Carp's Daily Tidbits
"Praise the Lord, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits." Psalm 103:2
Date: Tuesday, January 13, 2015
Today's Title: Through The Kaleidoscope
Today's Scripture: Matthew 4:18-19
Like most
people, I have several important things in my home that I simply will not part
with. Some of them I purchased on my
trips to Europe. Some I have come across
in little shops or in out-of-the-way places.
Some of them are gifts from dear friends and others are moments captured
with the aid of a camera. But perhaps the
most precious items are ones that my parents have given me over the years.
There is the
clock that hangs in my living room which was a Christmas present from mom and
dad. There is the clock hanging in my
bedroom which they presented to my brother and me as a house-warming present
when we moved into our home on Oak Street.
There is the silverware in my kitchen that mom brought and when I moved
into my first apartment. It is the same silverware I used growing up and I love
it. I also have my great grandfather’s
ice cream scoop and the scoop my mom used to measure sugar when she made cakes.
There are
several little knick knacks around the house that mean very little, if
anything, to my visitors but they mean the world to me. One of these items is a small kaleidoscope
that resides on my coffee table. Mom and
dad found it in an antique store in Ohio and brought it back to me. It is very simple, made of three mirrors
joined together to form a triangular tube.
At one end is a piece of metal that securely holds one of four differently
colored marbles that rest in holes cut in the wooden base that holds the
kaleidoscope.
The marbles
are very unremarkable. One is blue, one
is yellow, one is red, and one is light orange.
Taken by themselves they aren’t very inspiring but once placed in the
end of the kaleidoscope, they spring to life with unimaginable shapes and
patterns. What was a few seconds earlier
a commonplace marble changes into a vibrant splash of color that changes
formations as the marble is turned around and around.
The secret
of the kaleidoscope lies in its ability to make us see an image, not for what
it is, but for what it can become when seen from another perspective. This idea was not lost on Jesus. In fact, when calling his first disciples, he
saw them not for what they were but for what they could become.
In Matthew 4:18-19 we find these words, “As Jesus was walking beside the Sea of
Galilee, he saw two brothers, Simon called Peter and his brother Andrew. They
were casting a net into the lake, for they were fishermen. “Come, follow
me,” Jesus said, “and I will make you fishers of men.” Here
is Jesus walking along the shore when he spots two ordinary marbles, Peter and
Andrew. They have been fishing all of
their lives and have earned their living from the sea. They are like so many others who ply their
trade on the Sea of Galilee. But if we
look closer at this passage, we see that Jesus sees so much more in these
brothers than is visible to the ordinary eye.
Notice Jesus
words, “I will make you…” These men are
fisherman, anyone can see that. But
Jesus sees so much more. He sees them not as fishermen, but as fishers of
men. When seen through the eyes of
Jesus, Peter and Andrew are no longer men who catch fish; they are men who
catch souls. What they can become is unimaginable to them but is crystal clear
to Jesus.
Is it any
different with us? God sees deep into
our hearts and souls. He sees us not for
what we are but for what we can become through a relationship with his son,
Jesus Christ. What may seem ordinary to us
becomes alive once we are placed in Jesus Christ and our lives are viewed from
God’s perspective. Wherever you are in
your walk today with the Lord, rest assured his plans for you are beyond
anything you can imagine. Only when we
are placed in Christ can we ever fully reveal what is inside. What does God see when he looks at your life
today? Are you willing to see yourself from his perspective?
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