People see my performance but God sees my heart also

Christ and The Pharisees
Christ and The Pharisees (Photo credit: Wikipedia)
Matthew 23:25–26 “You blind Pharisee! First clean the inside of the cup and
the plate, that the outside may also be clean” (v. 26).

Hyperbole is one of the best ways to make one’s teaching memorable, and Jesus, a master teacher, is unafraid to use exaggerated statements to make a point. Matthew 23:24 records one such example; Jesus tells the scribes and Pharisees that in straining out a gnat they swallow a camel! The gnat is the smallest unclean animal found in Palestine (Lev. 11:20–23), and the Pharisees strain their liquids through a cloth to make sure no tiny gnat is present that would make their drink unclean. This analogy for being concerned with the tiny
details of the law (Matt. 23:23) is contrasted with the swallowing of a camel,
the largest unclean creature in Palestine (Lev. 11:4). Jesus’ vivid image
reveals that an inordinate focus on purity in the lesser things of the Law
makes a person unclean in regards to its weightier matters.

Christ’s fifth woe confirms that many of the scribes and Pharisees have put
their efforts at godliness in the wrong place (Matt. 23:25–26). All Jewish
sects in His day agree on the need to wash their dishes in order to maintain
their ceremonial cleanness, and they certainly also agree that it is pointless
to cleanse the outside of a cup and leave the inside filthy. Yet this is
precisely what the piety of our Lord’s opponents has achieved. Outward
behavior is important, but many scribes and Pharisees have not worked also on their souls. Thinking that external conformity to the Law is enough, they have not seen that evil is ultimately a matter of the heart, for all wickedness
originates there (Matt. 5:21–30). Those concerned solely with what others see, not the darkness within, are like a cup whose handle is sparkling but has the coffee from three weeks ago inside. No matter how much you polish that handle, the cup is still dirty.

The Law does not deal merely with externals; its goal is purity of heart (Lev.
19:17–18). Repeated washings should remind the washer of his perpetual
dirtiness and help him long for a clean heart. The Pharisees have missed this,
failing to see that outer cleanliness depends upon inner purity, (Matt.
23:26). Matthew Henry writes, “If renewing, sanctifying grace make clean the
inside, that will have an influence on the outside, for the commanding
principle is within.”

According to Matthew Henry: “those sins must be conscientiously abstained
from, which the eye of God only is a witness to, who searches the heart.” We
can easily think we are being obedient if we do many good deeds, however,
doing such things while harboring hatred, jealousy, and other such inward sins
is to act as a hypocrite. We are hypocrites if we fail to mortify those things
only God can see. What inner thoughts and feelings must you put to death?

Enhanced by Zemanta

Popular posts from this blog

Speaking in tongues for today - Charles Stanley

What is the glory (kabod) of God?

The Holy Spirit causes us to cry out: Abba, Father