Luke
11:34-36 – Your eye is the lamp of your body. When your eye is healthy, your
whole body is full of light, but when it is bad, your body is full of darkness.
Therefore be careful lest the light in you be darkness. If then your whole body
is full of light, having no part dark, it will be wholly bright, as when a lamp
with its rays gives you light.”
Have you ever noticed how two people
can view the exact same situation in two completely different ways? When laid
off from a job, one person gets bitter, gets a gun, and shoots his previous
employer. Another is disappointed, but understands the realities of business,
and takes the opportunity to pursue a new career. Ten years later the first is
in jail and the second is a successful manager, far better off than if she had
stayed with the first firm.
So much of our wellbeing in life is
not determined by what happens to us but by how we view it. In this passage,
Jesus says how our eye sees determines what our whole body is like. The
difference is how we look. Is it evil or pure?
The word translated healthy in the ESV above in Greek is aplous. It means sincere, genuine, with
no selfish hidden agenda. The concept of the evil eye is still strong in the
Middle East. You cannot go anywhere in Turkey without seeing a nazar – a blue, white, and black
talisman designed to keep people with jealousy and selfish ulterior motives
away.
Jesus is not urging us to get
trinkets to change the motives of others. Instead, he commands us to watch our
own eyes. Selfish prejudging of others’ motives will only cause us greater pain
throughout our lives. Look for the good. Instead of seeing that person who cut
you off in traffic, stole your phone, or lied about you to your boss as pure
evil, see them as a wounded person in desperate need of grace, just like you
and me.
1 comment:
very good, thank you for posting this today. our ministry idea is struggling, I haven't been able to find a job...and I've been looking at all this in a very negative way. trying to follow your advice and see these things without selfish ambition, and accept them for what they are.
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