine Leviticus and Mark's passage, it is evident that there is a small margin of error when it comes to hitting the mark of living a holy life. The point is we must be careful of believing certain things make a person righteous or holy. Jesus taught our hearts are to be searched and our minds are to be transformed into His likeness. What a person loves, the mind thinks upon, and what the mind thinks upon, the will acts out. Sinful behavior can be traced back to wrong thinking, and wrong thinking reveals a misplaced heart. All unholy living can be traced back to a wrong heart. It is the difference between hitting the 50 point circle and the 100 point circle.
Be Alert: In your own life, be aware that the greatest temptation we face as believers is in our thinking. Our belief in human philosophy, or cultural norms, or logical reasoning can lead our hearts far from God. Isaiah tells us that our thoughts and ways are not God's thoughts and ways. Take every thought captive and test it against Scripture. What are some prevalant thoughts among Christians today that may actually lead Christians away from Scriptural, holy living?
Search your own heart, mind, and actions: what would God have you confess that doesn't line up with Scriptural, holy living? Live your life to hit the 100 point circle and don't settle for the 50 point circle. Let me know what you think, hit comment below, and leave your thoughts.
I sometimes wonder why God allows us so much free will. Wouldn't it have been better for Him to design us to do right automatically?
ReplyDelete"Testing our thoughts" requires creating the habit. Thinking about what we do can/could affect many parts of our life.
-Chosing what to eat. (Healthy or not.)
-Chosing what to say. (Gossip or keep it to yourself?)
-Chosing to be spiritual.
So why did God allow....
-Fat and sugar to taste so yummy?
-Us to feel a need to share our words when things are difficult?
-It to be such a struggle to get up and spend time with Him?