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aturday morning is undoubtedly one
of the best things in life. No alarm
clocks, no busy schedule, and no running against the clock. It’s a day of leisure, a nice pause at the
end of the week, and a time to relax.
On Saturday mornings, I wake up later than
usual and make my way to the kitchen. I
open the refrigerator and usually decide to cook myself a nice breakfast. I pull out the eggs, the bagels, and the
country sausage or bacon and get ready to have a good, old-fashioned southern
breakfast.
Over the years I have learned to cook
pork sausage over medium heat. It is
necessary to cook the meat slow so that it gets done all the way through. Most men believe that there is only one
setting for cooking—high! The problem with this approach is that only the
outside of the meat gets cooked. It
gives the appearance of being done but in reality the inside is uncooked and can lead
to unwanted illness.
Now, what in the world does
under-done sausage have to do with today’s devotional? Actually, it has quite a lot to do with it.
Jesus understood the dangers of appearing to be something that one wasn’t. He knew that if we are to be God’s followers
and children, then we must be his all the way through. Unfortunately, sometimes we do a good job of
appearing to be Christians on the outside while underneath we are very much
under-done.
This was a lesson Jesus taught
repeatedly to the Pharisees. He chided
them for their inconsistent life style. He
exposed their hypocrisy and chastised them for failing to uphold their position
as the religious leaders of the people. He had no tolerance for those who were
religious on the outside but who in actuality were only half-cooked on the
inside.
In Matthew 23:27-28, Jesus has this to say about the teachers of the
law and the Pharisees, “You are like whitewashed
tombs, which look beautiful on the outside but on the inside are full of dead
men’s bones and everything unclean. In
the same way, on the outside you appear to people as righteous but on the
inside you are full hypocrisy and wickedness.”
Needless to say, Jesus’ words were
not very popular with the Pharisees and teachers but they were accurate. But
Jesus wasn’t concerned about their reputations or their egos; he was concerned
about their spiritual conditions and the witness they gave. He knew that if
people followed their example, spiritual sickness and death would soon
follow. Outwardly they gave the
appearance of total commitment to God but inwardly they were anything but
godly.
The message and truth of God’s love
through his son, Jesus Christ, is a pure message. It must be carried in pure vessels and shared
from a pure heart. We cannot simply give lip service to being a Christian; we
must back it up by the way we live.
Everything we do, say, and think, must give testimony to the fact that
we belong to God.
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o, today, we must ask ourselves the
following questions: Are we giving a pure and total witness for Jesus Christ in
all aspects of our lives? Are we done all the way through or are we
merely half-baked?
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