
“Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, hypocrites! For you are like whitewashed tombs which indeed appear beautiful outwardly, but inside are full of dead menās bones and all uncleanness. 28 Even so you also outwardly appear righteous to men, but inside you are full of hypocrisy and lawlessness.” Matthew 23:27-28
You’ve heard it said, āWhen you spill the glass, you see whatās inside.ā If sweet tea is inside, you see tea, and if itās sour milk, you surely donāt get sweet tea! š This is so true for each of us. No matter how pretty of a face we paint on, no matter how many smiles we flash, if our character is ugly, when pressures come, (and they will!) ugly is what will come out!
In the moments of stress, itās never a matter of what we know, who we know, or even what weāve learned. Itās a matter of what weāve allowed inside our hearts, what weāve processed and what weāve consumed. What is within our hearts is what is brought to the surface when we face hard times.
I love how one author puts it, āWhen youāre upset, you upset whatās really in you.ā -Ann Voskamp
I long for good to flow when Iām spilled out. I donāt like sour milk, never have; yet, when pressures arise, sometimes, sour is all thatās left. It gets messy, and others can see it. I long for purity. I long for less mess, and Iām really working on this; I truly am.
Yet, I have found that itās not a matter of the mind. You canāt just make yourself act better. ou canāt just decide in your mind, āOk, today will be different. No more spills. No more sour milk. Today, I shall be on a better course. I shall be better!ā No, itās not just a simple making up of the mind, and all is well. Itās a matter of the heart, and, oh, how that heart can be so stubborn sometimesā¦
I can determine in my mind that I will not doubt. I will not grow angry. I will not be afraid. I can convince myself that this time will be different. I will be different; however, if Iāve only convinced my mind, and Iāve not dealt with my heart, that heart will rebel. That heart will even revolt. When the heat of the moment comes, and my guard is let down, that heart will adamantly revert back to its comfort zone of fear, doubt, anger, or whatever emotion consumes it at the time.
You see, the heart holds all the wounds, all the pain and all the joy. The heart is full of all the emotion, all the wonder, all fear. When troubles come, it really is the heart that speaks, and this is why it is always a matter of that stubborn heart which determines what will spill out. This is why Jesus longs to rule our hearts. If He can hold our hearts, He can change our mind. He can transform our will. He can even change the world. If He can have our hearts surrendered to His will, He can consume our whole being.
If we want the inside to be purified, to be empty of the mess, to really be as pretty as the outside we paint, we must lend Him our hearts. We must surrender our emotions, our pains, our wounds. We must allow His living waters to wash over our hearts. We must let Him heal us from the inside out, and then, we wonāt have to worry when the glass is spilt. There will be no sour to pour. It will only be full of fresh, living water, flowing from His heart to ours, and out to the world.