The other day I happened to be in
a car with my friend and her two lovely kids; a boy and a girl. I think the boy
is about nine and the girl, 7. The boy was narrating to me about how his baby
sister is such a cry baby, and how she cries all the time just about anything. The
girl kept trying to defend herself, claiming it was a lie. Then my friend, the
mother, spoke up gently to the boy quoting Matthew 7:3 {Why, then, do
you look at the speck in your brother's eye and pay no attention to the log in
your own eye? GNB}. The boy then got quiet.
It got me thinking, isn't it
interesting how our flaws seem so magnified when they’re on others, and how
quick we are to spot them? Some things that irritate us so much about someone
else may be the same things that we do, and looking at these people we’re sort
of looking in the mirror and not liking our reflection.
And isn't it also interesting how
we go on and on about condemning the person for this very thing that is our
flaw. We even try to stop the person from doing these things not realizing that
the problem is in us first, and there’s no way we can give of what we don’t have.
If say you are prone to telling lies (or so called half-truths), then guess
what, you cannot impart/influence truth-telling to the person you've spotted
the flaw in.
We should be quick to examine
ourselves and slow to judging others. No one is perfect! I am not saying that
we condone evil around us, or excuse these flaws, No! As believers we should carry
out an honest personal analysis and seek to work on ourselves, to work on our
own salvation (Philippians 2:12), before we can seek to impart change on others.
It is the things that we first learn and practice ourselves that we can teach
to and impart on others.
You reflect what you constantly expose yourself to.
We need to partner with God in
making us who He created us to be; a true reflection of Him who created
us in His very own image.
Before you can find fault in
another person, look at yourself first and be the change you want to impart.
The truth is, God works in us individually.
Let us seek to constantly expose ourselves
to the light of His word, and be transformed to a true reflection of Him.
Here’s what you can pray for
yourself on a daily basis:
‘Search me [thoroughly], O God, and know my heart! Try me and know my
thoughts!
And see if there is any wicked or hurtful way in
me, and lead me in the way everlasting.’
{Psalms
139:23-24 AMP}